Saturday, November 16, 2013


MOTORCYCLE ROAD TRIP—KERNVILLE

After four novels back-to-back with little pause, I needed a road or sail break. Since the engine on my sloop had broken and my main sail is torn, I decided to visit my brother in Kernville by motorcycle.

I left Seal Beach early Monday morning aboard my reliable 1988 Kawasaki KLR single cylinder 650 Dual Purpose trail/road machine that after eight years with me aboard had an odometer approaching 50,000 miles. I’d written a memoir with it on the cover: ROAR AND THUNDER, MOTORCYCLE JOURNEYS that covered the twenty-odd motorcycles and 250,000 ridden miles in my lifetime. Like the rider, the machine was old and looked beat-up.

I intended to ride a loop instead of going back and forth along the same highways. Overcast and foggy gloom welcomed me along the 605 to the 210 and when I reached the 15 curving up Cajon Pass, I found pouring rain as I ran out of gas. I had 103 miles on a tank fill a week before but there wasn’t enough money for a complete fill. Now on Reserve (supposedly about 20 more miles), I slowed and stayed wet to the Summit where I filled with almost a full gallon still in reserve.

Rain stopped at the 395 turn-off. I had heavy buffeting winds along the long straight two-lane highway. The KLR is light (325 lbs) so getting knocked around with wind had me stopping at Inyokern for tea and a walk-around before I rolled onto the 178 West toward Lake Isabella. Weather was sunny and cool for November. I had always thought the best months for travel were April and October. Weather is generally pleasant, teachers and kids are in school, and tourists are home doing whatever tourists do at home. Except for an occasional big rig, traffic didn’t exist. Cars passed going the other way but only four 80mph cars swept past going my way. I stayed at 70 out of respect for my old engine.

 

(Rolling on 178 West out of Inyokern toward Lake Isabella, odd cactus along the road)

Highway 178 was curvy and pleasant with odd cactus growing along it. At Lake Isabella, I took Sierra Way up to Kernville and a reunion with my brother, Don and the cool wonder dog, Zeke. Don rents a mobile home in a small park surrounded by elderly women he thinks are after his body. And maybe they are. The three I met sure were friendly. How he found the place was interesting. Since his split with his wife in Palm Springs and was now living on Social Security, he went on Google and asked for the cheapest place in the country to live. He drew three: a small hamlet in Texas, a trailer park in Spokane, and Kernville. I’m thinking of doing that for marina slips.

 

(Downtown Kernville, the Kernville Saloon)

Kernville is a pleasant metropolis of 1,200. But Don misses many offerings of city life: multi-screen theaters, a decent library, a Chinese restaurant, a sports bar for football. He didn’t miss the city mob and their rudeness. We did find an excellent spaghetti place and an outstanding breakfast café where we both ate too much. Mostly we talked, and talked, we hadn’t been alone one-on-one for any real time since we were kids. Either he had a wife or I had a wife or we were surrounded by family, or we were each off alone someplace. None of that existed now and we spent our time talking and walking Zeke along the Kern River and into deep forest where Zeke liked to chase squirrels. I didn’t have room on the KLR for my gold pan or shovels or buckets but next visit I intended to bring them in the Explorer. The Kern River was down which made fishing at the dam good and maybe meant gold hidden under now-dry boulders.

 

(The KLR and me, Don’s coach and F-150 in the background, Kernville.)


Don and I are Irish twins, in that we are three days shy of being one year apart. So for a couple days we are the same age, and that’s what we were celebrating. I slept on a fold-out bed in the living room of his rented coach. When I asked if he intended to buy the coach (it was offered), Don told me that at his age, he was through owning stuff, a philosophy I sort of share. He believes things own you, be it house, car, a closet full of clothes or mechanical toys that restrict your personal freedom. He’s done with all of it. I own my boat, the Explorer and the KLR. Too much, except my boat is my home, and where I live requires private transportation of some kind. A thousand dollar car would work fine. I live on Social Security, a small retirement from Boeing, and my paltry book royalties.

Since Kernville has no chain grocery market and the one small store charges ridiculous prices, Don has to drive his F-150 fifteen miles down to the city of Lake Isabella for serious food shopping. The road is twisty and the drive bothers him. Sometimes he thinks about moving to Bakersfield where we both grew through high school, and where I couldn’t wait to leave, and did, to serve my machinist apprenticeship in Houston before going in the Navy. He says he’ll probably stay in Kernville but he doesn’t like that drive. I was to take that road going home.

Despite our marathon conversations and walking Zeke the wonder dog, I did figure mileage for the trip up. I had ridden 286 miles and at mostly 70mph. the KLR gave me 48.8 mpg. The ride home would be shorter through Bakersfield.




(Don and the quiet, obedient wonder dog, Zeke, DNA shown to be one-third Poodle, one-third Wire Terrier, one-third Whippet, well trained (poops on command), does not bark except when parted from his greatest companion,)

Don and I parted sadly Wednesday morning, with promises to do it again. I had my backpack bungeed on the seat behind me, not as soft to lean back on as a woman but we make do. I rode out of Kernville and down the wicked road Don dislikes to Lake Isabella where I reconnected to Highway 178 West, forty-nine miles from Bakersfield. I didn’t look forward to the twisty Kern Canyon Road with its 15 to 30 mph switchbacks and a long drop to the Kern River. Two or three are lost on that road every year. But I took it easy. The machine loves those tight curves and in my youth I did too. But we were both too old to lean at speed coming down the mountain.

 

(Approaching Lake Isabella to connect with 178 West, Kern Canyon Road, Bakersfield, and home.)


In Bakersfield I caught the 99 freeway and rode the long straight to the I-5 connection and up the steep Grapevine, buffeted by heavy winds that rocked me and the machine so hard we were often pushed out of our lane. At the top, construction had the highway down to one lane with a long line of big rigs. Cars were going nowhere, sometimes stopped for minutes. I stayed with them for a short time then took the asphalt shoulder to ride past the whole bunch and away to free open road. The only rest stop of the trip was at the top, where I walked around and drank water from a public fountain. Somewhere along the canyon or Grapevine I had lost my water bottle.

The worst, most tiring part of the trip was riding into the Los Angeles basin, where traffic was heavy and heat oppressive. To avoid the LAX mess along the 405, I took the 210 East that still had impressive traffic, and rode to the 605 South to Long Beach then Seal Beach and my sailing home.

The homeward leg of the trip covered 205 miles and the KLR gave me 50.2 mpg. Not bad for an elderly machine and rider. I returned rejuvenated and ready to work again, back to my kick-ass gal private eye, Makayla “Mac” Tuff and her first novel, PILLOW SHOT.

Future sojourns include gold prospecting in Alaska and Australia, and a six month back-pack trip across Europe. Life is one endless bucket list.

Available Books: www.amazon.com/georgesnyder/e/b007upcafg
 

         

 

Sunday, October 20, 2013


CAN YOU BELIEVE THEY INTERVIEWED ME ?

Page to Page Interview

            Thank you for joining us for an author interview. We have created a range of questions from your work, to some a little more personal, so that your current and future readers can become more familiar with you.

A Little on the Personal Side: 

·        What types of books do you read?

I read what I write—hardboiled crime novels. Just finished BUTCHERS MOON by Richard Stark (the late Donald Westlake), and before that two Sunny Randall novels by Robert B Parker. I’ve read most of them from Lee Child to Lawrence Block plus the masters, Chandler, Hammett, to paperback originals from John D. and Richard Prather. I have read literary types from Hemingway, Somerset Maugham, John Steinbeck, back to Dickens, Victor Hugo, Herman Melville and my pal Bill Shakespeare. I do like diversion occasionally and my next book to read is about the first man ever to ride around the world on a motorcycle, in 1912, aboard a 1912 Henderson, written by my good friend, Dr. Gregory Frazier, who himself has ridden five times around the world and has more than a million miles on different motorcycles. I only have a few hundred thousand miles on my motorcycles.

 

·        What do you love most about writing? What do you not like?

I love the routine of looking forward to it. I write early mornings so when I wake, just before climbing out of the rack, I churn in my mind what I’ll be writing. It’s hard to begin a novel but once into it, I look forward to creating characters and scenes every day. When on a book, I write five to six hours a day, seven days a week. My “office” is the dinette table aboard my sloop where I live. What I do not like is easy: publicity and marketing. I dislike every part of it, it’s like peddling my books as if they were vacuum cleaners. Even though I know it’s necessary because publishers don’t do that anymore, it still makes me uncomfortable because I’m an introvert. Friends and family often accuse me of being a hermit, squirreled away in the dark cabin of my little sail boat ticking away on laptop keys.  

 

·        When you are not writing where can you be found?

I can be found in used bookstores (can’t afford new), although I do have a Kindle. Or sailing, maybe for a day sail if I can scare up a feminine friend or over ocean swells to Catalina Island for a weekend of fishing and snorkeling with or without feminine friends, or in my boat cockpit reading, or gold prospecting in Arizona and Nevada, or riding my dual purpose motorcycle, either on the highway or along fire trails and mountain roads in search of gold, or in a movie theater watching a film, usually alone because I like matinees. Or you might find me on a road trip, camping in the back of my Explorer.

 

A Little on the Professional Side: 

 

·        Of all of the characters you have written, which has been your favorite? Why? Least favorite? Why?

Before my novel THE FAREWELL HEIST was released I had another titled CROSSFIRE DIAMONDS. In it is an assassin, Yolanda Smart tall, thin, black, sharp who has become my favorite character because she is cold, calculating and professional besides being beautiful and looking like an African princess. A close second is the young woman from India, Asin Bhandi, in my forthcoming Logan Sand novel, THE CALCCUTTA DRAGON, because she is feminine perfection and knows it, and mentions it. Plus I love my villains. They are hissingly evil and commit detestable acts, the type of dastardly creeps readers love to hate. Me too. But of course my top favorites are my three series leads: Baylor ”Bay” Rumble (four books: BAD GIRL DEAD, BLEEDING SISTERS, CATALINA KILLERS, BAJA BULLETS), Logan Sand (two books: THE CALCUTTA DRAGON, PLUNDERED ANGELS) and Makayla Tuff (writing first book: PILLOW SHOT).

 

·        What is your thought on eBooks being the new way to read?

eBooks are the future but they’re not the end all be all of books. They still don’t take well to color pictures. My Kindle doesn’t have page numbers. They are not as easy to read as books. They host several other undesirable traits. But the biggest danger for eBooks is price. The one looming attraction for them is books are cheap. But I see publishers submitting to their greed by charging $6-$8-$11 and even $13 for books that aren’t special except they come from a hot-shot author through a big name publisher. That will be the demise of eBooks. I have many books stored on my Kindle, including four of my own. I’ve read three books, one after the other. I still prefer books with pages I turn.      

 

·        Who is your ideal reader?

Readership for me is a slog. Because my books are tough and masculine to the point of pulp, most women don’t care for them. Not much display of woman empowerment in them. Since 80% of readers are women, and the majority of books published are a form of Romance, the landscape is kind of barren for my kind of tough crime novels. My ideal readers are men, likely working the hands-on trades. Prisoners like my books. But, with only a portion of a 20% readership, and I just read that 80% of men college graduates never read another book after graduating, and 45% of families don’t read books, it looks like an uphill crawl out there for my kind of books. Why not give in and write what they’re reading? Because I don’t read that stuff, and I don’t write it. Few of us are in this for the money. I live with the reality.  

 

A Little Quick Fire:

 

*When it comes to books*

 

Good Guys or Bad Guys? Bad guys

Fiction or Non-Fiction? Fiction

Handwritten or PC typed? PC typed

Cozy Nook or Outdoors Oasis? Neither. Mean streets and guns.

Happily Ever After or Nail-biter? Nail biter

Writing or Reading? Writing

 

*When it comes to you*

 

Ice Cream or Cake? Neither, too much sugar

Chocolate or Vanilla? Neither, too much sugar

Coffee or Tea? Coffee

Dress Up or Dress Down? Dress down. Onboard, cut-offs and t-shirt.

Barefoot or Shoes?  Usually boat shoes.

Cook or Order Out? Survival cook.

 

Online Presence:



Your Twitter: geo_snyder



Fill in as much or as little of the following as you wish:

Up to 3 of your book titles and their corresponding sell links:

 

1 THE FAREWELL HEIST by George Snyder


 

2 BAJA BULLETS by George Snyder


 

3 CROSSFIRE DIAMONDS  by George Snyder


 

 

 

 

CAN YOU BELIEVE THEY INTERVIEWED ME ?

Page to Page Interview

            Thank you for joining us for an author interview. We have created a range of questions from your work, to some a little more personal, so that your current and future readers can become more familiar with you.

A Little on the Personal Side: 

·        What types of books do you read?

I read what I write—hardboiled crime novels. Just finished BUTCHERS MOON by Richard Stark (the late Donald Westlake), and before that two Sunny Randall novels by Robert B Parker. I’ve read most of them from Lee Child to Lawrence Block plus the masters, Chandler, Hammett, to paperback originals from John D. and Richard Prather. I have read literary types from Hemingway, Somerset Maugham, John Steinbeck, back to Dickens, Victor Hugo, Herman Melville and my pal Bill Shakespeare. I do like diversion occasionally and my next book to read is about the first man ever to ride around the world on a motorcycle, in 1912, aboard a 1912 Henderson, written by my good friend, Dr. Gregory Frazier, who himself has ridden five times around the world and has more than a million miles on different motorcycles. I only have a few hundred thousand miles on my motorcycles.

 

·        What do you love most about writing? What do you not like?

I love the routine of looking forward to it. I write early mornings so when I wake, just before climbing out of the rack, I churn in my mind what I’ll be writing. It’s hard to begin a novel but once into it, I look forward to creating characters and scenes every day. When on a book, I write five to six hours a day, seven days a week. My “office” is the dinette table aboard my sloop where I live. What I do not like is easy: publicity and marketing. I dislike every part of it, it’s like peddling my books as if they were vacuum cleaners. Even though I know it’s necessary because publishers don’t do that anymore, it still makes me uncomfortable because I’m an introvert. Friends and family often accuse me of being a hermit, squirreled away in the dark cabin of my little sail boat ticking away on laptop keys.  

 

·        When you are not writing where can you be found?

I can be found in used bookstores (can’t afford new), although I do have a Kindle. Or sailing, maybe for a day sail if I can scare up a feminine friend or over ocean swells to Catalina Island for a weekend of fishing and snorkeling with or without feminine friends, or in my boat cockpit reading, or gold prospecting in Arizona and Nevada, or riding my dual purpose motorcycle, either on the highway or along fire trails and mountain roads in search of gold, or in a movie theater watching a film, usually alone because I like matinees. Or you might find me on a road trip, camping in the back of my Explorer.

 

A Little on the Professional Side: 

 

·        Of all of the characters you have written, which has been your favorite? Why? Least favorite? Why?

Before my novel THE FAREWELL HEIST was released I had another titled CROSSFIRE DIAMONDS. In it is an assassin, Yolanda Smart tall, thin, black, sharp who has become my favorite character because she is cold, calculating and professional besides being beautiful and looking like an African princess. A close second is the young woman from India, Asin Bhandi, in my forthcoming Logan Sand novel, THE CALCCUTTA DRAGON, because she is feminine perfection and knows it, and mentions it. Plus I love my villains. They are hissingly evil and commit detestable acts, the type of dastardly creeps readers love to hate. Me too. But of course my top favorites are my three series leads: Baylor ”Bay” Rumble (four books: BAD GIRL DEAD, BLEEDING SISTERS, CATALINA KILLERS, BAJA BULLETS), Logan Sand (two books: THE CALCUTTA DRAGON, PLUNDERED ANGELS) and Makayla Tuff (writing first book: PILLOW SHOT).

 

·        What is your thought on eBooks being the new way to read?

eBooks are the future but they’re not the end all be all of books. They still don’t take well to color pictures. My Kindle doesn’t have page numbers. They are not as easy to read as books. They host several other undesirable traits. But the biggest danger for eBooks is price. The one looming attraction for them is books are cheap. But I see publishers submitting to their greed by charging $6-$8-$11 and even $13 for books that aren’t special except they come from a hot-shot author through a big name publisher. That will be the demise of eBooks. I have many books stored on my Kindle, including four of my own. I’ve read three books, one after the other. I still prefer books with pages I turn.      

 

·        Who is your ideal reader?

Readership for me is a slog. Because my books are tough and masculine to the point of pulp, most women don’t care for them. Not much display of woman empowerment in them. Since 80% of readers are women, and the majority of books published are a form of Romance, the landscape is kind of barren for my kind of tough crime novels. My ideal readers are men, likely working the hands-on trades. Prisoners like my books. But, with only a portion of a 20% readership, and I just read that 80% of men college graduates never read another book after graduating, and 45% of families don’t read books, it looks like an uphill crawl out there for my kind of books. Why not give in and write what they’re reading? Because I don’t read that stuff, and I don’t write it. Few of us are in this for the money. I live with the reality.  

 

A Little Quick Fire:

 

*When it comes to books*

 

Good Guys or Bad Guys? Bad guys

Fiction or Non-Fiction? Fiction

Handwritten or PC typed? PC typed

Cozy Nook or Outdoors Oasis? Neither. Mean streets and guns.

Happily Ever After or Nail-biter? Nail biter

Writing or Reading? Writing

 

*When it comes to you*

 

Ice Cream or Cake? Neither, too much sugar

Chocolate or Vanilla? Neither, too much sugar

Coffee or Tea? Coffee

Dress Up or Dress Down? Dress down. Onboard, cut-offs and t-shirt.

Barefoot or Shoes?  Usually boat shoes.

Cook or Order Out? Survival cook.

 

Online Presence:



Your Twitter: geo_snyder



Fill in as much or as little of the following as you wish:

Up to 3 of your book titles and their corresponding sell links:

 

1 THE FAREWELL HEIST by George Snyder


 

2 BAJA BULLETS by George Snyder


 

3 CROSSFIRE DIAMONDS  by George Snyder


 

 

 

 

Wednesday, September 25, 2013


MEET GEORGE SNYDER THE WRITER

 

 

George Snyder

Bio

 

          Started by publishing short stories in men’s magazines and Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine. First novel, “The Surfer Killers” published as “Surfside Sex” by Playtime Books (part of Neva Paperbacks) in early sixties. With Merit and Award books and through promoter Lyle Kenyon Engel, wrote seven Nick Carter spy/adventure screw and kill books. One book, “The Defector” went into three printings and was translated into French and Japanese. And as Patrick Morgan, wrote ten spy/thrillers in the Operation Hang Ten series with titles like, “Hang Dead Hawaiian Style”(translated into French and Japanese), “Cute and Deadly Surf Twins”, “Deadly Group Down Under” “Too Mini Murders” etc. As Ray Stanley, wrote “The Hippy Cult Murders,” loosely based on Charles Manson.

          Cruising under sail, made a solo voyage from Seattle to Alaska and return, and spent a year sail-exploring the Sea of Cortez, Mexico. Characters met during that cruise were chronicled in “Baja Sailor Tales.” Hold an Advanced Open Ocean scuba certification and have motorcycle toured over 250,000 miles. Served in the U.S. Navy as a jet fighter mechanic aboard aircraft carriers moving through the Far East.

With a work resume that reads like the yellow pages of a phone book, have been delivery truck driver, newspaper stuffer, door-to-door vacuum cleaner salesman, gas station attendant, machinist, sailor, motorcycle mechanic, bowling alley pin setter, box boy, ship cook’s helper, deck hand, retail clerk and manager, sporting goods and auto parts salesman, fishing vessel crew, lumberjack, shipyard welder, missile assembler, riveter, drill press operator, metal plater, phone installer, postal clerk and carrier, industrial safety engineer, facilities engineer, assembly lead man, machine parts planner, material review board rep, research and development engineer, composite laminate engineer, apartment maintenance construction worker, missile heat shield lay-up assembler, helicopter rework/modification planner, Navy jet fighter mechanic, sheet metal worker, salvage scuba diver, yacht racing navigator, aircraft technical writer, hydraulic systems designer, security guard, prospector, retail hardware associate, treasure hunter, auto driving instructor, editor, publisher, auto racing journalist, yacht designer, boat builder, travel writer and novelist. Retired at 55 as Senior Editor of Technical Publications from McDonnell-Douglas (Boeing).

          In the late seventies, wrote a sci-fi Romance “Beyond Gender Wars,” eventually published as eBook by Extasy Publishing in 2010. Self-published three books in Baylor Rumble series, “Bad Girl Dead,” “Bleeding Sisters,” “Catalina Killers,” as well as non-fiction book, “Making it on Social Security” and two memoirs, “The $900 Honda” and “Roar and Thunder.” In 2011 connected with BooksForABuck Publishing that published “Satin Shorts,” and 2012 “The Crossfire Diamonds.” Also in 2012 received an award from the Southwestern Writers Conference, Albuquerque in the mystery/detective/thriller category for crime novel, “The Farewell Heist,” published by BooksForABuck in July 2013. Solstice Publishing brought out the eBook of #4 in the Baylor Rumble crime novel series, “Baja Bullets” and in 2013 the printed version.

In 2013 launched new, Logan Sand hardboiled crime series. The first novel, “The Calcutta Dragon” and second, “Plundered Angels” are now complete. In May, 2013 signed contract with television media production company Villavision for a 24 month film option on “Baja Bullets.”   

Presently writing first draft in series for kick-ass gal Private Eye, Makayla Tuff: “Pillow Shot.”

Thanks for your interest.

George Snyder






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Tuesday, September 3, 2013


 

 

FINISH THAT FIRST DRAFT

 

It’s done. Complete. Just typed: END.  That’s 81,000 words of work over with. My second Logan Sand crime novel is finished. Book number thirty-two has been racked up.

At least the first draft.

Never mind that it is lumpy with flaws. Scenes must be added to. Scenes must have deletions. Characters have to be fleshed out. Chronological sequences might need to be altered. The first editing has to be done. Then it will be run through your critique group then another edit. Read it through, carefully, end to end, each word, sentence, paragraph, page. Do a final edit.

It is terrible now. It stinks. You can’t approach it without a spray can of room freshener. Some pages read like a grammar school essay. Other pages are loaded with clichés. How did you get through it all?

Every morning, from four or five until noon you hacked away at it. Some days you left the computer with as many as fifteen completed pages. Other days you spent the whole morning staring at the computer screen. What Hemingway called long periods of thinking, short periods of writing, and you walked away with one paragraph—or less. Anything over three pages was a good morning’s work. Five pages were so satisfying they made you friendly with the outside world. You even smiled during the day.

You hit a wall at page 280. It’s always between 270 and 280. No reason for it either. You knew what was going to happen, you had it right there in your outline. The next scene was planted in your mind. The scene was there but the words to describe it lay hidden somewhere between the new balancer for the motorcycle, the stiff clutch in the Explorer and the needed sail for the boat. Each time you reached for the words other images cluttered the air.

Luckily you didn’t fall in love writing this one. All you’d need are thoughts of a woman pulling at your heart. 

The block was there but you made yourself sit in front of the computer anyway. Morning after morning—one sentence—another. One day—another. The back of your head kept saying, “Good job, boy. Whew! That sentence was tough. Time to knock off. Look, it’s almost noon. Come on, one sentence is enough for today. You’ll get more tomorrow. There’s always tomorrow.”

Word by agonizing word, sentence by sentence, the block crumbles and you can move on with the story. Story? What story? You dare to call this stinking mutilation of English grammar a story? Well, there are some mornings you smile and think maybe that part wasn’t half bad. You really do want to know what happens next.

Lingering in the background is always the doubt. Who do you think you are? Anybody who writes a shopping list thinks they can write a book. And just look at what you write. Any hack with half the talent can churn out this junk. You sit here day after day. This isn’t the kind of writing you originally intended, you’re not the kind of writer you thought you’d be, where you thought you’d be. Yet, you keep doing it, book after book. Who do you think you are?

Even if the novel gets finished, so what? Women won’t like it because it’s too tough. Men don’t read. It’ll languish in anonymity like the thousands of other books out there. Nobody can read all the books available. Why would they read yours? Why don’t you just quit? Admit the book stinks. Toss it and go for a sail. That’s more fun. Or find a woman to share dinner with. The company of a woman is much more fun.  Almost anything else you can think of is more fun. There’s sure no fun in this. It’s only that obsessive affliction you carry that makes you continue through this nonsense.

But you know you can’t seriously pass judgment until you have something to judge. You can’t say the book is lousy, you can’t say it’s good.

You can’t say anything about it until it’s finished.

And there is the answer. Ideas are a nickel a boxcar load. Ideas mean nothing until they are acted on and completed. Air around the globe is crowded with incomplete ideas colliding into each other, worthless. Your completed book might be brilliant. Or it might be less than brilliant. Or it might be not bad. The book is nothing until it is done. It doesn’t exist. It is invisible. It can’t be judged because it isn’t there.

On days you walk away with good pages you think might mean something, you think: Maybe when it’s done it might be…

And get it done. Today. 6:30 this morning. The End.

George Snyder
freelancer66@earthlink.net
Blog: http://onewriterconnection.blogspot.com
Web: http://www/georgesnyderweb.blogspot.com
Web: www.georgesnydersbooks.com
And all those social and book networks.