James McGowan Reader Group- Curses!

Howdy, folks!

All of us have encountered situations where something you really didn’t want to happen comes to pass, either in the slow-motion disaster way or the out-of-nowhere way.

Stubbed toes being a prime example of the latter.
 
And there are a few ways to approach voicing your frustration with such events.  Suck it in.  Voice an edited exclamatory phrase like “darn it!”

Or you let loose with something worse involving f bombs, s bombs, other fill-in-the-blank bombs, taking names in vain, or combinations thereof.

Speaking for myself alone.  My philosophy is it’s sometimes best to not let the curse words fly if you’re at work, in a public space around strangers, or around kids.

Other times.

Other times, rightly or wrongly, I will indeed vent the curses with abandon.  It’s how I talk.  And it’s how most adults talk. 

And in fantasy and sci-fi worlds, authors will often take two different approaches.  The made up curse word route with “frak” being a notable example from the newer version of Battlestar Galactica.  “By the abyss” also being a go-to for D&D novels.

Or authors just use the actual curse words.  Joe Abercrombie’s First Law series is a good example of that.

I fall into the camp of actually using the curse words.  Even if that loses me readers who don’t like it.  It just feels more authentic to me.

More visceral.

I always drop an F bomb in the first 5-10 pages of any of my POTG novels.  I want the reader to know early on that these words exist in my series, and if that isn’t a reader’s bag, then they can pull the eject lever early on without investing too much time.

And for readers who don’t mind language amid the violence of my stories.

I’m deeply thankful that you strapped in and took the Players of the Game ride!
Players of the Game Works in Progress
Woof… 

The Windows Magnifier’s read aloud function is incredibly helpful at finding typos, grammar mistakes, and awkward sentences.  But my goodness do I wish Microsoft would use the more natural sounding voices from Outlook and Word 365 with this function. 

I will be most happy to be done with its flat monotone and mispronunciations.  ViRauni is my new favorite one.  It pronounces is as “Six-Rauni”, reading the “Vi” as a Roman numeral six. The robits are ridiculous at times.

I am nearly done with The Game War’s fourth draft ultra grammar run-through with the triple check of ProWritingAid, Google Docs, and the Magnifier Reader.  I just finished Chapter 95.  I’m hoping to finish up in a week or so with Chapters 96-109.

Then on to a spell check and sending off the draft to beta readers and the editor.

I’ll need to switch mental gears after that and start outlining Book 4.5 and possibly use Scapple to do more macro plotting with the back half of the POTG saga.

I’m looking forward to putting the pieces together.  I’d quote Schism by Tool, but I don’t plan on watching them fall away.
 
Great song, though.

Players of the Game Out of Context Quote of the Month:

“I was planning on sending up a giant flare to signal them,” Ashe said.

Celsis scoffed out a laugh. “Along with everything else on the field of battle. My way was smarter.”

Ashe sighed. He really wanted to do that for purely childish reasons. “I guess you’re right.”
Recommendation Corner
Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga.

It is a tragedy that this movie didn’t do better.  But they can’t unmake it.

So, HAH!   I still got to see it.

No, it wasn’t as good as Mad Max: Fury Road, but that earlier movie is a modern masterpiece.  This prequel is still a 9 or 8 out of 10 in my book.

I love the chapter format and the far more expansive timeline.  The young girl Furiosa gets far more screen time as she is unlucky enough to cross paths with Chris Hemsworth’s very un-Thor-like portrayal of Dementus.

Dementus’s motorcycle chariots, verbose monologues, and fake-it-till-you-make-it incompetence are well done.

When Anya Taylor-Joy finally shows up as the young adult Furiosa, she does a fantastic job of conveying the stoic intensity of the character.  She ably mimics Charlize Theron’s voice.  I’d put it up there with Ewan McGregor’s imitation of Alec Guinness.

Tom Holkenborg’s (aka Junkie XL’s) score music is more of the same frantic and slow burn of deep chords with fast tempos.  It totally fits the flick’s post-apocalyptic vibe.

It’d be nice if this movie finds more popularity on streaming, but if it doesn’t, c’est la vie.

I’ll still be getting the Blu-ray.

Othercide

I got this game on Steam after looking at a Reddit thread for games that are like XCOM2.

I’ll admit that it took me a little to get into after a few months’ worth of false starts.

It centers on a neo-goth steampunky world where weird monsters hunt the city streets.  And the Red Mother dispatches her many white-haired, grey-skinned clone daughters to combat them.

All of them with posh hairstyles and leather armor.

There’s lots of turn-based tactics I like.  And it has the Darkest Dungeon mechanic of perma death.  So it’s more about filling in gaps in your A and B teams with class types rather than specific characters.  But you can resurrect the daughters if you spend the resources to do so.  And you can also have the daughters absorb/consume one another to power them up. 

Not at all disturbing.

I’m having fun with the game and really dig its black, white, grey, and red color palette.
Promo Corner
Smash Words is running a month-long promo.  And all the Players of the Game books are part of it.

They’re all free for the month of July.

Tap on the image or the button below starting on July 1, or you can save the link: https://www.smashwords.com/she…

Please share this promo with friends and family. You can even forward this email to the avid readers in your life.

Check ’em out if you’re a Smashwords reader, or even if you aren’t.
Happy reading!
Smashwords July Promo
Check Out the Players of the Game Series on eBook and Paperback
That’s all for this time.

Stay smart.  Stay safe.

Jim

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