blog 60: In which I say farewell to 2013 and plunge headfirst (after carefully checking the depth of the water with a stick) into 2014.

A lot of people make a BIG DEAL out of creating a list of RESOLUTIONS at the beginning of each New Year and then they don’t end up keeping any of them.

And I should know, because I am one of those people.

But not any more! This year I’ve decided to abandon that pointless folly. From now on I’m going to make a list of COMMITMENTS instead and see how that goes.

MIKE’S 2014 COMMITMENTS!
(Not to be confused with Mike’s 2014 Resolutions)

1. To write more.

                            “MORE”.

Done!

2. To avoid setting outlandish goals that I have little or no hope of achieving.

3. To swim the Kokoda Track. 

4. To stop writing “To-do” lists in order to avoid actually doing things. 

I will achieve this by:

  • making a list of all the “to-do” lists I’ve made in the past so as to better avoid them
  • ticking off each “to-do” list as I don’t make it
  • making a list of things  to do in place of writing “to-do” lists

5. To make a start on answering my huge backlog of SPAM fan emails.

For example:

FingdingleHey all, purely evolved into responsive to your own web site by way of Google, determined that it must be really insightful. We are planning to watch out for belgium’s capital. My business is grateful if you happen to proceed this kind of in future. Appear as healthy will likely be gained out of your producing. Best wishes!

Dear Fingdingle
Thanks so much for writing! How’s that English course working out for you? If it’s any help, I’ve been told that Brussels is the capital of Belgium and has been for some time.  My suggestion would be to go to Belgium immediately and ask directions from one of the locals. Apparently it’s fairly hard to miss. And as far as “appear as healthy will likely be gained out of your producing” is concerned – truer words were never spoken!
Best wishes right back at you!
Michael

OsdhsrHHlSend Christmas a noble Christmas Gifts for men Equitable Christmas Gifts watches, it’s beneficial! Christmas is at worst uncut fro the corner. Don’t abjure it to the likeness.

Dear OsdhsrHHl
Your moving reflection on Christmas has touched my heart. Would that all Christmas gifts were noble and equitable! You have managed to put into words what so many of us have been thinking for so long but could never express so succinctly and eloquently.

“Christmas is at worst uncut fro the corner”.

Oh how true! You have helped me to see the light. I realise now that I have been “abjuring it to the likeness” all this time without knowing! What a fool I have been.
With heartfelt thanks and not a trace of likeness abjuring
Michael

6. To pay more attention to my spelling and grandma so as to avoid pornographical errors. 

7. To be more selective with my language use so that the warmth and clarity of my prose is not buried under a cold and suffocating avalanche of mixed metaphors and similes like a man adding too many layers of heavy clothing on a clear and sunny day. 

8. To make sure I finish whatever I set out to do. For example:

9. To have more faith in myself. But I seriously doubt that will ever happen. 😦

And finally …

10. To avoid writing BLOGS where because I’ve really got nothing to say, I just post a series of random photos I’ve taken and write ridiculous captions in order to squeeze a desperate trickle of humour from the withered fruit of their essential unfunniness. (Note to self: Might need to work harder on Commitment 7)

Well there they are, my COMMITMENTS for 2014. Wish me luck with keeping them!

And now in order to officially draw a line under 2013 and usher in 2014, here’s a series of random photos I took to show what I got up to at the end of 2013!  

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I developed this rash on my hand but when I went to the doctor she wasn’t very sympathetic. She just said, “You’ve been spending far too much time in the sun, so what did you exspectrum?”

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I spent hours decorating the Christmas tree before I realised I’d forgotten to buy a tree!

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My decision to avoid using pesticides in the garden worked a treat.

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I was unjustly ejected from the museum for attempting to scratch my name into this car. Come on, lighten up stuffy museum guys! Some people would have killed for that autograph.

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My daughter Meg and I got stuck on this giant Golden Dalek spaceship and were transported through a space-time continuum where we had to avert an imminent invasion of Earth. But apart from that nothing much happened.

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I didn’t feel much like doing the whole “Christmas lights thing” this year so I just put in a token effort.

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We went to the Brisbane International Tennis tournament and I must say I was pretty impressed with some of the outfits this year.

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 Meg’s pet crocodile got too big and had to be put down. Very deflating experience for her.

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The illustrator of the Eric Vale Books Joe Bauer made me this model of the character Chewy for Christmas so I decided to officially adopt him. (Joe not Chewy) (But only on a trial basis.)

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I also got this cheetah for Christmas. Sadly the “getting to know you” session with my pet hamster didn’t go as smoothly as I had hoped.

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On a visit to the zoo my wife and daughter were tragically taken by a giant croc. But not before I managed to snap this great action shot!

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With the left over tinsel from the Christmas tree I built this! On Christmas Day it came to life and destroyed the neighbourhood. My bad!

That’s it. Thumbs up to a Happy and Super-Positive New Year and to more regular blogging.

Cheers
Michael

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blog 59: In which I post 10 shocking and astounding things.

Ok, one of my resolutions for 2014 has GOT to be to blog more regularly!

Once again it’s been quite a long time between drinks. Sorry. (Unless you hate reading these blogs in which case, ‘You’re welcome!’)

Anyway, in order to bring everything up to date, here’s a quick pictorial overview of TEN (10) things that have happened to me in recent times that are sure to shock and astound you! (With the possible exception of the ones that you don’t find interesting at all.)

Hold on to your hats!

1. I said “Hi!” to Anna in Germany who wrote to tell me how much she liked the Ishmael books.

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2. I accidentally stumbled across the Tardis trying to disguise itself as an old outside toilet in a Brisbane backyard. When someone asked me if I’d spotted the Doctor as well I said, “Nuh,nuh,nuh,nuh-nuh,nuh-nuh,nuh,nuh,nuh!” (BOOM! TISH!)

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3. I started up a one-man campaign to save the adverb and I’m pleased to report that it all went real excellent.

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4. I delivered plenty of writing workshops titled The Recipe for a Good Story but sadly always found myself stumped after just one ingredient.

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5. I spent a lot of time at my desk – but not necessarily being productive. Some times I just took photos of my desk. Below is the result of one of those times. In the image I tried to capture my desk’s essential ‘deskness’. I like to call this shot, “Photo of My Desk”. If you study it closely my desk will slowly reveal itself to you. As a point of interest, I am actually sitting at my desk as I type this. Perhaps you’d like to see a photo? Well here’s one I prepared earlier …

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 6. I went on lots of early morning walks and occasionally took photos as I did so. Photos of things like … the Jacarandas in bloom …

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… a kookaburra sitting in an old gum tree …

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… bark peeling artistically …

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… and lots of tiny random bugs.

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7. One morning in our bathroom, I caught a wild gecko with my bare hands and no one even had the decency to compliment me on my bravery!

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8. On one occasion I accidentally took a photo of my feet at a book launch. (Can you tell that I’m starting to scrape the bottom of the barrel now?)

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9. One day in my own backyard, life imitated art. Unfortunately you can’t see me just to the right of the photo about to enter with a rake.

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10. My wife and I bought comfortable new reclining lounge chairs. On the first night while watching TV, I fell asleep in mine …

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… for approximately three days.

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Well, that’s it I’m afraid. I sincerely hope I haven’t shocked and astounded you too much with these startling glimpses inside my amazing life. I know it can be very confronting to some people, but it’s just the way I roll!

Cheers
Michael.

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blog 58: In which AustrALIENS invade!

When I’m not tying him to a chair and making him illustrate my ERIC VALE books, my son Joe makes films with his partner Rita Artmann (ARTSPEAR ENTERTAINMENT).

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Shortly Joe is about to start illustrating the first of 3 spin-off books to the Eric Vale Series featuring the mad adventures of Eric’s own creation SECRET AGENT DEREK ‘DANGER’ DALE.

(Don’t forget you can see Joe’s animated trailer for the very first Eric Vale book HERE.)

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In the meantime and in between times, Joe will be working on the editing and post-production special effects of Artspear Entertainment’s latest feature film, a sci-fi comedy called AUSTRALIENS about an alien invasion of Australia (Brisbane in particular). Joe and Rita produced the film and starred in it and Joe is also the writer, director, editor and special effects dude.

TRAILER! TRAILER! TRAILER! TRAILER! TRAILER! TRAILER! TRAILER! TRAILER! 

There’s a way to go before it comes out in 2014 but the first trailer has just been completed. So for an exciting taste of things to come, CLICK HERE!

TRAILER! TRAILER! TRAILER! TRAILER! TRAILER! TRAILER! TRAILER! TRAILER! 

For more info on the film, fabulous photos of the shoot and updates on the post production, you can check out and LIKE the AUSTRALIENS facebook page HERE .

Also, as well as their Artspear Entertainment website they also have a facebook page which is very LIKE – able too!

If you do happen to like what you see and read, I’d love you to support these guys by liking and/or subscribing to their various pages and videos etc.  They’re young, hardworking, enthusiastic, super-talented, cute as buttons and most importantly, related to me.

And finally, just because it’s my blog and I can do whatever I like, here’s a recent picture of me with a Mr Mosely puppy lookalike and another one of the new Hebrew editions of Don’t Call Me Ishmael and Just a Dog.

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Cheers
Michael

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blog 57: In which I reveal the first stumbling steps of THE RUNNING MAN.

After reading DC Green’s great guest post about writing the opening to his novel Monster School, it got me thinking about my first book The Running Man and the journey that led to the opening paragraph as it now appears in the published novel. It was a journey spread over twenty years.

Here is that journey, briefly outlined in words, and pictures of words.

The whole story of The Running Man started from some childhood memories I have of a big mulberry tree that grew in the backyard of our family home in Ashgrove Brisbane. The memories consisted of two things – unsuccessfully looking for silkworms on the tree when I was little, and also my fears about a big black lizard that lived in a hollow in the mulberry tree. My brother and I called him Gorgo.

More than twenty years before I started writing the novel, I wrote a 100 line poem based on those memories.

SAM_2034In the poem the narrator recalls my two childhood memories and eventually, when he is older and the mulberry starts to die, it is chopped down and burnt in the incinerator next to which it was growing.

As he watches the tree burn the narrator imagines all the silkworms and cocoons he couldn’t find as a child being destroyed, but when only ashes remain, he thinks he can still hear Gorgo beneath them.

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Maybe our dreams and innocence are more easily destroyed than our fears and nightmares?

I wrote that poem while I was at University. Later when I became a teacher I had dreams of writing short stories to see if I could get them published. I never got around to doing it. One of the short stories would have been based on my mulberry tree memories and that poem I’d written at Uni.

As evidence, I seek leave to table exhibit 57 (a) – a page of ‘Goals’ from my 1998 diary:

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You’ll be pleased to know that I built the pond.

Even though I didn’t write the Mulberry Tree short story, I kept thinking about it and it started to grow into something bigger and more significant in my mind.

In the year or two before I resigned from my teaching job, I searched for a way to start the story that was in my head, and for a voice to tell it. On a few rare occasions I actually tried to get my thoughts and feelings down on paper.

Some of those early attempts were third person and I have to say, pretty bland …

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Some were written by first person observers – perhaps the reclusive Vietnam Vet Tom Leyton …

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The fact is, that when I resigned halfway through the teaching year in 2000 to write the ‘great Ashgrovian novel’ I’d written nothing of it except those scraps you see above and a couple more like them.

I still hadn’t found a voice to tell my story or even a way to take the lid off it.

Two and a half years later, after short-term teaching contracts at 4 different schools separated by time off in between to write, I had finally finished the manuscript for that ‘Mulberry Tree’ story. By then it had become 60,000 words long and was entitled ‘In Dream Too Deep’ based on a line from Douglas Stewart’s beautiful and haunting poem ‘The Silkworms’. Later the title of the novel would be changed to The Running Man.

I had finally found my voice – a third person narration limited (except for the epilogue) to the main character Joseph’s point of view – and a beginning which would also be an ending – a funeral.

This is the opening paragraph of that original manuscript (with some editor’s comments) …

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And after the editing process the final paragraph ended up looking like this …

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2014 will be the tenth anniversary of the publishing of The Running Man. I had no idea back then, the journey I was about to begin. I am thankful for every moment of it.

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Cheers
Michael

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