I just finished binge reading your entire library.
Cruel and unusual punishment, there oughta be a law against it.
I would suggest you get Teann to add an Author's note to the front
Ahh, the tyranny of storycodes. A note wouldn't help if stories are filtered by code at the start. The alternative is no storycode, but that's just as bad since it will never appear in a search by code. Maybe there should be a "doesn't fit into category" storycode?
great character development
Thanks for the comments! The way I see it, there are plenty of "scene" type stories, so I didn't want to be just another in a long line. Why not a different approach? Instead of what's happening, explore why it's happening. Go mental (in a good way), explore emotions, motivations, the evil ways society programs us to conform...
Or, since it's an amateur effort, write solely for the fun of it. Whether I have five readers (wildly optimistic) or five thousand (about when the Sun goes nova) the royalties are exactly the same (zero, it is public domain), so I can safely and economically ignore the potential audience. There are only so many permutations of the empty house, the isolated farm, the old castle, all mixed in with rope, leather and steel. But add the mental activity hidden behind blindfolded eyes, yup, then it gets interesting.
Night in the Desert was a very early story, and as you can tell originally stopped at the first part. I read it a few times, thought about it, and decided to keep on going, and going, and going. I spent many an evening, banging away on the keyboard, with nothing but XEW (radio station) to keep me company while I explored the mysterious mountain in the Mojave.
Once again, thanks for the response, and I look forward to any comments on the Island series. Part 3 is slowly coming along. Several years effort went into the first two, part of what I like to think of as my magnum opus trilogy.
Jack Peacock