
The Christ Corporation Series


So Kate Gosselin is “freaking out “ over her show being cancelled.
I really don’t care. I just couldn’t come up with an intro.
Although, seriously? She’s upset because her career has been derailed? Watch the video. It’s amazing how much she sounds like…well, like Kate Gosselin. Woman’s nuttier than a can of almonds.
It’s been some time since life has allowed me the time and energy to focus on writing, as well as the myriad other projects I want to work on. Now that I’ve left my post at The Corner Bookstore, I’m going to dive headlong into the wordy pool and see what comes of it. The primary objective right now is to finish Book 1 in The Storyteller series, which is tentatively called The Heart of Darkness. I should, all things being equal, complete that manuscript some time in October (preferably before I head to Richmond, Va for The James River Writers Confererence).
As I manage that daunting task, I mean to pick up the pieces of the abandoned Bookstore series of videos (newest one below) and continue building a platform with which to turn my bizzaro experiences as a bookseller into a television pilot. Think Arrested Development meets The Office and you’ll get a decent idea. Something that allows for a good bit of insanity but is more character driven than built around the location. I hope to have a new video up every Wednesday.
Additionally, I’ll have a few posts to add to The Adventures of Ducky Thomas, including his long overdue story of traveling to New York City. That post, for what it’s worth will be called The Massive Warship, and has an awful lot to do with his visit to St. Patrick’s Cathedral. The hope with Ducky is to translate his adventures into chapter books. I think the world needs stories about an adventurous duck. Ducky agrees.
Now that Flutter is out and selling, I will be returning again to the world of Timothy Webb and telling what may, or may not, be the final book in that series. I’m rather fond of Timothy and Natasha, so I may violate ever known rule of writing just to hang on to them. In the meantime, if you haven’t already, The Christ Corporation Series has a Facebook page. Like it. I’ll be posting updates there.
Finally, staring me in the face with the depth and deadness of a salivating zombie is a story that takes the traditional Zombie Apocalypse for rocking ride where it’s never been before. Not sure yet if I want to write the novel or the screenplay, but as I have information to offer, I’ll be tossing it up here on the blog.
…of which I will be visiting more often. Obviously, right?
So with nothing in my way but myself, all of these projects will be complete or underway within the next six months. I’m piling it on and looking forward to what comes of it.
Oh, and in the near future I’ll be looking for you to determine what absolutely ridiculous show I show blog about on a regular basis. That one is wide open. Anything from Springer to Gossip Girl, from The View to 90210. It’s not my call. It’s yours. I’m not sure who I hope to entertain more with that, but I’m quite positive it will be me.
That said, here’s the latest in The Bookstore series, called Potter is Hotter. Time to decide between Cullen and Potter. And pretty dresses.
So, you have 26 days left until the Rapture. Are you ready? Made your Rapture Party Plans yet? Have you found a home for your pet yet (that is to say, for those of you who will be leaving us)? Have you made your Bucket List? Get on it people! There isn’t time to dilly, or dally, or hesitate!
Then again, utilizing a quote I heard during my recent trip to NYC (I can’t claim right to this one, but I will use the hell out of it): “Why can’t you quit? Jesus did.” So, maybe you shouldn’t do anything. Just let it happen. Heat up some queso, prop up your feet, refuse to shower and watch 26 days of television.
Hell, forward all your bills to the people at We Can Know, seeing as how they’re so up on this whole Rapture shibang. I mean, can’t there be some type of legal spin on making plans around their May 21st date…you know, in the unlikely event that they’re wrong?
Dammit. I just paid off my car. Should have thought that one through a bit more.
Still, maybe this isn’t really a bad thing at all.
I feel secure that my publisher will still be around, since I know God isn’t terribly fond of Faerie worship or purple highlights, so at least Flutter will still arrive in August. And since I’m not necessarily targeting Christians with my books (well, targeting, yes, but not in the publicity sense), then I can rest assured that my audience will still be around. In fact, this may be a boon to the publishing industry, now that I think on it, because it will eliminate…er, I mean, remove all the people who are most traditionally likely to whine about literary content. Vampire Porn for everyone! Hopefully Stephanie Meyer is taken. I can’t stomach anymore of her work.
I’m actually thinking that the bulk of people at Twitter and Facebook will still be around, so we’ll still have that. To boot, all that Christian clutter will be gone, so no more scrolling through the rants and praise to Mr. Jesus. Heck, little boys all over the world can roam free, safe and secure in the knowledge that their pants won’t be removed by some God-horny Man of the Cloth, so that’s good. Then again, won’t all the Men of the Cloth who engaged in that activity still be here? Hm. Rule of the land! It’s time to put these imbeciles on a remote island with a few other undesirables, and have an And Then There Were None reality show. Given the dearth of candidates, and only 12 slots (should we remain true to the story), I’m thinking several continuous seasons of this will do fine.
Fortunately, we’ll still have this:
So that’s cool.
I’m actually feeling confident that the bulk of television shows, actors and actresses, producers, directors, musicians, writers, artists and executives will still be around, so I guess Hollywood just keeps rolling. I mean, they didn’t stop for Pearl Harbor or 9/11, did they? Can’t seem them seeing this any differently. So, we’ll still have a major portion of our art intact.
This solves our energy crises, doesn’t it? And food shortages?
Can we get back to community-based lifestyles, and weed out the box stores? I can promise you all non-Christian based indie bookstores will still be around. They didn’t break for Amazon or B&N, so I figure the Rapture won’t kill their inspiration either. Should be plenty of stock and, as mentioned, better quality to choose from, so there you are. Another win.
Looks like the recession is over. Jobs for everyone!
May have to entertain that Trump for President thing, after all. He’ll still be around. I mean, it would appear that every politician is a Christian, or so they would have you believe. Surely they weren’t lying about that. I’ll vote for him. Although George Clooney might be more interested now that there’s no real backlash to him running, right? Hell, all of Hollywood might put their name in the hat if they can do so comfortably knowing that there’s no one left to call them out on their loose-running morality issues.
What else?
You know, this may very well be the greatest Litmus test in the whole of testing things that aren’t what they purport to be. I sense a great deal of finger waggling, post Rapture, with some, “Ahhhhhh, I knew you weren’t a Christian!” in for good measure. Playground rules apply. Those shamed are cast into the Pit of the Unwanton Liars Who Used to Be Bullies But Are Now Just Stupid Dummy Butts.
Yeah, I’m liking this post-Rapture world.
I need to go stock up on cheese. Feel free to do the same. In the meantime, what did I forget?
Here’s the latest in The Bookstore series. This one is called French Stuff is Hot, and is a step further in the evolution of the characters. I’m just happy that Stacy isn’t bashing Anointed. I don’t know what I’d do if she didn’t like it. Kill her I suppose, but even for a God that’s a pretty harsh reaction. Anyway, and stuff, Jericho doesn’t know French. He just knows it’s pretty hot.
My latest post on the Southern Author’s Blog, A Good Blog is Hard to Find:
“My biggest problem is my brother, Farley Drexel Hatcher. He’s two-and-a-half years old. Everybody calls him Fudge.”
That was all it took. Twenty words. Three sentences. And from that point on, I knew I wanted to have books in my life, and that someday I would write books that made people feel the way I felt at that moment. It wasn’t so much that Judy Blume had launched into the introduction of a character I would fall in love with, nor was it that I knew, right then and there, that no book would ever be as thoroughly awesome as Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing. Rather, it was that it took less than five seconds to accomplish it. It was that my life’s path could be so irrevocably altered in the span of a breath. I might have only been seven, but I knew that was a power I wanted to have. To have and to master. Jedi style.
This was my face when I read the line, as it happened. I began to pour through books, looking for more examples of this power to influence, this directional wind vane of literary might. I wanted to know if this was a gift that was solitary, handed but to the great mastery of Judy Blume, or if there was a community pool of creation that all authors could simply dip into when they were ready. When they reached that point in the book, wherever it might have been, where they could lean back in the chair, crack their knuckles, say, “This is about as good a spot as there can be!” and dip into that basin of beautiful phrasing, and monumental simplicity.
Turns out that doesn’t exist, just in case you were wondering. I looked. Ponce de Leon had nothing on that search.
Which meant, quite simply, that it was a matter of skill, rather than fortune. That was good. After all, I could learn skill. It’s much harder to learn fortune. Most often, you’re kind of left standing out in the open, your arms wide, waiting for something pleasant to hit you. Which is a funny thought, because I’ve never been hit by anything pleasantly. It usually hurts. Quite a lot. So, I snapped out a pencil, grabbed a notepad, threw away the broken bits of the pencil that didn’t care for the “fortunate” hit it took while waiting to be grabbed, gently picked up another pencil, and began writing. I wrote a story about a young boy, walking his way to a Little League baseball game. He was nervous, distracted, lost in thought about how the game would play out, and what his ultimate hand in it would be. He hoped his team won. It was the championship, after all. As luck would have it, though, he was so engrossed in thought, that he stepped in a hole, and twisted his ankle. It was tragic. It was catastrophic. It likely meant he would have to sit the game out, if he could even make it to the field. Somehow, our young hero found the strength to hobble his way, and then the courage to take the field late in the game, when his team needed a hero. He got the hit that won the game. All was well. My pencil, and I, were very happy with what we had created. I was a writer.
Of course, it didn’t have a Fudg-errific line, or series of lines, but it was mine. It was breathtaking. It was, well, it was horrible mostly, but it was the beginning of a great career, I was sure of it.
I discovered, some time later, that not only can this power be utilized in the story, but it can also kick you in the seat of the pants as soon as you open the book. Kate DiCamillio demonstrated this, as well as any writer can, in her book, Because of Winn Dixie. Behold:
“My name is India Opal Buloni, and last summer, my daddy, the preacher, sent me to the store for a box of macaroni-and-cheese, some white rice, and two tomatoes, and I came back with a dog.”
It was this opening that educated me fully on the power, and importance, of an opening sentence. In the beginning, just wasn’t going to cut it anymore. Hence, when the day finally arrived that some crazy person boldly decided to pay actual money to put my work into print, they did so even after I threw everything I had into my first sentence, and managed, in that moment, to completely miss the point. Instead I re-created the opening line of a rather old joke.
“When the Anti-Christ and Satan entered the bar, nobody took notice.”
That was it. There it was. My Fudgey Winn Dixie moment. It wasn’t horrible. But it wasn’t Judy Blume. It wasn’t anywhere in the pool of really cool things that authors write when their brains are on fire. It was…good, but not necessarily great. So, I kept at it. I keep at it still, I should say. And I continue to tell myself that I can do this. I can write that memorable, life-altering line. I can change lives with twenty words, and five seconds.
Or I could try stand-up.
You should always keep your options open. Just don’t stand out in the middle of everything and wait for them to hit you. That hurts.