Newsletter -1

DrakeNews #-1 September 2024

Even after 9 months it is difficult not to imagine that Dave is outside downstairs on the lower deck with his books and computer. If he were writing this newsletter he would probably report how Hurricane Debbie brought enough rain to fill our pond, which has a respectable frog population. He would probably also mention the number of hummingbirds that have found the feeders this year.

He would also happily report that Audible renewed contracts for 35 titles and Baen still has most of his books available in print. Other publishing news this year is “The Complete John the Balladeer” in a very nice two volume edition from Haffner Press. These are the “Silver” John stories by Manly Wade Wellman.

It is still a bit of a shock to feel responsible for Dave’s literary estate and also Manly’s. The University of Iowa will be accepting some of Dave’s manuscripts and correspondence for the Archive that had been started a number of years ago. Manly’s papers are archived at Brown University.

There was no meteor; Dave died quietly in his sleep December 10, 2023. The family and a small number of friends will be gathering September 22 for a Celebration of Life. This is the Sunday closest to his birthday when he would have invited his friends to celebrate with a pig picking. Dave’s ashes will be scattered as he wished under the oak tree near where Jim Baen’s ashes were scattered in 2006. He often said he never wished to leave this place.

We all miss him. We thank everyone who remembers him and enjoys the many books and stories he has written.

As he would say, “Ride easy!”

All best,
Jo Drake
PO Box 904
Chapel Hill NC 27514

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Newsletter #137

DrakeNews #137 November 2023

Dear people,

The long view: covid and my series of mini-strokes have caused me to revisit items from my past.  For example, the Library of America recently reprinted crime novels of the fifties. Some of them were books or authors I’d read at the time.

In addition, I noticed that at my recent 78th birthday dinner an awful lot of those present have been friends for forty years. It is significant that I don’t change a lot over the years. I don’t claim that as a virtue, though I feel it is one. I have a long memory. This certainly isn’t a virtue when somebody else remembers another way and I refuse to change my belief. Sometimes it’s clearly a good thing though, being able to remember events in the army. Not so much because they gave me a career, not so much because of specific incidents as by giving me the feel of a war zone. That’s really different from normal life.

In the ’80s we as a family watched Moonlighting on TV and I thought now I would like to stream old episodes. It turned out that the episodes weren’t available for streaming. A few days ago, Jonathan told us that Moonlighting is available now. The change may have something to do with Harvey Weinstein’s legal problems. We’ve started watching it again. It is witty and fast- moving, just as I recalled.

–Dave Drake

Please use the contact form to send email to Dave.

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Newsletter #136

DrakeNews #136 October 2023


I just turned 78 (September 24). I used to have a big pig-picking at our house in the country, but Covid made a large gathering a bad idea. So, for several years I took family and friends to a restaurant I like. I did that again this year and had a great time with people who got along with each other.


I wore a Blackhorse shirt, nothing fancy, but it’s a long time since you could qualify for one and I did back in 1970.


But that does bring up a good point. Can you write military sf if you never served? Of course you can. People will be able to tell the difference, though. I wouldn’t have written about the military if I hadn’t been there. You can learn a lot of things by study, but you can’t get the feel that way.

–David Drake

Please use the contact form to send email to Dave.

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Newsletter #135

Dear people,

I don’t go to many movies in theaters, but recently I saw Oppenheimer and Barbie and I found both excellent. They both address major issues: nuclear weapons and gender equality respectively, but the films are about people.

The characters in Oppenheimer developed concepts I’d been reading about in sf for many  years. It isn’t a heavy movie. There’re no blocks of math to wade through but it does get across the fact that the people who built the bomb were people first. As a result of the movie, I’m reading the book it was based on– American Prometheus. It’s a fine job.

The film rightly emphasizes that the scientists involved were concerned about beating the Nazis to the bomb at a time most Americans wanted to see America take vengeance on Japan for Pearl Harbor. But Germany was a scientifically advanced country that could have built a bomb before we did. Japan was not. The biggest handicap the Germans had was that they’d expelled their Jews, which meant most of the theoretical physicists in Europe. The decision to use it on the Japanese was simply because the Germans had already surrendered while the Japanese were saying that they were going to fight to the end and take subject people with them as they had done on Okinawa.

Even after Hirohito had surrendered, it was by no means certain that the Japanese peoplewould accept the decision. The US immediately landed a company of the 22nd Marines without ammo in their weapons at Yokohama where they watched the formal surrender a week later. They had just watched the Japanese murdering the Okinawan natives, so they knew whatthe risk was. But they were Marine riflemen and taking the risk to save a million of their buddies.

One of those Marines was Ed Livingston who became my friend. The country is better for men like Ed.

Try to make the world better yourselves.

Please use the contact form to send email to Dave.

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Newsletter #134

 DrakeNews #134 August 4, 2023

Dear People:

One of the things a father is likely to think about is what field of work should my child go into? My answer was ‘whatever he pleases.’ I didn’t advise my son Jonathan. If he had obvious mathematical ability, I’d probably have said IT. But the only thing he seemed interested in was athletics which I knew nothing about and didn’t find interesting. When he told me he wanted a degree in sports medicine and wanted to stay in school another year to get education courses, I said I’d pay for it but I wasn’t thrilled that he hadn’t thought of this sooner.

So, he got his degree and a job teaching physical education to kindergartners. He liked teaching, but he and the janitor were the only males on the faculty. This got old pretty quickly and he quit to become a freelance personal trainer. I thought this was a very bad idea but the gym he was working at pretty quickly hired him as manager. Another gym in town was rumored to be getting a franchise as a Gold’s Gym. Jonathan researched what it would take to bring the place he was working at up to Gold’s standards. He came up with an answer that the owners thought was doable. They went out to Venice beach where Jonathan met with the guy in charge of franchising for Gold’s and got the franchise. After they completed the improvements, Jonathan was manager of a Gold’s Gym. When the owners divorced, he was out of a job again.

He volunteered for a friend repairing computers and then got a fulltime job testing them with my friend. It was always a good bet for someone with that aptitude. He is working in the field now. Red Hat– another firm in the area–recently sold for 238 billion dollars which means quite a payout for somebody. Jonathan isn’t expecting anything like that in the future–but he’s made out well through many changes and will probably do well the next time also. Sports medicine wasn’t a great field for him but learning to deal with life for himself was.

Also, he’s one of the strongest men you’re ever going to meet.

Dave Drake
Chatham County, NC

Please use the contact form to send email to Dave

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Newsletter #133

Dear People,

In the 1960s when I was just starting to write fiction, I was drawn to ancient history as a subject. I liked ancient history and knew nothing about the writing business, but it struck me at once the modern writers in the fantasy genre, particularly Thomas Burnett Swann, were gay (or in my parlance of the time) queer. While teaching bible school in Cincinnati, I found and read a novel by Bryher and was pleased to find that the author was not openly homosexual. (Maybe not but Bryher was gay all her life.)

I did begin writing stories set in the ancient world. I switched to modern settings because ancient settings didn’t have a market in short stories. I switched to military sf because the setting was as exotic to civilians as the third century AD. Roman empire. These short stories worked, and therefore I wrote no more work set in the ancient world. When I decided I was a fulltime writer, I needed to make a living off novels. That required me write a novel, so I started to do so. I didn’t try to use an ancient setting but rather set one in 1692 and studied up on India in 1692. Jim got me to write book length sf for him at Ace before I tried to market the novel.

I therefore set no more stories in the ancient world. I did use an Indian setting for some of the Belisarius series. The development of that series was mostly by Eric Flint, however.

The ancient world fascinated me though. Even though I didn’t write historicals set then, I did use events of ancient history as models for events in the far future. This made me a good deal of money, but it didn’t have the wonder and softness that I’d found and loved in the books I’d been reading in the ’60s.

One more thing.

I have ridden a motorcycle since 1972, basically since back I came back to the world and decided I didn’t want to kill somebody unless I meant to. I was a bad driver. But I was unlikely to kill anybody else on a bike. Giving motorcycles up was very difficult for me. I couldn’t ride one safely anymore. That’s the thing with my problem (not Parkinson’s but rather a series of ministrokes): it isn’t going to get better.

I thought about selling the bikes. Then I realized I didn’t need the hassle or the money, so I just gave them to my friend Dave. He’s a biker and had been thinking about getting a small one for knocking around town. He was glad to get mine.

Because I socked it away in stocks when I was making it, I don’t have to work anymore. Now that’s good, but I’d surely like to go on writing. Still, being in comfortable circumstances allows me to do favors for friends without worrying about where the next meal is coming from. I don’t know of a better use for extra money than helping a friend.

I’m not happy about life but I’m getting on with it and hope others are doing the same.

Dave Drake

Please use the contact form to send email to Dave

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Newsletter #132

DrakeNews #132  May 24, 2023

Dear People,

A couple of things happened to me around 1970 that changed my future in major ways. I was drafted in 1970 and sent to Nam. I hadn’t expected that. I was in the middle of Duke law school and had a deferment while in school. But Mr. Johnson’s lack of any plan for ending the war and Mr. McNamara’s series of bad plans that extended it led to the cancellation of most deferments, including mine. I didn’t get any physical harm in the army but it sure messed me up mentally. Then, after I got home, I fathered a son (Jonathan).

I didn’t spend a lot of time or thought on Jonathan and I didn’t think he got much from me but an education. Certainly, his athletics were no doing of mine. I didn’t encourage him to read SF and fantasy though that was what I read. I certainly didn’t try to make him become a writer. I just wanted him to be himself, not a copy of anybody else, certainly not me. As he approached high school graduation, he got recruiting letters from armed services. I was afraid he was going to accept one of them. I was proud of my military service, but it isn’t something I wanted and it wasn’t something I wanted for my son. It was an unpleasant experience. It messed up my head a good deal in 1968 when I got my draft notice and later when I was shipped to Vietnam in 1970. After I did return to the World, I became a father against my conscious desire. I was crazy as hell.

I thought both the army and fatherhood were unmitigated disasters. Nowadays, there’s a lot of personal good in both. They turned my life over in unexpected ways. I wasn’t injured in Nam and Cambodia. On the other hand, I came back a different and less good person than the guy who went over. I was very angry, sort of generally. Mostly at the army, at North Vietnam for defending itself, and a certain amount at Americans who were actively supporting the NVA for their own reasons (Jane Fonda among them) but mostly angry at myself at what I’d done and become in the army.

As for fatherhood, I basically didn’t trust myself. As it turned out, I didn’t kill anybody, including my son. I didn’t start drinking or doing drugs, So I kept all the control I had left and I started writing seriously. I had something real to write about now. This gave me a socially acceptable way to deal with my anger. I was very angry though.

I was pretty sure I wasn’t going to be an involved father (I hadn’t been an involved son either). Jonathan had an involved mother, however. My job was to provide a family income. Greatly to my surprise I was able to do that by my writing.

That really was a surprise, because I didn’t have money as a major goal of my writing. I wanted to put food on the table for my family. I didn’t get good reviews or much of any reviews, but I was making a living wage which was the important thing to me. Occasionally a review struck me as unfair, but I was a Nam vet and didn’t expect the world to be fair.

Tom Easton the Analog reviewer described me in public as a pornographer of violence and told me before a panel which he moderated that I was going to hate his printed review in Analog. In fact, I didn’t like it but Nam wasn’t a popular war and Easton wasn’t the only civilian to take his displeasure with the war out on the draftees who fought it.

Jonathan didn’t join the military, but he did become a practicing Christian. I was not because my mother had a very restrictive view of Christianity and I was afraid he’d go the same way.

He didn’t.

Jonathan is a delight to know. He is pleasant to everybody and respected by everybody at the gym. It struck me that he got to where he is the same way I had: doing the job in front of him as well as he could he could. He didn’t get any special breaks. He got a job with a friend of mine but had to do the work set him. My friend cultivates a cult of personality. Jonathan never bought into that. There would have been job benefits if he had but he didn’t think the tradeoff would be worthwhile any more than I had wanted to be an officer in the army. Jonathan has a stable marriage and a son to be proud of, as I am of him.

I wasn’t much of a father. But I raised a man, by God.

–Dave Drake

Please use the contact form to send email to Dave

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Newsletter #131

Dear People,

The pond has frogs, but nothing more exciting so far. That’s okay, and if it continues to hold water we’ll consider stocking fish.

I continue to train with Dave Colisanti who was Jonathan’s work-out partner thirty years ago. He continues to be Jonathan’s friend and has become mine also.

Dave was a high level weight-lifter, which meant using steroids. He blames this for the fact that he tends to be scattered now. A thoroughly nice person and extremely good at training. I used to think that that steroids made muscles grow faster; they just make you heal faster so you can train more. You’ve still got to do the work yourself.

It’s like a lot of things. Smart people tend to think there ought to be short cuts. Jim was sure he could lose weight without exercise and eating less. He was wrong. I listened to his repeated spiels on this or that wonder drug that would lead to health and long life with no work–and then ignored the recommendation. Occasionally Jim’s advice was actively harmful as with Seldane. More often they just struck me as something for nothing with unknown side effects as with the pill that made fat pass straight through without being absorbed so you couldn’t get fat if you took the pill before eating the fat meal. I told him that eating less kept me from getting fat, and that anything that interfered with digestion had to have wide-ranging effects. I didn’t hear any more about that one, but Jim’s ashes were scattered in our grove. I miss Jim a lot, but he didn’t always show good judgment.

I was very glad that Jonathan got his size and strength by normal exercise without trying shortcuts. Even if they worked without side-effects a picture demonstrates they aren’t necessary if you’re willing to put in the work.

I guess the same is true in a way about writing in any special field including military sf. Being smart and careful isn’t going to give you the feeling of what it’s like to be under fire.

I couldn’t with understanding write about running a company. I could read heavily about the subject but it wouldn’t convince somebody who really did it.

Best to all of you I hope you’re all doing better than I am.

–Dave Drake
Chatham county NC

Please use the contact form to send email to Dave

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Newsletter #130

Dear People,

We have a pond and also have redone the gravel drive after construction equipment drove over it. This has been a long run but we seem to have gotten somewhere. I joked with my trainer that as soon as I’m dead it’ll be broken up into half acre lots but that’s somebody else’s choice, but while I live I’ll have a pond. Maybe even migratory water fowl.

When we started the project years ago, we planned to have fish but the bottom didn’t hold water. I’m hoping that what we’ve got now will, but I’m not jinxing it by making assumptions.

That does make me think about what’s worth while. Writing well was important to me but writing as a vocation wasn’t. It became important after I came back from Nam and I needed writing to deal with my anger.

I am very proud to be a Nam vet but believe me I didn’t want the experience. I thought it was my duty as a citizen. I also think the war was very badly run in a military sense. There were guys who opposed the war for good moral or religious reasons. I had a good friend in high school who fled to Canada. I didn’t feel that way at the time. I just wanted to avoid having my life disrupted and maybe get killed. After I’d been there a while, I came to believe that the US involvement was a very bad thing for everyone involved, but I hadn’t cared enough to really learn about the situation before I got there.

I wouldn’t have become a writer if I weren’t a Nam vet. I’ve been asked if you can write military sf if you’ve never served. Of course you can, but I don’t know why you’d want to. John Scalzi was explicit that he thought there was a market. I suspect the same is true of other people. The result is rarely fully satisfactory as military sf. (It may sell fine and enhance the writer’s status (Mr. Scalzi became President of SFWA.)

The thing is, I had never had a dream of being a fulltime writer. I came back from Nam really screwed up and knew I was. I wanted to place stories. There was no market for historical fantasies, so I began writing military SF because that was another unususal background I knew well.

When I started writing seriously, military sf wasn’t a commercial subgenre. Joe Haldeman–writing at about the same time as I was–created it. I wrote it seriously to try to make sense of my experience. Maybe Joe did the same. If so Joe and I have good reasons to write military sf. The folks who do it for a paycheck don’t have a good reasons. They may be good writers–Kuttner is one of the field’s best–but as a general rule, I wish they wrote something else.

There’s an aspect to this that I hadn’t considered at the time: folks who want to write msf but don’t have personal experience to draw from have a moral right to do so and they may be very good writers, but somebody who’s been there will be able to tell the difference. I even know cases where a careful writer gets something right but folks in the field always got it wrong.

I’m reading a biography of J Edgar Hoover. It was well known in the underworld that Hoover was gay. This doesn’t bother me one way or another. I’m straight, but who somebody else screws is his own business. Hoover hit on his own staff though, and this does bother me. The difference in power makes this unfair even if it’s consensual. Friends of mine have hit on their staff so I know it happens, but it’s wrong and overspent a lot of time posing as a moral authority to America.

Don’t be full of yourselves, people, and be nice to other folks.

–Dave Drake

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Newsletter #129

DrakeNews #129 December 20, 2022

Seasonal Greetings 2022

Dear people,

Life hasn’t changed a lot for me personally since #128. I continue to be much less smart than I used to be. I can no longer hold a complete idea in my head. I don’t want to write crap, which turning out inferior stories would be in my opinion.

I haven’t managed to figure out how to get smarter, though I continue to take geneaire rebuilder. Maybe it helps.

Strength training definitely works.  I’m getting stronger though, I’m not what I ought to be. My balance is still off and I have to be driven by somebody else. My wife (and main driver) doesn’t think that matters, as I didn’t like driving anyway. It matters.

We had a quiet and very nice thanksgiving with old friends and walked around the 20 acre yard before dessert but Jonathan and family were in Norfolk with her family. We’ll see them another time.

Chicks in Tank Tops came out with a sequel to Airborne All the Way. The story is a  good

job but it’s very hard for me to write without being sure of my typing. My brain works well, but I no longer can hold a whole work in my head before I start working. It was and remains a considerable loss to me. I have enough money, but I liked to write.

Several years ago my wife told me she wanted a pond on the lower west end of the property and that our yard man could build it. I told her I knew nothing on the subject but if she would plan it I would pay for the construction.

This turned out to be a very bad idea. I should have refused unless she got it professionally planned first. We got a big pond but it didn’t hold water. Jo said it was “shit!” Recently we connected with a neighbor whose nephew is a contractor. He is now reworking the pond starting with clearing the saplings that had sprouted. He plans to rebuild it with a proper core. I still don’t know squat about pond design and construction, but it seems to be in good hands. I’ll hope.

Incidently I’m not complaining about the yard man. He worked hard for long hours, and dug a nice hole in the ground. He just didn’t know how to make it hold water

Have a great holiday people. It hasn’t been an easy year and I’ve lost friends, but people are really great and supportive in general

Be nice to other folks, people.

–Dave Drake

Please use the contact form to send email to Dave

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Newsletter #128

DrakeNews #128: October 14, 2022

Dear people,

I am now 77. I had a modest dinner party in a restaurant for family and a few old friends. Jonathan and his wife were present, also grandson Tristan, now a sophomore at ECU, and his girl friend. I now have a tee-shirt reading ECU grandad.

Tristan’s an athlete like Jonathan, only built for quickness rather than power. I’d say I was proud of both of them, only I didn’t have much to do with it. Click here for photo.

I got to thinking about success. I always figured that a writer could expect three material things from his work: money, readership and awards, I wanted enough money for a comfortable life and enough readers to sustain that income. I never cared about awards.

My friend Eric Flint wanted a fourth thing: fame. How different that is from the other three was driven home when his widow had to declare bankruptcy. Eric was a good writer and apparently (to me) successful. It turns out that it’s expensive to keep up the appearance of being successful–being famous, in other words. Eric spent more money on this than he earned, so he died famous but owing a lot of money.

I’d seen this before with Karl Wagner. In that case I’d been close enough to have seen Karl pissing away money–travelling frequently to the UK and buying Jack Daniels for his friends. As an imported liquor, Jack Daniels was extremely pricey in the UK while even in the US Karl had briefly switched to lower-priced George Dickel to save money. He decided he preferred Jack Daniels. He never made a serious attempt that I saw to stop drinking before it killed him because his image as a hard-drinking writer was more important to him than his life.

I didn’t see what Eric overspent his income on. But he also died broke, with a major reputation in the field which he sustained with loans.

There are other writers that do the same. They may be good writers and nice people, but their image is more important than their writing.

My writing was always been the main thing to me. That’s why I’ve retired from writing. I can no longer keep a whole work my  head, so I can no longer write to my satisfaction. I don’t want to turn out inferior stuff, and I’m not financially required to do so.

For now I’m signing off. Be well, people, and be as nice as you can to other folks.

Dave Drake
Chatham County, NC 27312

Please use the contact form to send email to Dave

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3 Drake Men at the Gym

Jonathan Dave and Tristan

Three Drake Men at the Gym October 2022: Jonathan, Dave & Tristan

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Newsletter #127

DrakeNews 127: August 2, 2022

Dear People,

A problem with getting old is that you’re increasingly likely to die. If you don’t die, you’re likely to lose old friends.

I’ve just lost two, most recently Eric Flint, whom I met in 1999. I had plotted a series for Jim Baen. The first one, the Raj Whitehall series, had been successful. Jim wanted a second one based directly on Count Belisarius (the model for Raj Whitehall). I plotted one.

Steve Stirling, the writer who’d developed the plots for Jim, had gotten crossways with him before starting Belisarius. Jim told me he’d found a guy to write the Belisarius books but he was a commie–a Trotskyite. I didn’t care about his politics–would he follow an outline? We talked on the phone and I learned the term was Trotskyist [not Trotskyite].

I was impressed and he started work. He sent me the first chunk. It was good but I told him to stop using passive voice. I forget his reason for thinking it was a good technique, but he didn’t argue–and he stopped doing it. In one of the later books, he started with a new scene which threw the pacing off and demanded a major change later on. I told him there wouldn’t have been a problem if he hadn’t added the opening scene.

Damned if he didn’t go back and delete about 20,000 words back to where he’d added the scene figuring that was the easiest way to solve the problem. Thais was remarkable self-abnegation.

At a later point I had the Indian villains of the series worshipping the demigod of the planet Mars. Eric called me and said he couldn’t find anything about the worship of that deity. I laughed and said I’d made it up because of my bad experience with a previous writer of Jim’s. Eric could and did do research.

We got along very well and I regret his death.


***

Another old friend died a couple weeks ago–Bobette Eckland–a woman whom I met shortly after I started working for the town of Chapel Hill. She’d just been hired by the new finance director who filled the slot with non-traditional hires. The previous agent–also non-traditional–had resigned because the setting drove her nuts.

Bobette could certainly do the work, but her personality struck some sparks from existing department heads. She was an educated Midwesterner (her previous husband had been a sociology professor). The heads were generally local men from rural background who were not pleased to be told by a small woman that she couldn’t do something because it wasn’t legal. In fairness to them, Bobette had a tongue.

One tried to get Bobette fired. The finance director enlisted my help in saving her job. We succeeded and things more or less settled down, but Bobette’s relationship with senior staff was never an easy one.

She was very proud of her fitness. At age 85 she could still hold a plank pose for five minutes. She was coming back after working out when she fainted walking to her front door. Her husband took her to the hospital where an MRI found a mass in a lung which turned out to be cancer. It had metastasized. They sent her home where in two days she died in her sleep.

She was a good lady and I’m sorry she’s gone

Hoping your lives are going well. It’s never a bad time to be nice to other people.

 –Dave Drake

Please use the contact form to send email to Dave

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Newsletter #126

Dear people

I’ve got mildly good news! I was looking up a book on amazon and ran into mention of a book in the Winston sf series from the ’50s: Danger: Dinosaurs. I had read and liked a number of books on the Winston list but not that one.

They were all YAs, mostly by new writers in the field. Sometimes by old pros who for one reason or another couldn’t turn in an adult work. Danger: Dinosaurs was by Sal Lombino who was at the time writing as Hunt Collins. He later changed his name to one of his mystery pen names, Ed McBain. He was very good.

Thinking about Danger: Dinosaurs, I remembered writing a YA after  I got back to the world in 1971. I had graduated from Duke law school. I took the bar view course but didn’t have a job, so I had a lot of time. I had written short stories and even sold two of them, but I wanted to write a novel–a YA because it was shorter than an adult novel and I thought the literary standards might be lower. I had brought a portable typewriter back from Nam. I got to work with it, typing on whatever scrap paper I could find.

I finished it but I had no idea of what to do with it then. There were two professional writers living nearby: Karl Wagner and Manly Wade Wellman. Karl was my age and had recently started writing himself whereas Manly had been selling fiction since the Twenties. I didn’t think I should bother Manly with something as trivial as my first novel, so I didn’t even bother to ask him to read it. (This was my assessment. In fact, Manly was a teacher and loved teaching.)

Anyway, I asked Karl to read it. He was extremely negative. Utterly dismissive. A bad idea, worse handled. I didn’t even bother typing up a clean copy to submit. I didn’t doubt that the book was bad or that Karl had given me an honest appraisal because I would have done that for somebody else.

I came to appreciate that Karl was very envious of me. In later years, there was something to envy, but not in 1972.

I decided to take another look at my novel draft if I could find it. At first I couldn’t, but my wife Jo dug through a file drawer and found the novel.

I’ve read it now. It has real problems but I had succeeded in my intention: to write a book which could fit in 1950’s juvenile SF line. Could it be rewritten for modern audiences? I’ll have to think.

We know a great deal more about dinosaurs now than we did in 1972 when I wrote the draft. Knowledge about dinosaurs has changed fast but society has changed even faster. The book was written with no reference to sex or drugs. That was believable with 17-year olds in the ’50s, at least with dorks like me, but it isn’t now.

Finding the draft made me feel positive for the first time in a long while. Even if I decide there’s nothing useful to be done with it. There’s a project I think I should be able to handle and I plan to try.

***

Still on the subject of life for an SF fan in the 50s:

My dad usually took his two-week annual vacation at the end of the year, pairing it with next year’s vacation into four weeks by car, generally into the west. In 1958/9 we did that.

On the way out we passed south of Wichita which was a major SAC base. We passed close enough to the base to see the parked B-47 jets. There was one B-52–the tail was too tall to fit into the hangars.

On the way home to Clinton, Iowa, we followed the same route through northern Missouri. Two lane roads through narrow valleys. Reception on the car radio was very bad, and finally dad shut off the radio entirely.

The sky overhead was crossed with very many contrails. This was before commercial jets became common, so we were seeing jet bombers.

I was an SF reader and had recently read Alas, Babylon about the long-feared nuclear war devastating the US. I realized as we drove though Missouri that the war had broken out. That explained the lack of radio reception and the sky full of bombers. I was terrified but said nothing to my parents or sister. There was nothing to talk about that would do any good. Within ten minutes dad found a radio station and there was nothing unusual about the news. I guess there had just been a SAC drill.

Boy, people generally, not just me, were sure worried about nuclear war back then. I don’t think Joe Biden is a great president, but in all the Ukraine crisis I’ve never feared we were as close to nuclear war as I did then–and as I would have been if Hilary Clinton were president. I was sure that the woman who got us into a war with Libya while she was Secretary of State would have responded forcibly to Putin.

One crazy macho world leader is more than enough.

***

Be peaceful to other folks, people. The Fifties weren’t a good time to live.

 –Dave Drake

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Newsletter #125

DrakeNews #125 for March 11, 2022

Dear people,

I’ve been taking Genaire ReBuilder for some while now. At this point I can endorse it.  In combination with working out on machines with my son Jonathan, I am in better shape than I was a year ago.

My balance is off and I’m being driven places rather than riding motorcycle. This disturbs me but it’s livable.

My brain is still shrunken though. I’m not writing. I don’t know how much is the condition and how much is me being a lot less smart than I was and 76 years old.

I’ve got some stories out though which makes me feel good. The odd one for ROBOSOLDIERS, odd because the editor wanted a story set in my own military occupational specialty (MOS). I was an interrogator. I couldn’t think of a believable way I could postulate a robot human enough to achieve empathy with a subject

I then decided to have robots do the necessary support work for the interrogation–the grunt work so to speak. This made both interrogator and subject completely human.

The story supposes that Mr. Trump won the 2016 election. I was glad he didn’t though my wife said “Trump’s a liar and you’re a liar, so I don’t see why you don’t support him?” I didn’t, however.

The story is a story not a political tract. If I had set it in first century AD Rome, a

reader would not assume I was making a reasoned judgment about the merits of Tiberius as emperor, nor should anyone assume my use of a more modern setting means I’m delivering my judgment on today’s politics.

A few years ago a stranger wanting me to collaborate on an alternate history novel sent an outline to my son’s address in Guilford county thirty miles away. The proposal postulated that the US in a crisis turns to the greatest leader available (Douglas Macarthur) who saves the day. I have a very low opinion of Macarthur as a strategist, so the wannabe’s attempt to find my home address through the tax rolls didn’t harm his chances of getting me to help him.

In the course of reading Astronomy magazine I saw mention of an 1888 book of popular astronomy by Garrett P Serviss. Serviss wrote other popular science works and some science fiction, including Edison’s Conquest of Mars. This was reprinted in 1947 by Carcosa House, put together by four fans. Karl really wanted to use Carcosa (not house) for our publishing venture so he contacted them (including Ted Dikty). They were all fine with our using the name.

That was my experience of being a publisher. The honor and status were important to Karl. Jim Groce (the third partner) and I didn’t lose more than we could afford. In all, I guess, a good thing to have done.

Go put a positive spin on whatever you’re doing.

–Dave Drake

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Newsletter #124

Dear People,

I’m not back to writing, but I thought I’d do another newsletter. Karen tells me she just meant for me to pause in the regularly scheduled newsletters, and Christmas seems a good time for an update specially since I was very slow getting a card image and then the finished cards didn’t arrive.

I still can’t concentrate and my typing is terrible. I’ve thought of using voice commands or dictating to a typist. (my wife was the first to volunteer). I didn’t go that way because the real problem is that I can’t think.

All my life I’ve been smart, but that’s no longer true to the same standards. I continue to take the Geneaire supplement and work out with my son, and the combination has physical deterioration on hold. I can’t tell you how much I regret being dull and unable to write; but I’ve got comfortable savings and no debts.

Also I’ve got great fans, some of whom have become friends. I’ve visited a swathe of the world with them. Some of the regular tourist sites like the Parthenon but others off trail like the Bovington tank museum. With the Knights I saw also the Kasbah in Algiers, and more recently traveled to Rome and Mycene. (They’ll come to the beach with us this year also. Good friends for a long time.)

Folks have really rallied round with my health problems There’s not a darned thing they can do, but I appreciate it.

Things seem to be settling down in this country after a rough year in a lot of fashions. I hope you and yours individually are doing well.

And go out and be nice to other people–even if you don’t agree with them. Maybe especially then.

All best
Dave Drake

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Newsletter #123 – the last one

DrakeNews #123, the last newsletter, November 17, 2021

Dear People,

Karen suggested I title this newsletter last, so I’m doing that. My health problems continue, whatever they are. I can’t concentrate enough to write a novel and I even had to give up my project with Ryan Asleben, (who couldn’t have been nicer).

I just couldn’t keep my texts straight. I’m still able to write stories and I think they’re pretty good. One on military robots is coming out in what’s now called Robosoldiers: Thank you for your Servos, edited by Stephen Lawson (Baen June 2022). The later story I did as a whim has been accepted for Weird world War IIIChina, edited by Sean Patrick Hazlett.

I can’t tell you how much I regret retiring. I’m okay for money and the anger I came back from Nam with has settled down to the point I’m no longer dangerous to other people, but I would certainly be happier if I were able to write.

Physically I’m doing all right, I continue to take Geneaire rebuilder pills. I don’t guarantee it helps, but I seem to be less unhappy. I continue to train at the gym with my son Jonathan. It’s a major positive for me to learn that Jonathan is a very good trainer. I never doubted that he was physically able to handle the job, but training requires people skills also. He taught himself those skills.

I am ticking along as best I can but without being able to write I don’t think there’s much to be said for me. I’m going to continue to try. I hope that most of you are doing better than I am. And regardless, go out and be nice to other people. That’s always good advice.

–Dave Drake

Note from Karen: There is a private Facebook page for Dave’s fans at https://www.facebook.com/groups/34097636315. Follow the instructions and the admins will let you in. Dave is not on Facebook, but sometimes we post comments from him. The contact form on the website still works also.

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Newsletter #122

DrakeNews #122 for September 2021

Dear People,

I had an MRI which seems to say I don’t have Parkinson’s. My brain however has shrunk, and there’s evidence of ministrokes of which I knew nothing. My sister tells me that our mom had TIAs in later life. These are often a warning of future massive strokes,  but in fact mom died of Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever. I will be careful of tick bites.

The situation disturbs me, but what it boils down to is that I’m mortal and 75.

At present I’m off the levadopa and taking a diet supplement that Greg Benford touts: Geneaire Rebuilder. I don’t know what or how it does, but I think I’m less scattered in the time I’ve been taking it.

I am also training with my son at the gym. I’m sure it’s good for my health but I’m not certain about specific benefits. I’m genuinely trying to keep my mind working. But I’m not getting any work done. I can’t find enthusiasm for getting down to work.

Part of the problem is that I never have privacy. I don’t mean that I’m frequently disturbed: I rarely am. But I always may be and can’t relax.

Will I be able to do more in the future? I hope so. I can’t expect my brain to regrow any time soon but Geneaire may be the magic pill I called it when I first heard about it.

There’s quite a lot of fuss about the  number of afghans who will be harmed by the US leaving the country. Women are the most obvious losers. They will be treated as afghan women have historically been treated by Afghan men. This does not meet western standards of proper behavior.

What should we (western countries) do about this? Invading and replacing officials with Afghan cultural values with those imbued with western values? That hasn’t worked out very well in the long run, has it? Twenty years wasn’t enough time to replace a culture developed over millennia.

Personally, I find abhorrent the practice of burning a widow alive on her husband’s funeral pyre. If a western country invades and stamps out the practice of suttee, however, this paternalism can only be justified by the belief that we know better than the locals do about how men should behave toward women and after all, to quote Hilaire Belloc ‘we the Maxim gun have got–and they have not.’

I was a lot more willing to accept changing other people’s culture by force before I went to Nam than since I’ve come back. Because it does require force and even if I personally think the result is good the means are likely to be pretty unpleasant.

British suppresssion of suttee saved the lives of a lot of Indian women–far more than were killed during the Amritsar massacre by Nepalese troops under British command because an Indian man had insulted a white woman. On the other hand, the suppression of suttee and other Indian customs for good western reasons leads to a culture in which it’s considered reasonable to issue untrained mercenaries from the hills with ammunition and and tell them to fire on a peaceful gathering of lowlanders. Even the British government later decided that wasn’t all right. But if you’re going to ignore local cultural norms which differ from western norms it’s hard to where to draw the line.  I heard Katherine Cramer say seriously that the US should object to the chinese government banning pro-democracy protests in china.

Dunno. I don’t want the Chinese government deciding what I should be allowed to think or say, and I don’t think we should decide what’s right for the Chinese to do either Mabe I’m not liberal enough.

Best wishes, people, remember that everybody else is having a tough time too.

–Dave Drake

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Newsletter #121

Drake News #121: July 6, 2021

Dear people,

Things have been rough for me for a while now and I’ve decided that the Parkinson’s has won. I’m unable to concentrate mentally and my typing has gone completely to hell. I continue to work on Ryan Alesen’s plot, and I did a little short story which the  editor of Weird World War 3, Sean Hazlett, says he loves but he didn’t have a commitment on this volume yet. I had a lot of fun researching it, but I’m not telling you  that I love it.

The Serpent, a novel in series with The Spark and The Storm, is due out today from Baen. The series, Time of Heroes, is my attempt to tell Arthurian romances in the form of far-future SF. The books are SF with a very fantasy feel.

I’ve decided I need to stop riding a motorcycle because of this Parkinson’s. I’m not concerned about having an accident. That could happen, but I don’t think I’m likely to hurt somebody else on a bike which was always my concern with driving.

I took a course on the Can-Am three wheeler. The instructors were quite nice about it, but they really didn’t think I should be riding a bike. This was a kick in the balls but they were being nice about it rather than shouting at me about what I needed to do for my own good. I do not want to start driving a car after not having driven since 1987. I’ve seen a lot of people who drove after they were no longer safe to do so. I don’t want to be one of them myself. I thought of getting a trike regardless of instructors’ opinion. A trike wouldn’t fall over (my concern) and wouldn’t hit most things hard enough to do real damage to them. I’m not strong enough to pick up even a small bike if it goes over.

I’d been considering suicide since the Parkinson’s became clear. I got far enough down that road that I seriously decided I didn’t want to do it. Helplessness was an unpleasant thought though.

In town there’d be public transit, but we’re way out in the country which I like. I made a deal with a local-ish friend to take me places a couple days a week (sort of like Uber). My wife will also take me around.

Things are okay and I’m trying to make the best of them. So far so good.

We’ve had another July4. When I was faced with that choice back in 1970, I wasn’t a bit happy about it, but I made the right decision anyway. The nation’s leaders blew it, but I didn’t.

There were a lot of things wrong in 1970 that were obvious even to a

WASP male like me, but it’s still right for a citizen to stand up for his country.

With that patriotic note, I hope all of you have a good life.

All best,
Dave Drake

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Newsletter #120

DrakeNews #120: May 11, 2021

Dear People,

Things are getting better! The catheter is out and I can pee normally. It took a while and I was doubtful to the end that shrinking my large prostate by embolization was going to work but it did at last. The whole business was beyond depressing and combined with everything else I really didn’t feel much hope.

We both have our vaccine shots with no side effects and can live normal lives. My wife continues to be home at most times. I had a plan to work anyway, but I wound up having a burst of medical appointments and didn’t really try it out. Since then I tried another experiment. I regularly get requests to collaborate with strangers. I regularly blow them off.

Recently however, I decided that because I wasn’t able to get anywhere with my own work I’d take a look at a plot by Ryan Aslesen. It was a good job. I have been at work modifying and expanding it. I’m feeling pleasure at working usefully again and a great deal of thanks to Mr Aslesen. I don’t know where this is going to go but I think we’ll actually have a book. (I told him I’d see what happened because I was by no means sure that I’d be able to work. If I could, he would pay me whatever  my work had been worth to him.) I’m happy with what I’m getting so far.

Sean Hazlett edited Weird World War III for Baen. I did a story that turned out to be way better than I’d expected. He’s pitching another series to Baen, and I would very much like to do another story for him but I need a story I want to write. When I did the first time I was really happy with the result.

The Serpent, the third book in my Time of Heroes, series is out as an e-arc from Baen. These novels have the feel of fantasies though I suppose they’re technically SF. Basically I’m using the Arthurian Cycle (the Matter of Britain) as an armature for the story. In this particular case the climax is closely similar to the romance of Yvain by Chretian of Tours.

I was interviewed recently on Writers Drinking Coffee. (I was actually drinking tea, but they only recorded audio anyway.) There was nothing earth shattering, but especially recently I really like matters being quiet.

I think I do want to say something about the recent spate of attacks on Asians. This is remarkably stupid. It seems to have gotten started with a fellow shooting a bunch of (mainly) women in the Atlanta area. They were Korean and the media clanged on that fact without  noticing the businesses targeted were massage parlors which happened to have Asian staffs. The shooter pretty quickly announced that he was a sex addict and the women he’d been hiring had been leading him into sin.

I said the business was remarkably stupid, even if you believe in sex addiction as a condition. I’ve known alcoholics, but none who thought they were justified in shooting up bars. The attacks on Asians have continued. Apparently Mr Trump made a point of referring to Covid-19 as the Chinese virus. That’s probably true; which makes it unusual for Mr Trump’s statements on the subject. It doesn’t make the attacks less stupid.

Don’t be stupid (or hostile) people. Work at making the world a better place

–Dave Drake

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What are you working on now?

updated May 11, 2021

What are you working on now?

I am working on a plot for/with Ryan Aslesen.

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Newsletter #119

DrakeNews 119: March 4, 2021

Dear People,

This will be different (and maybe more data than you want). It was certainly more than I wanted.

This has been  a very rough two months. I had my eyes tested for glasses. In the course of this I got eye drops, Apparently as a reaction to the eye drops, my urethra locked up.  After a bad night, my wife ran me over to the ER where I was catheterized and drained of something over a liter of urine, which is a lot on my build. I went to urology a week later to remove the catheter. I still couldn’t pee on my own, though, so I still have tubes in me till see the urologist proper later this week (the earliest option). Dunno exactly what that will mean, but the current situation is only borderline livable. The tubing frequently separates at one joint or another.

Apart from that we got a vaccine shot (and perhaps by the time you read this ) the second.

I haven’t gotten any work done. There hasn’t been any time I could be sure of privacy since lockdown occurred. I used to be able to plot in confused situations. I no longer can. The crunch with which I wrote To Clear Away the Shadows while I was still recovering from being hit by a car, plus the Parkinson’s diagnosis and now this catheter, have combined to rob me of flexibility.

Several times  (usually at 3 in the morning) I have decided that I will no longer try to write novels. I hope either the world or my mind changes for the better in the near future.

In 1977 we visited writer Ramsey Campbell and his wife Jennie in Liverpool. Every morning Ramsey went to an upper floor and sequestered himself from phone and Jennie to work for a fixed number of hours. He came down and lived normally at the end of the period.

A friend of ours spent a lot of time on Martha’s Vineyard and suggested a writing shed like that of historian David McCullough there. While McCullough is in the shed at the bottom of the garden he is at work. When he comes back to the main house he interacts with other people.

I rented an apartment for writing in my way into town back in 2001. Jo began caring for our grandson out of town and I didn’t renew the lease.

All of these are reasonable choices if rigidly adhered to by all parties in the house. At the moment we’re trying a rigid separation within the existing house. We’ll see how it works if we apply the course seriously.

Our cat died of old age and Jo didn’t want a replacement. Last week we were watching TV in the evening and a mouse nosed into the TV room and Jo decided we needed a cat. A friend who does rescues happened to come over in the morning, and we now have Kudzu, an active young cat, named for the weed patch where he’d been tossed in infancy. He’s settling in.

So, a lot of the recent past has seemed bleak but there’s hope. I hope there’s hope for all of you.

I haven’t commented on the capital riot. I don’t talk much about patriotism and don’t think of myself as a patriot. I am very much a citizen though.  What happened in DC was really wrong, whatever your politics are. It wasn’t the work of Americans acting as citizens and I am really sorry it happened.

I have said I was very sorry to vote for Hillary in 2016. I now feel that even if she’d been as bad a president as I feared she would have done less harm to the country than Mr Trump did by egging on the rioters.

As I said. I don’t think of myself as a patriot; but I went to Nam instead of staying home with bone spurs.

–Dave Drake

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Newsletter #118

DrakeNews 118: January 11, 2021

Dear People,

I hope you’re well and not too bent outa shape about the election (regardless of the result you wanted). We’ve got to get along with one another people. The US Civil War is an example of what happens if we don’t. (I think the partition of India is an even worse example.)

I have been plotting with difficulty. It was going all right, but a friend suggested I do a short story as a break. About then an editor solicited me for a Baen anthology Chicks in Tank Tops.

I took this to imply a humorous story about warrior maids. It would be a perfect place to do a sequel to Airborne All the way! a story I wrote to get out of a bad mental state after a long time friend finished drinking himself to death some time ago. It involved warrior goblins under a female crew chief in a fantasy universe (the original was based on Fantasy: the Gathering owned and trade-marked by Wizards of the Coast). If necessary I can put my crew chief in a mail tank top but I don’t think that should be necessary. (The crew goblins in the previous one are shown as wearing mail jock straps.)

I hope the story will be suitable for the collection. Regardless, writing it put me in a good mood and I’m back to plotting the novel.

One of the things I’ve been doing a lot of the past few months is watching lecture series from the Teaching Company. Recently that includes George Orwell. One of the things that reminded me of was the fact that the appraisal in his essays and reviews a scrupulously fair. He may fiercely oppose a person or his viewpoint, but if he thinks something is a work of art he says so.

I thought of this because a couple freelancers recently released a documentary on Karl Wagner. They filmed interviews with many people who knew Karl, myself included. Karl had many virtues. There were lots of things wrong as well, but I made a point of being fair and honest. Orwell would have approved.

My wife and I recently attended a Zoom birthday party for Glenn, an old friend out of state. This was put together by his daughter and was really a lot of fun. It included entertainment–dance, music, a monologue and even a tarot reading. It was certainly a case of something innovative and good in the present awful situation.

The beach is coming soon. It’ll be back to the original pattern from the 80s: I rent a beach house and invite congenial friends to join me and my family. One friend commented “It’ll be on your rules.” In fact there’ll be no rules beyond common politeness. I have nothing to prove.

It’s a group of folks who like to do things. Among other things I’m hoping to take a swamp tour and also visit the Navy cruise-missile test sites from the late ’40s.

Recently I’ve been reading Nathaniel Hawthorne short-stories. He was a great writer, but not one I got into in high school, though many of my classmates did. I appear to have actively avoided improving works out of sheer obstinacy. (This was stupid and cost me in the longer term.)

I am really struck by how much of 17th century US history I imbibed from Hawthorne. He provided the feel of early New England for me. In a very real sense I am recovering my own history as well as America’s.

I’m looking forward to the vaccine. Now that Biden is president, I hope release and distribution will go ahead.

Best of luck and health to all of you

And continue to remember that everyone is frazzling (you, and certainly me, included)

–Dave Drake

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Newsletter #117

DRAKENEWS For November 2020

Dear People,

I hope y’all have voted. My wife and I waited to vote on election day for tradition’s sake. I hadn’t been worried about the result (I never worry about that; I did my part and I expect other people to do theirs) but worried for the first time that the incumbent would decline to accept the result if he lost. The closest America has come to that result in the past was in 1800 when John Adams, a small man in all respects, lost the election to Thomas Jefferson. Adams did leave office, but he refused to shake the hand of his successor.

I suddenly decided that system would work as it always has, and stopped worrying about it. I hope the fear-mongers were wrong yet again. By now we know.

My publishing news is odd. New editions of two of my old books have come out: Killer in German hardcover translation (cover image), and Old Nathan in trade paper from Eric Flint’s Ring of Fire press. There’s a video interview with me up on the RoF website. I work outdoors in good weather, which the day of the interview was. As a result the interview is largely a silhouette of my face against a bright sky. Joy Ward is a great interviewer though, and I’m reasonably pleased with the way it turned out.

For new work, I wrote a story about robots in my former Military Occupationl Specialty in the army. I was an interrogator, so I wrote about robots in support of interrogation. I don’t think it’s my best story ever, but the editor was pleased.

I mentioned Killer. A German firm asked me for rights to republish it and emphasized they were only bringing out a translated edition so I agreed. Killer is a book about which I have bad feelings as I discuss on the website. At WFC just finished one the moderators of the panel I was on told me how he’d loved the book in college and had read it five times.

I had good reason to be negative about the way things worked with writing the book, but maybe not about the book itself. That could be true of other books and stories. When I’m emotionally invested I may not be the best judge of my own work.

I mentioned attending WFC 2020. A virtual con. I’ve done a number of Zoom interviews (see above) and I wasn’t worried about that.

It was a horrible experience, largely because I didn’t know how to navigate the WFC site.

Furthermore you needed a different code every time you logged onto the site and they didn’t update immediately–just told me I had the wrong code. I missed my first panel as a result. The next morning my geek son came over, bless his heart. I was able to get to other panels because my webmaster gave the con my correct data and they sent me prompts.

The panels themselves had excellent moderators and went well but I still couldn’t bounce around the site. CrowdCompass seems to have emphasized security at the cost of accessibility. In all I had a bad experience. If I have to do it again, I’ll make sure I’m accompanied by somebody who spends more time online than I do.

Toni accepted The Serpent and paid me for it. This really did make me feel good. I don’t have much confidence in my own work and the world generally has been a rough place.

Now I’m starting to plot the next RCN novel. It’s very early days so I can’t talk about because it’s too unstructured. I’ll tell you more when there’s more to tell.

I did a fair amount of research for a sword and planet story, then decided I didn’t want to write one after all. The editor very kindly let me out of the deal. I suspect that if I’d been in a better mood I’d have had fun doing it.

That’s a useful thing to remember: going into a project with a good attitude  conduces to a good result. I try to do that, but this year has been rough.

Keep slogging on. This won’t necessarily lead to a good result, but it’ll probably be better than if you just quit. And good luck to everybody.

–Dave Drake

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German Edition of Killer

Here’s the cover of a new German hardcover translation of Killer just published…. Read more about Killer

German Killer
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Newsletter #116

Dear People
 
I sent off The Serpent, third book in Time of Heroes Series and it has been accepted by Toni for Baen Books. My submission wasn’t nearly as clean as mine usually are. I’ve been having printer issues too.
 
I had many versions of the book getting in the way of one another. I finally got to the point that I couldn’t remember what I’d already moved or otherwise edited. I really had filled up my buffer. Everyone has been supportive: the problem has been my doing.
 
I hope to get a proper plot on the next one which I plan to base on the War of the Pacific of the 1870s. I need to do a lot of background thought to set up the situation but at least I’ve got a template
 
Weird World War III is due out in October with a story of mine in which I used my time in Cambodia as a setting. Let me emphasize: this was the setting, not what I was doing in Cambodia (which was normally pretty boring).
 
The setting was real though and it probably wasn’t a great idea for me to use it the way I did. I didn’t have anything like a bad war compared to what a lot of guys had, but the mental place I was in wasn’t a good one and going back to it for a setting meant going back to it mentally.
 
This was 50 years ago, people. It really shouldn’t be so close to my surface. It is though. Most successful people were doing much more important things 50 years ago than I was. The whole Cambodian business was so trivial in the greater scheme of things that during the 2016 presidential campaign Hilary Clinton could forget all about it and brag that her mentor in foreign affairs was Henry Kissinger, who’d planned it.
 
I can’t forget it though. I probably dwell on it far too much. In a way I’ve never gotten on with my life, and I regret that a great deal. It gave me a vivid setting, though.
 
The immediate next task is a short story involving military use of robots in my former MOS (military occupation specialty). I was an interrogator, a job for which the dispassion of robots is contraindicated. I don’t know how this is going to work out. I’m doing a great deal more backstory than is required for this story. I don’t know whether or not that’s a good thing, but as usual I let my gut deal with the details
 
As I mentioned the War of the Pacific is the next major project. Latin America was involved in many wars during the 19th century. the War of the Pacific had some of the most significant results. (It transferred much of the seacoast of Peru and Bolivia to Chile and with it the valuable guano deposits.)
 
I expect this to be a real RCN novel. Roy Olfetrie from Though Hell Should Bar the Way may be a central character. It occurs to me that it might be a good idea to read some more Alfred Noyes’ poetry. Wish me luck, people. There’s a long way to go.
 
Covid-19 continues to be daunting and unpleasant for me and I suppose everybody else in the world. Four of Mark’s relatives in Florida who’d been at the beach with us last summer have caught the virus itself, and have recovered. I hope all of you have been at least equally lucky.
 
Continue to be nice to people as we struggle to get through this bad time.
 
All best,
Dave Drake

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The Serpent

Publication by Baen July 6, 2021

The Serpent

The Serpent is based on the legendry of King Arthur as were The Spark and The Storm. Much of the action is adapted from the romances of Chretien de Troyes and the Prose Lancelot. These provided plot points, but more important was the feel of what went into a medieval romance.

Besides those sources directly in the Matter of Britain (to use the term of Jean Bodin) I also used The Knight in Pantherskin, an Armenian epic of the 12th century. There are Armenian castles in the neighborhood of Adana, Turkey, and I was privileged to visit one when  we were visting friends there. The world is full of wonderful things, especially if you’re willing to broaden your horizon to regions and subjects which are off the beaten track. When you visit a castle you get a feeling for why it was built there which a map only suggests.

I suppose what I’m saying is that fiction isn’t divorced from reality, but that it should emphasize an emotional response over facts and logic.

For the first time in this series I incorporated scenes from Ariosto’s Orlando Furioso. There are wonderful vivid scenes in the work, but to my surprise there is very little plot and I was reading it for connected plot. This is useful reminder for any writer: action is not story.

Some while ago I titled an RCN novel: In the Stormy Red Sky. The title was from The Voyage of Maeldune, a poem of Alfred, Lord Tennyson. Tennyson had read an Irish epic which survives in a 12th century form but probably goes back to the 8th century. I went back to the Irish work, The Voyage of Mael Duin, for inspiration. It wasn’t as complete a model as I’d have liked because it involved a boat load of adventurers, rather than one or two, but it did provide vivid scenes.

I incorporated elements from Flemish Legends, compiled by Charles de Coster and A Book of Danish Ballads by Axel Olrik, to get a pre-literary feel to my work.

–Dave Drake

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Newsletter #115

DRAKENEWS #115: July 3 2020

Dear People,

I hope you’re all doing okay. I am but I sure wish I were doing better. A friend has taken to slugging her e-mails In this time of plague. This is a useful reminder that we are not in a unique problem, but it’s sure an unpleasant one.

I continue to batter ahead on The Serpent. A few weeks ago I came to the end of my plot and added up my texts, hoping that I was finished. I was still way short of novel length. I started writing before I had a proper plot. Nobody was pushing me to do that; it was all on myself. The crash schedule on which I wrote the previous one, To Clear Away the Shadows, did my ability to concentrate serious harm. I seem to be getting back to normal, but jeepers! I wish it hadn’t happened.

I was badly disappointed that my book wasn’t longer and responded by doing more research and plotting another scene which I am writing now. It may take more than this, in which case I will do more (or die trying).

The covid-19 business doesn’t directly affect me, but the pall it casts over all human endeavors certainly doesn’t help.

I have an enlarged prostate and went to a urologist. He sent me off for an MRI, saying that if surgery was required it would help guide the surgeon. Boy! was I glad when he called back to say there was no cancer. (That was definitely one of the things which went right in the past couple months. I’ve had several friends on chemotherapy in the past few years, and even the one who survived had a really difficult time with the treatment. I’m having a hard enough time concentrating as it is.)

I’ve agreed to do a couple short stories after I’ve turned in the novel. I like short stories–reading as well as writing them. That still looks a good ways in the future, I fear.

What recent news hasn’t been covid-19 has been about how police treat  outgroups, particularly blacks, in this country. I suspect Hispanics and Native Americans have similar problems, but the current riots are largely black, and George Floyd, who was choked to death on video, was black. I’m a WASP, but I ride a motorcycle, which gives me some slight insight into the problem.

The Chapel Hill police force doesn’t have a bad reputation for brutality (the way the Minneapolis police have since I lived in the Midwest decades ago). Some years ago a fellow ran a red light and just about killed me. Instead of letting it go, I called the police  from the mall where I was going to pick up a rose for my wife on our anniversary. (This was before I had a cell phone. It was a stupid over reaction on my part, but I thought of the police as my friends–and I was hot about the driver’s behavior.)

Officer Steve Riddle wasn’t one of the policemen I knew personally but when he pulled up to the curb I walked over to greet him. His response was to shout, “Back up Cowboy!” and arrest and handcuff me.

In the magistrate’s office Officer Riddle lied that I was carrying a concealed weapon. (Most bike riders carry a folding knife on their belt. I instead had an AG Russell  Sting with a 3″ fixed blade clipped to the side pocket of my trousers.)

I went a lawyer whom I knew and liked. The case was dismissed in court.

I don’t mean all Chapel Hill police would have behaved that way (in fact a couple of them looked me up to apologize for Steve Riddle’s behavior).

I was wearing a motorcycle jacket rather than a business suit. But a black can’t change his skin color because he expects to come into contact with the police, and Steve Riddle isn’t unique among the police you’re going to meet. There are some who are willing to choke to death someone who committed no crime. (George Floyd attempted to pass a counterfeit $20 bill.  There was no evidence of intent. Do you have a dud twenty in your wallet? I’m damned if I know whether all of mine are good.)

So that’s my story. It doesn’t involve any brutality: just a policeman who jumped to conclusions and  arrested a man who’d called for police help. That’s not a mistake I’ve made since. Incidentally I was very polite throughout the business. Officer Riddle had already demonstrated his willingness to lie; if he shot me in the back I was sure he could find an exculpatory lie for that also.

I am neither liberal nor PC, but I have quite a lot of sympathy for black people who live in Minneapolis. Or for that matter, in Chapel Hill, NC.

One last point. I was just looking for a card to send to a friend who lost her business due to covid-19 and I found one with a picture I took in a 19th century shopping arcade in Naples. Right out the back door was a building with a historical marker saying that Rossini lived there–but the palazzo was owned by his employer, the impressario of the Naples opera.

The marker commemorates Rossini, though, not the rich man who employed him. I told my friend not to regret going into the arts instead of focusing on making money: the rich impressario is forgotten but Rossini will be remembered for further centuries to come.

Think positively people. And be nice to other folks in this difficult time.

Please use the contact form to subscribe to the newsletter or to change your e-mail address.

–Dave Drake

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Newsletter #114

Drakenews  #114 May 4, 2020

If you are well, it is good. I too am well.        

Above is the standard opening for a Roman letter, frequently reduced to initial letters like an acronym (Actually, I guess it is an acronym). It seemed a fitting formula for today.  In fact COVID-19 hasn’t changed my life very much directly, but when I go out I’m surrounded by a miasma of discomfort and fear.

I made the decision to buy land out in the country and build in the middle of it because I didn’t want neighbors. I don’t have serious PTSD from Nam but… well, I didn’t want neighbors. I go in town daily, to the post office and to the bank if there’s a check to put in. I carry a facemask to put on when I dismount.

At home I work or do yard work. The yard work is going fine: with 22.5 acres there’s always enough windfalls or trash trees in the wrong place  (generally sweet gums and evening olive) to keep me in wood chip mulch and my neighbor in wood for his stove–and me exercised. Real work–creating words on paper is going much slower–but about the same as before COVID-19. I continue getting a bit done every day except the day  somebody knocked my bike down in a parking lot and drove off. I was a block away when it happened and even the bike was uninjured.

Best bet is, the person backed into my bike and shoved it over a concrete curb onto a grass strip, where it fell over. It spilled a little gas and I had to go to the bank and get the manager who helped me get it upright and back over the curb, but I rode home with no trouble. Probably just as well I hadn’t been close enough to have a personal interaction with the driver. Even so I didn’t get any work done after I was home.

My major work problem isn’t my own situation but that of my wife, Jo. She’s been retired since age 62 but she’s been doing a full schedule of volunteer work until now. It’s a big house and a huge yard, but I’m used to being alone a significant part of the day.

We continue to have very good meals. Also a lot of excellent baked goods which nobody’s forcing me to eat.

I mentioned mulch. Fire ants have built in the pile. The area on top  has become crusted. If broken open, it swarms with ants who must have carried dirt at least 3 feet up from the ground to build their tunnels and chambers. (The ants work in the wood chips but not with them.) I don’t know how this is going to work out in the long term.

I continue one with nature in other ways. I work on a wooden picnic table. The other day I felt somebody climbing my leg under the table, when the wren got high enough it stopped, met my eyes, and flew off.

I was listening to BBC, waiting for the news to come on, and heard their regular program Witness History interviewing a woman who as a 9-year old girl in India had lived through  a previous pandemic: the 1957 Asian Flu. This really struck me because I’d had it also, but probably in 1958, in Clinton, Iowa. I was feeling really sick in 7th grade algebra class. I raised my hand to go out to the men’s room. The teacher, a stickler for discipline, ignored me. I vomited over my desk and the girl seated in front of me. The teacher asked why I hadn’t gone out; I said, “I’d raised my hand!” which seemed enough reason to me.

I went down to the school nurse who found I had a temperature of 103. It took a good while for my mother to get to school to pick me up and I was snappish about the delay. (The nurse pointed out to mom that I was running a fever, which probably explained my bad temper. Mom was quite smart and would have figured that out by herself.)

I stayed in bed the next couple days. I was weak and had hallucinations. I don’t remember any special  treatment: I’d seen This Island Earth, about an interplanetary war in which one planet was bombarding the other with meteors. That’s what I was hallucinating, except that the aggressor was driving cars up a ski jump on our moon to fly off and hit the Earth with great damage. I couldn’t do anything about it except feel despair, which I did.

Then I got better and went back to school. I don’t remember ever being afraid, just very sad about the damage all those 1957 Chevies were doing when they hit the Earth. (Incidentally, This Island Earth is quite a good movie, though the special effects aren’t up to modern standards.) I’m sure people died from the Asian flu, but I don’t remember any mention of it.

That was what the woman from India was saying also: she went back to school and life went back to normal. The media didn’t make a big thing about it.

That experience colors how I’m reacting to COVID-19. I think it was absurd that the US didn’t get airport testing in place immediately, and the shortages of really basic testing, etc, are unworthy of a developed country.

I’m now going to make a comment that can be taken as political. I know this is able to peeve some people so if you’re of that sort just stop reading now.

I have absolutely no ideology but I do speak my mind pretty directly. My comments about how the Viet Nam War was being fought when I got back to the World had my father in law wondering if I was a Commie.

I worked in local government for eight years and I saw some very stupid  behavior. The old public works area was being converted to the new bus garage. One of the major problems was the sewage digester, a massive brick dome which had simply been abandoned when the sewage plant moved decades before. It was full of sewage.

The town engineer, Joe Rose, was quite able and came up with an engineering solution. The town and county had recently bought (through condemnation ) a new landfill area. It was a poor black district and Chapel Hill makes a big thing of its liberalness, but we needed a landfill.

The engineer had the digester contents reliquified and hauled in tanker trucks out to the new landfill, where he dug a large trench and dumped the digester contents. The area residents had been promised various amenities in exchange for siting the landfill. What they got was 40,000 gallons of liquid shit.

The engineer resigned at the emergency board meeting the night after the aldermen and county commissioners viewed the trench; the town manager, Chet Kendzior, left before very long also. Obviously they were capable of real public stupidity.

But neither Joe nor Chet did anything nearly as dumb as suggesting the internal use of disinfectants.

Stay well, people. And be nice to other folks; they’re having a tough time too.

–Dave Drake

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Newsletter #113

Dear People,

No really exciting news this time, which isn’t entirely bad (given the content of my excitement the past couple years). Basically I have been writing The Serpent, a novel in sequence with The Spark and The Storm (in the Time of Heroes; a series title I’m not thrilled with).

Basically these are SF novels based on the legends of Dark Age Britain; King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. (I’ll get back to that later.) They have a fantasy feel, but they’re technically SF.

The work is crawling  along. The best I can say about it is just about every day sees more words on paper. I’m not sure they’re the right words or that my phrasing is all it could be, and I’m sure not getting long daily runs, but day by day the book is coming closer to the end.

Part of the problem is that ever since Nam, writing has been how I got through difficult periods. It was my refuge.

The need to crash out To Clear Away the Shadows before I was ready meant that writing changed from a refuge to the major stress point I was facing. That’s no longer the case–Baen Books is absolutely not putting any pressure on me now–but my psyche has already been bruised.

A much worse example of this is my year in Viet Nam, during which period I gave myself up for dead. I was really convinced that I wasn’t going to come back alive (though as it turned out, I didn’t have a bad war).

It was about 25 years before I internalized the fact that I really had survived and should get on with life. That probably sounds silly, but if things didn’t get to me I wouldn’t be much of a writer.

Anyway, I’m grinding my way forward on the next book. Goodness only knows when it’s going to be done.

Mention of King Arthur (the Matter of Britain) made me think. andy offutt hired me to do a plot (the whole story) for a Cormac mac Art series he was doing. I picked a subject I didn’t care about (King Arthur) so it wouldn’t bother me to turn the plot over to somebody else. I did a great deal of background work. Among other things, I read and took notes from Saxo Grammaticus and made a precis of the entire Histories of the Wars by Procopius.

Because of this work, I was able to turn in a plot that was as historically accurate as I could make it. The information which has come out since 1978 proves that almost all my  bases of the book were wrong. Arthur did not exist. Much more surprising, there was never an Anglo-Saxon invasion in the sense of Germanic warbands under their tribal chiefs. All my careful research didn’t get me close enough to the truth that I could edit the plot now into something I could be happy with having written.

Does that matter? This is fiction, after all, not a research paper.

It turns out that it matters to me. I don’t claim to know the truth, but I do claim to tell the truth as I know it, in fiction or non-fiction. In my experience that behavior is pretty unusual in most groups of people whom I know. The exception is journalists, to whom the truth is something of a religious duty. That’s something that’s always bothered me about Trump’s ranting about Fake News. Journalists have opinions and biases like anybody else–and sometimes they make mistakes, but the notion that any significant number of them are faking or spiking news to suit their biases is untrue in my experience. As a group they really care about the truth, maybe even more than I do.

Thus Michael Bloomberg telling his staff how politics are to be reported is just wrong, regardless of what your own politics are. Fox News has as been accused of similar behavior, but the Fox people (while probably biased) are still journalists. Folks who continue to work for Bloomberg are not. (And I’m told they started losing top people as soon as the boss’ intentions became clear.)

I’m going back to slowly writing a book.  Wish me luck people.

And be nice to other folks.

All best,
–Dave Drake

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3 Drake Men 2020

Tristan, Jonathan and Dave, New Year's 2020

Tristan, Jonathan and Dave, New Year’s 2020

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Holiday Greetings 2019

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Newsletter #112

Dear People,

Parkinson’s Disease runs in my family. I’m showing active signs myself and am now on a light dose of levodopa. My bigger bike (a Suzuki DL650) is not especially heavy but it has a high seat. Coming back from Chapel Hill I fell over three times when I cornered at a stop. My strength and balance are both poorer than they should be.

This is extremely bad (though not unexpected) news. Being me, I went instantly to end game. Looking up from there I began considering ways to find a livable solution for me. I expect that to be an ongoing process, probably for a long time. My aunt (dad’s younger sister) died recently at age 96.

One interesting part of the Parkinson’s business is that I’m in contact with health professionals more often than I usually am. They’re invariably struck by how good my health is. I don’t get annual physicals because statistically they have no effect on longevity (though they shift the cause of death to a degree; they catch some treatable conditions but iatrogenic [medically caused] conditions kill just as many people as the testing saved). Doctor visits are stressful to me (and I think to most people), so avoiding them has real health benefits.

The neurologist suggested a blood test to give them a base line. This was reasonable so I agreed. When the results came back, everything was excellent: “We never see profiles this good!” the nurse said.

That’s because I eat reasonably and exercise. Which everybody can do.

Having just come back from a convention, it strikes me that avoiding restaurant food is probably a major factor in eating reasonably. Tom Doherty is ten years my senior but he exercises heavily every day. At dinner his wife made a point that he’s heavier than I am. I think that the major difference is that he generally eats out and I generally eat at home.

My wife cooks very well. We have simple food of high quality, and when eating at home I find it easy to limit my intake. It won’t do anything to prevent genetic problems like Parkinson’s, but obesity and run-down condition are optional.

We’re back from a trip to Italy! Tuscany this time. I’m at work on a trip report, but there’s been a lot going on. The Parkinson’s diagnosis cast a mental malaise over me, but I still saw some really neat things.

I mentioned the convention: World Fantasy Con, in Los Angeles this year. I normally go to this one when it’s in North America. My agent, Kirby McCauley, started it in 1975, promising it wasn’t going to be like the SF Worldcon (which had been a horrible experience for me the year before). WFC quickly became the premier professional gathering in the F/SF field. Because of the number of professionals attending, the panels are generally excellent and broad ranging.

When the programming people send around a questionnaire early on asking about backgrounds and particular interests, I normally tell them to put me wherever they need me. There’s a lot of competition for panel slots. I have a wide background in the field and in WFC itself, so there are very few WFC panels on which I’d be unable to contribute usefully.

This year there was no questionnaire. My webmaster tried to contact programming, without result. When the program schedule came out, I wasn’t on it. This was very disappointing but I was just going to take it: I’ve always said they could put me wherever they wanted me. Apparently they’d decided they didn’t want me. On top of the Parkinson’s, I was really feeling that I’d lived too long.

My webmaster contacted programming again, making me out to be more pitiable than I’d have put it myself (I’m not saying she was wrong) and that I’d been on panels at WFC since 1975. She suggested two possibilities. (The various options were disappointingly slim.) This time the programming person responded and I was added as a seventh panelist on Fairy Tales. (I’ve always used them as source material and the first books I remember checking out myself from the Dubuque Public Library were Andrew Lang’s Color Fairy Books.)

I felt a lot better, but the other party to a negotiation always has a right to say no.

I thought (on looking at the panels generally) that programming had done an exceedingly bad job. Indeed all aspects of the con were poorly done (with the exception of the con suite.) There was excellent jewelry in the dealer’s room, but books and art were less well represented than is normal at WFC.

People involved in the Salt Lake City WFC next year assured me I would be on programming there. Furthermore at the banquet a member of the WFC board came up to me and apologized that I hadn’t been put on a panel (until Karen had gotten on them). Apparently my belief that the con committee hadn’t been up to the job was widely echoed.

Despite the glitches, it was good to see friends, many but not all business acquaintances. Outside the con I was able to see something that had fascinated me for 70 years: Rancho La Brea–the Tar Pits. The museum was about 10 miles from the hotel, too far to easily walk but I was sure I’d find somebody at the con with a car. In fact Karen thought to ask Mark Van Name ahead of time. He too was interested in going but the only time he could go was after the banquet Sunday (the site closed at 5 pm) but he assured me there’d be no trouble.

At the end of the banquet at 3:30 he’d learned that that it might be an hour to the site and the line there might be an hour long, but he’d go if I still wanted to. I did want to go. In fact traffic was very light and there was no line. The museum was a wonderful experience.

The displays include mounted skeletons and also life-sized models of many animals from the site. There are saber-toothed tigers, the huge American lion (25% bigger than the African lion of today, a display of dire wolf skulls (part of the 4,000 of the species found there), and many herbivores. Besides the well-known mammoths and mastodons, there are shovel tuskers with extended jaws and tusks top and bottom (which I didn’t recall had made it to the New World, though I should have known). Plus there were many horses and camels and bison (Bison antiquus, much larger than the familiar bison of today).

There was also Merriam’s teratornis, a huge bird like a condor but a third larger. All this was really a thrill to me. It was particularly nice because I found myself quite excited and perky, which I really hadn’t been since learning about the Parkinson’s. I’m coming back, people.

At the Baen dinner at WFC I chatted some while with Tim Powers who thanked me for the intro I’d done for his collection, Down and Out in Purgatory. I was particularly glad to hear that because when I’d asked Toni if he’d liked it; she said she wasn’t sure he’d seen it. He’d been effusively thankful to her, but that hadn’t been passed on to me. (Communication isn’t one of the strong points at Baen.)

While waiting in the hotel hallway for the maid to finish cleaning the room, Robert Silverberg came wandering up a cross-hall looking for the elevators. We chatted for half an hour, mostly his stories about working with John W Campbell in the ’50s. It’s wonderful to be on friendly terms with a writer whom I’ve been reading since I was thirteen. Certainly one of the high points of the con.

I think I have finally accumulated enough material for a plot of the next book (working title The Serpent). I hope to shortly get back to that. Wish me luck,

And be nice to other people, folks—

–Dave Drake

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Rancho La Brea

After the banquet at the World Fantasy Con in Los Angeles

Dave at entrance to museum.
Dave at entrance to museum.
Tar pool in front of museum
Tar pool in front of museum (an old asphalt mine) with family of Columbian mammoths (adult male in pool)
Reconstruction of Columbian mammoth
Reconstruction of Columbian mammoth
Columbian mammoth (larger than the wooly mammoth and not shaggy).
Columbian mammoth (larger than the wooly mammoth and not shaggy).
Dire wolf reconstrucions
Dire wolf reconstrucions
Dire wolf skeletons
Dire wolf skeletons
Dave and smilodon skeleton
Dave and smilodon skeleton
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Newsletter #111

DRAKENEWS 111: September. 2019

Dear People,

This is a bit early because my webmaster, Karen, is going on a genealogical trip to get in touch with her German roots. (These, by the way, are in Hesse, not Bavaria, so I’m not worried about her returning humming the Horst Wessel Lied. The only prominent Nazi from the general region I can think of is Joseph Goebbels.) (She may want to invade New Jersey, however.)

I was hoping to report major progress on plotting the next novel, but I can only say that I’m getting bits down: forward progress, but not as much as I’d like. Marla at Baen checked with me recently to see what my schedule was. (This is perfectly proper and if it had been done last year before To Clear Away the Shadows was scheduled, I would be in better shape now.)

This made me actually analyze the situation. I decided that the unexpected rush on Shadows had kicked me back about a year in my recovery from being hit by a car [Newsletter 104]. By October, 2018, I’d started to plot seriously and by November I was actually writing. Although right at this instant I feel that I’m flailing and will never again be able to plot a novel, I can reasonably hope that by October I’ll have gotten myself together again. Therefore I can expect to turn in a new novel in June, 2020, without abnormal stress.

I told Marla and I’m telling y’all–that it’s actually possible that by reinjuring my psyche by the crunch on Shadows when I wasn’t fully recovered from the shock of the bike wreck–that I’ll never be able to write another novel. I don’t think that’s the case and Marla insists that it isn’t, but I’m not the guy I was in 2017.

An obvious question is, “Why do I still ride a bike?” I can give (and have given) various answers to that, but here’s what it really boils down to: I was never a very good driver. I never had a serious accident in a car but it was only a matter of time. When I got back from Nam, I didn’t become a pacifist or a pushover; but I really didn’t want to kill somebody unless I meant to kill them. If I were riding a motorcycle, it was extremely unlikely that anybody but me would be killed in a vehicular accident.

As it turns out, being on a bike probably makes me a more careful driver also. At any rate, I’ve had a number of serious accidents since 1987 (when I last drove a car), but none of them were my fault.

I don’t have any new novels coming out, but The Chronicles of Davids, a Baen anthology, is due out in September with my story The Savage in it. This is a story I wrote to get myself into the milieu of the novel which became To Clear Away the Shadows. (I thought it would be out long before the novel was, but boy! was I wrong.) It’s a good story, but the scarring is on the opposite side of Joss’ face from what it becomes in the novel because of the haste with which the novel was completed. (My continuity error doesn’t detract from the story.)

It might be a good time to address some of the comments I’ve gotten on To Clear Away the Shadows. I was consciously doing something quite different from my usual novel. A change always pisses some readers off, but this may have been worse than usual because the book was prominently billed as the new novel in the RCN series. Technically that’s true, but a number of readers were certainly expecting something different from what they got. I usually have more input into the cover layout than I did this time, but I honestly don’t know whether or not I would have requested a change if I’d seen it. (I certainly would have credited the photographer: who was Karen Zimmerman, my webmaster. Because of the rush, nothing was run by me; and that’s one of the really obvious things that was screwed up.)

I was very clear in the most recent newsletter about the deficiencies in editing on the novel, but very few of the people who wrote me through the website appear to have read my description. (Goodness only knows what the comments on Amazon are like. I don’t read Amazon reviews because he writers of those I’ve seen tend to strike me as thick.) Most of those writing me were more concerned than angry, but there was one who suggested that maybe I was just past it. (Which, as I said above, had already gone through my mind.)

On the credit side, I’ve written two quite good short stories recently: one for the Weird World War III volume I mentioned in the most recent previous newsletter, and now also one as a tribute to Uncle Timmy Bolgeo and Libertycon. The latter is a fairy tale of the sort that the Brothers Grimm collected. (In other words, it’s not cutesie.) Writing short stories isn’t the same as novels, though. The jury is still out on my ability to write further novels until I do one.

I mentioned in Newsletter 110 that our house phone had been out for a number of weeks. I implied that I blamed the carrier, CenturyLink. CenturyLink didn’t cover itself with glory in the whole business, but when they finally got a technician to the house he instantly diagnosed the problem as a short in one of our phone jacks and then corrected it. A disused jack hidden behind a dresser in the bedroom (and a darned good thing my wife got back and remembered it) had developed slight contact between the outgoing and incoming lines. Dialing out through another jack was no problem, but an incoming call starts with a ringing current–which is full line voltage. That caused a dead short and shut the call off instantly.

So: that’s it for now. I will go back to making plot notes

Oh–I usually close these hoping folks will be nice to other people. That’s still good general advice, but some people’s responses to Shadows makes me want to emphasize it now. Rudeness, nastiness, really does make the world a worse place. Be nice to people, folks!

Please use the contact form to subscribe to the newsletter or to change your e-mail address.

–Dave Drake


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Newsletter #110

DRAKENEWS #110: July 9, 2019

Dear People,

I’ve been relaxing the past two months, which sounds like a more pleasant business than it’s been in my head. The trouble is that rushing the most recent book put me so far down that it takes a very long time to come to the surface. I’m not there yet.

I don’t want to sound like, “Poor, poor me.” I wasn’t drafted into this business. I generally love what I’m doing, and I’m paid well for my efforts. But sometimes as with any other job, things get stressful. This was an extreme case, and I’m probably not over the bike wreck either.

So I’ve been a bit fragile for the past while, enough that distant friends have been worrying about me. I regret this, but there’s not a damned thing I can do about mentally broadcasting distress. I’m okay, and I’m not in immediate danger of doing anything really dumb.

In terms of productive work, I’ve done a short story and I’m well into another short story. This doesn’t make significant money–in fact the one I’m still working on is for a tribute and I’m donating it to the cause–but I like short stories. I entered the field through reading short stories, and I’d been selling short stories for about 13 years before my first novel.

Because short stories are no longer a paying proposition, the most skilled and experienced writers rarely write them. When they do one as a favor for a friend or a publisher, it doesn’t get their full attention.

That’s certainly been true of me. When the editors of Star Destroyers pitched the concept to me, I said I wasn’t interested. (The initial working title was Boomers; I did for an instant consider writing about a dominance battle between male red kangaroos.)

They came back to me six months later and asked me as a favor to do a story so that they could put my name on the cover. I agreed because they’re nice people and I was sure I could find a story in the concept.

I wasn’t best pleased about the situation, however, and the first three ideas I came up with involved genocide. What I eventually did avoided genocide, but it’s not a good-hearted story. It’s not a bad story–it’s technically quite a good one–but it’s not a story which makes me happy to have written.

I try to learn from my mistakes. The story I just wrote for a Weird World War III anthology is as good as I could make it. That doesn’t mean that it’s a great story or that you’ll love it: just that I did my job to the best of my ability. From now on, that will be the case: either I’ll turn the proposal down flat or I’ll give it the best I’ve got. And if I do allow my arm to be twisted on a project I didn’t really want to do, I’ll still give it the best I’ve got.

This is kind of embarrassing to admit, but what you get in these newsletters is the real me. I haven’t always met what I think should be proper standards.

There’s a new podcast up at Baen.com in which Tony Daniel and I discuss To Clear Away the Shadows. We did the interview by phone and the sound quality isn’t (I think) very satisfactory. (My landline has been completely out for the past week, and our carrier–CenturyLink–is having trouble throughout the area.) I’m considering going in to the Baen offices if and when I do another podcast.

On a more positive note than most of this newsletter, I’m well into reading Democracy in America by Alexis de Toqueville. I’ve had the two-volume set for probably 30 years but I hadn’t seriously started into it earlier.

De Toqueville published his analysis in 1835 after travelling extensively in the America of his day and had done an enormous amount of documentary research. For example, when he contrasts the American federal constitution with those of other federal nations like Switzerland and Germany, it’s clear that he’s familiar with all of them. De Toqueville was a working politician rather than an ivory-tower philosopher. He certainly has his biases, but he makes it a goal to be fair and objective in all he says.

By seeing America analyzed from the outside I’m seeing effects from history which I’d never considered before. For example, most of Latin America broke from its colonial rulers about the some time we did from ours. We established a strong federal union, whereas what happened in Brazil and Colombia (to pick two states whose history in the 1820s I know a little about) was a series of coups and revolutions amounting to little better than anarchy.

The British North American colonies differed among themselves in population, culture, and economies. All had strong political classes by the late 18th century, but they were all ruled from London and had no independent foreign policy. Their individual political classes were used to accepting outside control, and they were willing to substitute federal control for royal control.

In most of Latin America newly freed provinces revolted against the new central governments–and also invaded neighboring provinces. These differing outcomes certainly occurred, but the fact doesn’t prove Anglo-Saxons are superior to Hispanics. Differing colonial history and culture are better ways to understand the different results.

I recently had a complaint from a reader that my attack on Fox News in the intro to Though Hell Should Bar the Way made it impossible for him to read the book. I should stick to writing books instead of political commentary.

My first thought was that I didn’t attack Fox News. I then realized that I was quibbling: I’d be perfectly willing to attack Fox News and to a lesser degree to attack the news from any of the other US networks. I listen to BBC News, not because it’s without bias but because it tries to be without bias.

The fact that to many Americans (not just my correspondent), the choice of a news source is a political act distresses me. As an extreme example look up the interview of Ben Shapiro, a Fox News commentator, by Andrew Neil.

Neil is probably the most right-wing (reputable) journalist in the UK (he’s high up in the councils of Rupert Murdoch, who owns Fox News among other things), but he is a journalist. Shapiro made a complete fool of himself (an assessment with which he would probably agree, judging from his statements  after he’d cooled down) by assuming that anyone who didn’t accept his position at face value was a liberal and unworthy of his own time.

Folks, there’s real information out there. Make an effort to find people whose priority is data, not sound bites and Revealed Truth. If you really care about something, you’ll probably want to check multiple sources even when they’re individually good.

And you could do worse than read Democracy in America. If nothing else, de Toqueville will show you that the news in the US has always been pretty much the way it is now.

Go out and be nice to other folks, people. We don’t all have to think alike.

–Dave Drake

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Newsletter #109

DRAKE NEWS: May 1, 2019

Dear People,

TO CLEAR AWAY THE SHADOWS, the latest RCN novel, is complete! Thank goodness. This has been a very rough passage.

The problems basically go back to the wreck in May, 2018. [Newsletter 104] I had no physical injury from that one, but it turned out to keep me for about six months from the full-on concentration I need to do my plots. This didn’t matter because I have no deadlines and I’ve got enough money for my needs for the foreseeable future. (I’m 73 and ride a motorcycle.)

I was getting a bit worried because things didn’t start to go together sooner than they did. It crossed my mind more than once that maybe the wreck had smashed my higher faculties for good and all. That wasn’t the case: it had just stunned them, sort of a lesser equivalent of what had happened to me when I came back from Viet Nam. It had been seven or eight years before I was able to write a novel, though I continued to sell short stories as I’d done before I was drafted.

The chaos in my mind jelled and I switched from taking notes to organizing them into a plot. This is the normal progression–it was just considerably delayed. I started the actual writing. It was a different book in form from previous ones; and though it was set in the RCN universe, it had a wholly new cast of characters.

Furthermore, the book has an episodic structure which I’ve used infrequently in the past. (Ranks of Bronze and Starliner were built that way, but not most of my recent ones.) This takes a bit more work than a unitary plot because the physical and human environment change every time the setting does, but if a writer doesn’t practice different techniques, he gets stale. (And so does his work, which is what matters for readers.)

All was going fine until I hit a glitch: Audible, Amazon’s audiobook line, contacted Kay, my agent, to buy rights to my new Baen release, Shadows. I told her that it must be a mistake; they were confusing me with Dave Weber whom I thought had used Shadow in a recent title.

Kay came back with the full title from Audible: To Clear Away the Shadows. That was the one I was working on, all right, and I’d be happy to sell Audible the rights–but I was hoping to finish the book first.

At that point (last November) I phoned Baen, the Wake Forest office, and asked Tony Daniel if the book really was scheduled. Yep, and they were expecting it toward the end of the year. I told Tony, “That’s not going to happen,” and went back to work.

I had the outline and was working on the text, but I didn’t have much and I wasn’t getting as high a daily rate as usual. That was probably because of the unusual structure, but at the time I had to consider that the bike wreck had caused permanent damage. All I could usefully do was to keep on working. Surrendering to despair wasn’t a useful or an attractive option.

Finally in January I did a word count and found I had 60K. For the first time I was confident I had enough plot to be sure to finish the book, so I phoned Toni and said I needed a few months but I’d be able to get the book in. She said that would be no problem, so I resumed working.

I should say here that apart from scheduling the book without first discussing it with me, Toni didn’t make a mistake. She explained that she’d needed a lead title for the June, 2019, slot and figured I could make it without a problem. If it hadn’t been for the bike wreck, I certainly could have–but she wasn’t factoring the wreck into her estimate.

If she’d talked to me (as she obviously should have done), what would have happened? Probably I’d have said, “Oh, hell, I can make that deadline.” I didn’t realize how badly the wreck had scrambled me either. That makes it seem as though it didn’t matter that the publisher hadn’t informed me of the schedule….

It made one huge difference. It kicked me straight back into Nam where matters of my life or death were decided without anyone consulting me or even informing me of the decisions. If I’d agreed to the schedule, even under pressure, it would’ve been my choice. As it was, I was giving up a couple months of my life–because the process of writing the book on this schedule precluded normal pleasure reading, exercise, and the other activities that make life worth living–for no reason having anything to do with me.

Some mornings at 2 am I thought of retiring from the field. That gives you a notion of how far down I was, because writing is just about as important to me as reading as an activity that gives me pleasure.

More realistically in daylight hours I considered my future writing projects. I had a number of friends volunteer advice on the subject. They used varied language depending on whether their background was primarily writing or primarily business, but as one of the latter put it, “You have value in the marketplace.”

Believe me, I knew I had options. I love Baen Books and have as much history with the company as anyone alive, but if I had the faintest belief that it might happen again, I’d be gone.

Fortunately Toni, when she realized what she’d done, apologized fully and promised it wouldn’t be repeated. Furthermore she handled her end of things flawlessly following that first (horrible) misstep. She explained later that when she realized the situation, she had two options: to cancel the book, or to let me get on with it and have production lined up to handle a late delivery.

Cancelling the book would have been disastrous for my career. I know of a few cases in which a book missed its ship date, but I don’t know of any in which the author has had a significant writing career afterward. In most cases the problem has been the author’s own fault, but that doesn’t matter: if you’ve stiffed the distributors–and this is true of Amazon in spades–they’re not going to give you another chance. Computers don’t care about fault.

Toni kept her own people off my back. I’m sure some of them were nervous about the timing, but they didn’t tell me about it. The situation was none of my doing and telling me it was bad wasn’t going to improve matters.

I finished the book before April 1, which was my own deadline (for myself). I did fewer polish passes than I normally would, but the book isn’t unedited. I’m sure there are errors I would have caught in another edit pass–but judging from earlier books, there are errors I would’ve missed also.

The book is about 97K words long. I was planning to hit over 100K, but this is a full-length novel. A worse problem is that I had plotted in several ‘expansion slots’ which because of the crunch in which I wrote it, I didn’t have time to use. This is not the book it would have been under normal circumstances–but I honestly think it’s a good one.

Baen got the proof pages to me promptly, aided by the fact I’d turned in the final draft in thirds as I finished each section. I realized when I’d read the proofs that the things I’m most proud of in life are the ways I’ve reacted when I was dropped into horrible solutions unfairly.

To Clear Away the Shadows is an example of this. The career and personality I’ve built out of the angry rubble I was when I returned from Nam are even better examples. But it sure isn’t fun while it’s going on.

So now I’m relaxing and reading for fun. This includes epics which I’m mining for notes which may wind up in the next novel, but there are a couple works of naval history and a lot of other things as well. Pulp fiction in particular. I just read a 1939 fantasy by Henry Kuttner involving African crocodiles as did my own 1981 King Crocodile. Kuttner handled the subject in a very different fashion than I did. Kuttner was a better writer than I, but mine isn’t a story which embarrasses me now.

So, thoughtfully–

Dave Drake

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Newsletter #108

Dear People,

As of writing this I still haven’t finished TO CLEAR AWAY THE SHADOWS, but it’s getting close. I’m on the final planet of the plot, and I’m on course to meet my own deadline. When I got far enough into the process to judge how things were going, I informed Baen Books; and I’m getting there.

Toni (Baen publisher) has promised not to schedule my future books without talking to me first. I think she may regret that she did so this time. Certainly I do, but we’re getting there.

I think the cover of Shadows is pretty well set now. I was glad to see it on the Baen site. This is basically one of Steve Hickman’s original conceptions. I said I’d give him an exotic alien if he showed me what he wanted, so he did sketches.

When I got to that point in the plot, I wrote the scene and sent it to him, saying I’d tweak it if he wanted a different color or the like. Instead he redid the cover entirely to make it an illustration of my scene.

This bothered me. I’ve known writers who’ve demanded cover control. I don’t personally know of a case where it’s led to a good result, and I know of a number of disasters: artists don’t see things the way non-artists do. Putting the non-artist in charge is a bad idea.

Apparently Toni (who acts as Baen’s art director) had a reaction similar to mine and it’s back to Steve’s original conception. Thank goodness,

A fan recently sent me an academic paper postulating a Canaanite source for portions of the Odyssey. Not only did this interest me (as he thought it might), it made me think of another life in which I became an Academic.

I’m not a natural Academic: I’m an antiquarian, which is a very different way of looking at similar material. The thing is, I believe I could have learned to function as an Academic–I’m not a natural novelist either: I’m a short story writer. I’ve learned to write novels, however.

The Academic paper made me want to take down my Oxford Classical Texts of the plays of Plautus to read the Menaechmi (one of the works discussed in the paper), but I realized I wouldn’t do that: I’d return to finishing Shadow. Another friend recently sent me an essay on the Aeneid which made me want to reread the Aeneid, but I hadn’t done that either: I’d resumed writing Shadow. (I don’t think I’ve ever read Menaechmi, but I think I’d go back to Vergil before I read the Plautus.)

Writing novels is really an all-consuming job if I do it right. I regret the freedom of my youth when I could do things like read the Aeneid through, but if I’d become an Academic (well, a reasonably successful one) I wouldn’t have any more freedom than I do now.

And Academe wouldn’t have given me the crucial thing that writing does: it wouldn’t have helped me handle the anger that I came back from Nam with.

I don’t care about the status of being a writer; and for that matter, I have more respect for many of the Academics whom I know than I do for many of the writers. I’m really glad that I’m not dead or in jail, though. Writing gave me that escape.

It brings me to what for me is a tangential point. Many writers don’t turn in books which they claim to be writing. Sometimes they’re very good and famous writers; generally they’re less good and less famous. (Almost every writer in fantasy/SF is both less good and less famous than George Martin, for example.)

Writing novels is very hard work. (It’s harder than any other job I’ve had.) If somebody decides it’s not worth his effort to do that, he’s almost certainly right. It’s regrettable if he strings publishers along with repeated lies about progress, as I watched Karl Wagner doing from 1975 through the rest of his life, but lying to make people think better of you is a common human failing.

You’re not getting something that you want? That’s a pity, but it’s not the writer’s problem. I’m sure he’d prefer to turn in a book rather than to continue to lie about it.

What he wouldn’t prefer is to buckle down and do the work. He’s got things which  much better repay his investment of time. In Karl’s case that mostly involved watching football games and bad movies on cable TV. (He discussed watching Xanadu three times, for instance.)

Me, I have a novel to write. Thanks to Nam, I don’t have better things to do. Most would-be writers are luckier than I am, however.

–Dave Drake

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Newsletter #107

DRAKE NEWSLETTER #107:  January 4, 2019

Dear People,

I’m at work on To Clear Away the Shadows. I’ve got a good chunk (20 texts which average over a thousand each), but it sure isn’t racing along.  Getting back on track after the bike wreck hasn’t been easy, though I’m doing better since I’ve been able to start work properly. I use the writing to settle me, but I needed to be more nearly settled to start writing.

It’s good to be successful, but there are complications. Audible queried my agent about the audio rights to ‘Shadow’. I told Kay they were probably asking about a recent Dave Weber book with Shadow in the title.

No. In fact they were talking about To Clear Away the Shadows. I will happily sell them audio rights, but I’d sooner they waited until I’d finished the darned book.

I then found that Baen has already scheduled the book, which is probably what spurred Audible to query me.  Nobody at Baen had said a word to me about scheduling or when I was likely to turn the book in. I checked and learned they were expecting it to come in toward the end of the year (2018). I said that wasn’t going to happen and went back to writing.

The thing is, I’m generally very steady–but I’m not fast. I can’t simply blast a book out in four weeks. If I tried, the result would probably be very poor, but it just wasn’t going to happen. Some of my books may not be as polished as I wish they were, but I will not consciously turn out crap–which is what would come of rushing one out that way.

I suspect that isn’t what my readers want me to do either, but that doesn’t matter. If I put my name on it, it’s as good as I think I can make it. I work hard, but pressing me to write fast just makes me more despairing than I was to begin with. That isn’t a direction I think I ought to go in.

I finally called Toni, the Baen publisher. She said there wasn’t a problem at all: I should turn in the book when it was done to my satisfaction.

This was a great weight off my mind. I really don’t like to fail and to let people down. In this case I hadn’t been consulted so I could reasonably have claimed that it wasn’t my fault, but this is a world in which an awful lot of folks immediately shout, “It wasn’t my fault!” when things go wrong. I don’t want to be another of those people.

So: I’m working as fast as I can, consistent with my own standards of quality. This is a different sort of book from my usual, and I may fall on my face trying to do things in a different way. But if I fail, it won’t be because I didn’t try.

The Storm is out from Baen. This is the second book in the Time of Heroes series (Toni wanted a series title and that’s what I came up with). You can call it a fantasy, or at least it has a fantasy feel. Compare it with the Dying Earth series by Jack Vance: the original stories from the ’50s were SF, but when Vance resumed with the Cugel the Clever stories in the same milieu, they were fantasy. This appeared to me to be a distinction without a difference.

Likewise The Storm. It would read the same if it were a fantasy: but just for the record, the author considers it SF.

The cover is another by Todd Lockwood. It’s completely different from his painting for The Spark, but again it’s an entrancing piece of work and accurately puts across the feel of the book.

My primary transportation is a motorcycle; actually, one of two motorcycles, day and day. This makes my daily run into town for the mail a more eventful process than it would be in a car. That’s at least part of the reason that I do it. I don’t need a lot of excitement in my life (I had a period of that in the army and don’t want to repeat it), but it appears that I do need some.

A few days ago I stopped at the bank to deposit a check. I was on the Yamaha SR400. When I came out, I was unable to restart the bike. I kicked multiple times, then moved the bike to a flatter location in the lot and kicked some more with the same lack of effect.

A black man of 40 or so came over and we chatted about the bike. He’d had the original version years ago (an SR500) and had rebuilt it in his living room. “That was before you were married?” I guessed. He laughed hard and agreed.

He got down on the ground and watched from below as I kicked further, then asked my permission to try kicking himself. “Be my guest.” We didn’t know one another from Adam. He was educated and had a US (not Caribbean) accent; and he probably knew about the same about me.

He suggested that I put her up on the center stand. I did. I got life on the first kick; then it started on the second. (I now know that sometimes the side-stand switch may stick; I’ll try to have my mechanic disconnect that particular safety.) We shook hands and I rode off.

Note that this had nothing to do with the SR400 not having an electric starter. It happened to me once on a Kawasaki Concours, I now realize.

The resolution wasn’t exactly a surprise. Bikers are an out-group, and (like veterans) there’s a tendency for one to help another of the group, even a stranger. Certainly I’d have done the same for him and have done the same for others in a similar case.

But it made me feel good to reflect on that: not just because the fellow who stopped was a nice guy, but in the realization that I’m a nice guy too under most circumstances.

I basically don’t like myself very much. The person I was in Nam wasn’t a good person, and for a long time that person was still wearing my skin and living in my head. I’m not a saint now and I can’t undo things that I’ve done, but I can honestly say that on most days I don’t make the world a worse place by being in it.

That’s a good thing to reflect on as 2018 ends. None of my close friends died this year. I had some problems as a result of the bike wreck, but I’m getting through them and I believe that that I behaved about as well as I could have when things went wrong.

Happy 2019, everybody. And make an effort not to make the world a worse place. Be courteous and polite as a reflex; and when shit happens, just hunker down and slog on through it. It’s not an inspiring goal, but if everybody did it, we’d all be better off.

All best,
Dave

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Holiday Greetings 2018

Longhorn Holiday Greetings

From Dave 2018

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Newsletter #106

DRAKE’S NEWSLETTER #106: November 9, 2018

Dear People,

I’ve started writing TO CLEAR AWAY THE SHADOWS! Really writing it: not taking notes, not plotting, not even putting pieces of the plot together. I’ve done all those things, for much longer than the process should have taken.

Yesterday I started writing text. I also typed up the epigraph, the bit of poetry relating to the title which will go in the front of the book. I normally add the epigraph after I’ve finished the text, but after I finished The StormI was completely wrung out and couldn’t find the particular chunk of Tennyson I’d planned to use. (Yes, I’d copied it down–somewhere.) I sent the manuscript in without it.

Toni read the book and noted the lack of context for the title, so I (thanks to my webmaster!) found the verse and turned in a corrected manuscript. The Baen managing editor then sent the wrong manuscript to the typesetter, as she had done a number of times in the past. I caught it in the proofs, and it turned out to be any easy one to fix; thank goodness. (Some of her similar errors have proven unfixable.)

Incidentally, the managing editor has since been fired for reasons having nothing to do with me. To repeat myself: thank goodness.

Anyway, The Storm is coming out in January. I read the proofs (which were clean except the lack of epigraph–even cleaner than my original manuscript, which isn’t always the case). It’s a good book, in series with The Spark. Now that there are two of them, they needed a series title which is Time of Heroes.

I say ‘in series with’ rather than ‘sequel to’ The Spark, because most of my books (and certainly The Storm) can be read without knowledge of anything else I’ve written. That’s a practice I got into when I started out, writing short stories for magazines and one-shot anthologies. I couldn’t assume that potential readers had any context for my work.

Incidentally, I’m usually so wrung out at the end of a novel that all I want is to be shut of it forever. This is a common reaction for writers who’ve finished books. CS Forester’s editor wanted extensive changes in The African Queen–then wrote back to say that the book would be fine if they just dropped the final two chapters. Forester thankfully said to drop those chapters, and the book was published that way–completely changing the thrust of the novel.

Forester republished the novel as written when he’d gained stature in the literary marketplace, but the John Huston film made from the book with Bogart and Hepburn basically follows the truncated version and has a happy ending. It probably wouldn’t have been as successful if it had shown Forester’s own bleak vision of male-female relationships.

I’ve mentioned The Spark, the first book in the series. The paperback is out, and the cover is striking even without the special foil treatment which the hardcover got. I’m proud of the book.

I said in a previous newsletter that to get into the feel of To Clear Away the Shadows I had done a story for an anthology of stories by or about Davids. The anthology is now titled The David Chronicles and is being edited by David Afsharirad.

I mentioned this in passing to my friend Barry Malzberg, who greatly to my surprise wanted to do a story for it. I checked with Toni and DavidA (a big Malzberg fan) and got their approval. Barry did an extremely good story–actually, it was a good story up to the last line and became a stunning story with that.

Only then did I realize that Barry thought the anthology was a tribute to me, like Onward, Drake. I told him that I thought that one Drake tribute volume was excessive and a second one would be ridiculous; but if the result was the story he’d just turned in, I was glad of the mistake.

Since Newsletter 105, we’ve had two hurricanes. Neither was especially serious where we live 150 miles from the coast, but the power was off for two days with Florence. Michael brought only about half the rain here–however there was an hour of severe wind and the power was off for three days. (Lots of branches and even trees went through power lines.)

I said, ‘the power was off,’ but in fact just grid power went out. The whole-house generator I’d put in a couple years ago chugged flawlessly and everything was fine. (And it didn’t use nearly as much fuel as I’d feared.)

The hurricanes did complicate travel. A culvert on the road into Chapel Hill washed out during Florence and added a three mile detour for about a week. That was fixed shortly before Michael brought trees and powerlines down on the same road. For a couple days I went around a tree and moved some barricades so that I could edge to the side of the road and duck under the cables. (I was on the little bike.)

In all, the hurricanes were mildly disruptive, but never worse than that for us. The (Generac) generator was a godsend. Among other things, the (electric) well pump continued in service.

The other excitement of the period is that Jo and I went to the Grand Canyon region (Zion, Bryce, and the North Rim) with our very old friends Glenn and Helen Knight. These are the folks we recently went to Italy and Greece with, and in the past had visited in Algeria and Turkey. As always, they did all the planning; and Glenn drove. Our job was to pay half of the expenses, and to sit back and have fun.

We flew into Las Vegas and spent the first night there. In the morning we rented an SUV (a Nissan Rogue; it was so satisfactory that the Knights bought one like it when they got home) and drove to Zion; the next day to Bryce; and following that to an air B&B in Fredonia, Arizona where we stayed for two nights and saw the North Rim of the Grand Canyon, which had been Jo’s particular goal for the trip.

There were incidental sights along the way, including the Kodachrome Basin and the Grosvenor Arch. This last was off paved roads, as was the entire way to Fredonia. The Nissan behaved without reproach, even in crossing mudholes to and from Grosvenor Arch, and along the washboard surface on the way to Fredonia.

The four of us continue to get along well. The people we met (including the waiter in the Denny’s where we had breakfast in Las Vegas as we set out) were uniformly nice. When I’m flying, I generally wear a Blackhorse t-shirt (mostly for the TSA monkeys, not that I expect them to be capable of taking the point as they badger civilians). I had a number of people during the trip thank me for my service (to which I responded as always, “Thank you, but it sure wasn’t my idea”).

At Pipe Spring national monument I chatted with the manager, a Southern Paiute. He noted that the brochure photo of a dancer in full regalia (including face mask) was him, and that he wore a red blanket as part of his outfit because he was a veteran–which was a mark of honor in his tribe.

I recall my Cherokee friend years ago telling me that hers is a warrior culture. That’s true of the Southern Paiutes also, and very possibly of all Native American tribes (which is what Cory implied). It seemed to be a commonly held belief throughout the southwest; and the attitude pleases me.

In all a wonderful trip. Old friends are a great benefit in life.

Now, back to a novel. I still haven’t managed to train them to write themselves.

–Dave Drake

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Southwest Trip 2018

Jo and I went to the Grand Canyon region (Zion, Bryce, and the North Rim) with our very old friends Glenn and Helen Knight. These are the folks we recently went to Italy and Greece with, and in the past had visited in Algeria and Turkey. Here are just a few views from the trip.

Zion National Park

Zion National Park

Zion National Park

Zion National Park

Kodachrome Basin

Kodachrome Basin

Jo Drake, Glenn & Helen Knight at Kodachrome Basin

Jo Drake, Glenn & Helen Knight at Kodachrome Basin

Grosvenor Arch

Grosvenor Arch

North Rim Grand Canyon

North Rim Grand Canyon

North Rim Grand Canyon

North Rim Grand Canyon

A window on a fin from the North Rim

A window on a fin from the North Rim

Closer view

Closer view

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Newsletter #105

Dear People,

There’s only ordinary news this time: I’m seriously into the plotting of my new RCN novel TO CLEAR AWAY THE SHADOWS. I’d like to be farther along–indeed, I’d like to be well into writing the book–but things are finally moving in the right direction.

A friend commented, “You’ve got to expect some confusion after a life-threatening trauma,” but in truth I hadn’t thought of the wreck (see Newsletter 104) as life-threatening. It clearly was, but not in my mind.

But there’s another part of it: I don’t cut anybody else slack, and I’m not going to start with myself. If I’m writing, books appear. No amount of bullshit is going to change that.

I just glanced at the Wikipedia entry on Karl Edward Wagner (which is pretty good in general). It says however that Karl wrote a second Bran Mak Morn pastiche (Queen of the Night) which was never published. Karl told his Zebra editor for months that it was almost done, then got an answering machine to screen her calls to save himself the bother of lying. Zebra even had covers printed for the book because they believed him–he was a very good liar–and the lie lives on in Wikipedia.

In fact Queen of the Night wasn’t even started: Karl’s relatives weren’t able to find so much of a page of it after he died almost twenty years later. He’d kept some of the Zebra cover flats, though,

Bullshit doesn’t bring books into existence.

I guess I’m more antsy than usual about my progress because Baen just had me do catalog copy for To Clear Away the Shadows. It’s scheduled for publication in July, 2019. I haven’t even completed my plot yet. I may well be the only person worried thtat I’ll be able to turn the book in; but believe me, I worry enough for many.

I’ve alluded to the wreck. It genuinely messed me up mentally, at least partially because it brought Nam and my complete helplessness there to the top of my mind. I don’t think I have any remaining physical problems, but for the past couple of weeks I’ve been feeling weak and tired, and my balance is off. I turn 73 on September 24, however, and that by itself is a good enough explanation for how I’m feeling.

Certainly the wreck didn’t help me. I advise all of you out there to avoid similar events.

I’ve just had the initial service on my new motorcycle, a Yamaha SR-400. It’s a delight: light, handy, and perfect for my needs as a backup bike. (The Suzuki DL-650 remains my primary machine.)

The Yamaha isn’t fast but it’ll hold 70 comfortably on a divided highway and 80 without discomfort. Supposedly it’ll do 90, but I have no intention of testing that. My normal use is to run 17 miles into town and back on two-lane roads, and I couldn’t have a better bike for the purpose.

It’s a single cylinder bike and accelerates slowly, but that’s slowly by motorcycle standards. I suspect it compares favorably with most cars. It’s a trifle buzzy at speed, but not uncomfortably so on a short run. For a cross country trip I’ll use the bigger bike (or more likely an airline).

The Yamaha is kick-start only. Now that I’ve gotten the hang of it (and built up my right calf a bit), that’s no trouble in warm weather. I don’t know about winter, but I think I’ll be able to handle it.

An acqaintance (whom I know to be shallow) asked me how I liked the new bike. Without thinking I gave her the pros and cons, just as I would most people. She apparently thought that in answering her question I was asking her for advice. She said, “Couldn’t you just trade it in on a motorcycle with an electric starter?”

Yes, I could, but instead I learned the tricks of kickstarting it (which took a week or two, as expected). And I also realized that when dealing with shallow people, the correct answer would have been, “When I get used to it, I think I’m going to like it a lot. And it’s really pretty!”

I’ll admit that only a few days before she asked me, I’d stalled the brand new bike in traffic on a very hot day. As a result I was thinking–and probably describing with some determination–about how not to have to repeat that experience any time soon. A month later I might not have bothered to mention it.

Still, just as stalling in traffic was a learning experience, so was the result of being inappropriately detailed in answering a question.

The Storm, a sequel to The Spark, is due out in January, 2019. Todd Lockwood’s art on this one is again excellent. I thought of the hero’s new dog, Sam, as being rather larger; but that probably only matters to me and to Toni Weisskopf. (We’re both dog people.)

There’s also been some local news. The Jim Crow-era monument on the UNC campus was pulled over by a mob last week. I don’t blame anybody for being offended by the statue (Silent Sam). It was of a common Confederate soldier–a grunt–but the folks putting it up in 1913 were unusually frank about their cultural stance.

The dedication speech was given by Julian Shakespeare Carr, a major regional industrialist (Carrboro, the bedroom community adjacent to Chapel Hill, is named after him). In the speech Carr bragged about having on that spot horse-whipped a Negro woman who had insulted a White woman.

The thing is, I believe mob violence is a bad thing in a civilized society. Yes, I understand people believing that the authorities aren’t moving fast enough to deal with an Obviously Bad Thing.

But Kristalnacht should not have happened.

Lynchings should not have happened.

And a mob shouldn’t have pulled over Silent Sam.

Think about society as a whole, people. Don’t step outside it to right wrongs that you think are particularly heinous.

–Dave Drake

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Yamaha SR-400

A new bike after the GS500F accident:

Yamaha SR-400

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To Clear Away the Shadows

Baen, June 2019 in the RCN Series

ADVENTURES BEYOND THE EDGE OF THE KNOWN UNIVERSE

To Clear Away the Shadows

Cover art: Steve Hickman

There were earlier examples, but the 19th century was the great age of scientific exploration. Wealthy amateurs sometimes funded their own expeditions, most were carried out with government support.

This activity greatly increased knowledge of the natural world. For example, what is still believed to be the deepest point in the oceans, Challenger Deep, was plumbed by the 1872 Challenger Expedition–a joint effort by the Royal Society of London and the Royal Navy.

More important for my purposes, these expeditions were often described by highly literate individuals who left personal accounts of amazing adventures. (The Voyage of the Beagle is one example.) I’ve read a lot of these both before and after I decided to use them as a model for this book.

The complexity of the political situation is extreme, and the risks and discomfort these scientists were undergoing in their researches are truly remarkable. It’s with reason that this period is sometimes called The Heroic Age of Science.

A note on the dedication. When I began writing in the 1960s, Mark Geston was one of the writers who were making waves in the SF field. By the time I left law in the ’80s, Mark had become a full-time attorney. We’ve kept up a low-key correspondence over the years.

Recently Mark sent me an anthology of British Great War poetry. Many of the selections were familiar, but some were not; among the latter, Robert Graves’ To Lucasta on Going to the War for the Fourth Time. Graves was a scholar and a poet of note, but when Germany invaded Belgium in 1914 to start the war, he joined the British army as an officer of the 7th Welch Fusiliers.

The fusiliers were originally raised to guard the artillery. They were equipped with fusils–flintlocks–instead of matchlocks and pikes. They had their own traditions and even a marching pace different from that of other British infantry. They were a picked force.

Exactly what that means is here in Graves’ poem:

Lucasta, when to France your man
Returns his fourth time, hating war,
Yet laughs as calmly as he can
And flings an oath, but says no more.
That is not courage, that’s not fear–
Lucasta he’s a Fusilier.
And his pride sends him here.

I understand perfectly; because I rode with the Blackhorse in Viet Nam and Cambodia.

–Dave Drake

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Three Drakes 2018 – Updated

3 Drakes-Updated

Jonathan, Dave and Tristan (Dave says “I keep shrinking in fact as well as by comparison.”)

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Newsletter #104

NEWSLETTER #104: June 27, 2018
Dear People,

For once, the big news hasn’t anything to do with writing. On May 9 I pulled up behind an old Jeep Cherokee at a traffic light in Carrboro. I was on my way home from my post office box, a trip I’ve made most weekdays for the 25 years we’ve lived in the current house. I was on the GS500F.

There was a long shriek of brakes behind me, concluding with an extremely loud BANG! as what turned out to be a 2013 Chevy Equinox hit me, followed shortly by a lesser bang as the bike was flung into the back of the Jeep. I’m not aware of being unconscious, but my next memory is of kicking my legs to get free of the bike. I don’t recall hitting the ground, though obviously I did. And the reason I felt trapped is that the bike was lying on my lower right leg, but I wasn’t aware of that either.

As soon as I got clear of the bike, I hopped to my feet, took off my helmet, and called to the considerable number of spectators, “I’m all right!” I suppose that was magical thinking, but the fact doesn’t bother me. I tried to pick up the bike and get it out of the road. That was crazy as it was squished, but I was trying to deal with things logically. (Logic doesn’t help if you start from an absurd premise.)

Lots of people were telling me what to do. Mostly this amounted to lie down on the grass and wait for the ambulance to take me to the ER. I had no intention of seeing a doctor, let alone a hospital. I wanted to get home.

Two police cars arrived shortly. (The station was within three blocks of the scene.) One of the cops told me I was really lucky. I replied that I didn’t think I’d ever count a day in which the bike I was on was crushed between a pair of SUVs as a really lucky one.

The girl driving the Chevy had moved it twenty feet back. (One of the spectators said that until she did, he hadn’t realized there was a bike involved. I guess it’s possible that I was under the overhangs of the two SUVs, but I’m not aware of that.)

The girl, a plump black of 21, was really sorry. She’d bought the car recently and the brakes had always been ‘funny’. From the sound as it sped toward me, I suspect the brake pads were worn down to the backing plates and I was hearing steel rubbing steel. For what it’s worth, it sounded exactly like incoming–right down to the bang at the end. There’s nothing for the guy in the impact area to do about either one.

A 65-year-old retired kindergarten teacher was driving the Cherokee. She was really freaked. When she got out of her car, she saw my leg waving in the air and thought she’d run over me. I kept telling her that I was fine and that she’d been even more innocent than I was, but it still upset her badly. (The next day I dropped by the place she volunteered–there was a sticker on the Jeep door–to reassure her.)

She offered me the water bottle she had in the car. I drained it: my mouth was really dry.

My wife was 30 miles away with a friend. They came and picked me up. I called my mechanic to pick up the GS500.

The bike had compressed to absorb the impact of a car moving at about 20 miles and hour, squeezing the bike into the SUV in front. Because I was stopped, I simply fell over instead of being skidded across the pavement. Other than falling onto the street (which I don’t remember), my body didn’t hit anything hard.

There were minor glitches over the next few weeks, but no physical injuries showed themselves. I had a touch on tendonitis in my lower right leg from levering the bike off it, but I regularly ache as badly after the heavy yard work I do. All the data the girl gave the cops–address, phone number, and insurance coverage–was wrong (she’d recently gotten married), but they were able to track her down, and she had insurance.

I wear top-end protective gear, an Arai helmet and a jacket from First Gear. That’s at least part of the reason things weren’t worse than they were. My shoulder hit the pavement, but at no point did I feel the impact. (I have a new helmet and jacket now.)

Things could have been a great deal worse. Similarly, I could’ve come back from Nam in a box. Neither of those things happened. That’s really all there is to say.

I continue to gather notes toward a plot for the next space opera in the RCN universe. The wreck didn’t improve my focus; but I’ll get there if I don’t die first.

So that’s the big news.

When I started working for the Town of Chapel Hill, WCHL-AM radio was a major part of the community and had a reporter at Board of Alderman meetings. WCHL is still there, and with changes in technology now has a local news website. A freelancer for the site (he’s a social worker in his day job) interviewed me recently. The result has come out here.

I will make only one comment on this very respectful article: I had gotten a haircut only a week before the guy came by. If he’d arrived a couple months later, it’s unlikely that he would have chosen the adjective ‘cropped’ for my hair.

Eugene Olson, the first freelance writer I ever got to know, just died at 83. He was my 11th grade English teacher, but he wrote on the side under the pen name Brad Steiger. Mr Olson was a very inspiring teacher. He also taught a one-semester creative writing course. I took the course but I don’t think it had much to do with my becoming a full-time writer.

What was crucial to that was the fact of Mr Olson himself. He proved to me that a kid from Iowa–he was from Decorah and only ten years my senior–could make it as a freelance writer. Without his example, I wouldn’t have attempted it myself.

After I knew Mr Olson, he went in directions I wouldn’t want to follow. If you’re into Forteana, you know that in the ’60s and ’70s Brad Steiger was a byword for phony sensation, and he also made decisions in his personal life which distressed me. That doesn’t take anything away from what Mr Olson taught in high school.

On Mother’s Day we got together with Jonathan and his family. There’s a new Three Drakes picture. I keep shrinking in fact as well as by comparison. Being something of a classicist, this puts me in mind of Tithonous.

Tristan is already at fifteen an impressive athlete and just competed in his first body-building contest. He didn’t get this from his grandfather. (Either one of us, come to think.)

I did an unexpected piece of writing recently. A professor from Minnesota, who in the ’70s was a high school fan of Karl Edward Wagner’s Kane series, has a contract from an academic publisher to do a book on that series. He asked me to do a short preface for the book and I did.

The job took me back to the ’70s when everything looked different. The world–our world and the speculative fiction world–was changing rapidly. Fiction magazines still existed and new ones were being started. Heroic fantasy was booming, Kirby McCauley was starting World Fantasy Con, and the future was bright.

I wrote about Karl starting out as a writer and trying to make a living. I kept the focus on him, not on me or on Karl’s interactions with me; nonetheless the little essay wound up being a pretty good picture of how the period felt from the inside. To that degree it’s about me and about all of us trying to write fifty years ago.

It was a rough time in a lot of ways (even, I suppose, for folks who hadn’t just gotten back from Nam), but there was hope and a great deal of good in the F/SF field then. One of those good things was the 1973 publication of Worse Things Waiting, a collection of fantasy stories by Manly Wade Wellman illustrated by Lee Brown Coye.

A near facsimile in paperback of the original Carcosa publication has just come out from Shadow Ridge Press at 20 bucks a copy. All the profits go to Lee’s family. Jim Groce and I, the surviving partners in Carcosa, decided they should have our share also. (Karl Wagner during his lifetime handled payments to Lee, and I’m afraid that matters may not have been done as I would have wished.)

Todd Lockwood did the art for The Storm as he did for The Spark, the previous book in the Time of Heroes series. This art catches the feel of what I described–which is explicitly not part of the sidereal universe.

I think it’s a wonderful job–and a perfect illustration of why I don’t tell artists what to paint on my covers (even when they call me to ask). My imagination isn’t visual the way a graphic artist’s is. I wouldn’t have come up with anything like what Todd did, let alone anything as good.

The book is due out from Baen in January, 2019. I’m very lucky.

Go do positive things, people. And try not to rear-end motorcycles: the life you save may be my own.

–Dave Drake

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GS500F Bike Accident

Crushed GS500 1

On May 9 I pulled up behind an old Jeep Cherokee at a traffic light in Carrboro.

Crushed GS500F 2

There was a long shriek of brakes behind me, concluding with an extremely loud BANG! as what turned out to be a 2013 Chevy Equinox hit me, followed shortly by a lesser bang as the bike was flung into the back of the Jeep.

Crushed GS500F 3

As soon as I got clear of the bike, I hopped to my feet, took off my helmet, and called to the considerable number of spectators, “I’m all right!” Things could have been a great deal worse.

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Three Drakes 2018

Three Drakes 2018

Jonathan, Tristan and Dave (who says “I keep shrinking in fact as well as by comparison.”)

See also: 20162015 and 2012

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The Storm

From Baen January 2019 in the Time of Heroes series:

The Storm

Cover art: Todd Lockwood

APPROACHING THE TERRITORY

The tales of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table lend themselves well to realistic, modern treatment. Tennyson’s Idylls of the King did this effectively for the 19th century, and TH White did another take in the 20th with The Once and Future King, which the musical Camelot followed closely. In both cases the focus was on the love triangle of Arthur, Guinevere, and Lancelot, though the authors had very different views of the subject.

The love triangle is a great story, and Tennyson and White were great writers; but there are other ways a modern writer can approach the material. Proust near the beginning of Swann’s Way imagines that instead of travelling through the modern countryside, he’s questing through the Forest of Broceliande. This is a reference to Yvain, by Chretien de Troyes, who composed his Arthurian Romances in the 12th century. This is slightly earlier than three anonymous authors created the Prose Lancelot. The Prose Lancelot provides the source material for most later treatments, including those of Tennyson and White.

The Forest of Broceliande is a wondrous place which a knight enters for the sake of adventure. There he may find a holy hermit with a secret to impart, or a powerful knight who takes on all comers, or a thousand other marvels. In Chretien a hero may become the champion of a daughter whose sister plans to cheat her of her share in their father’s estate, a situation in which a modern reader might find him or herself. Alternatively, the hero may have defend the chatelaine of an isolated castle from the lust of a giant who drags behind him a coffle of knights whom he’s defeated.

Beasts and monsters lurk among the trees. There are castles which can be entered only upon issuing a magical challenge. Beautiful women become the prey of powerful villains–and the prize of heroic warriors. An enemy may become a friend, or honor may force a friend to become your dangerous opponent.

This is Romance in the broad original sense of the word. This is what fascinated Proust, and it is what fascinates me.

In The Storm I’m trying to evoke that sense of Romance in a modern reader. I’m using material from Chretien, and from the Prose Lancelot, and from folktales. My sources aren’t “history” in the sense we mean today, nor even “history” as a scholar in the High Middle Ages would have meant it.

I intend The Storm to be true to the mindset of Chretien and his 12th century readers. And I mean it to be a good story, which was certainly Chretien’s intention as well.

–Dave Drake

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