Sunday 29 September 2013

Apples, Damsons and Paperbacks!


Hi, that’s if there’s anyone left to wave to. Been away from here for months and for the past six, the beginnings of my third book have chucked out everything else remotely to do with writing. Anyway, winter’s hovering over the old house; autumn’s already here, but so far, tentative. Not like last year, all wind and blustery rain; fingers crossed for our Indian summer to keep on going. Time left for me to put the garden to bed, cut the grass one last time and oil my chainsaw ready for logging time.
From my study window and without dripping out too many superlatives, the forests and hills are all dressed up in golds, russets and red berries. Our damson trees are overloaded and so is my belly. Hide underneath and reach up like a monkey; every time a damson, every day a belly-ache until they’re finished. Have apples too – open the side gate and it’s a race to see who gets there first. Jones is little and quick as a rat up a drain pipe, hits the tree at a full run and like some furry ground-to-fruit missile, bombs through the lower branches. Hardly ever misses. Holly and Star thunder up neck and neck; Holly watches and rumbles out instructions to her brother who has finessed the art of apple snatching. Always takes two; one for himself and one for his sister – leaves us the top ones, but only because the greedy sod can’t reach.
Enough rambling.  Re my books... just let loose the paperback version of Sons of Africa on Amazon. Cover’s stunning and the page colour, we decided on cream – easy on the eyes. Sincerely hope it sells as well as its eBook siblings; got to be more to life than living on damsons and doggy apples. You all take care and I promise to blog more. Going downstairs for a bacon butty; no damsons – ever again.
Talk soon.                        

Sunday 23 June 2013

Letting Go Ain’t Easy!

At last! Empress Gold is finished – done and dusted, uploaded and already I miss her. She’s on her own, out there on the internet jostling for recognition and there’s no way back. I pretend it doesn’t bother me, but it does. Just a book I tell myself; one amongst Amazon’s millions, fighting, hopefully upwards, through the Kindle rankings. I guess that’s why writers don’t stop writing... We can’t let go.

I’ve started book number three and feel better already – going back in time to the eighteen hundreds, a pre Sons of Africa standalone (perhaps); some thirty pages in and enjoying the excitement. Delving into untold happenings and hardships has really got my heart pounding. The title is set, but as yet, I cannot tell you what it is. A tale of epic proportions, one which I hope will sit comfortably amongst the colonial skulduggeries of Africa’s great adventure stories. Got to stop, old Africa’s crooking her finger and demands that I follow. Hope you all stay with me.

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Sunday 31 March 2013

A Couple of Short Extracts from Empress Gold

Hi - Empress Gold now in final stages ( hooray!), so here are a couple of short, non-spoiler excerpts. Will keep you posted - thanks for your patience.
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'Friday. They want you out.’
‘Who the hell are you? What are you talking about?’
‘Comrade Pasviri will be with them. Prepare yourself.’ The phone went dead.
Lee stood up from his desk, his mind raced, trying to tie the voice to one of a hundred faces and while filtering through the possibilities he projected his anger beyond the office window.
‘Bastards,’ he cursed, ‘thieving, bloody bastards.’ Hoax or otherwise, like a mental leech the caller’s voice had already worked its teeth beneath his skin.
Twenty-plus years had come and gone since the death of his father, from then on he had run the Empress Deep on his own. Pedal your own bicycle his old man always insisted. Lee frowned sharply and the crow’s feet at his temples puckered with annoyance. He was forty-seven, most men would have already slipped sedately into middle age, but still his stomach was iron-flat and his resolve was that of a rebellious thirty year old.
A dark foreboding sky hung above the Empress Deep. A mating pair of Martial eagles soared in close to the cloud’s edge. The late shift had assembled at the shaft head, one by one the miners stepped inside the conveyance – then the banksman drew down the steel door and for the umpteenth time Lee heard the shrill ring of the shaft signal bell and watched the metal cage with its thirty men drop like a stone to the dark throat of the mine. Reluctantly, he brought his anger under control and picked up the phone  - he dialled an outside number...
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Second Extract:
...Roberto held the Cessna’s image within the narrow eyelet of the launcher’s sights and he marvelled at the pilot’s stupidity. With the aircraft less than a mile out from the clearing, he fully depressed the trigger on the grip stock to uncage the missile’s seeker electronics. The missile’s infrared tracking sensor picked up the aircraft’s heat emissions and illuminated the launcher’s red ‘locked-on’ light. An audible buzzer sounded and Roberto applied slight lead to the oncoming target.
Within that next brief moment, the missile’s onboard power supply ignited the throw-out motor and with a thrust speed of over 30 metres per second drove the Strela-2 clear of its launcher. Both the forward steering guidance and four, rear mounted stabilizing fins unfolded as the missile left the tube. At five metres out, the rocket’s sustainer motor activated and accelerated the missile to its maximum speed of 430 metres per second. Tethered by its thread of silver smoke the missile lifted phoenix-like above the lagoon, the rumble of its motor dulled by distance and the drone of the approaching aircraft; the harrier for the goose – the falcon for the dove.
Enraptured by his sole possession of an open sky, the pilot again banked steeply, then at a lower altitude he levelled out and dipped the Cessna’s wings, first to port and then alternately to starboard. The act itself was inflammatory, another vindictive show of the pilot’s growing bravado. He was the conqueror, the victorious hunter-killer pouring scorn upon his aggressors. Comrade Pasviri would reward him personally for his skill as a reconnaissance pilot. From his port-side window the pilot laughed aloud at the confusion being acted out far below him. It was then that he saw the missile and the laughter died in his throat.
With realignment ability of nine degrees per second, the Strela’s AM tracking sensor stayed locked on to a powerful source of black heat growling from the aircraft’s twin exhaust ports. In a vain attempt to avoid destruction, the pilot rammed the yoke fully forward, forcing the aircraft into a steep dive. That loss of control drained his courage and left him floundering; he had lost sight of the Strela, the roles had been reversed. He was now the prey; the claustrophobic child trapped inside some dark room and he screamed out loud, gripped by insurmountable panic.
The missile wobbled in flight as its on-board seeker momentarily lost that powerful central eye of infrared radiation. However, quickly it made minute alterations to the missile’s angle rate tracking system. From beneath, it found the Cessna’s downward flight path; as the Peregrine falcon might flush its prey from the sheer sides of some Welsh mountain, so did the Strela rise from below in deadly pursuit of its quarry.
It struck the Cessna’s fuselage at its lowest point, amidships of the aircraft’s exhaust outlets – detonating the fragmentation warhead just a metre forward from the pilot’s feet.
Most of the blast energy was absorbed by the solid mass of the Cessna’s engine, but to the rear of its mountings the flimsy metal bulkhead had been ripped through. Fanned by rushing wind, acrid smoke from burning oil and avgas forced its way inside the cockpit.
Flung against his harness by the explosion, the pilot was left confused and disorientated, then the violent shuddering of his stricken aircraft and the ingress of terrible heat snapped him back to full awareness.
Where once his legs had operated the steerage pedals, now, through a ragged hole in the floor a furnace roared where his feet had been – it was then, like starving wolves to the stumps of both his legs did that gnawing pain engulf him...
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Tuesday 1 January 2013

New Year, Great Aspirations and a New Book!


Firstly, happy New Year to one and all! If you’re anything like me, your midriff will still be in a sorry state of calorie overspill. Don’t think I have ever eaten so much, though woe is me, never could I resist pleasurably produced, good old-fashioned Christmas fare. End of. No more. Not for another twelve months. I promise. At least I think so. Well, maybe…
 
 
Secondly, my sincere apologies for lack of blog content, it’s been a tough few months finishing off my second book; Empress Gold. My editor and proof-reader is halfway through and the finished article should be up and running on Amazon Kindle, Kobo and hopefully, Apple iBook by the end of April, so lots to look forward to. Have stuck an excerpt on here for you; more of a thriller/adventure novel, some of the characters you will recognise from Sons of Africa. It sort of follows on, but will definitely work as a standalone. Anyway, read the excerpt and have a gander at the superb cover artwork. My graphic design expert, Lon Chan has done me proud: a man of masterly touch and great imagination.
 
 
My best for 2013 and your occasional popping in to read my ramblings will be much looked forward to.  I value your interest; would be kind of lost without you.
 
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Excerpt from Empress Gold:
 ... Again, his loathing for what Pasviri stood for threatened to spill out. He was losing control of the Deep. Everything his family had built up was being torn apart; chopped up and flung to the Party elite for them to squabble over.
‘What about recompense? Financial compensation for lost interests.’
‘You’re alive, Mister Goddard.’ Pasviri’s eyes narrowed. ‘In our new Zimbabwe, most men would regard that fact as recompense enough.’ He nodded to his entourage. ‘Leave us. I will join you shortly.’
In the quiet, two men, both of different origins stood just metres apart. Had it been a hundred years previous, rather than the surroundings of a plush office there would have been thick forest and the discomfort of cold guti rain to contend with. Their dress, as decreed by historical circumstance would have been for Pasviri, fashioned from the skins of jackal and leopard and for Lee, a uniform of roughly woven calico, topped with slouch hat; across his chest would hang a soldier’s bandoliers, loaded with British South Africa Company’s, .44 calibre, Boxer-Henry ammunition.

 ‘In our grandfathers’ day,’ said Pasviri, ‘forgive me for quoting the Bible, but kaffirs, as we were referred to were tolerated only under sufferance, the proverbial hewers of wood and carriers of water.’ He took his time lighting another cigarette. ‘Not any more, comrade. Along with your infamous Mister Rhodes, the heady days of white supremacy are well and truly buried – forever.’

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