Author Archives: Bob Evans

A Relaxing Weekend Before a Busy Week

I must admit that this past weekend was rather pleasant. Friday evening started off with the usual board and card games that kick off the weekend in my household. One particular combination of card in Lords of Waterdeep, brought me from trailing in last to victory. After games were complete, I introduced a friend of mine to the first two episode of Amazon’s adaptation of Good Omens.

Saturday, I visited with Mysterious Galaxy for their official big opening at their new location in the Sport Arena district of San Diego. The new digs are lovely with about 30% more floorspace than the previous storefront. I chatted with staff and customer and may have gotten a couple of people interested in my upcoming release Vulcan’s Forge.

That evening was more board and card games as it was not a role play gaming weekend. I was not as lucky Saturday night as I was on Friday but did manage one fairly decisive win in Dominion.

Sunday is a day I generally spend with my sweetie-wife. We went to the zoo, I capture a few decent photos, but made a short trip of it as there was a light drizzle falling and I had managed to forget my hat. Lunch was at Kairoa a New Zealand themed bar and restaurant before we returned home for a relaxing afternoon and night.

I have a short work week ahead of me. Wednesday evening, I am driving to Anaheim and staying overnight in a budget hotel before spending the day with a dear friend I have not seen in years as we take in Disneyland. The Friday through Sunday I will be at the San Diego session of the Southern California Writers’ Conference.

All in all, it looks to be a busy week.

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There Will Never Be a President Removed by Impeachment

One thing that has become appallingly clear is that without constitutional revisions, and I am not proposing any particular amendments at this time, there will never be a president of the United States removed from office by impeachment.

Three U.S. Presidents have been impeached, Johnson during Reconstruction, Clinton, and Trump. Nixon resigned and avoided his impeachment. This week Senator and former Presidential candidate Mitt Romney made history by becoming the first and only Senator to vote in the guilt phase of an impeachment for the removal of a president of his own party. It didn’t happen for Johnson and it did not happen for Clinton.

Johnson’s impeachment was a purely political affair and from a historical time that does not reflect modern political processes.

Clinton was impeached for committing perjury while under oath, an obstruction of justice. Granted he was set-up, granted the investigation that had started was about a real estate investment and allegation, ultimately unfounded, of fraud and not about his sexual activities, but when asked directly under oath he had a duty, and a legal and moral obligation to be truthful. A citizen was seeking justice and he obstr5ucted it. I was torn over that impeachment because he was guilty but it was also a political vendetta.

Trump quite clearly, quite blatantly, used the vast powers of the Presidency, endangering lives and the interests of the nations, for his own selfish gain. It was an abuse of power, of his office, and of the public trust. Trump’s actions are the very reason what the impeachment clause exists and yet only a single GOP Senator could find the courage to vote ‘guilty.’

The political pressure, prices, and incentives are now simply too powerful to expect senator to vote contrary to the interests of their party.

The greatest political failing of this nation’s founding father was the naïve assumption that the system would function would forming political parties. (Their greatest moral failing is of course slavery, an absolute evil.) The system is designed for power and ambition to check power and ambition, but it assumes that the combatants would be the branches, congress vs executive and not the organizations occupying those branches. The system was not designed for this and increased incentives and penalties of today’s radically polarized politics renders the federal government ungovernable.

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A Very Odd Movie

Last night after I finished a few rounds of on-line Call of Duty: WWII I surfed my streaming services looking for something to watch before heading off to bed. What I found was What Did Jack Do? an odd two-character black-and-white short film, just 17 minutes, about a detective interrogating a witness at a train station. Aside from a waitress that brings coffee during the interrogation the entire film is unnamed Detective and the suspect Jack having a non sequiturfilled absurdist conversation.

Written, starring, and directed by David Lynch it’s normal to expect the absurd and strange but I was not fully prepared for this little gem. You see, Jack is a capuchin, a South American monkey. Utilizing n ungraded effect similar to what was used in the cartoon Clutch Cargo of superimposing a person’s speaking mouth on a pre-photographed image, Jack rebels, denies, and dodges the detective dogged digging into a murder.

What Did Jack Do? carries a copyright from 2016 and was shown at festivals but only last month did Lynch allow it to be added to Netflix’s service. I must admit that with suggestions of barnyard deviancy and murder this film worked for me more than some of Lynch’s feature films. It was oddly compelling, tense, and downright funny and certainly worth it’s brief running time.

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Naming My Characters

Coming up with names for characters in my short stories and novel has always been a challenge. There’s the desire to avoid names with feel too ‘common’ and lack their own sense of character, the Bobs and so forth, but going too far afield into actual names that are exceptionally rare feels false. This is a    hurdle I have to overcome with every piece of fiction, no matter how long or how brief and can be magnified if the character in question is an alien because before I can name the character I have to devise a naming system for his culture because after all individual name plus family name isn’t even universal among humans.

For my novel being published next month I managed to make this difficult task even harder.

The set-up in the novel is that when the Earth is threatened with destruction by a rouge brown dwarf passing through the inner solar system humanity launches hundreds if not thousands of automated arks loaded with self-replicating machines, artificial wombs, and banks of sperm and egg to establish new human colonies. Some of these arks were programmed with very specific goals of persevering certain cultures, nationalities, and religion and so forth, some were designed to have a greater degree of freedom in the care of the generations of humans that were to follow.

For the colony of Nocturnia where the novel takes place the demographic percentages of the later 21st century America were used to create the racial make-up of the colony and the names were taken from the U.S. Census but in drafting the outline and creating the character I faced a decision that swung me back and forth for quite some time.

Should the character names be tied to their character’s ethnicity?

These characters had never in any sense at all be a product of the cultures that their names derived from for all intents and purposes they were faux-Americans. With their ark’s designers fixated on an idealized American culture that never truly existed would that have programmed the artificial intelligences to force names to match ethnic background or simply have left the assignment of names to the A.I. own randomness?

I liked the idea that the names were randomly assigned but I was concerned that the readers might be lost of confused. I wanted to avoid leaning too heavily on reminding the reader just what each character’s ethnic heritage was and if I kept the names tied to their heritage I could side-step the challenge. But once I hit on the idea of the randomness of the names I really really liked it.

In the end I went the character names that do not map to their racial appearance. Now with the book coming out next month and should reviews and feedback come back my direction I will learn if I met the challenge or faceplanted.

 

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Movies Better Than Their Books

It’s a sentiment accepted by many a bibliophile that the novel is always better than the film version, but I content such a broad and all-encompassing statement cannot be universally true. Here are a few examples of where I think the films version of the stories exceeded what the novel presented.

Jaws

The iconic terrifying film from Steven Spielberg sent a generation scrambling for the shore fearful of the water is based upon a novel by Peter Benchley. For the screenplay two major sub-plots were omitted, the affair between Chief Brody’s wife and the young expert Hooper and Amity’s Mayor’s debt to local organized crime that made the mayor fearful of closing the beaches and being unable to repay what he owed. Both sub-plots are melodramatic and easily the most forgettable aspects of the novel. While Hooper’s and Ellen’s affair makes both of these characters less sympathetic than the cinematic characters.

The Hunt for Red October

Tom Clancy’s first novel of a Soviet super-sub’s defection to the west produced a terrific film directed by John McTernan and gave us the best on-screen Jack Ryan with Alec Baldwin. The novel suffered from American Uber Alles with everything done by the U.S. Military being exemplary over the far less capable Soviet forces. Reducing this produced a tighter and more tense conflict.

The Prestige

Not as well-know or as beloved as many other films by Christopher Nolan The Prestige took the great liberties with its source material a prize-winning fantasy novel of the same name by Christopher Priest. The novel spans time between the modern day, 1995 for the publication date, and the later 1800 with the feud between the rival stage magicians, introducing concepts as far afield as ghost into its narrative. Nolan’s script simplified the scope, restricting to its time setting, but retaining the multiple points of view and non-linear narrative but most importantly his gave a better motivation for why the feus turned murderous. In the novel it spirals out from one character performing seances, a common practice for stage magician’s, and being exposed for his fraud by his rival, also a common activity for stage magicians of the period. Having an on-stage death for which one is responsible made for a more compelling and acceptable motivation for the feud’s terrible escalation.

 

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The Contest Begins In Ernest

Tonight is the Iowa caucus and there usually considered only three tickets out of the contest for candidates vying for the Democratic nomination and there are 4 front-runners who have reasonable expectations of winning tonight.

Biden:

I’m not enthusiastic about Biden for two principal reasons. As a verbal gaff machine I think pitting him against the verbal bully Trump is a poor match=up from a Democratic perspective. And secondly but still quite important his belief that the GOP will return to some state similar to it condition before Trump seized control is, in my opinion, a fantasy. Trump is the GOP and his followers are driving the party that’s a reality we have to confront head on.

Sanders:

I am also not enthusiastic about Sanders. Again there are two overriding concerns. I do feel that a Sanders presidency will be very much a re-run of the Carter administration. What many people do not recall from that presidency is that Carter fought with his own party and without party support h was crippled long before international crises made things much worse. Additionally Sanders is too much of a revolutionary and will amplify negative partisanship that lowers his chances for a victory. Remember that Trump can lose the popular vote by as much as 6 points and still win the election.

Buttigieg:

For too inexperienced for my tastes. Too enamored with ‘heartland’ ideology and suffers from a lesser degree to the same rosy view of the GOP. The Republicans are fighting a procedural war not one of ideas and they are not ever going to give ground to a Democratic administration.

By process of elimination that leaves just one leading candidate, Warren.

Warren:

I like her. I think we do need big structural changes but not a revolution. I do think the principal issues challenging our government isn’t really policy but corruption and she’s focused on that. Some dislike her because she used to be a Republican but that’s a factor in her favor not against her in my book. Biden can’t admit that his support of Gulf War II was a disastrous error and Sanders still will not disavow his pussy-footing with murderous regimes. Being able to look at evidence and course correct is vital to good judgment; Warren has shown she can do that.

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It is Time to Engage with Reality

The GOP is not only going to acquit Trump for all his blatant and egregious wrong doing and abuse of office but now it is clear they intend to block all further witness testimony in an attempt to obscure the truth. The truth will be revealed, its arc may be delayed but it is predetermined. However, incentives force the GOP senators into this action. They cannot vote against Trump, now it is his party and any who even suggest that they are not fully committed are destroyed by Trump himself and his enthusiastic followers. To vote for witnesses or conviction is to invite the primary challenger and defeat at the 85-90 percent that are committed to Trump.

Our political system no longer represents divisions based on any sense of philosophy or vision but instead is a brawl between two self-selected groups. The battleground is no longer idea or hearts and minds but procedure. We are witnessing something every gamer is familiar with, rules lawyering.

The Democratic needs to recognize that the shape of the warfare has changed and is unlikely to ever change back. We will not return to the days when the two parties could compromise on major issues. In those days there were significant numbers of conservative Democrats and Liberal Republicans species that have gone extinct. McConnell has demonstrated that there is no price to b paid for victory no matter how ugly the method by which it is won. Norms have ceased to exist and all that matters is winning.

Going forward the Democrats need to fight the war on the same terms. Should they win the Senate they need to eliminate the filibuster, make P.R., D.C., and Guam into states, add at least one seat to the Supreme Court to counter the stolen one and learn the be as ruthless as their opponents. If they do not they will eventually be replaced internally by those who will. The projectile has been launched and its trajectory is out of our control.

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Coronavirus Panic

I am not saying that you should utterly ignore the news about the emerging coronavirus and its outbreak. New viruses and new pandemics are a certainty but be aware that all too often what sells advertising and pushes ‘clicks’ on the internet is fear and outrage not reason and facts.

Last I saw the death toll from the coronavirus is  still under 200 with just north of 7000 cases. Now for each person and their family and loved ones those are terrible but from a ‘should I be scared’  perspective it’s still dwarfed by the currently raging flu season.

The CDC estimates that the USA 2019 thru late January 2020 has seen between 15 and 21 million cases of flu with deaths estimated between 8200 and 20,000 people. And still people put off or ignore the advice to get their damn flu shot.

GET YOUR DAMN FLU SHOT!

Oh, and by the way most of the time when someone think they have the flu they really have a cold. Both are virial infections, but flu is influenza and it will hit you much harder than the common cold.

So, pay attention to the news, coronavirus could be just starting, and we need to be prepared but do not panic.

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Streaming Review: The Woman in the Window (1944)

Directed by Fritz Lang The Woman in the Window is a noir film about a married professor (Edward G. Robinson) who becomes fascinated by the subject of an oil painting hanging nears his gentlemen’s club. The subject, a lovely dark-haired woman (Joan Bennet) also fascinate the professor’s two pals, the city’s district attorney and a physician. A late-night chance encounter brings the professor and the subject together while the professor’s family is out on vacation for a week. They become friendly and her returns to her apartment to see sketches of her by the painting’s artist. An unexpected entrance by a mysterious and violent man end in the stranger’s death and to avoid professional ruin and unwanted questions the professor and the subject conspire to dump the body and never see each other again to hide any association with the killing. Naturally right from the start things unravel and both characters find themselves racing to stay ahead of bot the law and criminal elements.

The Woman in the Window is a tight, taunt noir that I watched on one of Roku’s free streaming channels dedicated to noir movies. The acting was top notch, the tension built wonderfully as the professor’s ignorance of police procedures and his friend’s ability as district attorney closed the nose around the pair. And yet I cannot truly recommend this movie. In the final minutes the script falls apart, perhaps in a bid to avoid trouble with the MPAA Production code and left me with an utterly unsatisfying resolution to the what had been a thrilling experience. I cannot tell you what the final ending is without massive spoilers and it may work for you but be warned it cheats.

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Thoughts About Prologs

One of the most common pieces of advice  you’re likely to hear at seminars, workshops, conventions, and writing groups is that publishers and agents do not want to see prologs. This is a true statement that is often countered by pointing to numerous books that currently sit on shelves with prologs. Of course, as a counter example that is not a very good argument because it suffers from survivor bias, the only books that sit on booksellers’ shelving are the book that were published a tiny fraction of the novel written and a tiny fraction of those submitted for consideration to agents and publishers.

Why is there such an often-repeated suggestion to omit your prolog? It is because far too many prologs are nothing more than either world building or backstory establishment where authors fearful that the readers will be lost create to explain the opening situation and there in a single word is why these prologs are weak openings, ‘explain.’

When you start your novel you have a very limited window to grab the reader’s attention and starting out with an explanation tends to lack dramatic tension. Agents and editors, people with little time and a very tall stack of things to read will smell an obvious explanation focused opening and from that deduce that the writer is unlikely to handle the rest of the story well and stop reading. Casual readers may give you more space but aside from self-publishing you must first survived the fires of the agents and editors to reach that larger audience.

I have a novel coming out next month, Vulcan’s Forge and to much amusement from members of my writers’ group it has a prolog. However, when I first wrote the novel it did not. After the first round of beta readers one of the more common comments centered of confusion about events that had happened prior to the start of the story. Because Vulcan’s Forge is written in a first-person point of view, I had two options to fix the issue. I could have characters that were there tell the point of view character what happened much like how a detective in some novels will gather everyone together for the resolution of the mystery, or I could show the events in a prolog. Clearly, I went with the prolog and clearly it did not cause my editor to bounce the manuscript, but I think there were a couple of factors that helped my novel survive the issue around having a prolog.

To start with the prolog is presented in third person. This cleanly breaks it away from the rest of the novel setting the tone that there is much that the main character is unaware of and that presents a danger to him. Next the prolog itself is a scene of dramatic tension with a viewpoint character that faces a tribulation and suffers its resolution. The vital information that my beta readers felt was missing is presented in the context of characters in conflict and not direct exposition. And finally, the prolog ends with a dramatic hook that leads directly into the opening scene of the novel so that the reader but not the character is aware of the importance of the story opening sequence.

Prologs can work but you must understand the purpose of your prolog and you must always wrap it in dramatic narrative if it is to be seen as essential to your piece.

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