You are browsing the archive for C. J. Henderson.

Other Memory Gaps

December 11, 2009 in Blogs

The stress around here is incredible; I find it difficult to remember things from one hour to the next.  So it’s not surprising that I’ve failed to mention other things I have done.

Before everything started coming apart at the seams, I managed to acquire and view a copy of Terminator Salvation.  I am intrigued at what I am going to call the reverse grandfather paradox, which I will discuss when I get to it.  I have already begun (on the suggestion of a comment at The Examiner) a series attempting to summarize the timeline of the first three films in preparation for the consideration of this fourth.

I finished reading the rest of C. J. Henderson’s Teddy London series, mostly in snippets of time here and there, and enjoyed them sufficiently that I will probably continue to review the entire series, but am letting some time pass between them both because I have other projects and because I think it helps him more if the reviews are spread a bit.

I also just discovered that Tony DiGerolamo, freelance writer who has written (among other things) the novelization of the Serenity movie, has become the Philadelphia Comics Examiner at The Examiner, naming me as a referral, which is good for him and good for me (because he will get a bit of extra income from the job, and I will get a thank you payment for the referral).  I met Tony through Ubercon also (that’s where I met C. J. Henderson).  Honestly, as much as I need the money, there is something about knowing that Tony thought my referral worth his time that boosts my mood significantly.

But that mood is not going to stay elevated long if I do not attend to some of these other tasks, so I’d better hit the road.  It suddenly strikes me that I am so disoriented I have not finished the backlogged e-mail, so I’d better attend to that next and hope to get back to the forums later.

–M. J. Young

It’s There Now

December 6, 2009 in Blogs

I always post to announce new articles, so I’m dropping a quick line to call your attentions to the new review, In re:  C. J. Henderson:  The Things That Are Not There.  This is the first of the Teddy London supernatural mystery stories, and the one that got me hooked.

I’ve also gotten a lot of comments on that latest posting about Primer, and so I’ve written a bit I did not anticipate writing, but that’s not really article stuff.

–M. J. Young

Diverging Back to Primer

December 3, 2009 in Blogs

I’m growing more accustomed to the updated browser, and one of my in-house computer experts has solved my mouse problems (although it’s now running very fast, so I’ve got to adjust to it, too), so things are going a bit more smoothly.

I posted another temporal anomalies article at The Examiner.  I’m moving through questions slowly at this point, mostly answering them when I’ve posted an odd number of articles in a series so I’ve got an extra day to fill before Monday returns.  Thus this one addresses the (im)possibility that divergent dimension theory might be the solution to the Primer story.  I invite you to read Primer question 3:  multiple dimension theory 1 if you have a spare few minutes.

There have also been some comments, finally, on the Star Trek series, and someone has suggested I turn my attention to Terminator since the DVD of the fourth film is now available, but I don’t yet have it and my series on Butterfly Effect is mostly ready to launch, so that’s where I will be on Monday.

Meanwhile, I’ve been devouring C. J. Henderson’s Teddy London series, forcing myself to read something non-fiction between each installment and pushing through the works of Muller and John Stott and F. F. Bruce so I can justify reading the next of these good supernatural detective pieces.  I keep mulling over writing reviews of them, but I’ve got so much on my plate as it is.  Still, maybe I’ll get to them.

–M. J. Young

Time to Catch Up

November 9, 2009 in Blogs

Some of you know, and others will have deduced, that I made it to Ubercon XII this weekend.  It was quite a weekend, with many new players some of whom will be finding their ways to our forum game, I expect.  I must thank Harry who prefers to be called John, as he worked hard to bring many new people to the table, at the expense of his own play time.  I should mention that Adam also made it, and that Al got a shot at moving his game forward incrementally.  I also met Ahmetia and her sister Katarina, and learned how her name is really pronounced (AH-meh-TEE-ah).  I could tell some great stories about some of the participants, but that’s not what this blog is about.

I got there in time to catch up with C. J. Henderson, who sold me a copy of the newly-published book I reviewed, and gave me a solid discount on the next several in the Teddy London series, so you’ll probably see more reviews of his stuff in the not so distant future.  I enjoy the London stories despite their occasional vulgarity, because I like to see the absolutely inconceivably powerful monsters beaten by a bunch of guys whose best asset is that they aren’t willing to lose.

I am safely back, but trying to catch up on the work skipped over the three-day weekend.  I have managed to get through the e-mail and hit the missed articles, and I uploaded the latest Examiner temporal anomalies article, Benders Big Score part 9:  the Gorey details and announced it in various places.  This one considers the impact of Bender’s accidental involvement in the 2000 Presidential race, which caused Bush to become President rather than Gore.  That has serious repercussions for Obama, but you can read about it there.

I am not certain whether I will get much done on the forum here, though.  I have about an hour left before other demands interrupt, with no certainty that I shall be able to return tonight, and I am certain it is very full, so forgive me if most if it gets booted into tomorrow.

Thanks for your understanding and patience.

–M. J. Young

In Re:  The Sleep That Rescues

October 28, 2009 in Reviews

I have over the past year or so reviewed a couple of C. J. Henderson’s books, mentioning that I know him through sharing panels at Ubercon.  I have also mentioned my fondness for the Teddy London stories.  The Things That Are Not There is still the best answer to Lovecraft I have encountered.  The sequel, The Stench of Fresh Air, was also excellent, with an innovative take on the concept of vampirism and a significant development of the characters, and particularly the hero.  Knowing that there were additional books in the series which had gone out of print but were slated to be republished, I occasionally nagged him about when the next would become available.

Whether for my nagging, or for my complimentary reviews of Lai Wan:  Tales of the Dreamwalker and To Battle Beyond, I have been rewarded.  Henderson has penned a new London story under the title The Sleep that Rescues to insert between The Stench of Fresh Air and whatever was the original third tale in the series, and while his publisher struggled to bring the book to print he favored me with a preview, an opportunity to read in draft form that for which his fans are eagerly waiting.  I promised in turn to have this review ready by the time the book went to print, which was an easy enough promise to keep, as the book is another page-turner which kept calling me back to learn what would happen next.  Not only did I finish reading the draft and writing this review in plenty of time, I also had time to go back and re-read the two previous entries in the series, and to drop him a note about this review, and to wait for him to greenlight the posting.

Drafts being drafts, they usually have errors in them; that’s the point of sending drafts to editors, and although that was not the point of sending a copy to me I did drop him a note with the few problems I would have corrected.  I say few, and indeed, these were surprisingly few.  I have read published books which were less well edited than this draft, and I expect whoever is doing the real editing will have caught the same few typos as I.  Even if not, the craft in Henderson’s art is quite good.

I also feel compelled to mention that some of my readers might be disturbed particularly by the opening chapters here.  It took me a while to find exactly the right word to describe what is not only several key scenes but also an undercurrent through several others.  That word is erotic.  It is not pornographic, and indeed there is no literal sex in this book (there was such an encounter in the early sections of The Stench of Fresh Air)–hugs and kisses the limit in the real world.  However, the events that connect to an out-of-control emotional relationship spill into the dream plain, and although again there is no sex, the combination of nudity and intimacy would gain the story an R rating were it rendered to a movie screen.  For those who find such eroticism discomforting, I should say first that once it reaches its early peak it remains subdued thereafter, even mostly evaporating as the story unfolds, and second that it becomes a necessary aspect of the story, not only for its impact on London’s relationship with the ever-faithful and supportive Lisa Hutchinson but also for the ultimate resolution of the primary story.

The antagonist is another Lovecraftian horror from another dimension, a monster trying to fight its way into our world to enslave and devour the entire universe starting with humanity, this time via the dream plane.  Yet Henderson again surprises.  It is not cultists who are unlocking the doors to admit the horror, but a scientist, an engineering researcher in a video game development company who thinks he has taken the next step in total immersion gaming but whose test subjects keep dying.  The police are baffled, but being made aware of London’s involvement in fighting the inexplicable, they involve him in finding the cause of death of a large number of mostly young men whose comas baffle the medical establishment.

Those familiar with London will be pleased to see the usual cast of characters.  In addition to unconsummated love interest Lisa Hutchinson (whom he rescued from the horror from another dimension for which her father intended her as sacrifice), we have the faithful sidekick Paul Morcey (former maintenance man who saved London in his first encounter with the inconceivable); psychometrist Lai Wan (whose very tense relationship with London balances her realizations that he usually causes her and everyone else a great deal of trouble against that he does it incidental to saving the universe); Professor Goward (expert in ancient beliefs about the supernatural); and Pa’sha (powerful Jamaican mercenary whose team of Murder Dogs are always ready to destroy anything that needs destroying).  New characters also find important roles here, including the Pirate Queen, Joan de Molina, an international cat burglar who gets entangled quite by accident but stays to complicate London’s life.  Captain Cantalupo also debuts in this book, although he has appeared in connection with Lai Wan in previously-published later stories.

The hero’s abilities are expanding.  This at first unsettled me.  In the beginning of the series, London was very much an ordinary private investigator sucked into an extraordinary case, and he was forced to rely on mostly ordinary people to assist him.  However, his brushes with the supernatural have impacted him, giving him power and helping him realize how to use it.  This began in The Things That Are Not There with the discovery that having been attacked on the dream plane he could track his enemy there.  It continued in The Stench of Fresh Air, as he realized he could sense and know things he could not before, and that the millions who were now dead at his hand (collateral damage in the salvation of the universe in the first book) could speak to him.  He does not hear them now, but he has begun learning how to control his use of the dream plane, similarly to but not the same as Lai Wan.  His efforts create trouble for him more than once, as he is still a novice, but gradually he improves.  It should not surprise that someone who brushes against the supernatural as frequently as he does will start to understand it and even to integrate his own efforts into it.  In this connection, he also introduces Paul Morcey to the use of the dream plane, so we might see more supernatural accomplishments from him in the future.

It is not just that this is a great adventure, though.  Henderson crafts his words well.  Quite a few times I was taken by a particular turn of a phrase, a way of saying something that was both clever and clear.  I was tempted to steal some of these; better, then, that you should encounter them in the text itself, and enjoy them for yourself.  The only thing worse than a movie trailer which gives away the best parts is one that gives away the story; let this review not do so, but instead alert you to the fact that there are some excellent lines you may wish to steal yourself, tucked into a story well worth reading if you enjoy stories of Lovecraftian horrors being resisted and repelled by human efforts.

What will be most interesting for me to see as a writer will be how well this story integrates in this space before the next one.  Morcey is just one example of people and things changing in significant ways.  The relationships London has Lai Wan and Lisa Hutchinson have advanced.  Henderson has here written a piece that should fit between two existing pieces; to know how well he has accomplished that, I will have to await a copy of the next story.

On the other hand, he has again written an excellent adventure, in which unimaginable horrors meet determined humans, and the humans manage to pull through as the winners.  If for some reason you have not had the pleasure of reading The Things That Are Not There and The Stench of Fresh Air, this book stands well on its own, adequately providing the pieces needed to understand the histories of its characters.  I continue to enjoy this series, and to look forward to future entries.

Henderson’s work can be found wherever he manages to make an appearance; I hope to pick up a copy of the now published version of the story when I see him at Ubercon XII.  For those unable to catch him in person, The London Agency Official Home Page is his web site, complete with a store in which to find all the books mentioned here.

    At the time this went to publication, the book was not yet listed on the web site store.  Henderson is limiting his attendance at Ubercon this year to Friday night, November 6, 2009; other appearances are usually announced on his web site.

A Confused Time

October 26, 2009 in Blogs

An odd thing happened last week.  There was an abrupt, brief, and unexplained surge in readership of my Examiner Temporal Anomalies articles.  On Friday the readership skyrocketed, but by Saturday it had plummeted relative to other articles on the site.  I have yet to determine how or why this occurred.  In any case, I have published the new one, Bender’s Big Score part 5:  Tut, Tut, Tut, which continues to consider problems surrounding the intermillenial crime spree.  It will be interesting to see if there’s another surge this time.

Meanwhile, I’ve been battered about quite a bit with too much happening too fast and me unable to keep up with it all.  C. J. Henderson dropped me a note to let me know that his new Teddy London book The Sleep that Rescues is finally and formally in print, and so I can polish up that review I wrote some time back and get it posted–but not tonight, as I am already running out of time with too much in front of me.  Hopefully that will go up this week, though, and if I manage to catch him at Ubercon I’ll get a real copy of it.  (He has also alerted me to the fact that he will be there Friday night only, and I’m already curious why, as that does not strike me as the best time to be there.)

In any case, there’s too much to do and too little time, and I’ve said that already so rather than repeat myself again, I’ll move to everything else.

–M. J. Young

Ubersteps

October 27, 2008 in Blogs

Several positive things were done over the weekend.

The big one, most of you know, is that I was again a guest at Ubercon XI.  Of the many familiar faces I saw I will mention only C. J. Henderson, whose Teddy London series I have thoroughly enjoyed so far.  No, the third is not yet back in print, but I did pick up a couple of things from him that were connected to some of the things I’ve already read.  I’m adding these to my reading list, which is of course already quite substantial, but looking forward to them.

The fact that a few books were sold is encouraging; the fact that I rarely make a profit on conventions is on one level less important.  A significant number of new players adventured in our worlds, and several are quite excited about it.  I expect some will arrive on the forum here (and may have already done so).  We also had a well-attended referee training session, and I’m looking forward to hearing about games being played elsewhere.

I returned to find a post waiting on the Corinthians study list.  Of late my end-of-week postings have been comments–something less than reviews–on books I have read over the years, but I had posted early last week that I would not be posting one on Friday because of the convention.  One of the list participants took advantage of my absence to post thoughts on my next book (he got an early release copy) Do You Trust Me?, and the comments were very favorable.  (You can read them at this site, but it is a Yahoo!Groups posting and you probably have to log in to Yahoo to access it.)  This is particularly encouraging, because I wanted to put some glowing quotations on the back of the book for its official release, and these will be ideal.

I am running late today, but that’s par for the course particularly after a working weekend away.  Let’s see what I can do next.

–M. J. Young