Night of the Purple Moon – available for Kindle, iPad, PC

What happens after space dust decimates the adult population. . .

For months, astronomers have been predicting that Earth will pass through the tail of a comet. They say that people will see colorful sunsets and, best of all, a purple moon.

But nobody has predicted the lightning-fast epidemic that sweeps across the planet on the night of the purple moon. The comet brings space dust with it that contains germs that attack human hormones. Older teens and adults die within hours of exposure.

On a small island off the coast of Maine, Abby Leigh and a group of children struggle to survive in this new world, but all the while they have inside them a ticking time bomb — adolescence.

 $2.99 at Amazon

Brilliant?

I wrote [ X ], 50,000 words. I thought it was brilliant. It would only be a matter of days before my readers agreed with my assessment.There was a lot of silence.

I re-read X a month later and thought it was garbage. I re-wrote it and once more reveled in its brilliance.

There was some Greek poet who would write the first draft of a poem and then put it away for 20 years. Putting distance between the burst of creative energy and the first objective analysis has merit.

20 years is a bit of a stretch, though.

I worked X pretty hard for a year or more. It went from brilliance to garbage and back to brilliance, all in my mind. I thought perhaps it was ahead of its time. Then I thought it was “beside its time.” That is, so far on the fringe that only others who live at the fringe can identify with it.

It didn’t meant that I was on the fringe. But I had the ability to “speak” to those out there.

Anyway, probably even the fringe elements would have agreed it was garbage.

Like the Greek poet, I filed X at the bottom of the pile. Possibly it would never resurface again. But it did. It resurfaced after my writing skill had improved dramatically.

Once more I tore into it and turned the sow’s ear into a silk purse. Silence.

Now I am rereading it…and reworking it…and what I last produced was complete garbage.

This time will be different.

Someone said the definition of insanity is you do the same thing over and over again and expect different results.

Nah, this next version will be more than respectable.

It is what it is

Henry Miller stepped off the plane in Paris when he was 40 years old and unpublished.

Norman Maclean published A River Runs Through It when he was 70.

Frieda Arkin published her first novel, Hedwig and Berti, when she was 87.

 

How to avoid losing your novel

Jack Kerouac’s ‘lost’ debut novel was published a few months ago. This week, ninety years ago, Jack was born. He is buried in a cemetery about four miles from where I live.

The simple way to make sure you don’t lose your novel is to send it to a gmail account. The Google servers are probably as safe a place to store it as any place. PC backup services are a good bet, too.

I thought someone stole my first novel, and it was my only copy. It happened in New Orleans, before Google, right around the advent of the PC. I set out to write the novel in the spirit of Jack Kerouac. That is, I sat before a portable electric typewriter and typed as fast as I could for five to seven hours at a stretch. I typed whatever came into my head. I figured there was a direct link from my subconscious—where stories take shape—down my forearms and into my fingertips and onto page after page after page.

I lived in a one-bedroom apartment in mid-city. On the other side of the wall was a law office. Each time I paid the rent (at the law office) the secretary commented on the duration and speed of my typing.

If I just kept typing, I knew that some work of art would emerge sooner or later.

At the time I was working on an offshore oil production platform in the Gulf of Mexico, two weeks on, one week off. I was cranking out about 100 pages in my off week. To get to work, I would drive four hours south, through the bayou, to Grande Isle, and from there the new crew would go to the platform by motorboat.

One time I planned to fly home to New England on my week off. Driving back to New Orleans there was a family hitch hiking in the bayou. I picked them up. Hitchhiking was more common back then, though I had probably never seen an entire family doing it, and I was also way more naïve and/or daring, definitely stupid. Anyway, the family consisted of a very large woman, a three year old girl, and a man who had the look of an ex-con, which he turned out to be.

To make a long story short, I let them stay in my apartment while I went home to Boston. This part is blurry, but it’s possible they drove me to the airport in my truck. I figured I had nothing in my apartment of value to steal. Nothing except for the most valuable thing in my life, my monumental work-in-progress, quite possibly The Great American Novel.

Upon my return I found the place not exactly trashed, but it was on the messy side. Then I discovered my novel was missing. It was one of the lowest points of my life. The law secretary told me that really good cooking odors had come from my apartment over the past week.

That evening I had to return to Grande Isle. All of humanity was on my shit list. I did not trust anyone. The boats left very early in the morning. No crew member ever stayed in a motel. They spent all or a good part of the night in a bar and then went to the boat and slept. Below deck had the worst smell in the world, a mixture of diesel fuel and vomit and to this day it sickens me to think about it. The less time you spent below deck the better. So I went into some bar and played pool and some guy said he would show me how to fold a dollar bill into a swan. What did he want from me? I hated him because he was human. The entire human race was despicable.

Fast forward four months, in my apartment I dropped something on the floor and when I picked it up, there it was, my novel, The Great American Novel was under the bed. The three-year girl had used it as a coloring book.

What’s in a novel title?

Hopefully your book title is unique, for starters.

Within a month (unless a major publisher from India bangs on my door–a long shot), I will ePub my middle grade/YA novel NIGHT OF THE PURPLE MOON. The title is less than a month old. Previously it was BOOK FOR TOUCAN.

In any event, a thought popped up this morning. What if that title is already taken? A quick search revealed it was taken! But by a musician. Not just any musician. But one of the craziest, most influential jazz artists ever, SUN RA.

This was a very good omen. I saw SUN RA live back in the day, once or twice, when one of my cultured friends dragged me there. I was grateful then. And I am very grateful now to know there is some link, some vibe going on with me and SUN RA.

More on SUN RA here