Karavansara

East of Constantinople, West of Shanghai


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Asteria in the Court of Minos

I know you guys are eager to learn what happened yesterday in Nizza, when I crossed typewriters with my friend Fabrizio Borgio for four hours of intense fiction writing.
And I’ll tell you, but not right now.

Right now, I am happy to announce that the first episode in the resurrected series The Adventures of Asteria is out and about, finally in English. You can buy it right now on Gumroad (epub, pdf, mobi) and it will be up on Amazon in a few days1.

asteria 1 eng

Asteria in the Court of Minos pits the gray-haired amazon against the king of Crete, and his sinister counselor, the scientist-magus Aischyuras.
Danger.
Intrigue.
Violence.
Minotaurs.
The Serpent Cult.
Giant robots.

Inspired by the old peplums and sword & sandal movies that were Italy’s own brand of fantasy film-making in the ’50s and ’60s, the Asteria stories play with time and space and historical accuracy, and often end with a big explosion.
I hope you’ll enjoy them.

All of Asteria’s adventures are stand-alone, novelette-length stories, and can be read and enjoyed in any order.

Next week…

Asteria in the Cour of the Great Khan

ADDENDUM: Amazon was faster than ever, and in about six hours made the ebook available. You can get it HERE

 


  1. my patrons have already received their free copy or their discounted copy, depending on their level of pledge. It’s good to be my patrons (or so they say). 


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Typewriter

So this is the day – in a few hours, as the thermometer reached 94°F, I’ll sit in front of a local bookstore with my mother’s typewriter and spend four hours (more or less) writing a story, based on prompts randomly picked from a bowl, where readers have put them.
I will not be alone, because Fabrizio Borgio will be with me. We even made the local news.

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What were we thinking when we proposed this?
Four hours for a story?
Using mechanical typewriters?
On the hottest afternoon of the year?

But we’ll make it. Continue reading


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Stained fingers and ideas backup

My fingers are stained black and red. I have just fitted the new ribbon in my mother’s old Lettera 35 – tomorrow afternoon, together with my friend Fabrizio Borgio, we’ll challenge the heat and the fishbowl-grade humidity doing our Burning Typewriters challenge, and we’ll write a story each, in public, in Nizza Monferrato.
I hope someone will take pictures.

And I’m not kidding about the heat – here’s the forecast…

Screenshot from 2018-08-03 12-27-30

Meanwhile, a story proposal I mailed about four weeks ago got a positive response, so I am re-writing/revising the story.
Which leads to an important suggestions for writers: talk about your plot ideas with your family. Continue reading


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John D. MacDonald in Hell

JDMdeskOne of the writers I like the most, and one from whom I learned a lot (or tried to) is John D. MacDonald. I’ve been a fan of his Travis McGee stories for ages.
So you can imagine what happened in my brain when I chanced upon an open call for a very short story for a small publishing house that had two requirements:

  1. A famous writer
  2. His experiences in the afterlife

And so today I skipped lunch and I hammered out a 1500-words story called The Man with the Red-Hot Typewriter.
In which John D. MacDonald finds himself in the Chinese hell. That it’s not that different from Travis McGee’s Florida: hot, damp, and the cops are crooked.

I hope they like it enough to buy it.
I’ve just sent it off, and now it’s just a matter of sitting and waiting.
That, my friends, is hell.


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Asteria is really back, and needs your help

asteria baseAsteria in the court of the Sun King is finished, and I am revising the text and deciding the final tweaks.
I am also uncertain, at this point, about the format of the publication: a single volume collecting the three novellas, or a new novella every week for this month of August?
Any suggestion is welcome.

And I mention one novella per week, throughout the month, because as I was closing Sun King, I fell back to the habit of closing the story with a hook for the next adventure. And it goes like this… Continue reading


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Guest Post: Different Approaches to Deal with Writer’s Block as a Freelancer Writer

[A guest post from my friend Veselina Dzhingarova, on a pretty popular topic. Isn’t it great when we have friends that can provide us with posts while we are busy writing? Enjoy!]

There’s a healthy debate about the merits of writer’s block and whether it even exists. Writer Jerrold Mundis once offered a course teaching freelance writers and novelists how to avoid getting blocked and then how to get unblocked if they did. Indeed, he wrote a book on the topic even though he himself doesn’t believe in the concept of writer’s block. However, when you have it, you don’t doubt that it’s real!

image typewriter

Royalty Free Photo

If you’re stuck in this predicament, then here are a several approaches to try to get out of this frustrating state.

Change Your Setting

One of the best ways to get out of your head and potentially end the inability to write is to take a vacation. Perhaps visit one of the Minnesota resorts which offer a comfortable setting and a swimming pool to relax in giving you time to read quietly or get lost in your thoughts. If you’ve been suffering from an inability to get anything down on paper or via a Word processor, then you may have stopped reading too. Being away, you can safely let your guard down to enjoy other peoples’ writing which you might find inspiring.

The Park Rapids Lake area is popular with locals and visitors from other states who enjoy the biking paths, riding over uneven terrain on an ATV, and the lake access throughout Minnesota. The Itasca State Park with the impressive Mississippi River nearby offers plenty to see and do; it’s considered the best state park in Minnesota and not to be missed. Lose yourself to find yourself once again!

Remove the Mental Obstacles

When you’re trying to write a novel or an impressive article for a national magazine, fear can paralyze you. The thought of writing a 4,000-word piece for a magazine’s editor-in-chief or an 100,000+ word fantasy novel is sometimes too much to get your head around. If you’re not careful, not starting can create enough inertia to paralyze you into a fixed state.

If this is your type of writer’s block, then the best way to handle it is to remove the mental obstacles. Forget about the length of the article or the book. Instead, break it down into sections (or chapters) and then into mini-sections. You can even make bullet points for each section or paragraph. Once this is done and you’ve reviewed it to ensure it’s a satisfactory plan, you can then mentally prepare to write the first small part of it.

When you’re thinking only about completing that section by following the bullet points you’ve already written down, you’re preventing fear from rising up and stopping your actions.

Try Your Hand at Freewriting

Freewriting is another way to get out of writer’s block. Think of this as an exercise just to get yourself to start writing again. It doesn’t really matter what you write, but the process of getting the creative writing juices flowing helps you when you wish to return to your own projects or those of your clients.

Just choose a strong emotion, a story theme, or a place. Sit down and write something about them. It can be anything. The quality doesn’t need to be great and no one is going to see it. When you’re free to write what you like with zero pressure or expectations, it can remove blockages that were holding you back. Make sure you have a quiet place to work that doesn’t have any distractions and if you prefer some background music, then select a piece you like to soothe your anxieties away.

Ultimately, getting out of writer’s block is as much a mental game as anything else. If you’ve suffered from it before and you developed techniques that sometimes helped you escape it, then give them another try. Otherwise, the ideas shared above might solve the problem for you too.