James Pyles's Blog, page 7

February 16, 2025

My New Stories in “Drabbles: First Contact” (2025)

My first publications for 2025 are now available in the Starry Eyed Press anthology Drabbles: First Contact (Amazon US). Click the following for the global link. For those of you who don’t know, a “drabble” is a complete story that is exactly 100 words long, no more, no less. “First Contact” is a reference to […]
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Published on February 16, 2025 06:53

February 12, 2025

Book Review of “Error Code: 22 Tales of Robots and AI” (2025)

Yesterday, I finished reading the small anthology Error Code: 22 Tales of Robots and AI by Eric Fomley and Addison Smith. It was produced by Shacklebound Books which I gather is a small, indie publisher. They’ve got quite a collection of anthologies listed on Amazon. Each story is quite short and the book is a […]
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Published on February 12, 2025 08:14

The Cure for Cancer

I’m dying. I’ve been riding this train to visit my children, well now, my grandchildren, for over thirty years. My dear wife Jeannie passed away six years ago, bless her. I’m the only one left of my generation and the docs say the cancer is spreading. It’s spreading across our land as well. That old […]
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Published on February 12, 2025 07:24

February 10, 2025

Review of “Dead Beat” (2006), Book Seven in the Dresden Files Series

Yesterday, I finished book seven in Jim Butcher’s Dresden Files series Dead Beat. Like the rest of the books in this collection, the title is a play on words. This time, Harry Dresden faces the threat of necromancers, users of magic of the dead. Harry’s life gets increasingly worse with each book and sometimes I […]
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Published on February 10, 2025 03:17

February 5, 2025

Iconic

Time traveling tourist Glinn Tanning staggered into the restaurant dressed in surplus fatigues and dragging a canvas rucksack in his right hand. It contained a couple of canisters of pepper spray and the makings of several Molotov cocktails. “Where are the protesters?” he complained to the bored looking woman behind the counter. “We’re closing soon,” […]
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Published on February 05, 2025 07:10

January 30, 2025

Podcast Promoting “Shoot the Devil 3: Martyr’s Miitia” This Friday

UPDATE: Here’s the public link for tomorrow’s podcast: https://www.youtube.com/live/qIGZAddSpk4 I’ve been promoting the anthology Shoot the Devil 3: Martyr’s Militia for a number of weeks now. It features my short story “The Book of Names.” A nearly-immortal man who is currently known as Griffin has been searching for the letters and syllables that make up the […]
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Published on January 30, 2025 05:29

January 29, 2025

Eviction Day

Eliab strolled through another collection of junk. It was only a small sample of the enormous task they were facing. They had given so-called “modern humans” 200,000 years to build a civilization harmonious with themselves and their planet. As predicted, they failed miserably. He was of the majority opinion, but “the Big Guy” kept giving […]
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Published on January 29, 2025 06:15

January 24, 2025

Book Review: “A Scanner Darkly” (1977) by Philip K. Dick

Philip K. Dick’s 1977 novel A Scanner Darkly is about drug addition and the physical, mental, and legal consequences it brings about. The character Bob Arctor/Fred is prey, predator, and victim. The book is also autobiographical since it (through fiction) chronicles Dick’s own experiences with addiction and the drug culture in the 1970s. I’m not […]
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Published on January 24, 2025 11:43

January 22, 2025

Tunnel Visions

Hill always came to places like this when he couldn’t sleep. He needed the dreams but without sleep, there were only visions. In his visions, he’s alone usually by choice. People made too much noise. When he couldn’t sleep, it was because his own brain made too much noise and because he couldn’t let go […]
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Published on January 22, 2025 02:21

January 15, 2025

Book Review: “The Warship – Rise of the Jain, Book Two” (2019)

A few nights ago, I finished Neal Asher’s 2019 novel The Warship: Rise of the Jain, Book Two. I read and reviewed the first book in this trilogy a little over a year ago. That’s really too long a space between these volumes. As with most of Asher’s novels (and there are plenty of them), […]
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Published on January 15, 2025 16:28