On Scratch Maps and Map Scraps

My friend Doc is reading The Twice-Drowned Saint. This is thrilling. I AM THRILLED whenever anybody reads ANYTHING of mine, and doubly thrilled if it’s one of those books that I uneasily think is “not for everyone.” (That’s pretty much all of my books.) (Not that ANY book is for EVERYONE.)

Don’t get me wrong. I adore The Twice-Drowned Saint. It’s the book about which my editor, Mike Allen, taught me one of my most useful phrases: “I stand by the work.” That’s hard to say. Harder to do. So many doubts. SO MANY DOUBTS. But I know… I know that I learned so much writing it.

Our gorgeous cover by artist Lasse Paldanius!

I know that it was, at the date it was written, one of my most ambitious structures. A novella that grew to be too big for its britches, but nonetheless still felt like a novella rather than a novel at 65,000 words. That liminal, boundary-defying darling. I know that I did so much research for it–about building with salt structures, about ice, about alpine rescue; I even interviewed someone who used to do it! Robert Peterson! The absolute darling! He read over the work and let me know what I needed to tweak.

My friend Magill, who knows everything about movies and the history of movies and about filmmaking helped me with some of the cinematic stuff. I structured every chapter as different shots of a camera, since the main character thinks in movies.

But I also think the work is dense. And maybe I let some threads fall? I don’t even know! Every time I read it I’m pleasantly surprised it’s not the mess it was just two drafts before. That’s the thing about final drafts. They’re not the ones that LIVE IN MY HEAD.

I am rambling. What I meant to say is: Doc is reading The Twice-Drowned Saint, and was interested in making a map of Gelethel. He asked me if I had one. I mean… I HAD one. I could almost remember it. The trouble is… which notebook is it in?

Thankfully, I’d digitized that one. So after a search for “Twice-Drowned Saint Notes and Cuts,” I found it, copied and pasted into that document! Thank you, past Claire.

The most glorious Phoebe Ashcroft’s fan art of Alizar the Eleven-Eyed from The Twice-Drowned Saint.

But in the search for that map, I found several others.

You all probably know by now that most of my stories, short and long, take place on the same world Athe. But depending on where you are on the world, and when you are in its time line, it’s going to have different rules, different gods, different ways of operating. If one whole continent, and the different countries on it, shares certain magical or religious beliefs, even with variations, it will operate more cohesively than a continent of scattered city-states that worship vastly different deities. Like, say, a city that, for example, is run by angels who went and murdered their god. (Ahem, The Twice-Drowned Saint.)

I didn’t intentionally do this when I started writing short stories. I just thought it was funny. Little secret giggles for myself. I didn’t think, twenty years later, there’d be interconnected novel worlds that I’d then have to justify to CLOSE READERS. Sorry, mi enjambre. I’m just not that awesome a tactician. More of a practical joker, but mostly playing jokes on myself.

Anyhow, I thought I’d share these bad maps with you. Because they’re hilarious.

Rough map of Gelethel

Yeah, I don’t know why I wrote “S” when I meant “E” for east, but that’s my scrap maps for you.

The city of Gelethel is diamond-shaped, but I made a square because that was easier on grid paper. I just turned it slightly so the top of the square was North.

And what is that shape in the middle? Is that the salt palace? What was I thinking? I probably made the map during an early draft anyway. Maybe things changed.

Map of Seafall, Drowned Lirhu, Doornwald, Amandale, etc… from Bone Swans, Dark Breakers, The Witch in the Almond Tree, my WIP Fiddle, and my short story in Uncanny Magazine: “From the Archives of the Museum of Eerie Skins, an Account.”

See Kywit’s Grove on there?

See the Six Realms in the Northeast corner? I don’t know that I ever call them the Six Realms in the Saint Death book, maybe because I kept thinking I’d SURELY come up with a better name if I tried, but then it didn’t become important because they’re not, at present in the Saint Death books, unified at all, but that’s where Liriat, Rook, Quadiíb, Damahrash, Leech, and Skakmaht all are.

See the bottom right–Southeast–that says “Eastern Bellisaar”? That’s where “Godmother Lizard” (Black Gate Magazine), “Life on the Sun” (Bone Swans), and The Twice-Drowned Saint take place. It’s also where, if I ever write it, Zilch: A Tale of Nea the Nephilim will take place. (Or was it “Nea the Knighter”? All I know is that the main title is called Zilch, and it’s about Nea, who makes a brief but important appearance in The Twice-Drowned Saint.

Speaking of the so-called “Six Realms” see below. (Dang it. Now I HAVE to think of a better name for that continent. Once it’s unified. I wonder when THAT happens in its long history? Does it ever become a democratic republic, do you think? Or a meritocracy, like Quadiíb?)

…But, look. I can read my own map (sort of). If you count Kalestis and Umrys-by-the-Sea, as well as LOWER Quadiíb, it’s more like NINE realms anyway. DO I ever count Kalestis? (I remember using Kalestis for SOMETHING, but maybe that was in a former draft, or a WIP. I shall have to do a search.)

In the Saint Death books, Damahrash is still sort of a Rookish satellite anyway. It would be considered part of Rook? Maybe Kalestis is formed later? And Quadiíb is thought of as just Quadiíb, at least by the Lirians, even though Higher and Lower Quadiíb are very different entities, governmentally speaking.

So I suppose it COULD HAVE BEEN six, and later in the timeline becomes nine. Or vice versa.

Why even, fantasy novel?

I don’t really sit here answering questions about the world until a certain stage in a given draft.

Except books are… cumulative. And one’s oeuvre becomes this great spiraling accretion disk, with yours truly as the black hole at its center.

At some point, for Saint Death’s Herald, I had to figure out how far the character could travel in a day, and what each square of the grid represented, mileage-wise. Then I had to answer the following questions: “How fast does an undead flying tiger rug fly?” “How fast does a dragon fly?” “How fast does a sky house fly?” LOL.

And, obviously (it’s just becoming obvious to me now), between the Bone Swans/Dark Breakers continent and the Saint Death continent, there’s not just those weird squiggle mountains, but also “The Glistring Sea.” It must be so, because I’ve written it in.

Seriously, smalls, don’t take these maps to heart. Like the pirate says, it’s “more what you’d call ‘guidelines.'”

But I’ll leave you with ONE LAST ONE. I didn’t end up using this one as much. It was EARLY Saint Death’s Herald draft for Witch Queen’s City, in Leech. In fact, my research led me to model it off Castellfollit de la Roca in Catalonia, but here’s the map before the research:

Early ideas for Witch Queen’s City, in Leech (now called “Taquathura” to be respectful to the skinchangers who live there).

Anyway. That’s all. I just wanted to share it with you. It’s funny… looking at them all together like that. These are scraps from ACROSS THE YEARS. I am very haphazard about this sort of thing. And only when someone like Anthony John Woo approaches me about adapting my world for his 5e D&D campaign, or Doc wants me to make me AN ACTUAL MAP do I start considering the notebooks and notebooks full of this stuff.

So there. Have a present.

2 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

Spooky Reading! October 29th! Virtual!

Dear friends,

WE ARE DOING IT! WE ARE DOING OUR SPOOKY READING! NEXT TUESDAY NIGHT! 8:45 PM-10:30 PM EDT! Put it in your calendars, friends!

We are doing it on Twitch TV. You don’t even need a subscription to stream it! You can dip in whilst doing dishes and folding laundry! Wahoo!

Edited on reading date to add: Cass Khaw and Tonia Ransom had to bow out, alas! We wish them the very best night!

Reading order:

Christa Carmen
Zig Zag Claybourne/Clarence Young
Dr. Kathleen Jennings
Jessica P. Wick
Mike Allen
Kenesha Williams
Juliette Wade
Rob Cameron/Cameron Roberson
Dr. Lisa L. Hannett

Alas, I couldn’t come up with a better title than just “Spooky Reading” but, you know… VIBES.

Gregory A. Wilson is hosting us on his wonderful Twitch channel https://www.twitch.tv/arvaneleron.

Carlos and I will be introducing the authors, reading your their bios (with FLARE!), and telling you about the awesome stuff they’ve got going on.

At the end of each reading, we’re going to roll some dice, and use Kathleen Jennings’s amazing GOTHIC ART CHART and a list I created from her “Girls Running from Houses” gothic bot to give each author their own unique GOTHIC NOVEL GRAB BAG! That is: a visual prompt and a written prompt that they can leave with… just in case they need to go off right away and write (another?) gothic novel.

At the end of the night, we are going to give the CHAT their very own visual/written prompt as well.

THAT WAY WE CAN ALL GO HOME AND WRITE GOTHIC NOVELS TO OUR HEART’S CONTENT!

All of which to say… it’s time to MEET THE AUTHORS!

Mike Allen

Mike Allen has written, edited, or co-edited thirty-nine books, among them his new horror collection, Slow Burn. His first two volumes of horror tales, Unseaming and Aftermath of an Industrial Accident, were finalists for the Shirley Jackson Award for Best Story Collection, and his dark fable “The Button Bin” was a nominee for the Nebula Award for Best Short Story. As an editor and publisher, he has twice been a finalist for the World Fantasy Award. Ruadán Books intends to publish Mike’s sidearms, sorcery, and zombies sequence The Black Fire Concerto and The Ghoulmaker’s Aria in 2025 and 2026, respectively. With his wife, Anita, he runs Mythic Delirium Books, based in Roanoke, Virginia. Their cat Pandora assists.

Check out his new horror collections Slow Burn at https://mythicdelirium.com/slow-burn#Burn, and his new short story “Service Sector” here: https://kaleidotrope.net/autumn-2024/service-sector-by-mike-allen/

Celebrate his forthcoming novel series The Stormblight Symphonyhttps://ruadanbooks.com/wordpress/press-release-17-september-2024/

Kenesha Williams

Kenesha Williams is an author, screenwriter, speaker, and Founder/Editor-in-Chief of Black Girl Magic Lit Mag a speculative fiction literary magazine. She has been a panelist and speaker at StokerCon, the Horror Writers of America convention; Boskone, the longest-running science fiction & fantasy convention in New England; ECBACC, the East Coast Black Age of Comics Convention; and BSAM, the Black Speculative Arts Movement convention. As an, essayist she has written for, Time Magazine’s millennial imprint, MottoFireside Fiction, and I Am Black Sci-Fi, among other publications. Kenesha is also a screenwriter who is in pre-production on a horror web series and a short horror film.

Dr. Kathleen Jennings

Kathleen Jennings lives in Brisbane and writes Australian Gothic fiction and fairy tales and illustrates other people’s books.

Check out her short story collection, Kindling, at Small Beer Press, her Redbubble page at tanaudel.redbubble.com, and this beautiful crowdfunder she contributed to as an artist: Elizabeth-Jane Baldry’s Great Oak Feasting Table

Juliette Wade

Juliette Wade is a novelist who never outgrew the habit of asking “why” about everything. This path led her to study foreign languages and to complete degrees in both anthropology and linguistics. Combining these with a fascination for worldbuilding and psychology, she creates multifaceted science fiction that holds a mirror to our own society. She is the author of The Broken Trust books: Mazes of PowerTransgressions of Power, and Inheritors of Power, as well as short fiction found in magazines such as Analog, Clarkesworld, and Fantasy & Science Fiction. She lives in Australia with her Aussie husband and her two sons, who support and inspire her.

Dr. Lisa L. Hannett

Lisa L. Hannett is an award-winning author of over 80 weird and whimsical short stories, five collections, and a mosaic novel. She’s an Associate Professor Creative Writing at Flinders University in Adelaide, where she writes and obsesses about Vikings, dreams about fantasy food, and dresses up in costumes.

Check out her latest: Fortunate Isles, nominated in the Best Collection category for the World Fantasy Award this year (and available in a beautiful hardcover edition!) as well as Viking Women: Life and Lore, available in bookshops everywhere in Australia, but only in ebook internationally.

Jessica P. Wick

Jessica P. Wick is a writer, poet, and editor. She co-founded Goblin Fruit with Amal El-Mohtar, a quarterly e-zine of fantastical poetry, and is a passionate advocate for the reading aloud of poetry and fiction. Her poetry has been nominated for the Rhysling Award and received honorable mentions in Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror anthologies. Her short fiction can be found scattered across the internet; recently, her novella “An Unkindness” appeared in Mythic Delirium’s A Sinister Quartet. Jessica’s experience as an editor runs the gamut, from full-length novels to short fiction, poetry collections to magazine articles, academic papers to audio works. She also reviews books for NPR

Rob Cameron/Cameron Roberson

Cameron Roberson, who writes under the pen name Rob Cameron, is a teacher, linguist, and lead organizer for the Brooklyn Speculative Fiction Writers. Poetry, stories, and essays, have appeared in Star*Line, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Foreign Policy Magazine, Tor.com, Clockwork Phoenix Five, and Apex Magazine. Daydreamer, his debut middle grade novel, came out from Random House in August.And his novelette Ice Like Honey comes out with Lightspeed magazine next year. 

Daydreamer is his debut middle grade novel. Rob is also lead organizer for the Brooklyn Speculative Fiction Writers and executive producer of Kaleidocast.nyc.

Christa Carmen

Christa Carmen is the Bram Stoker Award-winning and Shirley Jackson Award-nominated author of The Daughters of Block IslandSomething Borrowed, Something Blood-Soaked, “Through the Looking Glass and Straight Into Hell,” & the forthcoming Beneath the Poet’s House. Find her at www.christacarmen.com

Zig Zag Claybourne/Clarence Young

Named as one of Book Riot’s “6 of the best Black indie scifi writers you should be reading” (Jan 2021), Zig Zag Claybourne is the author of the newly released fantasy Breath, Warmth, and Dream. Other works include: The Brothers Jetstream: Leviathan and its sequel Afro Puffs Are the Antennae of the UniverseBy All Our Violent GuidesNeon Lights; and Conversations with Idras.

His stories and essays have appeared in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Apex, Realm (formerly Serial Box), Galaxy’s Edge, GigaNotosaurus, Strange Horizons, The Year’s Best African Speculative Fiction, and others. In addition to being a Kresge Foundation Literary Fellow, Zig is a frequent speaker at libraries, conventions, and other learning institutions. zzclaybourne.com

Check out his new fantasy Breath, Warmth & Dream, featuring wraiths, witches, and beasts!

2 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

Orange & Bee Salon!

I was asked to be at a guest at the Orange Salon, hosted by editors Carina and Nike at theorangebee.substack.com, a fairy tale journal. They will be hosting salons for paying subscribers, and this was their first!

We did a Q&A and a reading, and then I ran a short “Infernal Salon” with our Negocios Infernales cards, “the Deck of Destiny.” Nike asked me as a sweet favor to sing them all a song on my way out, so I wrote a song based on my card draw. It’s a VERY simple melody, and I probably don’t stay on key, but I recorded it for posterity, and shall link to it below.

I do write songs occasionally in case any of you reading this don’t know that yet. You can find most of them here: https://brimstonerhine.bandcamp.com. My first two attempts at music-making are EPs: Alecto! Alecto! (retellings of women in myth), and The Headless Bride (monstrous women and sea chanteys). And then I made one album: Corbeau Blanc, Corbeau Noir (each song written for the backers who backed my EPs at a high level, so it’s kind of a hodgepodge.)

If I make another, it’ll be Ballads from a Distant Star, my collaborative sci-fi musical concept album. And then, who knows? Maybe the 6-episode musical podcast The Devil and Lady Midnight

Here were the cards I drew! Below are the lyrics and the very fast, quick, and rough recording LOL.

Pearl in the shell, foam on the sea
Way-oh, the song goes
How it has been, and how it must be
Way-oh, and round she goes, round she goes, the world-oh

Rose on the thorn, moon in the sky
Way-oh, the song goes
All things are born, and all things must die
Way-oh, and round she goes, round she goes, the world-oh

Kings for their crowns, dragons for gold
Way-oh, the song goes
Crows for their black, snow for its cold
Way-oh, and round she goes, round she goes, the world-oh

Rise up and dance, rise up and sing
Way-oh, the song goes
Harvest in fall what’s planted in spring
Way-oh, and round she goes, round she goes, the world-oh

Now is the dusk, now is the dark
Way-oh, the song goes
Now is the winter, teeth of a shark
Way-oh, and round she goes, round she goes, the world-oh

Put down your work, come out and play
Way-oh, the song goes
Live in the light while still it is day
Way-oh, and round she goes, round she goes, the world-oh




Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

A Call for Help, for Howard Andrew Jones

You may remember me writing “News of Great Sadness” a few weeks ago. This week, the friends and family of Howard Andrew Jones launched a GoFundMe to help defray the arduous and impending medical expenses of his multifocal glioblastoma.

Here is the link to the GoFundMe. Please spread the word if you can. Howard’s third book also came out this week, in his wonderful Hanuvar series–the first of which I got to beta read and blurb, even before his agent sent it out on search.

If you love episodic secondary-world fantasy with marvelous details borrowed from history and incredibly compelling characters, I think you’ll live Hanuvar like I do–and it would help his family (and do his sweet heart good) if you bought the book

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

No Big Deal. >.>

Oh, you know.

Just a little graphic I made.

Just now.

For SAINT DEATH’S HERALD.

5 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

The Street of Many Porches

by C. S. E. Cooney

(I hand-wrote a draft of this in my journal in February of this year, 2024; we’ll see what it turns into tonight)

(This is one of my fondest daydreams)

not so many years from now
after retirement, before attenuation
somewhere near water, but on a hill
(above the floodplain, on the hospital grid)
view of the sky, trees nearby
post office, library with study carrels (and maker space)
smoked fish at the grocery store (a zero-waste store)
farmer’s market, night market, craft fair
a festival for every season (and for idiosyncratic reasons)
someone to lead foraging walks
somewhere to host game nights
a concert venue and a bookstore
a place to dress up for
a theatre, a park for outdoor movies
near enough to bring you soup when you are sick
near enough to drive you to the airport or emergency room
where we can celebrate birthdays, have a bookclub
monthly literary salons, poetry nights
walks in the graveyard, walks by the shipyard
bare branches with lights
picnic in the grass when we’re up
tea on the deck when we’re down
no borders between us but zinnias and oyster shells
no miles between us: walkable
[him in his guayabera, arms spread wide:
bienvenido, mi amigos!”
me in my ballgown, apron, and pocketknife
our house your second home, your third place]
and we will all have our gardens, our disasters
and travel together, and signal from windows
run into you randomly, walk you home part way
borrow sugar, babysit, show up at need
gift exchange, thrift shop, stress bake, create
keep each other honest, exercise en masse
age in place, gracefully
see each other’s faces,
as we fade like lace,
every day

2 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

Infernal Salon Tomorrow on Twitch TV!

Hello, my beauties! Happy Autumn Equinox weekend!

I’m so excited that Carlos Hernandez and I were invited to host an Infernal Salon this coming Saturday on Dr. Gregory A. Wilson’s Twitch TV channel.

For those of you who don’t know:

An Infernal Salon is a fun, low-stakes writing workshop, high on community, ix-nay on the essure-pray. We’ll draw cards from “the Deck of Destiny” from our forthcoming TTRPG “Negocios Infernales” for creative prompts, set a timer for 20 minutes, and UNLEASH! Then we all share what we’ve made! It’s all very raw and vibrant, like a lightning storm!

(Learn more about the game and see some of the cards here . Pre-order at Outland Entertainment’s website here.)

Our salonnières this Saturday are:

Writer, fiber artist, and tarotista Danielle Brigante
National Book Award-winner Will Alexander
Dark fantasy writer and forest-punk Silvatiicus Riddle
Writer, editor, Bram Stoker-nominee Tina L. Jens
Writer, activist, somatic therapist, and creativity coach Sophia Babai
“Vocateur” reader and writer of SFF fiction and poetry Dylan Haston
Frankenwald based horror writer and comics reviewer Steve Toase.

If any of YOU want to tune into https://www.twitch.tv/arvoneleron on Saturday, from 4-6 EST, please feel free! We ALWAYS draw cards for the audience as well.

Anyone who wants to create something with us in the 20-minutes of creation time is always welcome to “whisper” it in Greg’s DMs. If there’s time, he’ll read/share your work too!

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

News of Great Sadness

CW: critical illness.

I have had this news recently. What you read here is the announcement crafted by Howard, his wife Shannon, and their friend Mark.

I know there is grief across the world, for so many awful reasons. And this is another awfulness: my friend is dying.

Perhaps he is your friend too. Or perhaps you have read his novels, or his reviews on Black Gate Magazine. For my part, Howard Andrew Jones has been my friend and colleague for going on twenty years.

We saw him last month at GenCon. We ate dinner with him. We laughed and caught up in person, after too many years of just phone or zoom. We talked about creating new monsters to fight, in this fantasy-novel business of ours of fighting monsters.

I am glad we broke bread, and played the poet game, and left each other laughing. That’s all the gladness I have right now, because the rest is grief. And gratitude, that our mutual friends are acting as a bridge between Howard’s nearest and dearest, and the rest of us who are sending him so much, so much love.

2 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

Fathoms in the Earth: an Air and Nothingness Press anthology

I am SO EXCITED to announce this! Soon releasing is the FATHOMS IN THE EARTH anthology, published by Air & Nothingness Press.

AANP books are SO BEAUTIFUL, heavy with fine paper and thoughtful covers. This anthology comes with interior color plates and 12 double-sided postcards–one for each story title!

This one is a limited run of 200, so it’s probably best to order soon if you want one.

I have a story in it, called “The Book of Games.” For my archetypes (which you’ll read about in the following paragraphs), I chose to play with:

Maid/Familiar/Monster.

I particularly enjoyed researching Naples, and re-spinning characters from The Tempest from a, you know, 21st century, feminist, post-colonial viewpoint.

(I realize that the “post-colonial” part is an ongoing project; and may we all contribute to and live to see widespread reparations to those we have harmed.)

About this book, by editor/publisher Todd Sanders:

“The Tempest entered the consciousness of Western Civilization with themes of magic, betrayal, revenge, and family. It is a singular work ripe for reinterpretation with archetypal characters.

This collection of 24 stories, with titles taken from the film Prospero’s Books by Peter Greenaway, explores these five fundamental characters and their interactions, placing them in new contexts, and inventing new narratives for their relationships.”

Here’s the order link again:
http://aanpress.com/aanorder.html#fathom

Find Air and Nothingness Press at the following social media places:
Twitter: @aanpress
Mastodon: @aanpress@wandering.shop
Bluesky: @aanpress.bsky.social
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aanpress

2 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

Hearthglow: the Podcast

Well, one of the most hilarious things of my 40s is suddenly loving and playing D&D.

I mean, I’m not UNUSUAL in this, given the rampageous success of shows like Critical Role and Dimension20, which, yes, we watch.

My main job–other than writing–is voice acting, specifically as an audiobook narrator. But I was never into RPGs before Carlos. In fact, I was mildly repelled enough by them that he proposed co-designing a TTRPG I’d like to play with me so that I WOULD play RPGs with him. Yadayadayada, look at me now. LOOK AT ME NOW!

Designing an RPG was, in fact, A TOTAL GATEWAY into a whole world of gaming I now love. I’m sorry now that I ever felt any other way about gaming… but fandoms are complicated, and hospitality is a long game. Sometimes we bounce off things if we don’t feel actively welcome in the spaces those things are loved. Sometimes it’s just a matter of exposure and social circles, etc. I’m here now. I’ll do my best to invite others in.

I have some personal goals as a gamer, which are:

1.) Be less anxious about learning new games and playing games in general

2.) Playtest a lot of NEW games-in-development by brilliant designers, be in the conversation, learn the vocabulary

3.) Lean into the fun and YES, AND!

One of my “Yes, ands” is, when Dr. Gregory A. Wilson asked me to be one of his cast for the Heathglow podcast, I said yes. AND now I’m in a podcast, lol.

Greg wrote a 5e adventure and sourcebook called Tales and Tomes from the Forbidden Library, published by Alligator Alley entertainment, and available as a PDF and a hardcover.

I thought that playing Mog Rizz, a Hyena-shifter trickster and student at Hearthglow Academy was a one-off thing for the Damon Runyon Foundation charity that Greg was running a couple of years ago.

Mog Rizz, a Hyena-shifter rogue, 3rd Level (Arcane Trickster). I asked artist Hannah Flaherty for her to look like a cross between Eponine from Les Mis and Eurydice from Hadestown… only, a hyena.

First, we performed live at the Klein Auditorium and the tickets benefited cancer research. Artist Hannah Flaherty made character art for all of us. But THEN there was a follow-up performance at the Klein (along with a level-up of our characters) last year.

And THIS year, the Klein is letting us record on their second-floor mezzanine for a third adventure… in fact, a series of them! This is the Hearthglow Podcast.

When Greg proposed this to us, I looked at Carlos, blinked a few times, and then said, “Well, yeah. I guess I’ll do it. That sounds like something I want to have done in my 40s.” I already knew Carlos was in. He was getting that glinty-eyed thing again.

A D&D LIVEPLAY PODCAST! LIke the COOL KIDS. Here’s a link to the Hearthglow page, with all the episodes so far. More coming, since we just recorded a session, which is enough material for 2-3 more episodes, I think.

Carlos, who’s always been a cool kid (as defined in this blog as a cute-patootie gamer who loves D&D, which Carlos has been since he was 13), is playing Ally Needy (pronounced Nee-DAY currently), a fairy dragon with a confusion breath weapon. I’ll try to get a pic up of her later.

ETA (LATER):

Ally Needy (pronounced Nee-DAY), Carlos’s character, is a fairy dragon with something called GEMFLIGHT. I don’t know what it is but I wants it.

In the new Hearthglow podcast, Ally’s introduced a new CONSTRUCT companion: MR. ROUND CLOWN! Carlos asked Bek, the illustrator of our Negocios Infernales cards, to create character art for her.

Mr. Round Clown. Art by Rebecca Huston

Carlos did up all the specs for Mr. Round Clown, and created this character sheet for him that looks, you know, like something you’d find in a campaign setting or something.

I know I linked to the Hearthglow page above, but just in case you don’t fee like clicking, here are the first few episodes, as well as the YouTube link.

If you’re into this kind of thing, I hope you enjoy this! I know, for my part, it’s fun to participate. It was an honor to be asked.

2 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized