Friday, June 18, 2010

THE CREATIVE IMPULSE

When my sisters, Gloria and Miriam, came over for dinner recently, I gave each a copy of my science fiction novel, OOOEELIE. After we had our goat cheese on slices of baguette; lamb tagine on flavored rice, red wine and water, and finally a strawberry tart with whipped cream accompanied by Scottish tea, Gloria held up OOOEELIE and asked, “Why do you write novels.” I responded, “For the same reason poets write poetry, artists paint, and sculptors sculpt.”
Gloria didn’t ask the follow up question and I didn’t offer what would have been the follow up response: What prompts the creative impulse. The answer lies in man emulating god; the desire to be godlike, to be a creator. How else to explain cave art, early jewelry, tattooing, the stone-age Venus figurines, the first musicians, the story tellers around the fire? From the very start, after finding food enough to fill their bellies, men and women have been driven to create.

A suggestion: My novel, THE PENCIL ARTIST is available as an e-book on Smashwords, Kindle, and Barnes and Noble; as a paperback on Amazon.

Monday, June 14, 2010

THE HERO, a mystery

THE HERO, a mystery, is my latest novel to go online. It is available on Kindle, as a paperback on Amazon, and as an e-book on Smashwords and Obooko.
The novel centers on two mysteries: the source of artificial courage and a homicide. THE HERO, set in the mid-1950s, involves the Korean War, cowardice, artificial courage, heroics, the Medal of Honor, a shaman, homicide, a mystery writer, a relentless detective, and a book store on the East Side of Manhattan.
It is worth reading. Of course, that is the author’s opinion.

A suggestion: My novel, THE PENCIL ARTIST is available as an e-book on Smashwords, Kindle, and Barnes and Noble; as a paperback on Amazon.