Happy February you few, you proud, you Stroock's Books Reader(s). Temps are expected to climb into the 20s today, which damn near feels like a heart wave. We didn't like our Chipotle very much last night. Baaaah! We swipe at the air and drink our grog.
We're in the deepest part of the Yankee winter now. One month checked off. One month that wore us down with cold snaps and a lot of snow. As wintery as the weather's been, the weather's about to get wintrier *. That is the strength and fury of the Yankee winter. We don't take it lightly.
We ourselves are in a kind of creative funk...[An ennui?-Ed] An ennui. Amateurs might call this ennui writer's block. Nonsense. We may not quite know what to write. But we are not blocked.
Roughly 23 years ago Strategy & Tactics Magazine accepted our first article, Sparta's Defeat of Athens. We'd submit a second piece soon after, Frederick the not so Great. And soon after that, we'd begin A Line Through the Desert. Our point is we've written a lot for a long time. And we don't get, nor do we even believe in, writer's block. If you, aspiring writer, have writer's block, don't quite your day job.
Reminder, writing is our day job. We've hundreds of publishing credits and a couple of dozen novels. We're in the top fifteen, maybe even the top ten percent of authors in the English speaking world. So when we say something about writing, it's because we know what the fuck we're talking about. We are among the best there is at what we do.**
Nevertheless, we're mired in a kind of malaise [Does that even make sense?-Ed]. Don't know. We've been thinking about the Irish and their damnable Troubles for too long. And smart reader(s) will recall that for every solution, the Irish will find a problem. Which is how our tight and pithy novel about a British invasion of Ireland became two long and winding novels. Those Irish...We shake our head.
We think we've got the first 20,000 words of Thatcher's War set. The next 20,000 need a month's worth of work. There are sone good, smart, even funny ideas. Just try to imagine how the Irish would passively resist a British invasion. After that we've written your bog standard Stroock tactical battle. Bog? Or bogged down? It's a habit now. Just a scene or three to describe a battle or ambush, and 10,000 words later we're finally finished. We wrote another such battle in the Managua Campaign. Speaking of, we're eager (over eager even) to get back to The Managua Campaign, as we think we can wrap up The Managua Campaign right quick. [You think that about everything-Ed].
Anywho...Before we can move on from the Irish and their damnable Troubles we need to write another 20,000 words wrapping things up - including out totally cool four-pronged assault on Dublin.
Soooo....Will's Good Idea for the Week of 2/1/26. We've got too many of 'em, that's the problem. Alert reader(s) will note we updated the Future Projects Page.
*Huh, spellcheck likes wintrier but the internet doesn't. Anyway, you people know what we mean. More winter. Even more winter.
** [With talent on loan from God?-Ed] With talent on loan from God. Thanks Rush.