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In Truth and Claw Release Day


As of today, IN TRUTH AND CLAW, book 4 of the Mick Oberon series, is on shelves and e-shelves. (E-shelves ...

December 8, 2009

I’ve just sold another novel. Pyr–the sci-fi/fantasy imprint of Prometheus books–will be publishing my novel The Goblin Corps. Too early ...

November 30, 2009

Welcome, everyone, to the new and improved mouseferatu.com. The change and upgrade are long overdue, and I’m thrilled that they’re finally ...

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When upgrading the website, some issues were had. As a result, all of the news is now undated and has become “Old News”. New news will show up under the NEWS tab.

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More Wittering on Divine

So, gods in fantasy fiction. In real world mythologies, it's actually fairly rare (though not unheard of) to have a clearly defined "god of [specific thing]." Most gods were, well, messier. Poseidon, god of the sea, right? Right. Also earthquakes ...

In Truth and Claw

  Credits: Sole author.Cover art by Julia Lloyd. Notes: Book three in the Mick Oberon series! Uncover the occult mysteries and deepest secrets of gangland Chicago, from the underworld to the Otherworld. Availability: • Amazon.com • Barnes & Noble.com • Indiebound.org • ...

Patreon

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"Never Again"

Have I just been making false assumptions? Having grown up as a Jew whose grandparents were all Eastern European immigrants, I know that I was educated in the horrors and specifics of the Holocaust more so than your average American ...

Horrors!

(Note that I mention several movies, below, to use as examples. I touch on the endings of these particular movies, so watch for spoilers if you haven't seen them and still plan to: Alien, Life, Drag Me to Hell, Dog ...

Adding My Voice

It's so easy to think "Well, I've cut ties, that's enough." But it really isn't. As these last few weeks have demonstrated, time and again, it's necessary--and well past time--to speak up about each and every incident. So this is ...

Twenty years

I've only just realized that if you count up all the years that George and I were not romantically involved--both before I ever met her and for the year-and-change we were friends but not a couple... Well, as of this ...

Star What Now?

Wait, are there seriously rumors of a Luke Skywalker-based prequel?  😯 The entire point of Luke's story was that he was a nobody farmer to whom nothing of any real importance had ever happened. It's a cliche, but it's a ...

Contact Ari

For novel offers, script offers, and inquiries regarding rights and subrights, please contact Sam Morgan at the Lotts Agency. For all other matters, please use the form, below.

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More Wittering on Divine

So, gods in fantasy fiction.

In real world mythologies, it’s actually fairly rare (though not unheard of) to have a clearly defined "god of [specific thing]." Most gods were, well, messier. Poseidon, god of the sea, right?

Right. Also earthquakes. And HORSES.

Ares and Athena were both war gods, and while they’re definitely different, it’s not entirely clear where one starts and the other ends, influence-wise. Don’t even get me started on Apollo.

And the Greek pantheon was a lot more formal than some.

I mean, it makes sense. We’re looking back at a mythology that developed over a broad area over hundreds of years. Many of the gods evolved, or started as local/tutelary deities that were eventually more widely adopted.

Fiction, however, tends to be neater than reality, and that includes in its religion and mythology. In most fantasy novels or RPGs, the gods are much more tightly defined. Bobeseus is the god of lawnmowers and gardening tools, and nothing else. And nobody else has dominion over the lawn.

And that, too, makes sense. You want something that readers/players can easily identify with and keep track of. And even on the writer’s side of things, it’s just a lot easier to work with way. Cleaner. More efficient.

I’m curious, then, what you prefer as a reader and/or gamer. Are you good with your fictional deities fitting into neat slots? Or would you rather authors make more of an effort to mimic the chaotic feel of real-world myth, even if it comes at the expense of ease of use or efficiency of storytelling?