Whew!

I feel like I’ve come full circle.

I started the year in chemo fog. I’m ending it in COVID fog. Luckily, I had a lot of clear days in between. All things considered, it was a good year. No, I didn’t do everything I wanted to, but I did enough.

Status

Ishmael Wang and Company
With the end of the Marva Collins series, the Golden Age of the Solar Clipper reached an equilibrium point. No, I don’t believe that’s the last we’ll hear of Ishmael. I don’t know where his voyage will take him next, but I feel certain that he’s just starting out on new adventures along with the crew.

The audiobooks for Marva Collins are working through the mill at Podium. Book 2 went up for preorder recently and book 3 will appear when they have it ready.

Shackleford House
I had to put The Wizard’s Cat aside. The story I thought I had failed in spectacular fashion. I know why but still haven’t solved the story equation for this next step in Roger Mulligan’s tale. It will come, but – like any self-respecting cat – only in its own sweet time.

Other Stories
I keep meaning to revisit Tanyth’s world, either directly in Korlay or via the world EJ and I created in Salt. Perhaps I’ll get to that this year.

Background Stuff
I need to redo my web presence before Bluehost’s new limits take effect in March. I have too many websites on a single account and use too much space. The Solar Clipper Diary needs to get folded in here. I have a couple of sites that need to go away. That’s going to take a lot of focus – a commodity I’m sorely lacking right at the moment.

What Did I Read?

Not exactly the same level as 2022, but still 176 titles of my 100 title goal!

One of my goals for the year involved reading some of the classics that I’d never read before – like Moby Dick. In hindsight, that might have been a mistake, but I learned that trying to force myself to read just killed whatever enjoyment I might be getting from the practice. I discovered that my normal reading week of 20-25 hrs fell into the middle teens on any week I had a classic on the Kindle. After a few months I abandoned that goal as not accomplishing anything meaningful.

I did like Moby Dick (in hindsight) and enjoyed Siddhartha. The rest? Less said, the better.

Old friends like Jerry Boyd’s Bob and Nikki showed up month after month. In the latter half of the year I caught up with a lot of the series I’d started – like Tom Watts and Tom Larcombe. Jenny Schwartz’s sequel series, Delphic Dame, started with Scarper and I’ve been watching for the new titles as they come along. I dug back into Chaney and Maggert’s Backyard Starship series as the year wound down.

I also found a lot of new authors last year. In fantasy, Chloe Garner’s Queens Chair series. Gwen DeMarco’s Sophie Feegle. Mel Todd’s Twisted Luck. For science fiction, I’m still working my way through John Wilker’s Grand Human Empire.

The list goes on – and many thanks to the suggestions you’ve all sent me. Some great stuff there.

Word of the Year

My word for the year was Juggle. I’m surprised how robust that word turned out to be in terms of helping me deal with all the various vicissitudes. Encompassing “dropping a ball” and “begin again” and “flow” and “pattern” and – well – everything meant I always had a focus point to help me pick up and recover, regardless of what the year threw at me.

Three other touchstones gave my year continuity.

  1. A focus on today. I can’t do anything about yesterday – except maybe learn a lesson from it – or tomorrow – beyond planning head. Whatever I needed to do happened “today.” Stripping things down helped to clear the fog and kept me moving. It didn’t always work, but it worked enough.
  2. Daily habits. I have a checklist and a time sheet. Every day, I have a half dozen things that I do to try to keep myself positive and moving. Again, I don’t manage to do them all every day (like walking) but they’re still there on the list.
  3. Writing every day. Yes, I didn’t always work on fiction but every day last year I wrote two things. One positive thought in the morning and a daily haiku. Trying to find something positive to say about the day before it begins really helped reset my mental clock. The haiku? Something I’ve never done. A challenge to my writing muscle, a dare to myself.

For 2024, the word is Surf.

I got the idea from a Hugh MacLeod post in Gaping Void and it’s been slowly working its way into my mind. Ideas like balance and awareness, reaction and response. Falling down and getting back up. It’s all the same water but every wave is different.

We’ll see how that works out but so far, I think I’m going to like it.

Looking Ahead

Thanks to all of you, 2023 was a good year. I had a lot of work to do to recover from 2022. That recovery continues even as my Christmas COVID finishes running whatever course it’s going to take.

I want to write the next Shackleford House book. It’s grinding at me and it won’t go away until I get it figured out and written down. I need to find the joy I had in writing the original Roger Mulligan. I want to have that feeling again.

I need to resolve the web issues. Too many sites. Too much data. Too complicated by half. External factors will force this issue if I don’t deal with it myself.

And above all, I need to keep going. The long term side effects from my cancer treatments continue to wear me down. I’m still very weak, lacking in stamina. I wasn’t able to make as much progress on recovery as I’d hoped last year, but – hey – it’s a new year.

Who knows what I might be able to accomplish next?

Until next month, safe voyage.

-N

12 thoughts on “Whew!

  1. I’m glad your feeling okayish. And I want to read the next Roger Mulligan book, whenever you finish writing it-today, tomorrow, next month, next year or the next decade, you get the idea. My family wish you well and a long pain free life.

  2. Nice summary!
    I’ve enjoyed following you on Mastodon this year. You’ve given me a lot there in meeting new people you’ve boosted or interacted with as well as food for thought in your posts each day.

  3. Happy New Year Nathan! I pray that you get better soon. Thank you for writing these monthly updates. Your Solar Clipper series has been my chicken soup through many a sticky moment during the pandemic. My thanks for writing the series!

  4. Would you like some help dealing with website consolidation/hosting stuff? I like dealing with that sort of thing, and I’d be happy to hop on a zoom call here and there and lend a hand to hopefully make the process less arduous for you.

    1. I’m mapping it out now. The biggest issue will be downloading the extra data now that they’ve put a storage cap on what was always an unlimited account.

      Mostly it’ll be purging the old databases from days gone by and been long dark.

  5. Happy new year to you, Nathan, and to all who see this. Sending good health wishes and lots of positive thoughts your way.

  6. I have to say, as I’m finishing listening to The Wizard’s Butler for perhaps the fourth time in 2 years, I am excited to see where Mulligan’s tale will take him. There is a hopefulness and a humor to Mulligan’s perspectives at Shackleford House, partnered with Shackleford’s dry wit (or is it sarcasm?), that just makes this book a easy favorite to return to. I hope beyond hope that you are able to find the joy in writing the Mulligan series again, as every time I read Wizard’s Butler, it feels like coming home.

  7. Ugh! You got the COVID? Sorry Skipper, I wouldn’t wish that on anyone, even vaccinated to within an inch of their life. Give it a little rest, don’t push, and the next thing (whatever it may be) will be along shortly and possibly surprisingly.

  8. Good that you’re feeling better!
    I’m looking forward to you revisiting Tanyth, When I first stumbled on that trilogy (thanks to Ishmael and this site) I was enthralled almost immediately. I read all three almost non-stop which led to a serious lack of sleep but it was totally worth it.. well, except the despair I felt when I realized there was no more to read.. It’s been 10 years, and I still go back and re-read them from time to time as I patiently wait for more..
    It doesn’t matter what you write, I’m always watching for more. Thank you, for hours and hours of enjoyment!

  9. Yuck to cancer and yuck to covid! Yay to learning to take things on day (or one step) at a time.
    I just started listening to your Ismael Wong series and have been enjoying them immensely. Thank you so much for sharing your story telling gifts.
    All the best to you and yours.

  10. Finally got around to buying the Marva Collins books, after enjoying them on K Unlimited.

    The only other writer I’ve found who addresses the issue of financing and paying to operate a starship is Andrew Moriarty…Adventures of a Jump Space Accountant. It manages to be a
    screwball comedy.

    Best wishes (including “get well soon “) for 2024,

    DW

  11. I just finished The Wizard’s Butler. I cannot remember the last time a story kept me so engaged and so, well, charmed! No violence, no profanity (or very little)…how refreshing! I was sorry to turn the last page, and am looking forward to the next installment. I am sure it will be worth waiting for.

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