1 April Kickstarter: Laserblasted

You ever have not merely a bad idea–but a terrible, no-good, utterly compelling idea? A hideous idea that won’t leave you alone until you act on it? An idea that makes folks say “You shouldn’t have! No, really, I’m not being polite. You shouldn’t have.”

No? Me neither.

This year’s April Fools’ book might be as close as I ever get.

This novel will go to Kickstarter backers and Patronizers first. I’ll have the print and ebook in my bookstore next, then it’ll be available on retailer sites. If you want to know more, you can read the uncopyedited first chapter below. If you want to know less, go elsewhere.

Here’s the first chapter.


Assimilate (R-23 Mix)

A sky flared silver-blue around a scrawny yellow sun. Scattered shrubs too stubborn to accept extinction cracked through dirt scorched to pavement and clawed towards the sky, dusty green leaves stretched to catch any hint of rain or falling sweat or spit. Heat-drenched stones had become open-air kilns hotter than the dirt. The only people who willingly stayed were rocks.

But if you stayed, if you watched, you’d see the innocent convict reassemble himself on this parched world. Upon discovering he had a mouth, he promptly screamed. A billion billion compatible life forms in the galaxy, and he’d escaped into a filthy meatsuit. A meatsuit on a world that was pure death to algae-based life.

But the GalactiCops would never look for him on this dead-end blue-green world.

The convict tried to cackle, but this body didn’t even have gills.

He wobbled on stolen feet. Only two legs? Clumsy. Unreliable. Plus, two-legged species were always the ones to invent police. Sociologists claimed it had something to do with a fondness for kicking each other in the fork. A handful of bipeds decided that they needed to impose their morality on others and in just a few million years they tromped all over the galaxy telling the aquatics to stop singing starhymns and the algae to stop churning.

There might be police here. But not GalactiCops.

The distant horizon wobbled. Balance! If he fell, the superheated dirt would harm the meatsuit. Fine, let the host handle that—what? Breathe? What was breathe?

Incendiary air wheezed in through the face-holes, inflating the torso.

His vision stabilized.

Oxygen exchange through a bellows? What prankster had designed this biome?

Worry about that later. Body first.

Two arms, two legs, attached to a central torso. Bilateral symmetry. A paltry five digits on each hand, but one of them was opposable. Convenient, that. A lump of hard bone atop the torso, half-covered in sensory organs. A food-hole with grinding bones top and bottom, two air-holes above it, two (ouch!) visual organs further up. Audio receptors on each side, nice for echolocation. Thin fur over the top. A flexible pinkish-brown membrane encased the meatsuit. The convict’s healthy spore-green was suffusing through the membrane, tightening his control.

A word drifted up from the host: man. He was a man. Male.

Not just meat, but sexed meat? Dis-gus-ting. No wonder they kicked each other in the fork.

#

This poor bastard won’t be on screen much but he’ll shadow the whole picture, so you need to know a couple things. The Prime Algae had felt the need for an innovative thinker unconstrained by society’s preconceptions so it had meticulously selected his sperm spores instilling intelligence, unconventionality, curiosity, and persistence. His native form was an endlessly flexible mass of algae the size and strength of a Chevette—yes, there’s newer cars that size, but we’re in 1989 so let’s keep the Mini Cooper reboots out of shot. He’d gone off and solved some of the Parent Algae’s more pressing problems, incidentally covering a few planets in a brand-new high-reason computational cyanobacteria of his own devising. A couple animal species made ridiculous claims to “own” those planets, when even meatsuits know that algae is welcome everywhere. The convict had gone so far as to make the results of his research freely available through the modulated digestive gas emissions all sensible species used for communication. Unlike light interception or vibration analysis, even the most primitive life forms could perform direct chemical analysis. How could he have been more generous, more transparent? The animals only had to take a good whiff to get ample warning of atmospheric changes, but no, they hadn’t bothered!

Enter the GalactiCops.

Exit to the prison planet Plutocrat’s Pleasure.

The convict had scavenged the parts to build a spatial inverter. Not much of one. Just enough to get a few million spores and a few gigasouls of his essence across space in a self-reassembling container. Patient hours probing the light years in search of not just a usable host body, but a host body near equipment that could be autoassembled into a useful multitool. It wouldn’t do any good to escape to a resource-stripped planet, but with a multitool he could build the tools to build the tools to return to the Parent Algae and heroically unleash a cyanobacterial Golden Age across the galaxy.

The first step, escape, had succeeded.

The host wore the chunky spore pod on a chain around his neck. The spatial inverter had reassembled the atoms of whatever devices the target had been using into a multitool, a little clunky but you couldn’t expect an algorithm sketched on blotting paper to understand style or grace. One end of the multitool’s shaft was hollow, designed to slide over one of the host’s upper limbs up to the middle joint so the meatsuit could seize the control bar. The other end was serviceable crystals and controls. With this he could slice mountains or smelt carbon dust into delicate starwarp lace.

The host’s brainstem surged in satisfaction. The multitool was very male? What? A repulsive image flashed from the host. Meatsuits were even worse than he’d imagined!

Appalling or not, he wore one now. He had to care for it, return it in better condition than he found it. The meatsuit wore protective cloths over most of its body, exposing only the head and hands. Everything felt overheated. Surely the meatsuit didn’t live in this barren oven! It had to have shelter, somewhere.

Dread rippled through him. Was this species at the dying end of a Great Filter? Had he escaped to a planet wheezing its last?

Mountains ringed the horizon. One looked closer than the others.

The host urged that way. It might not be in charge, but it didn’t want to dry out and flake away either. It urged the convict to bring along the round canteen, but the thought carried an obscene image of unscrewing the top and wrapping its food- sphincter around the opening. The convict wanted nothing to do with sphincters.

Now, a name. Algae recognized each others by their emissions. Meatsuits used stupid names and even more stupid titles, transmitted by vibrations in electromagnetics or water or stone. Start with the title, indicating rank. Doctor? No, the host was a Doctor, a doctor of rocks. The convict wasn’t anything like this creature. Not for long. He needed a title that meant knowledge-sharer, discoverer of new wisdom—

The host threw back Professor.

Yes. Professor. Professing the truth. That would work. Now the name. He gathered up his memory of his personal emissions aroma and told the host to translate it. A jumble of pointless implications and impressions came back, wrapped around a few clear words.

Good enough. He would fit in.

Until he didn’t need to.

Professor Raisin Bran Farts set out to show them. Show them all.

#

Speaking of names, we need an establishing shot of our approaching GalactiCops. There they are, approaching Earth. Saucer-shaped GalactiCop Cruiser 82 has all the sleek styling of a Cybertruck and the timeless grace of a moose on fentanyl, but the inertialess drive goes from zero to everything in nothing so who cares how stupid it looks?

The Greys invented police long before humans did. One of the things they police is access to humans. It’s not that they care about us. Humanity hasn’t evolved enough to join the galactic market and hasn’t invented antigrav so the Galactic Species Index classifies us as livestock. If someone figures out how to profitably strip-mine us before we get our act together, we’re done. While the Orion’s Sword civilizations consider human pineal glands a potent aphrodisiac, we’ve put so many toxic chemicals in our environment that the Swordian Morality League has taken to saying, “take gland for your last stand.” The Greys put humanity on the Protected Species list, which isn’t so much for our benefit as giving them another excuse to put the boot in. The Swordian Society for Responsible Human Ranching will get that law changed one day and swoop in to save us from ourselves, for them.

Greys have jointless limbs, almost like tentacles. Their three fingers bend wherever way. They’re kind of like turtles with extra forehead nostrils and extensible necks. Each giant eye has one lid. It blinks up. Sort of creepy, but not a bad creepy.

The more experienced GalactiCop was on his fifth life, old enough to actually be grey. His people came from the sunny side of a tidelocked inner planet like Mercury. Most bright siders never leave their tunnels, so when he departed his colleagues named him Bright Land. That happens to be the meaning of our name Lambert, so we’ll go with that.

The newer cop still had the bronze hide of his first life and the impish humor of the young, but he was serious about being the best police he can. He actually read Blackstar’s Simplified Law for The Fuzz and marked notes in the margins. They’re not even the kind of notes about how a GalactiCop could leverage the law and his position to get free probing from the Greys Of Negotiable Affection. His colleagues call him Serious but that’s not a name here so we’ll call him Earnest.

By the time the Professor learned the importance of carrying water when hiking through the inland California desert in high summer, Bert and Ernie were landing. Ernie hopped to the armory and drew a turboblaster, calling “Come on, partner!”

Bert didn’t even look up. He was eating a burrito.[1] Not just any burrito, but Galactic Cuisine’s brand new Deluxe Everything Jumbo. In his last life he’d had a side gig as a Burrito Influencer on NextGalaxy. While reincarnation had stolen his soothing high-pitched grinding voice, and with it his audience, he maintained his in-depth knowledge of the art form and Galactic Cuisine still had him on their reviewer list.

Be warned, Galactic Cuisine never removes anyone from their reviewer list. Tearing open the wrapper legally grants Galactic Cuisine a nonexclusive, irrevocable license to analyze, resell, or modify the consumer. Nobody reads license shrinkwrap, so it’s fine. Once Bert opened a burrito, his GC-updated enzymes wouldn’t let him stop eating until he devoured the whole thing. Bert believed it was because he was “savoring,” but the truth is all Galactic Cuisine food tastes like violently molested sea cucumber.

Ernie’s impatient ripples annoyed Bert. “Listen. Ernie.”

“He’ll get away!”

“Nah,” Bert grunted around a mouthful of Genuine Fast-Breeding-When-Fed-But-Adorably-Purry Fuzzballtm burrito filling. “Don’t take that little turboblaster. Get the big one.”

Ernie perked right up at that, but he’d spent too much time with Simplified Law for the Fuzz to just snatch it. “Is this perp that tough?”

“Who’s in charge here, kid?”

“You are.”

“That’s right.” Bert chomped. “This fungus busted out of a high-security prison fifty-nine parsecs away. It’s dangerous.” Still chewing, he hauled himself to the door and selected a pistol turboblaster. “Don’t take no chances. Weapons on fricassee. You see our escapee, you put him down.”

They emerged on the same baked desert the Professor loathed, but Galactic Cuisine has so heavily bioengineered the Greys over the last fifty millennia that they’re equally uncomfortable everywhere. Ernie waved his rifle about like the parboiled sky might hurtle hot hail, but Bert kept himself relaxed and sighted along his turboblaster’s barrel to scan among the scraggly shrubs and scattered boulders. It would be easier to see the escapee if he knew what type of body it had claimed.

Professor Raisin Bran Farts had figured out enough about knees to crouch behind one of those scraggly bushes. The multitool’s weight dragged at his arm. Algae doesn’t have a divinity to swear by, or at, so it had to soothe itself with action. Using a multitool to direct raw energy lacked style, precision, and cleverness, but it would make short work of the GalactiCops. Algae isn’t a natural user of ranged weapons, though. The Professor aimed at the GalactiCop with the bigger gun.

The multitool’s automatic targeting assessed the GalactiCops, identified Ernie’s turboblaster as the most serious threat, and blew it straight off his shoulder.

Ernie wailed at the impact, more surprised than hurt.

“Called it,” Bert muttered. Every GalactiCop’s first field lesson: perps shot the person carrying the biggest gun. Bert wasn’t about to take chances. His karma was so low, his next life he’d probably come back as an author.

Bert would enjoy telling everyone back at the station how Ernie sniveled, but took the chance to line up his shot and let the fungus have it. The turboblaster’s auto-targeting took over and knocked the multitool right off the fungus’ arm.

The Professor had believed he knew all the flavors of pain. He had a point. Prison isn’t kind to algae. But algaes don’t understand bones. They know the concepts, sure, but that’s like Mrs. Perfect Dentition earning her PhD in toothache theory. The multitool’s clear housing went all the way up to the meatsuit’s elbow. The impact broke the meatsuit’s radius in three places and the ulna in four. Bone pain was a whole new kind of agony, one wholly alien to everything the Professor had ever experienced. He fell back, not knowing how to override the meatsuit’s pain signals.

The last thing Professor Raisin Bran Farts saw was the grey GalactiCop raising a brutal turboblaster square at his meatsuit.

Bert blasted the meatsuit to a scorched black mark. The indestructible spore pod thudded to the ground. “Hey, kid! You’re fine. On your feet.”

Ernie didn’t feel fine. Humiliation made a Grey’s elbows hurt, and Ernie’s felt like they’d been dipped in boiling lead. He would need a few more encounters to internalize Bert’s first field lesson, as well as the second: your partner is a bastard.

Bert tossed the burrito stub in his maw, dropping the wrapper.

A buzzing rose from behind one of the rocky hills. Had the convict left a dangerous surprise? Ernie flowed to his feet. No, not a weapon.

A flying machine. A powered metal glider dragged by an airscrew. What sort of species would use that instead of simple antigrav?[2]

Bert shouted, “Kid! Grab your weapon and let’s go!”

“What about the convict’s weapon?” Ernie said.

“Did you see where it landed? Cause I didn’t. It’s not traceable to us, but your turboblaster is. The natives find that, the Contact Form’ll be nine times as bad!”

The tiny aluminum Cessna wobbled past, but by the time the pilot turned around and came back for a closer look Bert and Ernie had grabbed the turboblaster and flung GalactiCop Cruiser 82 into the sky, leaving only the distinctive triple divots from the thrusters.

An escaped convict fricasseed with little enough damage and a weak enough witness that they had to do only a few hours of paperwork. A job done, if not done well.

[1] Wrapping one food in another food is universal among intelligent species, the most spectacular example being the avisvores of Omicron Spaniel and their Living Turducken.

[2] Every sensible species invents antigrav right before figuring out nuclear power and right after discovering spalt.

New book launches on Kickstarter tomorrow, but no title yet?

My new book launches on Kickstarter on April Fools’ Day. This is not a coincidence. It absolutely follows in the footsteps of Ed Mastery, the Networknomicon, and the Savaged by Systemd audiobook.

What is it? Not telling. I do have hopes for it, though.

I also have a blurb for it, from a famous author. Well, more famous than me at least.

I don’t know what more you could ask for. Oh no, wait, I do! I have been informed that people who follow this blog do so because they want my updates. Updates on the Kickstarter’s progress will appear here as well as on the campaign page.

The big small-to-medium reveal is tomorrow. Watch this space, or the Kickstarter page.

82: Lying to All Sides

Project IDGAF is complete, so I’m back on the new Networking for System Administrators.

Network address translation, or NAT, uses a device that accepts packets bound for the public Internet, rewrites them so they appear to come from the NAT device’s public address, and forwards them to their destination. When the remote site answers, the NAT device rewrites the response so that it goes to the original client. The NAT device maintains a table of connections, and tracks the state of each connection so that it can properly open and close connections as needed. Most home routers are NAT devices. While NAT seems easy, it involves lying to all sides of a network connection, and not all protocols can handle those lies. Common examples are FTP, VoIP, and certain sorts of VPN, which all require special handling to traverse NAT. The network administrator can apply filters to NAT devices to block some, but not all, unwanted traffic. NAT is not a security mechanism—the minimal protection NAT offers was broken decades ago. IPv6 specifically excludes NAT.

I hung up some cloth to muffle the roomy sound. We’ll see if that helps. Also, N4SA2e is still available for sponsorship.

81: An Occasional Meal

Zeno’s Paradox of Book Endings is well in play for Project IDGAF. Only a couple scenes left, but damn if this book ain’t fighting me hard.

Thirty years of honorable service, and it all came down to a house he couldn’t take proper care of and a pension that didn’t quite cover his meals and a hippie granddaughter who liked the wrong kind of boy.

Of the three, Colonel Wittstock worried the most about his granddaughter Katie. Katrina to everyone else, but his love had been Katrina and he’d called her Katie and they were so much like one another that he couldn’t call her anything else.

Smart, she was. Smart like a flick knife. She’d had trouble at that fancy LA school so her dad had decided that Wittstock needed a caretaker. Sure, he forgot things sometimes, but missing an occasional meal hadn’t done him any harm serving in Asia and it wouldn’t hurt him now. You miss one day eating, you enjoy tomorrow’s meals that much more. The bills got paid, eventually. Thinking about it, though, he hadn’t seen a power bill in a while. Had Katie been poking in his mail? No, she didn’t have that much money. Maybe his meddling son had called the power company, told some stories. It was good for a son to help out his dad. He’d done the same. But Wittstock didn’t need that kind of help, even if he’d forgotten a few times.

This week’s episode brought to you by Patronizer JM who donated a really good mic to me. It came with a spit shield and everything!

Direct Print Sales now shipping from US, UK, Australia, AND… Canada

Delivering books to Canada has long been a pain in my butt. I live in Detroit, Michigan. Canada’s right there! I can walk a mile to the shore, throw a rock, and hit a poutine wagon. But no matter how I stretch, I can’t get tiger tail and I can’t cheaply mail books there. It’s cheaper for me to ship to some parts of Europe and Asia than it is to ship to Toronto.

I just discovered that my direct print sales fulfillment printer, BookVault, now prints from Canada. I hit the button to enable that so fast, you’d think it was offering tiger tail delivery. The books will be printed in Winnipeg, and shipped within Canada via their postal system. I have not tested BV’s Canadian printer. I can’t; if I order a book here, they’ll print it in the US.

If you’re Canadian and want one of the books I’m selling direct, do try it and let me know.

February’s Fervid Sausage

This See the Sausage Being Made post went to my esteemed Patronizers at the beginning of February, and will go to the public in March. Not a Patronizer? You could be.

One of the advantages of being a self-employed writer is that my schedule is infinitely flexible. I can work any hours I want, so long as I work them. The down side is that everybody knows my hours are endlessly flexible, and when there’s a family emergency I get elected to cope. A sane society would have supports for medical emergencies, but this is the United States and everything is terrible.

Still, words are being made. I hope to have Project IDGAF finished by the end of February, and the new Networking for Systems Administrators done by the end of March. As Douglas Adams said, “deadlines are wonderful: I love to hear the whooshing noise they make as they shoot past.” Still gonna try to make them. The Windows examples in N4SA2e are pure PowerShell, which has been an education. PowerShell has an interesting and design that makes many things possible in managing Windows. Unfortunately, it’s burdened by managing Windows. Want to look at a network interface? Great! There’s several different commands for doing that, each slightly different! It has a built-in select command for grabbing columns out of the output, rather like the bastard child of SQL and awk. You have to have that, because the output of any one of these commands might be hundreds of characters wide. If you can remember which of the several similar commands you need to look at, that is.

Anyway. Windows admins need network competence too.

Once that’s done, I’ll be working on a new ZFS book with Allan and finishing Skybreach. After ZFS, I’m planning a core DNS book.

And now, for some tedious business neepery.

People have been asking me about this new author web site tool, Fourthwall.com. It promises to be all things an author would need: web site, store, monthly patronage, and so on. It pretty well replicates what I built on tiltedwindmillpress.com. They only charge 3% of all sales, plus transaction fees. It seems like a great deal, doesn’t it?

Rather than give an opinion, I’m going to discuss how I decide to use an outside service.

The core postulate of service selection: The Internet’s business model is betrayal. Amazon was willing to lose millions of dollars a year until they achieved market domination. Once they crushed the competition, they promptly raised prices. Uber spent millions to destroy taxis. It’s not just the Internet, of course; look at the devastation Walmart inflicts on community businesses. Short of malice, there’s also inexperience and incompetence. When my first business back in the 90s, I sat down and figured out my cash flow and decided the company would work. My inexperience showed itself through expenses that far outstripped my predictions. I failed. It happens. From my customers’ perspective, I’m certain it felt like betrayal. So: The Internet’s business model is betrayal.

Before using a service provider, ask yourself: if they betray me, what is the cost of no longer doing business with them?

I use BookFunnel to deliver books. They provide ebook delivery, track who has what books, and let buyers re-download their books months or years later. The service costs me $100 a year. I switched to BF because I was spending 20-30 hours a year dealing with delivery and redelivery issues. My time isn’t worth a lot, but is more than $4/hour.

If BookFunnel betrays me, I have to switch back to delivering books myself. I would probably hire a contractor to set up something, or persuade a WordPress developer to write a book delivery system suited not only for my customers but for the customers of every other affected author. In the grand scheme of things, the impact is vexing but minimal.

Mind you, I don’t really expect BF to betray us in the foreseeable future. Why? Because of profitability.

Consider what Bookfunnel does for me? They run a database, a web front end, and provide file downloads. That’s it. The web site doesn’t offer news updates or anything that would lure the Hacker News crowd, so it’s not likely to experience massive traffic and load spikes. Running such a site as a business requires a meticulous attention to detail, but it’s not technically hard. Tens of thousands of authors pay BF $100/year or more for work that can be done on a single rack-mount server. That’s a nice business. They also support author stores, charging fees that are better than Amazon but reasonably profitable for them.

Suppliers need to feed their pet rats. (Or children, whatever.) If a supplier’s business model doesn’t generate enough cash for the supplier to meet their bills, it’s a good sign that the supplier intends to capture and then betray their market.

Just as important as profitability is the path to profitability. I have no idea how BF started, so I’m going to assume it’s the success story I hear over and over.

Some programmer hears their author friend griping about the problems of indie book delivery and thinks, “I could solve that!” They hack together some PHP and Postgres, rent a VM, and pitch it to their author friend. That friend helps them discover the most vexing bugs. Once the thing basically works, that author tells their other author friends how this site solved all their problems.

One hundred dollars a month times one user? Your VM bills are paid and you made a few bucks helping a friend, cool.

Ten users? It’s staring to look like real money.

Fifty users and more signing up every day? Quit the day job and ride this cash cow as far as you can!

Best of all, their customers are technical enough to configure WordPress payment gateways and have enough traffic to consider that $100/month a worthwhile investment over managing files themselves. They’re not complete newbies, and support responses like “update your plugin” require no further explanation.

The path to profitability is obvious and predictable. So is the path to failure.

Let’s consider Fourthwall in those terms, and assume I set up shop there. This example uses novels, because most writers running their own stores are novelists.

The path to profitability? You’re offering every author in the world a free web site and free store! They’re gonna flood in. While file storage is almost free, it’s expensive at scale. Many of those customers will have never set up a real web store before, and are going to have questions.

Writing books is one of the hardest ways to make a living. Selling books as an indie author is even harder. Most authors sell nothing. Three percent of sales? I charge $5 for my novels. That gives Fourthwall $0.15 per sale. Many novelists sell their books for $1 (a terrible practice for anything but loss leaders, but that’s a separate argument). Fourthwall gets $0.03 per sale.

How many three-cent purchases will it take to cover monthly server rental?

The numbers on my tech book sales are slightly higher, but still depressing.

If I ran my site, my store, and my Patronizer program through Fourthwall and they took three percent? They’ll eventually either go out of business and leave me hanging, or be compelled to raise their prices. When either happens, I must drop everything and scramble to replace those services elsewhere.

Again, none of this requires malice. But authors are so prone to falling for scams that entire web sites exist exposing scammers. After thirty-two years kicking around publishing, an honest business is an extraordinary claim that requires extraordinary proof.

And I might be wrong! I have made claims and been proven wrong before. (Performative Buzzword Compliance is very real, but the specifics of Kickstarter’s case made me wrong. Oh well.)

Being independent is not easy. I opened my bookstore eleven years ago. Getting it to its current state has been long and slow, and I’m still working on integrating print sales into it. I’m hoping that my outside contractor figures out the final shipping problem. I’m a tiny customer so I’ve told them to fit me in wherever.

For the curious, why did I outsource a silly WordPress problem? Because I’ve been fighting this problem for over a year. In the immortal words of ZZ Claybourne, “my job is book.” I don’t want to delve sufficiently deep into WordPress to solve this problem. I’d prefer writing “More SNMP Mastery” or “[ Mastery.”

In other business-related stuff: the new US presidential administration is just as bad for business as I expected. We’ve flipped our spending to Yellow. Business thrives on predictability, and predictability is now in the same narrow niche as the Ford Edsel and the mechanical calculator. While I am always grateful to my Patronizers, my thanks are especially fervid now.

But if I’m gonna get this book done, I better go make some words.

80: Mentally Stable People

I’m gonna finish this book. I’m gonna finish this book. It doesn’t matter how much life tries to stop me, I’m gonna finish this book…

One of the great problems of civilization is disposing of unwanted stuff. Nuclear power means nuclear waste, which remains toxic for tens of millennia and grants superpowers only to untraumatized, mentally stable people, of which there are zero. The obvious solution, of course, is “put it in the trash and make someone else deal with it,” which is our society’s go-to for everything. Instead, responsible folks treat nightmare toxins like they treat busted refrigerators and last week’s garbage; we bury it. Eventually we get an idea for a better place to bury it, so we dig it up and move it. Like a dog with a bone.

You don’t have to bury it. Most food waste you can compost, so long as your neighbors don’t mind the smell or the flies. What you can’t compost you can feed to the raccoons. They’ll love you for it at first, but will soon demand you eat more pork chops and leave more meat on the bones.

Bodies? Bodies are so much trouble to get rid of only because everybody gets weird about freelance disposal. Besides, there’s never a trespass-friendly pig farm around when you need one.

Only a few scenes left, but the ending keeps receding like Zeno’s Paragraph.

Also, we’re only a couple weeks from my next Kickstarter. I should probably mention it here.

“SSH Mastery” now available in print direct from me

The headline kind of says it all, but it won’t let me put a link so I’ll repeat it. If you want SSH Mastery in print you can buy it from me. Unlike any other store, buy the print and you get the no-DRM ebook for free.

Thanks to the number of retail channels I use I have no ability to generate per-title book sales figures, but SSH Mastery is consistently near the top at most of the stores.

Print and ebook editions of all future Tilted Windmill Press titles will be available first through my store. Adding a backlist title is a few hours work, and a couple weeks of waiting to be sure that the printer does a good job. Yes, it’s a third printer. I’ll rant about why in March’s See the Sausage Being Made column, which I still owe my Patronizers.

Anyway, you can get a print/ebook bundle of SSH Mastery. It’s a mere eight years later than I wanted, but that’s tech for you.

If you want to know if I have a particular title in print, see my store’s print category.

79: Creepy As Chad

The “Project IDGAF” Terminal Death March is upon me, so here’s a tidbit

You people in the special effects department need to pay attention here. Yeah, I know most of you are busy building the Isaac Asimov sign and rigging explosives in the faux gas station Props slammed together last night, not to mention stealing the mail collection box we need to complete the two blocks of Mole Hill we’ll need for the Big Finish. Yes, we’re on a tight timeline and a tighter budget. But this bit needs to be genuinely creepy.

The burn on Lance’s chest? It’s not a burn.

He thinks it’s a burn, but to be fair he can’t get a good look at it. His neck can’t stretch like a Gray’s, and he’s not the sort of guy to study his reflection in the mirror, so he doesn’t get a good look between his pecs. From his view sure, maybe it’s a burn.

But it’s a silver and black plate. Kind of pebbly. Weirdly organic looking, if lead can be organic. The size of Katrina’s hand over Lance’s heart. This “burn” needs to look as creepy as Chad.

Okay, fine. Nothing can be that creepy. But still, people, work with me here!

This book demanded a soundtrack. It’s given me an excuse to dig up old songs I love that I hadn’t heard in a while. Looking at the songs, though, it’s clear that my 80s were not like most people’s 80s.