I could have been doing something useful today. Instead…
IA! IA! IA-IA!
Chorus
IA! IA! IA-IA!
Your wife says your Saltes aren’t essential;
So sing us another verse
That’s worse than the other verse
And drive us some more into madness.
I could have been doing something useful today. Instead…
IA! IA! IA-IA!
Chorus
IA! IA! IA-IA!
Your wife says your Saltes aren’t essential;
So sing us another verse
That’s worse than the other verse
And drive us some more into madness.
I feel that “Warning, Ignored” strives to remind us about the universe, and about who gets a vote. Key word there, naturally, is ‘strives.’ It’s up to you, Dear Reader, to determine whether or not it succeeded.
I dinna think that the world of “The Death-Maker” is gonna be revisited, sorry.
Personally, I think that The Fermi Resolution is some of my best work. Which you can check out on Patreon, for as little as a buck a month! Plus short stories and microfiction! In fact, I just posted a short-short story there this evening! Take a look!
“Give The Humans Their Due” can probably be alternatively titled as “Adventures in Heresy!,” part X of Y. But that’s all right. It’s definitely not my first one. And, hey, I’m at least thinking about this stuff, right?
“Tactical Metallurgy” is there because I’ve never quite grasped why it should be assumed that demon hunters wouldn’t keep up on materials science. I mean, if something can be damaged by mundane kinetic energy then why not use depleted uranium rounds on a demon? Particularly if it’s got an armored hide. That’s what depleted uranium rounds are for, really.
The Mathematician Sings of Love is not really genre fiction. But I suppose that it’s at least geeky. You take what you can get.
“The Medusa and the Hero” is, in the end, about the virtues of pragmatism. And the ability to think outside the box. And perhaps just the faintest hint of, ah, shenanigans. Useful word, that.
PATREON! PATREON! So good they named it PATREON!