Slow Starts
On the first of the month the database on the mark Joseph "young" web log developed a glitch, and thus posting there was delayed while the tech team at my hosting service resolved the problem. Thus the first item published this month is the thirteenth chapter of the tenth Multiverser novel
In Version
, with subsequent chapters running through chapter 18 this past week, featuring Joe Kondor, Derek Brown, James Beam, and Bob Slade.
Web log post #477: The Song "Step by Step" actually appeared later that evening; it is the longest and most operatic song in the collection, an extended picture of Jesus' crucifixion. The next day it was joined by Faith in Play #68: Prayer at the Christian Gamers Guild, about the issue of whether players should speak the prayers their characters pray in their games.
The Guild also hosts the Chaplain's Bible Study, which in the first half of the month covered Mark 5:41 through 6:7, including the Recap of chapter 5.
Meanwhile, off camera I have continued setting up An Analytical Commentary on The Book of First Corinthians for print publication, and A Dozen Verses for the web. I wrote a December entry for the Faith in Play series and rescued another lost Game Ideas Unlimited article for RPG-ology, so I'm covered through the end of the year. I've begun picking up the pace a bit in writing Multiverser: A Dozen Verses, and my collaborator on that, Eric R. Ashley has also returned his attention to that.
Otherwise, all that remains is for me to suggest you can keep more current by following me on social media and particularly Patreon, where you can also support me, and you can support me without being burdened with more updates on PayPal.me.
Web log post #477: The Song "Step by Step" actually appeared later that evening; it is the longest and most operatic song in the collection, an extended picture of Jesus' crucifixion. The next day it was joined by Faith in Play #68: Prayer at the Christian Gamers Guild, about the issue of whether players should speak the prayers their characters pray in their games.
The Guild also hosts the Chaplain's Bible Study, which in the first half of the month covered Mark 5:41 through 6:7, including the Recap of chapter 5.
Meanwhile, off camera I have continued setting up An Analytical Commentary on The Book of First Corinthians for print publication, and A Dozen Verses for the web. I wrote a December entry for the Faith in Play series and rescued another lost Game Ideas Unlimited article for RPG-ology, so I'm covered through the end of the year. I've begun picking up the pace a bit in writing Multiverser: A Dozen Verses, and my collaborator on that, Eric R. Ashley has also returned his attention to that.
Otherwise, all that remains is for me to suggest you can keep more current by following me on social media and particularly Patreon, where you can also support me, and you can support me without being burdened with more updates on PayPal.me.
Published on July 15, 2023 17:25
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Tags:
a-dozen-verses, analytical-commentary, bible, christian-gamers-guild, crucifixion, derek-brown, eric-r-ashley, faith-in-play, first-corinthians, game-ideas-unlimited, in-version, james-beam, joseph-kondor, mark, mark-joseph-young, multiverser, novel, patreon, paypalme, robert-slade, rpg-ology, social-media, song, study, technical-problems, thirteenth-story, web-log
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The Ides of Mark
Goodreads was nagging me, as a Goodreads author, to start another web log--I say another, because I already have the mark Joseph "young" web log http://www.mjyoung.net/weblog/ where I dabble eclectica
Goodreads was nagging me, as a Goodreads author, to start another web log--I say another, because I already have the mark Joseph "young" web log http://www.mjyoung.net/weblog/ where I dabble eclectically, and a Patreon blog https://www.patreon.com/MJYoung where I keep a running report of everything I publish and what progress I'm making on writing. But I thought of the blog title, and decided that twice a month I could catch up this blog on what I've been writing.
Anyway, we'll see how it goes. ...more
Anyway, we'll see how it goes. ...more
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