Hugo Negron's Blog, page 5
September 7, 2021
PeoriaCon is back!!
PeoriaCon is on for Saturday October 2nd 10am-5pm!! Comics, games, cosplay contests, collectibles, and more! Forging of a Knight will be there - will you?!
1601 W. Northmoor Road, Peoria, IL 61614
https://www.peoriacon.com/?utm_source...
1601 W. Northmoor Road, Peoria, IL 61614
https://www.peoriacon.com/?utm_source...
Published on September 07, 2021 10:02
•
Tags:
adventure, collectibles, comics, cosplay, dragons, dungeons-and-dragons, elves, epic-fantasy, fantasy, forging-of-a-knight, gaming, gen-con, knights, peoria, peoriacon, sword-sorcery, trolls, wizards
August 18, 2021
Forging of a Knight needs your help!
Hey all!
I'm so excited because one of my Forging of a Knight books - Book 5, Knighthood's End, was just nominated for the 2021 Readers Choice Awards contest by TCK Publishing!
Now Qualtan and company need some help -
Please vote for it at https://www.tckpublishing.com/2021-re...
Urgsh will love ya for it!
I'm so excited because one of my Forging of a Knight books - Book 5, Knighthood's End, was just nominated for the 2021 Readers Choice Awards contest by TCK Publishing!
Now Qualtan and company need some help -
Please vote for it at https://www.tckpublishing.com/2021-re...
Urgsh will love ya for it!
Published on August 18, 2021 08:53
•
Tags:
adventure, contests, dragons, dungeons-and-dragons, elves, epic-fantasy, fantasy, forging-of-a-knight, gaming, gen-con, knights, sword-sorcery, trolls, wizards
February 10, 2021
Spellfury is back at last!!
It's here - Spellfury is back at last!!
Season 3! Episode 1! Check it out by Urgsh!!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZcaO1...
Season 3! Episode 1! Check it out by Urgsh!!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZcaO1...
Published on February 10, 2021 14:48
•
Tags:
adventure, dragons, dungeons-and-dragons, elves, epic-fantasy, fantasy, forging-of-a-knight, gaming, gen-con, knights, spellfury, sword-sorcery, trolls, wizards
December 21, 2020
Thank You!
Thank You!!
I wanted to give a big and hearty "Thank You". With a year fraught with extreme political polarization, COVID, high unemployment, isolation, and more, its been a challenging time for all of us. I am honored by those readers who have picked up copies in the Forging of a Knight series during this horrendous time, and hopefully they have given you some small measure of escape and enjoyment during this global travail.
Who am I thanking? Forging of a Knight received some amazing support this year, and now that we are in that wonderful week leading up to Christmas, where ol' Kris is still going to be out there making his holiday run, it's time for some shout outs:
Thank you to the folks at Lulu.com for getting Book Seven of Forging of a Knight, Against the Alliance, completed at last!
Thank you to Zyro for the ease in getting the Forging of a Knight website launched - https://forgingofaknight.com!
Thank you to the many new readers who joined the Knighthood - I had set up some aggressive sales numbers to meet this year, and despite all, Qual and his pals achieved it, selling more copies than ever before!
Thank you to the folks who were willing to put ink to quill pen and put out some reviews on Amazon and other platforms - 20+ at last count, spread out through a variety of the books!
Hopefully we will all be able to have a better year in 2021. Happy Holidays everyone!! Stay mindful and safe out there!!
I wanted to give a big and hearty "Thank You". With a year fraught with extreme political polarization, COVID, high unemployment, isolation, and more, its been a challenging time for all of us. I am honored by those readers who have picked up copies in the Forging of a Knight series during this horrendous time, and hopefully they have given you some small measure of escape and enjoyment during this global travail.
Who am I thanking? Forging of a Knight received some amazing support this year, and now that we are in that wonderful week leading up to Christmas, where ol' Kris is still going to be out there making his holiday run, it's time for some shout outs:
Thank you to the folks at Lulu.com for getting Book Seven of Forging of a Knight, Against the Alliance, completed at last!
Thank you to Zyro for the ease in getting the Forging of a Knight website launched - https://forgingofaknight.com!
Thank you to the many new readers who joined the Knighthood - I had set up some aggressive sales numbers to meet this year, and despite all, Qual and his pals achieved it, selling more copies than ever before!
Thank you to the folks who were willing to put ink to quill pen and put out some reviews on Amazon and other platforms - 20+ at last count, spread out through a variety of the books!
Hopefully we will all be able to have a better year in 2021. Happy Holidays everyone!! Stay mindful and safe out there!!
Published on December 21, 2020 08:39
•
Tags:
adventure, dragons, dungeons-and-dragons, elves, epic-fantasy, fantasy, forging-of-a-knight, gaming, gen-con, knights, sword-sorcery, trolls, wizards
November 22, 2020
An interview with John Sankitts, Jr.!
As usual, I have been lucky enough to connect with some amazing creators out there, and I have to add yet another one to the mix! Say hello to John Sankitts, Jr. – writer, filmmaker, author, and more!
Hi John - thanks again for taking the time to be interviewed! Let’s begin with telling us a little bit more about who John Sankitts is.
When did you know that you wanted to be a writer? I knew when I was in Film School in 2001 writing my own stories gave me a sense of individuality and protection from ridicule so writing scripts was my initiation into writing. But in 2008 when I wrote a piece for a magazine as an editorial submission, they loved the piece I wrote on a artist and offered me a job writing for their Music and Sports magazine named G.O.A.T magazine.
You have written Memoirs of an Island Boy and for G.O.A.T magazine. How did you develop the ideas for your stories? Which are your favorites? My father always spoke on his time on St. Croix Virgin Island as a small boy, he always recited them, they were funny. I wanted to immortalize his stories forever, so I took all his stories, embellished them a little for a more humorous impact and wrote the book. My favorite story is when he was running from the landlord land he trespassed on.
In addition to being an author you have also done some film work like Letter of Circumstance and now working on Paintings on the Wall.
Which projects were the most fun to develop? The Painting on the wall TV series is the most fun to develop.
Which were the most challenging? Paintings on the Wall, it’s a complicated TV Crim Drama series.
What are your plans long-term for your writing and other projects? I am currently researching for a comedy film. It’s a full feature 93 pages long. I’m stuck on page 12.
Do you have additional/different works in mind? Yes, I look to join a few film festivals, have a short film in mind about a Girl auditioning for a talent show but has no way of getting there on time. She finally does auditions in the restroom while a judge is currently using it! Funny sort.
As an author, I share the challenge of getting the word out on my books. What have you had to do to win broader exposure and branding for your works? I use social media, I use the Airlines to see if they can offer my book on their planes. I also use word of mouth. I use Hootsuite that can post a link to my book on a schedule time every day to all social media platforms. I also join author groups on Facebook and LinkedIn, also Group Me Author groups.
This question will start off sounding like an old joke – a person walks into a bar (or convention or bookstore) and bumps into John Sankitts – what would be your elevator pitch to showcase your work? Hi I’m John and I’m your future Boss, welcome to the team. They will say, “Is that right?” I’ll respond with yes, let me show you why, and Ill quick play my trailer to my TV series…works sometimes…lol…In regards to the book, I always have a copy with me, it takes careful coordination, but if I see my objective going into a elevator , I will hand them the book and tell them, Its for you.
As an author, it’s sometimes difficult to finally say a product is finished, no matter how many times you review or edit. Is there anything you would go back and change in your completed works? Oh God no…once it’s done, it done as per day in a book. A screenplay though, well it has not done till you get an offer.
Where their ideas you had in mind and then decided NOT to include? For a book no. But for a screenplay, it’s had to place an idea because it usually leads to developing the idea and back story, more work, and may change the course of the narrative.
I have an 8 year old son, and structuring time around him can be challenging! I’ve lost count of the times he nearly pressed the delete button on something I was working on…how do you find time to carve out your ideas? Usually believe it or not Ideas come to me right before I actually about fall asleep, sometimes I get ideas in my sleep and if I’m somehow able to wake up I jot it down and in the mornings I attend tot it.
Do you have a certain method you use when you write – i.e., a certain room, music, mood, etc., to help get you in the right writing frame of mind? When I look at my bank account and it says “you have .45cents available.” That’s when I say, I need to get this writing done. But mostly its spontaneous, especially if ‘m looking at a movie and get an idea.
Find John Sankitts on his linkedin profile! https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnsanki...
Hi John - thanks again for taking the time to be interviewed! Let’s begin with telling us a little bit more about who John Sankitts is.
When did you know that you wanted to be a writer? I knew when I was in Film School in 2001 writing my own stories gave me a sense of individuality and protection from ridicule so writing scripts was my initiation into writing. But in 2008 when I wrote a piece for a magazine as an editorial submission, they loved the piece I wrote on a artist and offered me a job writing for their Music and Sports magazine named G.O.A.T magazine.
You have written Memoirs of an Island Boy and for G.O.A.T magazine. How did you develop the ideas for your stories? Which are your favorites? My father always spoke on his time on St. Croix Virgin Island as a small boy, he always recited them, they were funny. I wanted to immortalize his stories forever, so I took all his stories, embellished them a little for a more humorous impact and wrote the book. My favorite story is when he was running from the landlord land he trespassed on.
In addition to being an author you have also done some film work like Letter of Circumstance and now working on Paintings on the Wall.
Which projects were the most fun to develop? The Painting on the wall TV series is the most fun to develop.
Which were the most challenging? Paintings on the Wall, it’s a complicated TV Crim Drama series.
What are your plans long-term for your writing and other projects? I am currently researching for a comedy film. It’s a full feature 93 pages long. I’m stuck on page 12.
Do you have additional/different works in mind? Yes, I look to join a few film festivals, have a short film in mind about a Girl auditioning for a talent show but has no way of getting there on time. She finally does auditions in the restroom while a judge is currently using it! Funny sort.
As an author, I share the challenge of getting the word out on my books. What have you had to do to win broader exposure and branding for your works? I use social media, I use the Airlines to see if they can offer my book on their planes. I also use word of mouth. I use Hootsuite that can post a link to my book on a schedule time every day to all social media platforms. I also join author groups on Facebook and LinkedIn, also Group Me Author groups.
This question will start off sounding like an old joke – a person walks into a bar (or convention or bookstore) and bumps into John Sankitts – what would be your elevator pitch to showcase your work? Hi I’m John and I’m your future Boss, welcome to the team. They will say, “Is that right?” I’ll respond with yes, let me show you why, and Ill quick play my trailer to my TV series…works sometimes…lol…In regards to the book, I always have a copy with me, it takes careful coordination, but if I see my objective going into a elevator , I will hand them the book and tell them, Its for you.
As an author, it’s sometimes difficult to finally say a product is finished, no matter how many times you review or edit. Is there anything you would go back and change in your completed works? Oh God no…once it’s done, it done as per day in a book. A screenplay though, well it has not done till you get an offer.
Where their ideas you had in mind and then decided NOT to include? For a book no. But for a screenplay, it’s had to place an idea because it usually leads to developing the idea and back story, more work, and may change the course of the narrative.
I have an 8 year old son, and structuring time around him can be challenging! I’ve lost count of the times he nearly pressed the delete button on something I was working on…how do you find time to carve out your ideas? Usually believe it or not Ideas come to me right before I actually about fall asleep, sometimes I get ideas in my sleep and if I’m somehow able to wake up I jot it down and in the mornings I attend tot it.
Do you have a certain method you use when you write – i.e., a certain room, music, mood, etc., to help get you in the right writing frame of mind? When I look at my bank account and it says “you have .45cents available.” That’s when I say, I need to get this writing done. But mostly its spontaneous, especially if ‘m looking at a movie and get an idea.
Find John Sankitts on his linkedin profile! https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnsanki...
Published on November 22, 2020 11:05
•
Tags:
adventure, dragons, dungeons-and-dragons, elves, epic-fantasy, fantasy, forging-of-a-knight, gaming, gen-con, john-sankitts, jr, knights, sword-sorcery, trolls, wizards
November 15, 2020
An interview with Author Dennis Bartizal!
I had the pleasure of meeting this fellow author at CodCon (College of DuPage Sci-Fi/Fantasy gaming convention and more!) awhile back and was eager to interview him after reading and enjoying one of his works, What on Earth, a political satire. Take it away, Dennis...!
Hi Dennis - thanks again for taking the time to be interviewed! Let’s begin with telling us a little bit more about who Dennis Bartizal is.
HN: When did you know that you wanted to be a writer?
DB: The seed was planted during my freshman year in high school. I had good, creative and encouraging English teachers. I was shy and wanted to overcome my shyness, so during my freshman year I joined the staff of our school newspaper. Because of the creativity of the writing projects from my classes I began writing a humor column for The Profile, that was the student newspaper at Proviso West High School. I enjoyed our science classes: Biology and Chemistry. I also took active part in our mathematics classes: Trigonometry and Geometry. Civics and History seemed important to me. How could I overcome my own shyness if I could not understand where other people are coming from and how their background is important. I began rock collecting. I began questioning history. I began reading Franz Kafka. Anyway, six months ago, while I was straightening up a storage area at home, I came across a box I saved from my high school years. In that box were fossils I had collected during those years. I also saved many English papers from my various classes. I dug out several of my newspaper columns which I had cut out from The Profile and rubber cemented on sheets of typing paper. On September 27 of 2020 I retyped those columns and English themes and I published them in my 10th book on Amazon. The title of that book is What I Got Out Of High School. Along with that box of what I had written (stories, poems, and song parodies) during high school, I also excavated notebooks and typewritten pages of some of the creativity I attempted during college. I am currently typing them up as word documents and I hope to publish an anthology from my college years.
HN: You have written seven books (What on Earth being my favorite). How did you develop the ideas for your stories? Which are your favorites?
DB: Several years ago, I retired from my career as a computer programmer. With the free time now available I joined The DuPage Writers Group, with hopes to encourage myself to developing more stories. This writers group meets on a monthly basis. We read what we are currently working on. The group critiques what we had shared. Each year this organization publishes a book of short stories, poems, and art work called our Possibilities Journal. Even before I was a member of the writers group, actually since I graduated college, I would occasionally write something for my own enjoyment. I would also, occasionally, attempt to submit something I had written, to various magazines, to no avail. Since I was getting a few of my stories published in the Possibilities Journal I felt encouraged enough to try self-publishing. I use Amazon. My first book Kafka Can Wait was a Trial, on my part, at self-publishing. (Not sorry about the implication.) Along with his novels and short stories, I have also liked Franz Kafka’s aphorisms. I felt a closeness between my short stories and Kafka’s aphorisms. I also felt a closeness to certain people in my past that this collection emoted to me. My novella Thrown In A New Dimension was inspired by the science-fiction works of Brian Stableford, especially his books that were inspired by The Iliad and The Odyssey. My other novella A Chance Of Mars was inspired by Issac Asimov. Over the years I’ve read a lot of Stableford and Asimov. My novel Sticking Your Neck Out came from my love of nature and my want to write about Man learning from animals. Man learns to communicate. The animals taught him, he did not teach himself. When I was in college, I took a Geology Field Camp. Parts of what I experienced about nature and existence is expressed here. My next novel, What On Earth, is my science-fiction look at current days. Sometimes I call it a political satire. Other times I call it political sarcasm. I enjoyed writing it. I have three other collections of short stories. The Photon And The Dog 2017, 2018, and 2019. I have a blog called “The Photon And The Dog.” I write this blog to try to get people interested in reading what I write. I try to have a new post each week. At the beginning of the year I delete all the posts from the previous year and start each year a new. The last year’s posts get published in a book. I’ve tried something new, for me, recently. This fall I also published a children’s book. It is called Why Did The Turtle Cross The Road. It is about a boy, in grade school, saving a turtle from getting run over by a car. The boy takes the turtle home and they both grow together. This book was inspired by my childhood. From when I was six years old until I was a sophomore in high-school I had twenty-seven turtles. Two box turtles, one tortoise, twenty-three mud turtles, and one snapping turtle. I took care of them. I fed them. I brought them down to our basement over the winters. My turtles never died under my care. School got to be too much for me, so I donated my turtles to the zoo when I was a sophomore in high school.
HN: Which projects were the most fun to develop? Which were the most challenging?
DB: My turtle book was the most fun to develop. I took a lot of things that had happened to me and turned them into pieces of fiction. Since this was my first children’s book, I asked my 11 year old nephew to read what I had written many times. Robbie is a good kid and cares about me. I got good advice from him. My anthology of my high school stories was the most challenging. I needed to just type in what I had written years ago and try not to change it (too much). I would correct the grammar, but that’s about all, other than changing people’s names. Several things I said back then I wish I had said or written differently. But, to be honest, I needed to keep the stories the same as when I originally wrote them.
HN: What are your plans long-term for your writing? Do you have additional/different works in mind?
DB: In the long term I would like to write more novels, especially science-fiction novels. Short stories are fun but novels have more dimensions to them. I would also like to write some more children’s novels. I don’t know what to write about in that line, I will ask my nephew about that. Currently I am three quarters of the way finished with writing a science-fiction novel. Also, since the year is coming to a close, I will be putting together The Photon And The Dog – 2020. As I stated previous, I am typing an anthology of my college writings. I have also been making some notes on a sequel to A Chance Of Mars.
HN: As an author, I share the challenge of getting the word out on my books. What have you had to do to win broader exposure and branding for your works?
DB: I need to learn more in this area. I have found a couple libraries that have local authors shelf sections. Some of my books are there. Not only do the local library patrons get a chance to read what you write, your books get listed in the Illinois Card Catalog. I met you at the DuPage Comic Con. I have been getting tables at other Comic Cons in order to get my name out there that way. I also take part in local library Local Authors Festivals. I look for Coffee Houses that have Open Mic Nights. I will read my works to live audiences. Since I do write song parodies, I want to look into making sound recordings. I have a computer programming album in mind. My satirical Christmas songs might sound good. Maybe I could sell them on Amazon.
HN: This question will start off sounding like an old joke – a person walks into a bar (or convention or bookstore) and bumps into Dennis Bartizal – what would be your elevator pitch to showcase your work?
DB: Look at how advanced our civilization has become. We are cloning sheep. We are flying to other planets. We can build computers that talk, act, and think the way that we do. Did you know that there is another planet of people more advanced than we are? They are here! But they are learning too. Don’t worry! They are not trying to take over our world. They are only trying to live among us so they can understand how to live on another planet. They will not stay here and take over. They did not put one of their people in as our president. They are going to leave soon and they will leave us as we are. Or are they?
HN: As an author, it’s sometimes difficult to finally say a product is finished, no matter how many times you review or edit. Is there anything you would go back and change in your completed works? Were there ideas you had in mind and then decided NOT to include?
DB: I feel the need to work on my dialogs more. I hope the different people do sound like individuals. I hope they do not sound the same. One of my characters had a friend who died in outer space. I wish he didn’t die. I may bring him back in a sequel after having gone through a white dwarf supernova explosion, instead of his ship and self being destroyed, his electrons echoed the speeds and cycles of that part of the cosmos. Our physicists have found some evidence that electrons in areas of their clouds move back in time instead of forward. If the supernova divided his elements in monopole space he exists now in a different timeline and I can write about their attempts to reunite. At least with science-fiction and fantasy you are not stuck with permanent changes.
HN: I have an 8 year old son, and structuring time around him can be challenging! I’ve lost count of the times he nearly pressed the delete button on something I was working on…how do you find time to carve out your ideas?
DB: I carry a notebook. At least when I am struck by a fleeting idea I might be able to write enough parts of it so I can get my mind to working that way later. When I get to the computer I have a group of folders with many, many documents of ideas or parts of stories or a small chunk of detailed work that I can hope to find the time later to work on or even just string together. I wake up at one or two in the morning, turn on the computer, and type if I am so mentally pushed. There is never enough time. That is life.
HN: Do you have a certain method you use when you write – i.e., a certain room, music, mood, etc., to help get you in the right writing frame of mind?
DB: For my blog’s flash fictions I try to get a quick story put together on a Tuesday. I’ll return to that story the rest of the week, reading it, correcting it, making it larger, more dimensional, more characters or more activities. Then, Saturday, I post it in my blog. For books I am working on, I write with a goal to have a good part finished by the time The DuPage Writers Group is going to have its meeting. I bring those last few pages with me and share them with our gang so I can get critiques and suggestions. I like to take walks at the zoo. I always have a notebook with me. I walk and think and write.
HN: What are you reading right now?
DB: Surely You’re Joking Mr. Feynman by Richard Feynman, The Panda’s Thumb by Stephen Gould, The Year Of The Angry Rabbit by Russell Braddon, Caging Skies by Christine Leunen.
HN: Where can people go to find out more about Dennis Bartizal?
DB:
https://thephotonandthedog.blogspot.com https://www.amazon.com/author/dennisb... http://www.illinoisauthors.org/
Thanks Dennis, for sharing some of your time!
Hi Dennis - thanks again for taking the time to be interviewed! Let’s begin with telling us a little bit more about who Dennis Bartizal is.
HN: When did you know that you wanted to be a writer?
DB: The seed was planted during my freshman year in high school. I had good, creative and encouraging English teachers. I was shy and wanted to overcome my shyness, so during my freshman year I joined the staff of our school newspaper. Because of the creativity of the writing projects from my classes I began writing a humor column for The Profile, that was the student newspaper at Proviso West High School. I enjoyed our science classes: Biology and Chemistry. I also took active part in our mathematics classes: Trigonometry and Geometry. Civics and History seemed important to me. How could I overcome my own shyness if I could not understand where other people are coming from and how their background is important. I began rock collecting. I began questioning history. I began reading Franz Kafka. Anyway, six months ago, while I was straightening up a storage area at home, I came across a box I saved from my high school years. In that box were fossils I had collected during those years. I also saved many English papers from my various classes. I dug out several of my newspaper columns which I had cut out from The Profile and rubber cemented on sheets of typing paper. On September 27 of 2020 I retyped those columns and English themes and I published them in my 10th book on Amazon. The title of that book is What I Got Out Of High School. Along with that box of what I had written (stories, poems, and song parodies) during high school, I also excavated notebooks and typewritten pages of some of the creativity I attempted during college. I am currently typing them up as word documents and I hope to publish an anthology from my college years.
HN: You have written seven books (What on Earth being my favorite). How did you develop the ideas for your stories? Which are your favorites?
DB: Several years ago, I retired from my career as a computer programmer. With the free time now available I joined The DuPage Writers Group, with hopes to encourage myself to developing more stories. This writers group meets on a monthly basis. We read what we are currently working on. The group critiques what we had shared. Each year this organization publishes a book of short stories, poems, and art work called our Possibilities Journal. Even before I was a member of the writers group, actually since I graduated college, I would occasionally write something for my own enjoyment. I would also, occasionally, attempt to submit something I had written, to various magazines, to no avail. Since I was getting a few of my stories published in the Possibilities Journal I felt encouraged enough to try self-publishing. I use Amazon. My first book Kafka Can Wait was a Trial, on my part, at self-publishing. (Not sorry about the implication.) Along with his novels and short stories, I have also liked Franz Kafka’s aphorisms. I felt a closeness between my short stories and Kafka’s aphorisms. I also felt a closeness to certain people in my past that this collection emoted to me. My novella Thrown In A New Dimension was inspired by the science-fiction works of Brian Stableford, especially his books that were inspired by The Iliad and The Odyssey. My other novella A Chance Of Mars was inspired by Issac Asimov. Over the years I’ve read a lot of Stableford and Asimov. My novel Sticking Your Neck Out came from my love of nature and my want to write about Man learning from animals. Man learns to communicate. The animals taught him, he did not teach himself. When I was in college, I took a Geology Field Camp. Parts of what I experienced about nature and existence is expressed here. My next novel, What On Earth, is my science-fiction look at current days. Sometimes I call it a political satire. Other times I call it political sarcasm. I enjoyed writing it. I have three other collections of short stories. The Photon And The Dog 2017, 2018, and 2019. I have a blog called “The Photon And The Dog.” I write this blog to try to get people interested in reading what I write. I try to have a new post each week. At the beginning of the year I delete all the posts from the previous year and start each year a new. The last year’s posts get published in a book. I’ve tried something new, for me, recently. This fall I also published a children’s book. It is called Why Did The Turtle Cross The Road. It is about a boy, in grade school, saving a turtle from getting run over by a car. The boy takes the turtle home and they both grow together. This book was inspired by my childhood. From when I was six years old until I was a sophomore in high-school I had twenty-seven turtles. Two box turtles, one tortoise, twenty-three mud turtles, and one snapping turtle. I took care of them. I fed them. I brought them down to our basement over the winters. My turtles never died under my care. School got to be too much for me, so I donated my turtles to the zoo when I was a sophomore in high school.
HN: Which projects were the most fun to develop? Which were the most challenging?
DB: My turtle book was the most fun to develop. I took a lot of things that had happened to me and turned them into pieces of fiction. Since this was my first children’s book, I asked my 11 year old nephew to read what I had written many times. Robbie is a good kid and cares about me. I got good advice from him. My anthology of my high school stories was the most challenging. I needed to just type in what I had written years ago and try not to change it (too much). I would correct the grammar, but that’s about all, other than changing people’s names. Several things I said back then I wish I had said or written differently. But, to be honest, I needed to keep the stories the same as when I originally wrote them.
HN: What are your plans long-term for your writing? Do you have additional/different works in mind?
DB: In the long term I would like to write more novels, especially science-fiction novels. Short stories are fun but novels have more dimensions to them. I would also like to write some more children’s novels. I don’t know what to write about in that line, I will ask my nephew about that. Currently I am three quarters of the way finished with writing a science-fiction novel. Also, since the year is coming to a close, I will be putting together The Photon And The Dog – 2020. As I stated previous, I am typing an anthology of my college writings. I have also been making some notes on a sequel to A Chance Of Mars.
HN: As an author, I share the challenge of getting the word out on my books. What have you had to do to win broader exposure and branding for your works?
DB: I need to learn more in this area. I have found a couple libraries that have local authors shelf sections. Some of my books are there. Not only do the local library patrons get a chance to read what you write, your books get listed in the Illinois Card Catalog. I met you at the DuPage Comic Con. I have been getting tables at other Comic Cons in order to get my name out there that way. I also take part in local library Local Authors Festivals. I look for Coffee Houses that have Open Mic Nights. I will read my works to live audiences. Since I do write song parodies, I want to look into making sound recordings. I have a computer programming album in mind. My satirical Christmas songs might sound good. Maybe I could sell them on Amazon.
HN: This question will start off sounding like an old joke – a person walks into a bar (or convention or bookstore) and bumps into Dennis Bartizal – what would be your elevator pitch to showcase your work?
DB: Look at how advanced our civilization has become. We are cloning sheep. We are flying to other planets. We can build computers that talk, act, and think the way that we do. Did you know that there is another planet of people more advanced than we are? They are here! But they are learning too. Don’t worry! They are not trying to take over our world. They are only trying to live among us so they can understand how to live on another planet. They will not stay here and take over. They did not put one of their people in as our president. They are going to leave soon and they will leave us as we are. Or are they?
HN: As an author, it’s sometimes difficult to finally say a product is finished, no matter how many times you review or edit. Is there anything you would go back and change in your completed works? Were there ideas you had in mind and then decided NOT to include?
DB: I feel the need to work on my dialogs more. I hope the different people do sound like individuals. I hope they do not sound the same. One of my characters had a friend who died in outer space. I wish he didn’t die. I may bring him back in a sequel after having gone through a white dwarf supernova explosion, instead of his ship and self being destroyed, his electrons echoed the speeds and cycles of that part of the cosmos. Our physicists have found some evidence that electrons in areas of their clouds move back in time instead of forward. If the supernova divided his elements in monopole space he exists now in a different timeline and I can write about their attempts to reunite. At least with science-fiction and fantasy you are not stuck with permanent changes.
HN: I have an 8 year old son, and structuring time around him can be challenging! I’ve lost count of the times he nearly pressed the delete button on something I was working on…how do you find time to carve out your ideas?
DB: I carry a notebook. At least when I am struck by a fleeting idea I might be able to write enough parts of it so I can get my mind to working that way later. When I get to the computer I have a group of folders with many, many documents of ideas or parts of stories or a small chunk of detailed work that I can hope to find the time later to work on or even just string together. I wake up at one or two in the morning, turn on the computer, and type if I am so mentally pushed. There is never enough time. That is life.
HN: Do you have a certain method you use when you write – i.e., a certain room, music, mood, etc., to help get you in the right writing frame of mind?
DB: For my blog’s flash fictions I try to get a quick story put together on a Tuesday. I’ll return to that story the rest of the week, reading it, correcting it, making it larger, more dimensional, more characters or more activities. Then, Saturday, I post it in my blog. For books I am working on, I write with a goal to have a good part finished by the time The DuPage Writers Group is going to have its meeting. I bring those last few pages with me and share them with our gang so I can get critiques and suggestions. I like to take walks at the zoo. I always have a notebook with me. I walk and think and write.
HN: What are you reading right now?
DB: Surely You’re Joking Mr. Feynman by Richard Feynman, The Panda’s Thumb by Stephen Gould, The Year Of The Angry Rabbit by Russell Braddon, Caging Skies by Christine Leunen.
HN: Where can people go to find out more about Dennis Bartizal?
DB:
https://thephotonandthedog.blogspot.com https://www.amazon.com/author/dennisb... http://www.illinoisauthors.org/
Thanks Dennis, for sharing some of your time!
Published on November 15, 2020 18:24
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Tags:
adventure, codcon, dennis-bartizal, dragons, dungeons-and-dragons, elves, epic-fantasy, fantasy, forging-of-a-knight, gaming, gen-con, knights, sword-sorcery, trolls, wizards
November 8, 2020
Forging of a Knight has a new website!
It's here at last!
Forging of a Knight has its own official website! Lots of fun stuff from our Facebook Forging of a Knight page will be transferred over - namely, interviews and convention/signings updates and pics, but there will be a direct shop soon for all sort of Forging of a Knight goodies, an easier way to connect with me, a blog page, and more!! It's still not fully baked, but you'll see more as I update over time. So come by and say hello...again!!
https://forgingofaknight.com/
Forging of a Knight has its own official website! Lots of fun stuff from our Facebook Forging of a Knight page will be transferred over - namely, interviews and convention/signings updates and pics, but there will be a direct shop soon for all sort of Forging of a Knight goodies, an easier way to connect with me, a blog page, and more!! It's still not fully baked, but you'll see more as I update over time. So come by and say hello...again!!
https://forgingofaknight.com/
Published on November 08, 2020 11:00
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Tags:
adventure, dragons, dungeons-and-dragons, elves, epic-fantasy, fantasy, forging-of-a-knight, gaming, gen-con, knights, sword-sorcery, trolls, wizards
November 4, 2020
Spellfury is coming back!
You know Spellfury - the action/fantasy comedic series by creator/writer Travis Gordon. I interviewed Travis awhile ago, shared links to his Spellfury page, and some of the episodes as well (you can see them on YouTube!). The show has been in pause after season I and II, but hold on to your scabbards, it's coming back! Travis was nice enough to share some rough cuts below from a soon to be released NEW episode! Check 'em out!!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kgXib...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sHCr-...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=asTyD...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kgXib...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sHCr-...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=asTyD...
Published on November 04, 2020 11:34
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Tags:
adventure, dragons, dungeons-and-dragons, elves, epic-fantasy, fantasy, forging-of-a-knight, gaming, gen-con, knights, spellfury, sword-sorcery, trolls, wizards
October 3, 2020
The Winner is In!
The awesome winner to Mulvanen's contest to name your favorite character in the Forging of a Knight series is at last confirmed! N. Moore submitted the below which is a perfect summary to our fearless knight Jesepha:
"I love Jesepha! She’s tough and cool. She fights all the villains and I love how she is friends with Euric. He’s annoying and silly and has a crush on her, but its sooo funny how she lets him know she doesn’t like him that way, but they can still be friends and that’s cool. I have the same problem at school, so I know how she feels and I am glad for them. I also love Visandus. He is a handsome pirate and loves her too, but she is taking her time and making him prove how much he loves her."
That's a lot of love from N. Moore (and her mom), and definitely deserves some love back, so flying on the back of a dragon (well, the U.S. postal service) to your home castle will be a signed copy of book seven, Forging of a Knight, Against the Alliance, and per your pick, a knights templar pen holder. Schmuck the dwarf thought it would be an additional treat to have Jesepha sign the book for you both, but when he approached Mulvanen with the news no one had selected him as a favorite character, he had his hands full with the wrathful wizard. Schmuck sends his apologies and suggests he may try again after his injuries heal. His singed beard should be growing back any day now...
"I love Jesepha! She’s tough and cool. She fights all the villains and I love how she is friends with Euric. He’s annoying and silly and has a crush on her, but its sooo funny how she lets him know she doesn’t like him that way, but they can still be friends and that’s cool. I have the same problem at school, so I know how she feels and I am glad for them. I also love Visandus. He is a handsome pirate and loves her too, but she is taking her time and making him prove how much he loves her."
That's a lot of love from N. Moore (and her mom), and definitely deserves some love back, so flying on the back of a dragon (well, the U.S. postal service) to your home castle will be a signed copy of book seven, Forging of a Knight, Against the Alliance, and per your pick, a knights templar pen holder. Schmuck the dwarf thought it would be an additional treat to have Jesepha sign the book for you both, but when he approached Mulvanen with the news no one had selected him as a favorite character, he had his hands full with the wrathful wizard. Schmuck sends his apologies and suggests he may try again after his injuries heal. His singed beard should be growing back any day now...
Published on October 03, 2020 08:13
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Tags:
adventure, dragons, dungeons-and-dragons, elves, epic-fantasy, fantasy, forging-of-a-knight, gaming, gen-con, knights, sword-sorcery, trolls, wizards
September 18, 2020
Book Seven of Forging of a Knight - ebook format versions available at last!
Book Seven Kindle available at last!
This is it! Forging of a Knight, Against the Alliance is on Kindle, Nook, and more! The end of the first Forging of a Knight series - and what a mind-blasting finale! Can Qualtan stop the war between his former King and the School? Who will stand with him and who will stand against him? Will the Dragon King help, or destroy them all? And even more sensational, even more astonishing...the secret that has held firm throughout the entire series - will we finally learn what Glaive's REAL name is?
By Urgsh's curdled toenails, you can't miss it!
https://www.amazon.com/Forging-Knight...
This is it! Forging of a Knight, Against the Alliance is on Kindle, Nook, and more! The end of the first Forging of a Knight series - and what a mind-blasting finale! Can Qualtan stop the war between his former King and the School? Who will stand with him and who will stand against him? Will the Dragon King help, or destroy them all? And even more sensational, even more astonishing...the secret that has held firm throughout the entire series - will we finally learn what Glaive's REAL name is?
By Urgsh's curdled toenails, you can't miss it!
https://www.amazon.com/Forging-Knight...
Published on September 18, 2020 19:21
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Tags:
adventure, amazon, dragons, dungeons-and-dragons, elves, epic-fantasy, fantasy, forging-of-a-knight, gaming, gen-con, knights, sword-sorcery, trolls, wizards


