In a little over a week, I will start a new job--in fact, an entire new career--putting an end to years of graduate school and part-time freelancing. This will drastically cut into my time for personal writing projects, blogging, etc.
This means that you will be seeing a lot fewer blog posts, movie reviews, etc. here. I will continue being part of 
Myopia: Defend Your Childhood, but I won't be reviewing every movie we watch like I've been doing. I will also write posts linking to the podcast 
The Geekly Oddcast put on by 
The Brothers Herman, but since 
Geekly Oddcast records on weeknights, I'll probably be doing that less often than 
Myopia. I will have less time for my personal writing projects, so there will fewer updates on those.
Speaking of my personal writing projects, here is the plan for some of them.
*I intend to finish two additional stories featuring my supervillain protagonist Andrew Patel and release them as a four-story electronic collection 
Consequences that will also include the first story 
("Übermensch")
and the second 
"Needs Must." I have partially written both, with more progress made on the fourth story (which will ultimately tie Patel with the world of my Lovecraftian novel 
The Thing in the Woods) than on the third. This will be my top personal writing priority aside from selling my completed novels 
Battle for the Wastelands and 
Thing.
Here's the cover, which my regular artist 
Alex Claw made awhile back, to whet your appetite:
I will also be working on a novella entitled "Fairmont," which will take place just over three years before the events of my novel 
Battle for the Wastelands. My fellow writers 
James R. Tuck and 
Delilah S. Dawson both secured book deals that saw the release of novellas for e-readers alongside more conventional print books, while 
Marko Kloos self-published the short story 
"Lucky Thirteen"
and the novella 
"Measures of Absolution"
 alongside 
Terms of Enlistment
and kept them online even when he got a traditional book deal for 
Terms. Regardless of whether I go traditional or independent with 
Wastelands, "Fairmont" would be an excellent way to whet readers' appetites for 
Battle, much like how 
"That Thing At the Zoo"
 preceded 
Blood and Bullets.
My completed novella "Son of Grendel" can come afterward, much like 
"Spider's Lullaby"
 came after 
Blood and Bullets and before 
Blood and Silver. 
I have received some good comments from agents and publishers on 
The Thing in the Woods (but no bites yet--you'll find out when that happens), so I don't foresee tinkering with the manuscript too much. Depending on how things go with that I might resume work on the sequel 
The Atlanta Incursion or resume work on the third project I'm holding close to the chest at the moment. I've let that one fall by the wayside due to graduate-school responsibilities, but I've been told by fellow members of my writing group that this project plays to my strengths (world-building and journalistic writing) and, owing to the nature of the project, it's something I could finish more quickly than a conventional narrative novel.
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