Monday, April 20, 2026

Potential Discovered!

MORE NEEDED
By Alex Ness
April 22, 2026

I have tried over the 20 years of writing on blogs to consume products and ideas and by digesting my experience, give a reply, and do so with the ideas that are stirred by such a diet. At one time I had people who read my work from publishers of all sorts of media. I am unaware if any still do. But the sad thing is, works considered 20 years ago and considered were by and large all lesser works by me. I have learned from the time in grade. My work is therefore better than it ever was, but fewer read it now.

PROPERTIES TO DEVELOP


If you've viewed the movies Star Wars, Episode 1, Death Race 2000, to some degree Speed Racer, the concept of a race and personalities of various drivers lead to a renewable concept with new racers and serial episodes. Star Wars Podracing, captured chariot races in antiquity and movies about Rome entertained just as the races did historically. In movies and stories, for the state and for the owners of slaves, that required a death defying performance to thrill the viewer. Chuck Dixon wrote a comic book miniseries featuring wars as fought while in cars, and Steve Jackson Games features many games to play the scenarios yourself. The concept could grow, and it can be fought as a fan of races, or the feature of fiction found in a futuristic nihilist series where the world is burning, and car races fuel the drama in that world. These are modern gladiators fighting in modern chariots.

BORDERLESS TRADE, TRANSNATIONAL ECONOMY & CYBERNETICS

More seriously, but even more interesting, Alan Dean Foster has written different stories about the future of trade, diplomacy, and borderless states and stateless people all colliding. The drive for profit with few attachments for the maker, the families of the workers and profit driven ethical failures of the individuals in every scene read. Both in terms of a motion picture,or as fiction novels or comics, the setting is an amazing place of high dreams and bottom line survival. It is also less and less fiction. The world it investigates is ongoing. The neutral zone found on the border of Mexico and the US, the Maquiladora exist right now, and the Trump administration are dealing with aspects of global trade that include human trafficking, stateless money, and violence.

THE EVOLUTION OF HUMAN MINDS WITH LIFE IN A DIGITAL WORLD

The goals and ideas of the future often feature the power of AI, Cyberconnectiveness and modern allegiances. But Tokyo Ghost has a different and far off looking future in mind. It says, are humans already addicted to screen, do we have a chance to separate ourselves from tech, rewards based on upon non human transactions, digital currency and human body divorced existence? The deeper future isn't as pretty and the Tokyo mentioned here has segregated cyber use for areas outside of its non tech garden. City states are alive, due to the massive nation state weakening, from the addictions, and the economy that rises from it. There are not enough works that investigate consequences that will happen, not just might happen, and if this isn't a joyously happy future, it does offer hope for human agency.

FERTILITY CRISES

During my wife and I's journey to have our child, we experienced disasters, and scientific mitigation of our tragedies. I have written about that experience many times. However, there are a variety of scholars, including people from the right and left of political divides, who argue that the human population issue is more complex than numbers, or consumption of resources. However, there are known consequences of various political states controlling the means to end or to encourage more population. Higher Taxes upon families having multiple children is one way, taxes incentives for those family building larger families of the types of population is a similar way. Oddly, both kinds of laws and edicts can exist in the same states. Singapore saw its lower birth rate of the more monied/educated classes as happening in one ethnic group. So, at the same time it limited others, it gave benefits to larger families in the highest bracket. Children of Men, by PD James and the movie adapting it, speak of how birth of children from various groups have led to economic and political crises. The fears of the wealthy, the white elite, the educated, crashing in fertility as the groups with less ability financial or educationally, rising, leads to a collision of goals and idealism. 


ART BY MOEBIUS


I was asked by someone why I love the work of Moebius, aka Jean Giraud so much. I think this is a case of trying to describe what something tastes like to a person who has no taste buds. It is much more than taste, but it is involving my taste. I see colors and humans, dreams and nightmares in forms I never saw before Moebius's work, and never since. Some try. Some try to evoke his works, others might even swipe his work. All I know when I picked a book which was 75% off a hardcover collection of Moebius, and found when I brought it to the register, it was 50% off that price to boot, I felt like I'd got away with the deal of the century.

The lines found in Moebius are original. He came of age when the arts were moving from simple story telling and service to the story, to creating art that was so large and mind blowing that people would forget about the greater story if they let themselves do that. I wrote a letter to Jean Giraud in 1990 through the services of one of his publishers forwarding his mail (I had air mail postage on my letter to be forwarded) and my letter was written in French. He responded in 45 days or so, thanked me for the letter, and sent along a sketch. It was a very good day. The images show works that reward the readers and I recommend them all.


LINKS:

MY POETRY AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com 
HERE: Poplitiko.Blogspot.Com 
MY PUBLISHED WORKS 

Social Media
https://x.com/alexnesspoetry

All works shown and/or considered are copyright the respective owners, fair use is the sole means of use asserted.

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Author Ian Watson passes away

Rest in Peace IAN WATSON
Author, Poet, Commentator
Warhammer and Sci Fi author
20 April 1943 – 13 April 2026
His website: IanWatson.Info

A talented editor, author and poet, Ian Watson has passed away at age 82. His contributions to speculative fantasy were esteemed and he will be missed.  Condolences are offered to his fans and family. 


Thursday, April 9, 2026

Authors and Books

A BRIEF NOTE ABOUT AUTHORS (AND LOTS OF IMAGES)
By Alex Ness
March 23, 2026

TO MY READERS


I've discovered that my doctors had known way more about my health than were telling me, and only now do I also know that I've had a return of cancer without questions. It would be true to say I am in remission, but it isn't a hopeful thing. The recent clarity of the situation does explain a great deal of the last 4 years of issues. Prior that, I had a broken neck, messed up shoulders, and that was a lot to deal with. But currently with lymphoma cancer, diabetes type 2, recurrent mono, I wonder how to go forward. I also know, in the past I was told grave expectations for all the different health issues, and mostly, rather than killing me, they just suck. I appreciate that they haven't killed me, and perhaps they won't. However, I sleep little, I'm in near constant pain, and my desire to write remains great, but my mind isn't always able, as it had been in the past.

Facing delays, disappointing efforts and lack of funds, I can't go much further. If you are interested in buying copies of my work let me know. My facebook offers a look at what I have available usually, though my books for sale are many, I have to catch up with other projects before I am done sorting. Currently therefore it'll be a couple weeks before I begin sharing. My good friends have helped. My my wife and son have allowed me to endure, and my cousins and besties are responsible for giving me hope. And I am grateful to all of them.


ERNEST HEMINGWAY

Reasons I like Hemingway's work? His economy used words to create a canvas of light and shadow, the absence of information becomes as telling as the kind of words create detail. Whatever you choose to see, a subject covered in light casts shadow. Wherever something doesn't become illuminated, is it the narrator's decision to not express, is it a case of not knowing, is it meant to evoke isolation, quiet and absence. I like many authors, I like many genres, and I am aware that some authors, perhaps many, do exactly the opposite than Hemingway, choosing to leave no detail unconsidered. They are each writing, but the finished work is largely different.  


FRANZ KAFKA

Kafka writes clearly about subjects that are confused, complicated, and difficult. He uses his voice to describe the emptiness mental illness can feel like. He also offers tools to consider how someone who is lonely, left alone kind of loneliness, or uncomfortable amongst many people. To live in this kind of reality is difficult, painful and hopeless. Kafka often reached into the dark heart of personal despair and gave it clear perceptions. His lucid clarity makes for tales not told for their horror, but can evoke such pain, the reader is left agreeing. Perhaps though, other than to further dig, one is not interested in revisiting those works.


ALBERT CAMUS

Albert Camus wasn't telling stories that people had an easy time interpreting the meaning. He was telling human interactions and choices in the form of story. He was explaining through them his desire to have humans rise to a level of being able to hope, be happy and struggle but overcome fears. For me his writing brought understanding and awareness, and purpose. We all labor, and all have a task, but however difficult or constant the struggle is, our purpose is found in how we go about our life's tasks. He would say, we must find in ourselves the knowledge that we can be content in our labors, and find happiness in that. It changed my life, really.

ANTOINE de SAINT-EXPÉRY

The Little Prince was such a great book that I endeavored to understand it in the original language, not the translated one, so that my brain could grow in reading it. Saint-Exupéry is able in novella or short stories to penetrate my heart and infuse it with hope. More than most anyone else.


YUKIO MISHIMA

My best friend reads Cormac McCarthy and says it is difficult but worthy of the time spent. McCarthy was seriously talented, but for me it didn't come with a reward for the effort. Mishima is my difficult writer. He constantly told stories that have beauty, but death, isolation, alienation, and sorrow mixed with patriot blood. His personal grief over being closeted in a sexually repressive society, his belief in beauty as a truth, and shedding of blood to atone for acts of violence, led him to a ritual suicide the day he sent off his final manuscript. I can't unread his work, it lingers in the palette. 


CLIVE BARKER

While I read Stephen King, and think him a great writer, he didn't pull my trigger. I find his work very much smart and able, but King is nowhere near as interesting as Clive Barker. The reasons for this comes from original ideas, beautiful darkness, and characters that bring ruin to the idea that there will be a happy ending. I never interviewed Barker, never tried to either. But I like him, his work, and find it a good time to invest in a story. Movies based on his books are less interesting to me.

MICKEY SPILLANE

I love the power and economy of Spillane's writing. It is crime, but nothing like a real detective no matter how well he details the investigation. It is a raw, violent and well told tale, and every work manages to evoke a mystery, without redoubling the themes and characters time after time.

LINKS:

MY POETRY AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com 
HERE: Poplitiko.Blogspot.Com 
MY PUBLISHED WORKS 

Social Media
https://bsky.app/profile/alexanderness63.bsky.social 
https://x.com/alexnesspoetry

All works shown and/or considered are copyright the respective owners, fair use is the sole means of use asserted.

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

TOP SHELF RELEASES 4/7/2026

 
New Top Shelf Releases
 
Punk'n Heads
things get messy with this band!
 
Announced The Marsh Fellows — the graphic novel debut of beloved online cartoonist, Anna-Laura Sullivan.
 
Ghoul — a spooky twist on the imaginary friend arriving May.


AVAILABLE NOW
STARRED Review — "Clever pacing gives the whole book a cinematic quality, with tiny, pithy snippets of backstory giving the characters more substance and thoughtful subplots coming together in meaningful ways." — Booklist


Punk'n Heads
by Dave Baker and Nicole Goux

$19.99 (US) | ISBN 978-1-60309-586-0
216 pages | 6 1/4" x 10 1/4" | Mature
Browse Preview Pages

Available Now!


RECENTLY ANNOUNCED...
Beloved online cartoonist Anna-Laura Sullivan makes her graphic novel debut with a captivating adventure about misfits exploring the dark edges of their world! After a nuclear war plunged the world into darkness, the last beacon of hope is the island utopia called Slumber City. In this rainy, happy town, one angst-filled urchin doesn’t see what there is to smile about. But after being taken in by the elderly Marvin and Pearl, Urchin is pulled into their quest to solve the dark, damp riddles lurking outside Slumber City—and uncover the plans of its mysterious mayor.
Preorder Link


ARRIVING IN MAY 2026
Be careful what you wish for! Newcomer Kasey Iris is set to release her debut graphic novel, a macabre take on the imaginary friend with Ghoul, available May 5! This 292-page full-color graphic novel centers on a lonely Filipino-American teen and her ghoulish companion putting a spooky twist on a friendship from beyond.

Iris created this Spotify PLAYLIST to accompany her debut.

"heartfelt graphic novel explores grief, loss, and relationships"
"Eerie and poignant." 
— Kirkus Reviews


Ghoul
by Kasey Iris

$19.99 (US) | ISBN 978-1-60309-583-9
288 pages | 6" x 8" | YA
Full-color, softcover graphic novel
Browse preview pages
Release Date: May 5, 2026

Sunday, April 5, 2026

UPDATE: Tunnels & Trolls


A NEW AGE? FOR TUNNELS & TROLLS
By Alex Ness
April 6, 2026

I've interviewed some of the people who worked on the Flying Buffalo's game Tunnels & Trolls, shared reviews and considerations of the same. In 1993 I was alone and the world was far away. My wife was with her family for the holiday and I had finished all of my course work as both a Graduate teaching assistant and a grad student at my beloved history program at North Dakota State University. Solitaire T&T was very easy to learn, flowed well and actually had such a flavor that even in the case of solitaire, it felt epic and fun. Flying Buffalo's owner Rick Loomis sadly passed away, but he and game designer and writer Ken St Andre, artists Steve Crompton and Liz Danforth all joined together and created an elevated product.

Over time since that time I've still RPGed, but less intensively. However, I have become friends or friendly acquaintances with Ken and Steve. As such I've interviewed them, enjoyed their products and saw other games and various RPG systems, but preferred T&T. Deluxe Tunnels & Trolls came out a decade ago and reading through it, game testing it led me to prefer this over most RPG systems, and easily worth the series.

REBELLION UK games purchased the game May 2023. I had hopes, but nothing of substance immediately happened. But then recently came a Kickstarter to drive the first new edition under Rebellion's hands. I didn't post the news of a kickstarter when it first appeared, as I was mostly offline. When someone shared the link with me, I was dealing with the issues regarding my health over the last five plus years. As I am doing better, more or less, I took a look and read various PR for the event. I absolutely do like the look of the new product. I am curious if it captures the original product's good points but I don't think of it as being a new edition, as a new system built upon the foundations of work that led it to still be played, 50 years later.

KEN ST ANDRE

Interview one https://poplitiko.blogspot.com/2015/06/tunnels-trolls-creator-ken-st-andre.html
Interview two https://poplitiko.blogspot.com/2022/06/ken-st-andre-answers-questions-on.html

LIZ DANFORTH
https://www.lizdanforth.com/

STEVE CROMPTON
Interview https://poplitiko.blogspot.com/2024/03/steve-crompton-artist-writer-game-maker.html

RICK LOOMIS Head of FLYING BUFFALO Games
http://rickloomispbm.com/


TUNNELS & TROLLS THE NEW AGE THE  KICKSTARTER

I look forward to seeing the game arrive after being funded, and perhaps playing it as well.  Good luck to Rebellion UK Games and thank you to Flying Buffalo for support of Tunnels & Trolls.

LINKS:

MY POETRY AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com 
HERE: Poplitiko.Blogspot.Com 
My published works: https://alexnesspoetry.blogspot.com/2024/09/published-works-of-alex-ness.html

Social Media
https://x.com/alexnesspoetry

Contact email: Alexanderness63@gmail.com

All works shown and/or considered are copyright the respective owners, fair use is the sole means of use asserted.

Sunday, March 29, 2026

ATLANTIS, THE OCEAN AND FALLEN KINGDOMS

THINGS TO FIND: Underwater
By Alex Ness
March 30, 2026


I taught a number of courses from 1992 to 1997, and even really enjoyed much of it. But in three separate courses, none of the students had ever heard about the ancient world, nor the myths and legends from the same.  The lost kingdom of Atlantis has always fascinated me, and the thought that the students never had the opportunity to revel in the morality plays, the possible historical existence, and the lessons for the future Atlantis offered, wounded me. In that case that I had been reminded that the modern mind thinks the past is boring, so as a creative writer I must try to give the reader more to appreciate. I've used the past as well as alternative narratives of the past. It has been addressed in many of my works, projects, and p.o.v.


In fact, Tales of Lost Kingdoms is a work illustrated by some wonderful past artists, with poems and essays by myself and Peter Urkowitz, a bright man with some fine talents. The cover was my doing for arranging/designing it, with use of art by Josh Howard, and images from Pixabay. I had asked Josh to do the image as a book was being created 4 years prior to my first book being published. But the publisher refused to pay for the image. As such I traded a very limited book about Ray Harryhausen, and other works for it and Josh said, it is all yours. It is available through me, Peter or Amazon. 


In a way, all of the books shown above are fiction, and speculation. Some shown are better than others explaining the narrative and some are better at storytelling, if not necessarily seriously. However, I definitely believe that there was a model for Atlantis in a historic subject. However, we haven't enough evidence to point to it at this point. Prince Namor of Marvel Comics, and Aquaman of DC Comics both refer to Atlantis as being a sunken kingdom, where the inhabitants breathe in water. Along with Aquarius Mission by Martin Caidin all these fictional works are worth reading, but they aren't addressing the subject from the perspective of a fictional and fantasy outlook. 


KULL by Robert E. Howard

The character Kull, King of Atlantis came from the mind of Robert E. Howard. He wrote of heroes in a lost age of steel, each being a paragon of leadership, power, and ability to fight. Kull is different than Conan, the modern era's preferred character by Howard. But, Kull is more about the cost of leadership, with sorrow and desire to overcome the kingdom's issues. He was not seeking romance, sex, or carnal desires. Unlike Conan, Kull was motivated by elevated ideals. (I like Conan, this is an attempt to compare, not a vote for one character or the other). What I like about Kull specifically, is that it displays the cost of leadership, and in contrast to, say, Elric by Michael Moorcock, that facing the depths of darkness, he isn't one who practices the darkness. Howard's version of Atlantis is thoughtful, and interesting not retreading paths walked upon before.


ALAN DEAN FOSTER: Oshenerth, Cachalot and more...

The people who read science fiction often demand a story to be exotic, complicated, logical and more. People who read fantasy seem to want emotive stories, with action and ideals of living in a world that can be changed, saved, or engaged. Alan Dean Foster often speaks to the aspects of the future with a means of emotional connection.  In Cachalot an ocean planet is used to grant reparations to ocean mammals, for the misuse of them over human history. The concept is similar to demands for racial reparations from invaders, dominant populations to assist the damaged people for what was done. As such, the book plays differently for people. I am moved by it, and I am aware that it is more space fantasy than science fiction. All of the story, which utilizes orcas and humans collaborating to solve a recent trend of disastrous events.

Oshenerth is set within the oceans of another world. Two ocean dwellers, Glint and Chachel find an unconscious being, described as a demon and help save their life. They learn of a massive approaching invasion, leading them to a fight for survival. The world is distinct in  with the ocean life having specific behaviors and sorts of thought. Somewhat similar to how various human species lived on the same planet at the same time... (Neanderthal, Denisovan, Cro-Magnon) Merpeople and other intelligent life forms exist. The Mer people use blue magic and are an analogue for humans in the setting explored.

FANTASY PAINTER JEFFREY JONES
Jeffrey Catherine Jones was a painter who Frank Frazetta considered the next great painter. That is high praise. I was able to both interview JCJ, but more importantly, become a friend in time to her. She had a spirit that was more kind than almost any I have encountered, and with her great amount of talent, of skills, that is almost unique. She struggled a great deal with her gender, being transgender and by the time she had surgery, it had been a difficult run. Depression led to more issues. But somehow, she maintained a sense of kindness that I've never truly encountered before.  Her art did not die when she did, but the books are expensive, and rare. I have two of these books and do recommend them for any others to seek and find.

LASTLY
LINKS:

MY POETRY AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com 
HERE: Poplitiko.Blogspot.Com 
MY PUBLISHED WORKS 

Social Media
https://bsky.app/profile/alexanderness63.bsky.social 
https://x.com/alexnesspoetry

Contact email: Alexanderness63@gmail.com

All works shown and/or considered are copyright the respective owners, fair use is the sole means of use asserted.

Saturday, March 21, 2026

SNEAK PREVIEW: LOST ON PARADISE

From Alan Dean Foster, a new book, an October 20 release. From Blackstone Publishing.

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Author Len Deighton, Master of Thrillers and War has passed

        Author Len Deighton has died


Military Science Fiction author William C. Dietz has died


William C. Dietz: 30 January 1945- 15 March 2026

American author William C. Dietz, who specialized in the genre of military science fiction, has died. He leaves a legacy of work, and fans of his place in the genre and in sci fi overall.  He created works about wars in space, on different planets, earth in the future and wrote in the Halo and the Star Wars universes.

He'll be missed, and condolences to his family and fans.

Sunday, March 8, 2026

Change at the Top, And How Exposure to Media led to More Media

CHANGE AND CONTAGION
By Alex Ness
March 9, 2026

MIKE RICHARDSON FIRED AT DARK HORSE COMICS, ENTERTAINMENT

Recent events in the medium of comic books have led to upheaval in staff and leadership at various publishers. Mike Richardson had began the publisher Dark Horse in 1986, and the publisher was sold to bring stability. It was reported that Richardson has been fired by the holding company that owned it since 2022. It stands as a very large event within the last 50 years of American comic books.

It's usually a safe bet when a publisher or EiC is fired sales and poor reception to one's product are the reason. Yet one might wonder if the sexual harassment event of Scott Allie colored the decision. The lingering decision in most ways might not be the whole of the reason to move on from Richardson, but the quality of his writing and personal imprint on the works that Dark Horse created suggests it had to have been more than simple sales, market stagnation, or personality issues between creative partners.

I've asked other minds in the industry about the reasons and they almost all suggested it is sales, but for one. They said, ageism in comics is an enormous trend statistically, but no one dares to bring it up as most don't notice age until it is important to them, at the age they are at the time. I think that influences the decision, but still isn't the sole or most important reason.

Rich Johnston covers the important facts and gives some needed context to the event HERE

FIRST CAME A MOVIE THEN SO MUCH MORE

To plant a seed of creative taste one experiences a new thing, and by the nature of influence, one delves the concept, understands the message, and seeks more. I was a 16 year old male, with 2 similar aged friends and as such, they also possessed similar interests. Here was a movie titled HEAVY METAL, it was suggested to be an anthology of stories, similar to the offerings found at science fiction and fantasy magazine, Heavy. But it was itself born from the magazine Metal Hurlant or literally, Screaming Metal. The movie soundtrack was filled wildly intense appropriate evocative sounds found in the film.

The art of Chris Achilleos was featured on the movie poster, the cover of White Dwarf magazine and more. I began to collect White Dwarf, almost certainly as a result, and it was for its first 100 issues truly worth reading. Along with the familiar images and themes, everything I saw in the film led me to some other destination. In this way it felt more like a contagion because every further move was influenced by the event of seeing such a movie.  


For me, the movie imagery led directly to Moebius and from appreciating his endless imagination, joy, despair and bizarre. Moebius drew with a line that was distinct, not so very photo camera real, as it was perfectly able to cast shade, depict motion, and emotion. His work a decade later on Silver Surfer was one where I first felt the Surfer was the Christ character or at least John the Baptist prophet of the coming God, and it was perfect beneath Moebius's pens and inks. From the kind of stories Moebius exposure led to, Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind by Hayao Miyazaki. The influence is clear, it is not an homage so much as saying the universe and characters imprinted themselves on Miyazaki.  

From the song by Blue Oyster Cult Veteran of the Psychic Wars I felt the beat, the pained voice, and epic tone, the lingering wars and heartbeats drowning out the peace we seek. And then sought Rogue Trooper and Starship Troopers. These works added more to my enjoyment of comics, books, movies more than the music.

Women History Month 
Sun, Mar 1, 2026 – Tue, Mar 31, 2026

In March we celebrate women, here are two real women and a gathering of some great characters in fiction. My life is only possible as a child resulting of rape by the choice of my birth mother to not abort me, and gave me up for adoption.  I don't have a perfect life or past, but I'd have nothing without her courage, and without my adoptive mother's fierce determination to be someone I could never have become without her guidance and love.



Here is a collection of women from the world of comics, heroes and powerful humans. I've often said, and I believe it to be true, my mother, wife, and numerous women friends allowed me to see how powerful women make the world better, and are by no means less than equal to men, but higher on the scale of compassion, endurance, and expression of power. I could never see the point of view in people who ignore, look down upon, or deny women, seeing the excellence of how they lead in the many ways they have led.

LASTLY
LINKS:

MY POETRY AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com 
HERE: Poplitiko.Blogspot.Com 
MY PUBLISHED WORKS 

Social Media
https://bsky.app/profile/alexanderness63.bsky.social 
https://x.com/alexnesspoetry

All works shown and/or considered are copyright the respective owners, fair use is the sole means of use asserted.

Monday, March 2, 2026

BOOKS, Dragons, Fantasy

FACTS VERSUS FANTASY
By Alex Ness
March 2, 2026


They say that the days of one's life move faster the older that they are. Is that really true? Well, it depends. No doubt, every day has the same number of seconds, minutes and hours. But how it plays upon the mind and perception is truly not so equal. The more days, hours, minutes and seconds that have passed for the individual, the more fleeting they appear. The context for time, also, is an imaginary thing. We create it, it is a construct, for the context and distance from and to an imaginary point in the distance. The older that one is, therefore, the smaller every day is, the more swiftly it passes. And as such, a historian is dealing with thoughts and paradigms that even those who might still be living from when they occurred would not feel them as deeply as in the moment, and for people of that specific time. (Click upon images to enlarge)


Peter Green was a historian, a classicist, and a thinker who not only understood the times in which he considered, he could feel the whims of time more easily than most in similar settings. I mention him because, I am a historian, and also a poet. The moment is a very important time, and those that happened far from now, in time, often lose appeal as more time gathers. My personal outlook has changed many times, due to personal events, trauma, hope, fear, and epiphanies. As such, finding authors who have placed the truth on paper as well as Green did, lead me to further understanding, hope and perspective.

The Greek world was one of the first known people to the modern world, to achieve the heights of democracy, military excellence as a group, and governance that had honor and truth as goals. Peter Green's works bringing the Greeks and Macedonians into conflict, and then jointly invading Persia, demonstrate how the flexible, democratic leadership could take a far smaller force into a conflict, and destroy it. Persia had numbers. It had a level of cultural enlightenment, and honor. But the Greeks view on the world and the changes in human culture that followed it, led the entire planet to perceive humans as equals, neighbors as being connected, and all people have a voice, democratically, spiritually and as a group of people, who by vote become one in response. Xenophon's Anabasis "The Expedition and Return of the 10 Thousand" is the perfect example, and Green's work enables the reader to understand our deepest roots of democracy and democratic expression. Along with Green's outlook, the work he analyzes and shares is as enlightened as the events themselves. For me, that is a way to visit an era, understand an idea, and find new outlooks, without having to invent a time machine.

My reason for sharing the works and suggesting people read them, is that there is a momentum of culture that is going on currently. No matter how we try, we might well be unaware of all the opportunities lost, all the cultural exchanges. Time maturing is important. We all have our talents, and have our deficits. People in my life have experienced a lesser version of me, receiving no kindness, no interest in repair. If someone injured me, they received a harsh word, action or worse insult in return. I think knowing the past leads me to attempting to be better in my own present.


I'm not a believer in the actual existence of real dragons. However, I do believe in real dragons. Huh? Is Ness high? Not this time. You see, there are concepts that are found across the globe. Certain ideas had to have a precedent. Without getting into what else happened, without happening the way we remember it, certain concepts were remembered in the fossils of dinosaurs and whales. Certain evidence, like the teeth of sharks and other reptiles were found on the beach, indicating something enormous once had these teeth in their skull, like dragons.

Dragons were the imagined creature, and fear led to the adding flight, wings, intelligence. The skeletons were proof to the minds of the day, that something enormous walked great canyons, swam oceans, flew across the sky of watching human kingdoms. The remains were so enormous the people had no problem creating great mythos and legends about them.  Therefore, the dragons lived in the imaginations of humans, and as such, people acted according to beliefs. In some art and legends, Dragons represented evil. That they did so didn't make dragons evil, but they surely symbolized an understood concept, that a great evil could be represented in this image.

There are great works featuring dragons in art, in story, in movie, and fairy tales. There are non-fiction examinations of the dragon, from a factual and scientific perspectives. Even with all these selections, There is another great story, involving dragons. The Dragon Slayer is such a story. It suggests from the very beginning that the dragon is an enemy, and the slayer is a hero. But as we know from existence, not everyone drafted to become a hero has heroism rushing through his or her veins. The reason I have begun to consider dragons from a new perspective, is that in the present all dragons have been reappraised in light of modern ideals...

The dragon as the enemy is no longer immediately accepted without further thought. In a world of no black and white ideas, the dragon as an anti-hero is just as valid as any other. As a legend of violent creatures, they stand as the beautiful and huge creatures who deserves to be free in nature. Anything might be done to humans would be due to the humans made by humans. The overall view of dragons and humans have perhaps switched places. There is obviously room enough for all views, so no version of the perception is in need to be the sole version.


As many long time readers know Robert E. Howard and Alan Dean Foster are favorite authors of mine. Both of them even write in the genre of Fantasy and various forms of fiction that some might term Weird Fiction. My point here deals with something people ask me, weekly, if not more often. What does "genre" mean? It isn't a term that implies a lock, there is no warden who sends you to author jail if you violate the boundaries. You should think of genre as a guide to commonly found aspects of story.  

Robert E. Howard focused upon action, violent resolution to problems, and worlds of exotic clothing, foods, riches and events. Slavery is common. But not a positive or negative, a state of being. Alan Dean Foster writes in many forms, including Fantasy, but his works are less violent, less solved through violence, and the warrior of Robert E. Howard's tales would not be able to solve the issues found in Foster's tales. The mind in Foster's tales is as much of the weapon as Howard's steel swords.

Each author brings a different collection of work that counts as Fantasy. They are both of fine quality, but they are truly different. They might not be parked next to each other in Fantasy's parking lot, where cars are parked in order of violence and carefree joy. However, they each contain a level of writing that is highly desirable, and tell stories that can't be found in other genres. I'd certainly suggest readers gather the works of both, as they have never failed to be something I enjoyed reading.


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