Your support helps keep the words flowing!

-

World Without Pain: The Story of a Search
-
Road Signs
-

A collection of science fiction and fantasy short stories -
Thoughts from the Aerie
-

-
Memoirs and essays on a range of topics
-
Silent Interviews
-

Stories about the mysterious Telepathic Guild Invisible People
-

A collection of science fiction and fantasy stories The Relocation Blues
Adriana’s Family
The Woman Who Fell Backwards and Other Stories
Apocalypse Bluff and Other Stories
The Senescent Nomad Hits the Road
Invasive Procedures: Stories
Heroes and Other Illusions: Stories
Bedlam Battle: An Omnibus of the One Thousand Series
After the Fireflood
Caliban’s Children
The Fantasy Book Murders
Opting Out and Other Departures
Sunflower: A Novel
America Redux: Impressions of the United States After Thirty-Five Years Abroad
Fear or Be Feared: Fantasies
Writing as a Metaphysical Experience
Reviews and Reflections on Books, Literature, and Writing
The One Thousand: A Novella
The One Thousand: Book Two: Team of Seven
The One Thousand: Book Three: Black Magic Bus
The One Thousand: Book Four: Deconstructing the Nightmare
After the Rosy-Fingered Dawn: A Memoir of Greece
The Misadventures of Mama Kitchen: A Novel
Dark Mirrors: Dystopian Tales
Love Children: A Novel
Painsharing and Other Stories
The Dragon Ticket and Other Stories
Tag Archives: sixties
Book Review: A Fiction of the Past: The Sixties in American History by Dominick Cavallo
I came into the sixties indirectly – that is, in the backwash of the early seventies. Gone were the Diggers, the SDS, Woodstock, the Summer of Love, the whole Flower Power scene, and other manifestations that made the era so … Continue reading
Posted in Book Reviews
Tagged counterculture, Diggers, drug culture, Grateful Dead, hippies, SDS, sixties, Thoreau
Leave a comment
Book Review: Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life by William Finnegan
In my search for new nonfiction books to read, I perused recent awards lists and came across this title. It surprised me that a book on surfing should have won a Pulitzer Prize, but as I read brief descriptions of … Continue reading
Posted in Book Reviews, On Writing, Travel
Tagged seventies, sixties, surfing, travel, Writing
Leave a comment
The One Thousand Series
Bedlam Battle: An Omnibus of the One Thousand Series Four science fiction thrillers in one volume The four novellas of the One Thousand series are now available in one all-inclusive volume. See below for links to distributors. This omnibus includes: … Continue reading
Book Review: The Unfinished Odyssey of Robert Kennedy by David Halberstam
I’ve been wanting to read this book for years, but I’ve never been able to find it at a price I could afford. It’s the only Halberstam book I know of that’s out of print. I’m not really sure why. … Continue reading
Book Review: Stranger in a Strange Land: The Original Uncut Version by Robert A. Heinlein
“Stranger in a Strange Land” is among those books that were life-changing and profound literary experiences when I was growing up. It was a tremendously significant tradition-shattering revelation when I first read it, and coincided smoothly with the loose, iconoclastic … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged book review, Robert A. Heinlein, science fiction, sixties, Stranger in a Strange Land
1 Comment
Book Review: Prime Green: Remembering the Sixties by Robert Stone
This is a re-read, actually. I read this book several years ago, possibly around the time I was writing “The Misadventures of Mama Kitchen,” my novel about a hippy girl’s adventures in the sixties in a wilderness commune, Haight/Ashbury, and … Continue reading
Posted in Book Reviews, Memoir
Tagged hippy, Ken Kesey, Prime Green, psychedelics, Robert Stone, San Francisco Bay Area, sixties, Vietnam War
Leave a comment
The Ongoing Relevance of the Sixties and Seventies
Last night I watched a wonderful film called “Pirate Radio”. I had seen it in Greece a few years ago; the European title is “The Boat That Rocked”. It’s the story of a time in England when it was illegal … Continue reading
Posted in Memoir, On Writing, Travel
Tagged Haight/Ashbury, hippies, marijuana, Pirate Radio, rock and roll, seventies, sixties, Star Trek, The Boat That Rocked, travel, Woodstock, Writing
2 Comments
Book Review: Life by Keith Richards
When I was growing up I listened to the Rolling Stones sometimes on popular radio stations, and I liked some of their songs but was never particularly attracted to the group itself as a fan. I was more into the … Continue reading
Posted in Book Reviews
Tagged Blood Meridian, book review, Keith Richards, Rolling Stones, seventies, sixties
1 Comment
Book Review: Dangerously Funny: The Uncensored Story of The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour by David Bianculli
If I had to pick a decade that was germinal for me I would probably not pick the sixties but the seventies. I was a teen in the sixties, true, but I was a late bloomer. I didn’t really absorb … Continue reading
Posted in Book Reviews
Tagged book review, censorship, counterculture, sixties, Smothers Brothers, Summer of Love, television, Woodstock
Leave a comment




























