The Bedlam Books on Amazon!

Cover by Jon Hunsinger

Cover Art by Jon Hunsinger

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I know I should let them rest, but I always feel like mentioning these books.  Crossing Bedlam and Chasing Bedlam came about from me wanting to write an R-rated adventure.  It takes place in a blocked off, collapsed, dystopian United States.  The heroes are a young woman who evolves into a gun-loving mercenary and her best friend/big brother serial killer.  These books had everything that I didn’t want to put into my other series.  Cursing, violence, pop culture drops, clarity that sex occurred without the actual scene, and poking fun at a variety of real-world groups.  Really got to cut lose when writing these books.

That’s why I feel bad that they never sold and I had to shelve the entire project.  I published two more on my blog since I had them written.  Protecting Bedlam (Now made private) did get fairly political, which is a reason I didn’t publish that.  Hinted that it wasn’t canon when I got to Derailing Bedlam.  Will I ever return to this series?  I have outlines for other adventures, but the lack of sales and only have blog interest means it’s dead unless I become a career author.  That’s not in the cards.  So, enjoy these two outings of my madcap psychopaths who will always be on my mind.

*****

“We don’t mean you any harm! Seriously, we come in peace!” Lloyd announces over the megaphone from the zoo parking lot. Standing on top of a truck cab, he continues shouting while waving his paintball gun in the air. “Again, I have been asked to put your minds at ease. Please come to the front of the zoo, preferably on a rooftop, and listen to what I have to say. Best that you leave the guns behind because they can be a distraction. So, where was I? That’s right. We come in peace and don’t mean you any harm! Scouts honor. Though not the kind you’re thinking of. More of the kind that transforms with twirling and comes from space. They didn’t have many cartoon choices in Rikers.”

With dawn having only recently broken, most of the Guardians are groggy and confused thanks to the rude awakening. Those who were on the night watch are more aware of the situation, but remain quiet and quietly go back to their tents. As far as they are concerned, Lloyd is a harmless man with a megaphone that wants nothing more than attention. Nobody knows where Amur is hiding or if he knows about the disruption, his tigers having been roaring since the obnoxious noise began. Due to Lloyd firing paintballs around their feet, the animals that spent the night in the parking lot have run back into the zoo. The only living thing that he has managed to hit is one of the guards, the woman succumbing to the itching powder and ipecac combination within minutes.

The Guardians are beginning to lose interest in Lloyd when the roaring of an engine erupts from the eastern side of the zoo. Monkeys screech from their island while the remaining rhino charges toward the zebras and giraffes. Birds fill the sky as the reinforced fence is taken down by a heavily armored van. A pack of motorcycles and sports cars follow the larger vehicle through the wreckage, all of them honking horns to scare animals out of their path. Bullets ping off metal as the Guardians scramble to defend their territory, but they only manage to take down one of the bikers down before the invaders split into smaller groups. None of the defenders are sure what to do without their leader and they are not entirely dedicated to killing the Metal Minstrels. As the vehicles move further into the zoo, the gunshots become fewer and only one other gang member is struck through her car’s windshield. It is only a shoulder wound, which one of her passengers tends to with a bandana while the others continue firing into the air.

Moving without an escort, the van careens toward the entrance pavilion with the intention of bringing Lloyd into the fight. Tyler clambers onto the roof of the vehicle, knocking on the driver’s side window to let Rose know he is in position. The gang leader leaps onto the pavilion and rolls to avoid slipping into the falling rubble created by the van smashing through the structure. Four of the guards remain at their posts and are slow to react, only one of them fully clothed and ready for a fight. Tyler shoulder rushes the slowest of the Guardians and knocks the woman off the roof before she can react to his presence. The agile man whirls around to slam the butt of his shotgun into the face of another enemy, who crumples into a groaning heap. Cocking the weapon, Tyler hopes the noise scares off the other two enemies, but one of them raises their rifle. The boom of the pink shotgun echoes across the zoo and the blast has enough force to send the dead man toppling into the wreckage. The final Guardian drops his weapon and attempts to retreat, but the van returns to collapse the pavilion section his is standing on. Tyler leaps back onto the vehicle while the entire building crashes to the ground, those inside or on top trapped in the ruins.

“That was awesome!” Lloyd shouts while he hangs out of the sliding door.

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Characters With a Death Wish

I guess the quote above is what a literal death wish is.  That would be an acceptance that life has an ending and you’re okay with that eventuality.  Doesn’t sound like you’re wishing for death, which is how fiction tends to portray the term.  Certainly sounds like a big shift in mentality.

So, I started thinking about this after watching an anime called ‘Bungo Stray Dogs’.  The plot doesn’t matter for this topic since I want to focus on a character named Dazai.  This guy is highly intelligent, fairly charming, and can negate the powers of others.  He’s almost like a mentor to who I think is the main character.  One of his biggest character traits is that he is a ‘suicide junkie’ and routinely tries to kill himself, which has others accusing him of having a death wish.  They aren’t wrong.

Before I go further, I will explain why Dazai is like this.  He is a character who wonders if there is any point in living.  So, he tries to find a purpose, which started as an efficient killer for a mafia when he was younger.  Now, he does this other thing where he wants to discover and experience the perfect death.  Usually with a pretty girl who is willing to die as well and mean it.  Always sounds like he would never go through with it because he doesn’t try to get himself killed in battle.  I never really managed to fully wrap my head around this, which is why the death wish fascinated me.

Authors and readers have a lot of trouble with a character who wants to die.  When writing it, we tend to make them highly depressed or even deranged.  Living things have that built in fear of death, so we see the desire to die as a symptom of mental illness.  An author may want readers to avoid connecting with these characters and see them as broken, so they try to push the personality to the dismal side of human nature. This can be done to the point where the character’s reasons for wanting to die are either lost in their actions or never revealed at all.

I would say that there’s a fear of going all in on a death wish character too.  It’s fine if this translates to high action feats of heroism, which has the character survive or sacrifice themselves.  The type of hero who ‘doesn’t care if they die as long as they save others or get the mission done’.  This actually sounds closer to the real world death wish (acceptance) than the fiction one (desire for it) we tend to think of.  Maybe this is why we find it easier to write this type of hero than the ones that truly want to do for no other reason than to cease living.

This might be why I found Dazai rather interesting.  He kind of straddled the whole concept.  He was okay with dying, but fought against it whenever it was forced upon him by an enemy.  It was like the death wish was his way of controlling his existence. Maybe he was living the quote where he accepted death, but he was kind of going out of his way to find it during his downtime.  There were moments where it really was played for dark comedy too, so that might have been a key factor.  Still, it’s a staple of the character to try to die in his off-time, which is strange and seems unnatural.

Have I figured out how to write a death wish character?  I don’t know.  The version that has accepted that death is inevitable, but won’t go out of their way to die appeals to me.  They will still fight to survive when their lives are threatened, but they know that their time will come.  It sounds like a challenging balance to strike.  One that many people might even relate to.  I think I have a few characters in future books that I want to try this with too, so I should look more into it.

So, what do you think about the death wish concept?  Both reality and fiction.

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Writing through the generations: Generation X

Hello, SE friends. A couple of months ago, I began a series entitled Writing Through the Generations. The purpose of the series was and is to help …

Writing through the generations: Generation X
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Happy Squirrel Appreciation Day

I couldn’t resist this holiday.  A dear, close friend of mine and I have a squirrel thing going on for years.  So, I’d be remiss if I didn’t take advantage of this day.  Also, there are 5 subfamilies, 58 genera, and 285 species of squirrel . . . So, this is the only way I can do an animal post about them without going insane.  Enjoy the bushy-tailed funnies.

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Goal Post: A Week of Cold and Treading Water

Heard this song on Pandora yesterday morning during my shower.  Really caught my attention.  Been a while since a new song grabbed me like this.

Anyway, this week didn’t see much in the way of writing or editing.  Might have found time to get a few pages of Darwin & the Fate Bracelet taken care of.  Hoping to fix that this weekend with a binge.  Next week might work out too since it’s midterms week.  Students go home at 12:30, which means I have 2 hours of sitting around.  I can get a little editing done if I’m not doing anything else.  Fingers crossed, but I believe I’ve made my decision to edit the first 5 Darwin books before I start writing the 6th.  Too much is going on and I may need a refresher.  Should help with series continuity too.

I had my son last weekend, so there was a lot of Pokémon Go and Super Smash Bros.  He has taken to playing the latter with us taking random characters.  We team up against the computer.  He says he’s loving this because I tend to get characters I’m not very good with and I’m fairly vocal when I play.  So, the two of us start yelling at the computer and making exaggerated noises when things go wrong.  With the weather being freezing and a little snowy, it was a nice way to get some energy going.  Of course, I now how to do this whenever we have free time between homework and him going to his mother’s place.  It might die down for a bit since he has midterms next week.

On the other side of things, I hadn’t been sleeping well due to stress.  The ‘life event’ took up a lot of my time even when I wasn’t in scheduled meetings about it.  This stressed me out to the point where my CPAP machine wasn’t making much of a dent in my apnea a few nights.  The numbers are back to normal, but I’m clearly still off.  Going to take the whole weekend to reset myself, but it won’t last for long.  The ‘life event’ hits the final stage (at least I hope so) this coming week and then a lot of stuff changes.  Some for the good and some for the not so good.  When dealing a situation that requires negotiation, you can’t get everything that you want.  It still stings even though it’s necessary.  Doesn’t help that other situations have cropped up around the ‘life event’, which has my head spinning a bit.  Just can’t catch a friggin’ break.

Nothing else really happened this week.  It took me 3 days to watch an anime episode that was 23 minutes long.  Exhaustion and distractions were the flavor of the week.  I’m genuinely surprised I didn’t collapse and need a day off like last week.  Friday was definitely touch and go for a while.  A 2-hour delay on Wednesday might have helped me a bit since I could rest up after dropping my son off at school.  Got to bike and run errands in the morning instead of doing it late after the final ‘life event’ meeting.  Not that I wasn’t bombarded by texts nearly every day too.  Will next week be different?  No clue, but I’m hoping it is.

Wish there was more to talk about it, but this feels like another week absorbed by the ‘life event’.  That should end soon, but I don’t know how long it will take me to recover.  I feel like every time I drop my guard, my imagination goes into doom spiraling about my life instead of writing stories.  I miss the version of myself that could sit down and escape reality with my writing.  Haven’t been that way in years because things always seem to be dire and stressful.  The fact that I’m struggling to edit isn’t a good sign.  My plan is to fix that this weekend though.  I say that all the time though.  Not an author of my word since I falter all the time.  Maybe I’ll get back to what I was one day.

Goals of the week?

  1. Edit Darwin & the Fate Bracelet
  2. Help son study for midterms when he is here.
  3. ‘Life event’!
  4. Finish watching ‘Flame of Recca’ and start the old ‘Highlander’ series.
  5. Do more or complete the March blog posts.
  6. Relax?
  7. Replace CPAP parts without breaking the machine or getting it stuck to my face.
  8. Order boneless wings for lunch today because it’s been a while.
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Questions 3: Fondness of the Past

I have a feeling that I woke up today and chose violence with this post.  We all have connections to the past that we remember fondly.  Items and styles that we wish were still popular.  Unsure of the things that replaced them.  Sadly, we all hit that point one day and can only take solace in the fact that the youngsters will meet the same fate.  In other words:

Grandpa Simpson

Now for the questions.

  1. What is a piece of technology that you miss from the past?
  2. What is your favorite song from the past?
  3. If you could bring any tangible object back from the past, what would it be?
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What’s Happening in the Literary World–January Edition

Jacqui here with my first posting to Story Empire. I’m so excited to be part of this amazing group of authors. I have long read their posts, followed…

What’s Happening in the Literary World–January Edition
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Poetry Day: Here We Are Again

Bullet Train

(I don’t remember the specific events, but that’s probably because it happened a lot in the past.  You start making headway and think you’re about to gain stability.  Then, you get one unforeseen accident and you’re back to the starting line.  This is why I sometimes think true stability of life is impossible.  Most people will always be living under the threat of that one big disaster.)

Our position has not changed

We are back to where we were

Stress barking at our heels

Evolving into terror

That we are forever trapped

A year of working hard

Dashed by misfortune and despair

One holding to a basic job

The other back at home

All hopes and goals are paused

As the newest pieces crumbling

Revealing the tattered tapestry

That we fought so hard to mend

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Best of 2023 #3: 7 Tips to Writing About Blunt Weapons

(This was originally posted on March 8th, 2023.  Seems I started 2023 strong.)

Google Image Search

Since these kinds of weapons differ from swords and spears, you can’t always use the same tactics.  Swinging a club will not have the same effect as slashing with a cutlass.  So, what are some things that will help you with this type of weapon?

  1. Nobody who masters a mace or hammer will have stabs as their main strategy.  It may help to push enemies away to get space, but these weapons are most effective when being swing.  This is because a lunge or jab is a quick burst, but doesn’t have the same power as a full swing.
  2. Due to the goal being to break bones and organs, a person using these weapons will aim for specific spots.  Heads and ribs are fairly popular in fiction because they make for one-hit kills.  Yet, an adventurer with a mace might start off by aiming for other areas.  For example, hitting joints, even if they are armored, can weaken an enemy enough to make the rest of the fighter easier.  You have more opportunities to hit wrists and elbows than heads and torsos.
  3. Blunt weapons have no edge, so the area that needs to hit is smaller than that of a sword.  Striking with the side of the long handle can hurt, but that’s not going to do much damage.  Similar to stabbing, a blunt weapon has a small spot that needs to make contact with when compared to its size.  Glancing blows might not have the same affect as well.  You need a direct hit to deliver the full power of the attack.  So, warriors who use this weapon will use tactics to make sure they increase their chances of a direct hit.
  4. The really big blunt weapons need two hands unless the warrior possesses superhuman strength.  This goes for all weapons, but you really need to consider the size of the warrior when compared to the size of what they’re swinging.  Outside of magical enhancement, a halfling can’t go swinging a maul made for an orc like it’s a wooden toy sword.
  5. Yes, blunt weapons make a lot of sense against undead.  There’s nothing wrong with following this trope.
  6. Spikes on blunt weapons can add a stabbing affect, but it can come at a price.  The additions don’t turn these weapons into swords or spears.  They increase the chance of breaking the skin and puncturing armor.  This also means there is a chance that they get stuck.  A spiked club getting through platemail can result in the enemy getting stuck on the weapon.  If it’s a deathblow, the warrior has to dislodge his weapon from a limp body.  If the other person is still alive, they’re now stuck within swinging range.
  7. While anything can be used as a club, blunt weapons do have some designs that make them different from improvised weapons.  There is a weight and balance to each one that allows for effective blows.  If this is off then the weapon can break or not strike with enough impact.  You don’t really have to consider this too much outside of writing barfights where random objects are being swung.
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Outlining Finesse, Part 1

by Stephen Geez Greetings, Story Empire mavens! I’m starting the year with a series of posts about how to make outlining work for you. Beem Weeks and…

Outlining Finesse, Part 1
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