Raconteur is publishing another anthology this weekend, and I will be doing the same on my substack. For now, I suggest you take another look at a previous anthology they published that had one of my stories in it. In Coffee Adventures, you never know where a good brew will take you, or what you will do for a good brew. In my story, Another Perfect Cup, Captain William Carter and his fine faery lady Joanna find themselves doing important and dangerous things with an amazing brew as the final reward. This story covers the second day they know each other. He saved her soul on the first day. What will he do on the second date?
We are often limited by the technology of our time. But sometimes technology advances even as we are watching it.
Captain William Carter is a man who has seen technology advance from the horse and buggy to the locomotive and all the way to the automobile and beyond.
In Miami Red, I wanted to write the feeling of speed, of never slowing down, of having a literal deadline and buying time at every turn. The picture I chose for my substack image I thought managed to convey that feeling.
And now Grok Imagine is allowing people to put pictures to video, and it is very good at what it does. I’ve been testing it, and this was one of my earlier tests. Speed sounds like revving engines and squealing tires and it fits the feel I was going for.
The first Friday of the month is coming like a BattleMech, and I will be at the local Games & More on North Broadway from 5PM to close to give you a taste of BattleTech Alpha Strike.
I bring everything you need to play, so all you have to bring is yourself.
Yourself and clothes. Please. I will consider it a gift.
See you at 5PM on Friday if you want to play.
Happy Labor Day to all of you.
Especially a Happy Labor Day to you who are laboring on labor day.
Not everyone gets a three day weekend for Labor Day. Not everyone gets to BBQ hot dogs on Labor Day. Not everyone gets to go to a Labor Day protest.
The world we live in is built on those people who labor on Labor Day, just like any other day.
Happy Labor Day to all of you.
Lifeboat was a story I wrote for an anthology about families in war, and how different races come together to form odd bonds. The primary characters were soldiers from different races in the middle of a war enjoying a quiet moment for a good natured game of “I Spy” when the spacecraft they are in loses all power. I went into it not wanting to have a fight. A crisis, yes, and to explore how they reacted to it, but I didn’t want any weapons fire or killing anything. I had a plan for it, but the final scene caught me by surprise when I wrote it. I had to go back and slide in references to make it seem like I planned it all along. Authors can be crafty in that way when it comes to telling people we knew what we were doing, when we were really just letting the words flow and finding out where they went in real time.
The background I used for the jackofharts substack was both the most complicated and the easiest one I have made for my substack posts. I went to dezgo dot com like I did with the others, and asked several of the render engines to give me a holographic redhead with green eyes and an alien dress standing in front of a futuristic wall. A few more odds and ends to tweak it, but every single engine I tried failed spectacularly. They could give me the girl, or the background. Not both. Not certain exactly why, but the more arguments or prompts you add to an engine, the more chaotic the results get. I asked them for too much, and they couldn’t give me any of them.
So I went into Flux and asked it for a military themed futuristic compartment with a hatch. A few more arguments, but that is the general drift. Now Flux is one of the most amazingly beautiful art engines. Spectacular results, even if it is harder to focus and more random than others. I ran maybe fifty generations through, loved most of them, saved them, and sorted through until I found one that really did what I wanted. Then I went into Envy and asked it for a hologram of an anime redhead with green eyes and an alien dress with NO BACKGROUND. That is an option at dezgo dot com. Once again, there were a few more prompts, but that is the general idea, and I ran maybe half a dozen images through before I got what I wanted. Envy is real good about that. If you can tell that engine what you want, it will give it to you real quick.
I then brought both images into my ancient copy of Paint Shop Pro 7 that I still use and placed the girl on top of the background, in a different layer so I could manipulate everything. Increased the transparency so you can see the background through her, and added the title and my name. It maybe took a day to generate the images I used. It was figuring out how to get what I wanted that was the challenge, but once I changed my methods, it came easy and quick.



Forge of War on Amazon
Angel Flight on Amazon
Angel Strike on Amazon
Angel War on Amazon
Wolfenheim Rising on Amazon
Wolfenheim Emergent on Amazon