Frank Harrist wrote: What books did you write?
Both novels, both unpublished, and looking back at the first one (Smoking Mirror) it reads too much like a first novel to be worth resurrecting. The newie (The Other Side of the World) I have high hopes for and am ready to pounce upon the publisher I have in mind, or just do the bloody thing myself if that doesn't work. I'm afraid there's a science-fiction element (about 25% but no time-machines or spaceships or ray guns) although it doesn't impact on the historical material, if anything it's more the other way round. It's written as part of a line (Faction Paradox) of which previous novels have dealt with the warring states period of Chinese history and er.... (sorry, but just the idea of this one makes me laugh) what happens when all the alternative earths where Rome never fell gang up against all the alternative earths where Hitler won World War II (heh heh - top THAT!). If this doesn't sound too sickening take a look at
http://www.madnorwegian.com. Anyway, aside from making some use of all the stuff in my head, and wanting to write a gripping tale for a quite exciting line of novels, I really wanted to do a definitive Mexica story before some clueless proot inevitably comes along with more ancient astronauts in Mexico crap thus forcing me to track them down and administer a kicking.
Frank Harrist wrote: I love reading that kind of stuff. Anyone here read Aztec or Aztec Autumn by Gary Jennings? Great books. Great imaginings of what the Aztec/Mechikan world was like. (Probably spelled that wrong) A lot of facts there too. I highly recommend both novels.
I've noticed them but been put off by previous novels of the kind, wherein they get basic facts and names wrong and generally balls it up. Which is partially a motivation for writing TOSOTW by the way. Maybe I should give them a go. A recommendation from someone on this forum seems to suggest GJ might be worth checking out after all.
Seeing as this is a jokes page and I've made a pretty poor showing so far, I'll mention
http://www.beasthouse.fsnet.co.uk which probably won't be of much archaeological interest, I'll admit. The guy (Lawrence Miles) is one of my favourite fiction writers. This site is quite old, and it's just page upon page of his bitter, twisted, sarcastic, and (for me) banging-a-fist-on-the-floor hilarious observations on popular culture. Well, it works for me, but then I'm English and I don't know how well some of it'll translate.
Thanks to the correspondent who pointed out an unfortunate line from a Scooby-Doo and the Harlem Globe-Trotters cartoon, in which Fred - having lost several members of his gang - is asked where he thinks a newly-discovered secret passage will lead: 'I hope to Shag, Scooby and the Globe-Trotters.' Now try it again without the comma.