As we are talking about my recent works… here I am together with a few big shots.

An English-language edition is also in the works, and of course I’ll let you know when it comes out.
Oh, yes – the cover is for my story.
As we are talking about my recent works… here I am together with a few big shots.

An English-language edition is also in the works, and of course I’ll let you know when it comes out.
Oh, yes – the cover is for my story.
And after the cover, the book itself…
The Princess Himiko is a small flying ship belonging to the fledgling Iezo Republic, cruising the skies in its maiden voyage.
But what the men and the women of the Himiko are about to discover hidden in the stormy sky above the Caucasus, will change the world forever.A story of exploration and science gone mad in the world of Hope & Glory.
I found myself another time-waster.
And you ladies and gentlemen out there might help me.
Let me explain – and to do so we’ll have to take a tour of my library.
Now, you all know I am a lover of historical fiction and historical non fiction – non-fiction-wise I love the history of Asia, of the British Empire, of Rome and the Mediterranean, too.
I have a very soft spot for Elizabeth Tudor and her age.
In this category I bundle also old travelers’ tales and the odd collections of National Geographic articles.

I’ve got tons of books on the subject, and I plan to get more – what’s life, after all, but the accumulation of books? Continue reading →
In four days I have to deliver a 15.000 words of hard-hitting police procedural, and I am currently at 5000 words. The story, that is perfectly outlined and with all the characters and the set-pieces in place, just won’t write itself.
But something happened this afternoon.
When I am completely stuck – just as I was stuck this afternoon – I go for a walk.
One of the perks of living in the countryside is you can take long walks in the middle of nothing – no noise, no people, no distractions.
Only the hills and, these days, the autumn colors.
It can be quite beautiful – autiumn is probably the best season hereabouts.
And I was walking when I hit upon a solution.
It took less than ten minutes: I’ll have to kill the stripper.
Now, this is a sad business, because I love flawed female characters, and racy, sexy, strong-willed women that happen to be walking on the wildside usually trigger my affection.
But there is no doubt – I just have to look at the outline, and I can see that, as soon as you kill the stripper, every piece moves into the right position and connects neatly with the others, and the end result is a solid story.

So I did it.
I came home from my walk and I wrote the scene in which the stripper is killed.
700 words.
Bingo.
The story now makes complete sense – which is very important for a mystery story.
In the next three days, it will be just a matter of mechanically typing the rest of the story.
I’ll meet the deadline, and I am sure my publisher will be pleased with the overall results.
If only had there been another way…
A big drawback of writing lots of different stuff on a very tight schedule is, sometimes your subconscious (or whatever it is) gives you a field day.
Or night.
This is the reason why, last night, I spent a few hours tossing and turning in my bed, my mind overloaded with scenes from two stories I am writing (story n°1) and revising (story n° 2).

My imagination gave me a roller coaster ride between a small town in the Bible Belt and a South-American plateau infested with dinosaurs.
You can imagine the effects.
I emerged bleary-eyed and impossibly grumpy at 7 a.m., to the sound of someone shooting a shotgun – has the hunting season began already, or is just someone warming up? I don’t know. Continue reading →
Yesterday I suggested to a friend an old book that was one of the most fun, intelligent reads I chanced upon back in… ah, must have been 1991 or 1992.
Turns out the book is still available and quite cheap on Amazon – it’s called Journeys to the Underworld and was written by British poet Fiona Pitt-Kethley.
It also happens to be somewhat on topic here on Karavansara, being both a travel book and a book about ancient magic in the Mediterranean basin. Continue reading →