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The Hour Not Lost

April 6, 2008 in Blogs

I awoke today and looked at the bedside clock, the one with numbers large enough that even I can read it without my glasses, as long as I’m somewhere on the bed.  It told me that there wasn’t much time before my wife would be getting ready for work, so I’d better hurry if I wanted to use the bathroom.  I pulled myself upright, and grabbed my watch–which gave me an entirely different view of the matter, telling me that I had plenty of time to get coffee and get organized before her alarm would ring.

Of course, her alarm is in that other clock, the one with the considerably later time on it.  However, I realized, impressively quickly given how foggy I still was otherwise, that the bedside clock had compensated automatically for the change for Daylight Savings Time which was not to be this weekend, because we did it several weeks back.

I was working on moving both new books toward publication when I hit a snag.  I had both publisher sites open, because I figured I could upload Game Ideas Unlimited:  Volume I to the one site while uploading Faith and Gaming to the other.  The former is with a printer who has done merchandise for us in the past, but never books, so I was fighting my way through there process and very pleased finally to have come to the place where I could upload the text.  I had not to that point done the conversion to portable document format (PDF), but that’s a relatively quick fix.  After all, I’ve had Adobe Acrobat Professional 4.0 on my computer for most of a decade, and never had any serious problems with it.

However, I encountered my first serious problem with it.  It is not Adobe’s fault, but MicroSoft’s.  It seems that when we made the change to the new operating system, it failed to recognize the Acrobat software as printers.  If you have an Acrobat writer on your computer, it shows up as several different types of printer drivers, which permit you rather simply to hit “print” and turn just about anything you can print into the universal portable document format.  However, those options were absent from my system.

Nor does MicroSoft make it easy to move printer drivers around.  Obviously, the drivers are still on my computer, in the printers folder on the old hard drive; however, the printers folder apparently is not called that, and I could not find it.

Mercifully, I had to drive someone home last night a “fur piece”, about eighty miles each way, which put me in the neighborhood of our friend and treasurer Adam Keller, who owns a disused copy of a newer version of the software (he has purchased a yet newer version for his own use, so this was an unused license).  I will be upgrading later this afternoon or early this evening, which hopefully will resolve this problem in plenty of time.

So I have much to do, but hopefully enough time in which to do it.

–M. J. Young

Another Friendly Interruption

March 27, 2008 in Blogs

I had finished the regular work last night, and was working on proofreading the Faith and Gaming collection (which I finished earlier this afternoon), when a call came from a young lady, a dear friend of one of our sons who has found herself living in our living room (odd that it should fall to that purpose) before.  She had been evicted from her apartment, an hour away in Philadelphia, and needed to move herself and her things immediately.

I agreed to get her.  I called my wife, who was finishing up at work, to let her know my intentions, and she said to wait until she called me back.

Oddly, while I was awaiting that call, I came upon the old article, Faith and Gaming:  Friends.  I say it is odd, because the piece recounts another night, years ago, when it was my wife who was taking the truck to go help a friend in need in the middle of the night, and I who was accommodating her.  The article speaks of unbalanced ledgers, and how it is not the point of friendship to look for balance, that what we gain does not always equal what we pay.  It was an interesting and indeed timely reminder.

My wife insisted I take the boy along who is most closely her friend, and he agreed that he should go despite the fact that this would mean being crowded in the unheated cab of the truck.  We at the time did not know how crowded, nor how complicated, this would be, as in addition to the girl we also picked up a cat in a carrier and a ferret on a leash, and there was no place to park along Tenth Street south of Mifflin in Philadelphia even at one thirty in the morning when we arrived, so I was sitting by a fire hydrant with the back end of the vehicle extending into an intersection for most of an hour while they first carried boxes and packages to the truck and then attempted to coax a ferret out from under a neighbor’s balcony so he would not be left behind.  We also had to feed the young lady on the ride home, at almost three in the morning when all we could find was a McDonald’s Drive-thru, even in so busy a place as the Deptford Mall area.

I neglected to mention that our eldest and his wife, who missed Easter with us because of his work, managed finally to make it down, arriving minutes before the phone call which took me away.  They were still here when I returned; in fact, it was after four when I finally got to bed, and they were still here when I awoke shortly after five to get boys to buses.  Thus I did not see much of them, but my wife did, and that’s a reversal of the usual circumstance, so that’s good.

I probably did not get eight hours of sleep before I was folding laundry (another thing I tucked into that time) and trying to start my day, but I’m not slowing down yet.  I have a Collision rehearsal tonight, and it happens to be Baxter’s birthday, so I’ve asked our resident cook if he could make a cake just in case Baxter makes it.  Meanwhile, I’m hoping to get everything else out of the way sooner rather than later, so I’ve got time to do some other stuff at some point.

–M. J. Young

I’m Here

March 26, 2008 in Blogs

I’m here.

I’m not at all certain what I should be writing here tonight.  I did a few important errands, but otherwise all I can remember that I’ve done since yesterday’s blog is more editing the Faith and Gaming book.  I’ve not done much of that, either, just a quick breeze through one or two of the fifty articles while getting dressed.

But I’m on schedule for today, even if there are a dozen things I wish I’d done, so let me try to stay that way.

–M. J. Young

Getting to Know Anew

March 23, 2008 in Blogs

Happy Easter to all for whom this is a welcome greeting; He is risen indeed.

I find that the front page of Gaming Outpost has been redone, as part I presume of a thematic update. There are things to like about it, and I do like them; there are also some glitches and concerns, but I’ll manage.  I’ll discuss these in the appropriate forum, I think, when I get there.

I have been proofreading my the text of the proposed Faith and Gaming book, the collected Faith and Gaming articles.  Mostly I’m adding footnotes to things that were easily linked or discovered when it was part of the Christian Gamers Guild site.  I’ve not yet reached the point of pricing this, which will be the longest book I have yet published independently.  I’ve not heard about the cover for the Game Ideas Unlimited series, but then, I don’t check my e-mail until tomorrow, and I am beat enough tonight that I’m not going to add anything to the list.

Actually, I’ve had a thought on that which I am going to have to send to Jim–O.K., I’ve sent it.  I’d like to list on the back cover, with a brief blurb, maybe half a dozen titles from the book which are particularly good, or at least particularly enticing.  To that end, I think I’ll offer at the end of this article the titles of the twenty-six that will be included, and if you recognize any of these as something you remember (or if the blurb entices you to read it), let me know which ones you would list.

Now I really must get through today’s work so I can get some sleep tonight.  I’m starting to get very run down, to the point that my wife is thinking I may need a medical exam, and I want to get a good night’s sleep to forestall any such problem.

Actually, rather than listing and linking all of them, I can take advantage of some of the work I did with the original series and again more recently. The first dozen are linked from the thirteenth, Game Ideas Unlimited:  Over My Shoulder which originally appeared on August 24, 2001, and marked the completion of the first quarter of a year of the series.  used that milestone as an opportunity to look back over what preceded, and forward toward what was to come.  The copy at Gaming Outpost has blurbs about all twelve, including as mentioned links to go read them.  I did the same thing every quarter, but I haven’t fixed all fifteen quarterly articles yet.  I have fixed the one for the second quarter, Game Ideas Unlimited:  The Process which also suggested that the way to learn creative process was by watching how others did it.  It still appears at Gaming Outpost.

I do hope this won’t disrupt my efforts to get people reading and discussing these one per week on the forum.  I’m just hoping that I can get some input from those who remember these articles as to which ones would be best to blurb on the cover, either because people who read them before would want to read them again, or because people who heard the idea mentioned would be fascinated enough to want to read more.

Thanks.

–M. J. Young

A New Book, The Easy Way

March 21, 2008 in Blogs

I stayed up too late last night; but this being Good Friday, all is good.  I managed to get through six months of Game Ideas Unlimited articles, fixing all the links and copying the text into the draft of the new first volume of the book.  It’s very nearly one hundred pages, and I’ve printed a copy for our president and e-mailed a copy to our art director.  My expectation is that someone will create a cover for it fairly quickly, and I’ll have a few of them at Ubercon, depending on the budget.

I also did something I always wished I could do:  at the end of each of the articles there is now a link to the next, so you can follow them in series forward.  I’ve not yet done the cleanup work on the twenty-seventh article, but it’s still there and you can read it.  I made only two changes to any texts.  In one it was apparent that I’d left out a word, which I inserted.  Another, the twenty-sixth article, had mentioned that all the links had gone sour in the thirteenth (because of a major site overhaul at that time), but having finally had opportunity to repair those links I added a marked edit that that had been done.

I’ll continue to post pointers to the articles week by week, and hopefully I’ll find another chunk of time in the foreseeable future to get through the next six months.  I’m also thinking of doing the Faith and Gaming series, but Valdron is not so interested in that so I’ll probably publish it myself.  That might be easier, but I’m not certain yet.

–M. J. Young

In Re:  Evil Star

November 1, 2007 in Reviews

I was handed a reviewer copy of this book, Evil Star by Alexander Horowitz; it is billed as the second book in The Gatekeepers series. The first, Raven’s Gate, escaped my notice despite being on the New York Times’ Best Seller list at some point. (That has more to do with my inattention to such lists than with any lack of merit in the book.) It is entirely accidental that I received this book. It was tossed in the bag with my copy of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, because the bookstore was celebrating the release of the book and looking for things they had around that they could give away. The person who gave me this book had no idea that I was a reviewer (he did know I was an author, and had read my novel), and no expectation that I should review it. However, I read it, and since it was a pre-release “early reader edition” copy I thought I would write a review.

I am sorely tempted to call this series, “Harry Potter Meets Cthulu”. The connections seem to scream at me.

The hero of the series, Matthew Freeman who prefers to be called Matt, is in this book fourteen years old; that makes him a bit older than Harry was in his second book (he had just turned twelve). It is not clear to me, however, how old Matt was in the beginning of the first book. Like Harry, Matt is an orphan, although it seems his parents really did die in a car accident and not until he was eight. That tale is told, apparently, in the first book. Like Harry, Matt has powers he does not understand and cannot always control; he was aware of the car accident before it occurred, and he sometimes has similar premonitions here. He also sometimes causes telekinetic events, but through severe emotional upset, not intention. He is even described as thin with unkempt dark hair and blue eyes.

The similarities to Harry don’t end there, though. We are told that there are seven gates, and apparently each book revolves around the effort to keep the next one closed. first grade math says that means there will be seven books in this series, just as there were in the Potter books. Matt is the hero, the focus of the stories; his friends, young and old, help him, but in the critical moments he is the one on the line.

In fairness to Horowitz, at least some of these are the tropes of the genre: fantasy books for adolescents have adolescent heroes. Cry of the Icemark was similar in some ways. Matt does not have a group of adolescent friends; he has the friendship of a young adult reporter, and the support of a secret international organization, but he is completely estranged from his peers. No one is helping him learn to use his powers. He is not exactly unique; there is much in the book about “the five”, of which he is the first to be identified, and he dreams about the other four trying to reach him. Still, in this book one of the others does reach him, recognizing him from his own dreams. He, too, has powers he does not understand, but they are very different powers.

As to Cthulu, he is never mentioned; however, the series revolves around a set of gates through which the “Old Ones” threaten to return to bring darkness to the word, and this book focuses on an ancient newly discovered book which tells how to open one of those gates. A wealthy reclusive businessman is the evil monster attempting to get the book and open the gate.

I did not feel that Matt was as familiar a character as Harry. It was a weakness of the book that I had trouble identifying with its hero. Harry stayed with family members who did not like him, but Matt had an insane former foster mother trying to kill him. Harry was alone at school but for a couple of friends, but Matt was alone on the streets of the Peruvian slums with a boy with whom he shared no common language. Harry meets creatures of fantasy and learns to control his power through the mentoring of those more experienced than he, while Matt meets Incan survivors and struggles to work through his own use of his powers. Where Harry’s powers made us feel that he was special, Matt’s powers make us feel that he is different; we want to be like Harry, but not like Matt. Even the fact that Harry goes to school in what seems a very ordinary way (despite it being a school for wizards) gives us a point of contact; Matt is behind in his education, because his life is constantly interrupted and he has to move to another school. It just never felt like Matt was a sympathetic character.

On the other hand, the author takes us on quite an adventure. Matt is the reluctant hero here; he wants to be a normal boy, but he’s not normal, and fate will not leave him alone. In his new school he is the outcast, and the fact that he pulls the fire alarm before the explosion that would have killed almost everyone only makes him less accepted. The Nexus, the organization that is fighting this battle, wants and perhaps needs his help, but he is trying to avoid getting involved–and yet gets pulled half way around the world and into the midst of the trouble as events unfold. It is not always clear who are the villains and who the allies, and more than once he flees from those who would have helped him. Scores, maybe hundreds, of people are trying to help him, but at the critical moment he stands alone but for the other, younger, boy.

The book is laced with some wonderful images, many of them descriptions of Peru from its ancient wonders to its modern slums. If there is a fault here, it lies in the interlacing of fantasy elements–a hidden Incan city, secret passages in those preserved wonders known only to the surviving Incans–with the hard facts. Even I am not certain where the facts ended and the fantasies began at times. That is only a fault because of the wonderfully clear portrayals of the realities of Peru, the author’s skill at bringing us into that place, and because (being published by Scholastic) it is targeted at a teen or pre-teen audience who will benefit greatly from the look at that society, if they can sort out the reality from the rest.

The copy I have has a number of errors in it which caught my eye as an editor, which may also have caught the eye of Scholastic’s editors before the finished version went to press. Most of these are minor typos, a wrong but similar word here or there. The mistake which most bothered me involved a description of the actions of a minor character, a truck driver on his way to be beaten and robbed. Before the incident we are told that he is thinking about asking a certain waitress at a certain truck stop out on a date; after the incident we are told that his wife was contacted and gave them important information. I prefer to think that the author overlooked part of what he was doing, rather than that he perceives married truck drivers commonly asking women out on dates; I hope, at least, that this was a mistake, and that it was corrected before the final copy.

I am tempted to attempt to obtain a copy of the first book. After all, it is often the case that one book in a series is weaker than the others, and this might be the weaker book. It is not a bad idea for a series; the Lovecraftian horror concepts are present but not terrifyingly so (although I’m probably not the best judge of that–Lovecraft has never frightened me). There is madness, there is betrayal, there are evil people working toward evil ends. Matt does not always emerge victorious, does not always make the best decisions, and is not always eager to do what he must do. However, he proves the hero through his efforts, and moves an epic story forward a significant chapter. I wouldn’t expect this to be the stuff of a best seller, but then, such things are determined by factors other than how they appeal to fifty-something author-reviewers.

Avatar of EDG

by EDG

A Cthulhu Mythos: Bibliography & Concordance

April 21, 1999 in Reviews

I find it very difficult to review this book, as it’s the kind of thing only
an obsessive would need to have – put simply, this hefty tome tracks EVERY
SINGLE INSTANCE a particular proper noun is used in any Cthulhu Mythos
story, EVER. So you’d like to know when the first appearance of Kadath is?
There it is. How many times did the Crawling Hideous Maw appear in Ramsey
stories? There it is.

Not only does this book exhaustively detail the proper nouns, it is also a
complete bibliography: so if you’ve been missing the one Cthulhu story by
Ernest Hemingway that would complete your collection, the Old Man and the
Shivering Tentacled Old One, now you can find out all the details you would
ever need about the work.

I love Delta Green and Call of Cthulhu, and I can understand the need for a
Necronomicon of this sort to exist. I will personally never need it: I can
not imagine that my paltry knowledge of the greater darkness of Lovecraft
would ever require this dense Bible. So this is the first Pagan Publishing
I am recommending you do not buy, unless you are a serious Cthulhu Mythos
researcher.

You see, this book isn’t for gamers who play Call of Cthulhu on weekends and
use pregenerated scenarios. It isn’t even for dilletantes like myself.
It’s for people who would drive 8 hours to see a live performance of “The
King in Yellow”. It’s hardcore.

The Verdict

This isn’t a contest, where all the “cool kids” own the book – if you need
the Concordance, you’ll know it. For example, I “need” two or three
different atlases of maps for medieval France…most people would not. If
you are the kind of archivist who needs a fully comprehensive, indexed tool
to the Mythos, this is it–the print quality is superb, the binding is
sturdy and it covers everything. If you need it, you’ll know instantly that
it is everything you’ve hoped for.