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: travel
Book Review: Trail of the Lost: The Relentless Search to Bring Home the Missing Hikers of the Pacific Crest Trail by Andrea Lankford
This book, written by a former member of the National Park Service’s law enforcement team, focuses on the years-long search for three through-hikers on the Pacific Crest Trail who disappeared without a trace, two in California and one in Washington. … Continue reading
Posted in Book Reviews, Travel
Tagged hiking, Pacific Crest Trail, PCT, rescue, travel, Wild
Leave a comment
On the Hippie Trail
Usually I post book reviews on this website/blog, but because of its focus on travel, for the past two weeks I have posted a two-part review of On the Hippie Trail: Istanbul to Kathmandu and the Making of a Travel … Continue reading
Posted in Book Reviews, Travel
Tagged Hippie Trail, hitchhiking, India, Kathmandu, Nepal, Rick Steves, travel
Leave a comment
Book Review: Aflame: Learning from Silence by Pico Iyer
Aflame is a celebration of Iyer’s decades-long infatuation with a Benedictine retreat in an isolated spot in the hills above the ocean at Big Sur. In his recent book The Half-Known Life: In Search of Paradise, Iyer searches the world … Continue reading
Posted in Book Reviews
Tagged Big Sur, contemplation, meditation, Silence, stillness, travel
Leave a comment
Where Am I?
This week’s newsletter in The Perennial Nomad: For Those Who Wander with Intent celebrates the irresistible urge to roam. Sometimes it takes me awhile to remember where I am in the world. No, that’s not right. Let me rephrase it. … Continue reading
Time Traveling for Nomads
This week in my newsletter The Perennial Nomad: For Those Who Wander with Intent I discuss the value of visiting historical sites while traveling. The concept of time travel has intrigued humankind for centuries. H.G. Wells popularized a device that … Continue reading
The Perennial Nomad
Introducing The Perennial Nomad, a weekly Substack newsletter. I began writing with a focus on science fiction stories. Many of the books I read as a teen and young man were science fiction and fantasy, and it was a science … Continue reading
Book Review: No Ordinary Assignment: A Memoir by Jane Ferguson; Part Two
As I read of Jane Ferguson’s adventures in war-torn countries in the Middle East, I was reminded of my own travels in the area. During a narrow window of time in the 1960s and 1970s, it was possible to travel … Continue reading
Posted in Book Reviews
Tagged Afghanistan, journalism, memoir, Middle East, travel, war correspondent, Writing
Leave a comment
Concerning Empathy
According to the Merriam-Webster online dictionary, empathy is “the action of understanding, being aware of, being sensitive to, and vicariously experiencing the feelings, thoughts, and experience of another.” This contrasts with sympathy, which is a feeling of concern for another … Continue reading
Life Is a Gift
As I mention at the beginning of this essay, I wrote it a few weeks before Christmas. My first thought was to post it a week or so after Christmas, possibly even after New Year’s Day, because I thought it … Continue reading
Strange Christmases – Part Two: Penang, Malaysia
On one of the strangest Christmases I have ever spent, when I was all alone on the island of Penang in Malaysia, I received an unusual but intensely valuable gift: a clue that led me toward my destiny. This was … Continue reading




























