Category Archives: Writing

Writing Realistic Injuries (warning: graphic images)

Don’t you hate seeing people in action movies always hit in the arm or the leg and they just soldier on and kill the bad guys?  Who among us can take a slug to the arm and leg and not react? Writing realistic injuries is very important to me.  I have a guy hit in the arm in one of my novels.  He gets infected and barely survives after an emergency amputation.  Real people, no matter how heroic, succumb to blood loss and shattered bones with shock or at least limited ability to function.

The so-called flesh wound is no fun at all.  If it hit bone or an organ, you will die right away, or slowly from infection and gangrene.  If it just hits flesh, you have a terrible jagged tear, full of bacteria, blood loss and pain.  Just think about the last time you had surgery, or even had a tooth filling.  Without any pain medicine or treatment would you just laugh that off?  I think not.  As an author, I have to be true to the scene.  Sometimes that means a favorite character loses a limb, an eye, has months to recuperate, or even gets vaporized.  It is not fun to realize your story needs carnage to those you have grown to love, but it is worse to have them miraculously survive.

Later I can talk about the .38 snub nose shooting someone off a ten story roof, or the machine gun firing 100 rounds at point blank and missing the hero…

There is a very helpful link below, but first, two pictures, a bit grisly, of real gunshot “flesh wounds” to demonstrate you might want to make them a bit more serious in your stories:

Shoulder Flesh Wound

Shoulder Flesh Wound

Forearm Flesh Wound

Forearm Flesh Wound

 

Here is a great link to very detailed analysis of properly writing realistic injuries:

http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/7RMh43/:16YPDdasi:Tj+VIpVd/www.users.totalise.co.uk/~leiafee/ramblings/realistic_injuries.htm/

Writing Realistic Injuries
By Leia Fee, with additions by Susannah Shepherd

Quick Contents

Introduction
General remarks
What’s  normal?
Reactions to injury – including emotional reactions, fainting and shock.
Minor injuries – such as bruises, grazes and sprains
Head injuries – from  black eyes to severe concussions
Broken bones
Dislocated joints
Cutting and Piercing – for various locations, including blood loss symptoms and figures.
Blunt trauma – getting hit, internal injuries.
Burns – including electrical burns
Hostile environments – such as extreme cold and heat, oxygen deprivation and exposure to vacuum.
References – useful websites.

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Excitement and Frustration

So, I am going to be at booth #1629 at Phoenix Comic Con 2013 from Thursday May 23rd through Sunday May 26th!  That is the really exciting part.  I will be selling signed copies of Twisted History, The Travelers’ Club and the Ghost Ship, The Travelers’ Club – Fire and Ash, and the newly released Twisted Nightmares.

My wife will be selling vintage jewelry, Gatsby like hair decorations and pop culture creations at the same booth with me, from her Susanne’s Passions craft store.  I am really looking forward to this awesome event, both as a vendor, and as an attendee.  My friend and fellow author, Chris Wilke, and his family will be helping out at the booth some as well.

pcc logo

So why the mixed feelings?  Why the frustration?

It is because the “powers that be” at Phoenix Comic Con refuse to consider me for any panels.  I will not name the person, but I write articles for the same publication as this person.  Despite the fact that I have appeared at numerous conventions and appeared on local panels at LepreCon, DarkCon, and the Wild Wild West Con, the folks at PCC won’t return my calls or emails.  They even refused to talk to me in person.

Why?  Because I am Indie-published.  Despite the fact that PCC has panels each year on how to Indie publish, their guy in charge of writers only invites those published through traditional publishers.  In fact, the panels on Indie publishing have all authors who are traditionally published.  The exception of course is Michael Stackpole, a great guy who has been a mentor in my journey, who had many books traditionally published and now Indie publishes.

indie

It is a shame that even at a cutting edge cultural event, the old social morays still stay in place, that some how an Indie published author is a “vanity press” author.  Some of their guests in prior years I have actually outsold as an Indie, and one of them had a book deal but did not even have a book out yet.  I know we each have our own path.  I even feel petty and small for being irritated by this.  However, I have real experiences to share with authors who go to events like PCC to see a panel on “Indie publishing.”  I have been on dozens of panels on the topic, been written up in local newspapers and media, and appeared at many writer conferences to give seminars on the topic.

I am very happy for the authors who are appearing, including a great person I worked with years ago named Amy Nichols who has her first book published, an awesome Children’s book.  Also there will be Jenn Czep, who is a wonderful person with a story in Twisted Nightmares.  Michael Stackpole, Timothy Zahn, Terry Brooks and Cherie Priest are all great people too.  Sam Sykes and Gini Koch I know and enjoy as well from meeting them and being on panels together.  I don’t even care that much not to be selected – it is not even being considered because I am an Indie that is frustrating.

I don’t usually rant.  I am a very upbeat guy in general.  For some reason this just annoys the heck out of me.

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Another Historical Writing Source

From time to time I post some of the sources I use for my historical fiction.  I write a lot about the Victorian Era, roughly 1830 to 1900, and probably spend twice as much time researching a story as writing it.  To give the real feel of an environment, you have to put in pieces from all over to give a sense of reality.  One source that is very good is on popular songs of various time periods.  Link found here:

http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/2aOUaQ/:z!0VJYk!:XhM+EubB/www.contemplator.com/america/

music

Almost any time is incomplete without the music of the era.  However, knowing what was popular in Cincinnati in 1854 is not something you know off the top of your head.  After using a nice reference site like this, you can look at songs, lyrics and other information.  Then you have to reconcile any use with other data.  For instance, if you want to use “I’ll take you home Kathleen,” you should find out when it was written, by whom, how was it performed?  Where was it distributed?  Was it orchestral, sheet music, able to be played on violin or harmonica? Was it high-brow, low-brow or pop?  After that research, often you have to turn to another song, and another, just to get the right time, place, setting and folks who are listening.

That one song may just represent a sentence in the set-up to a place where action occurs in the story.  It is the little details like that I am most proud of in my stories.  Many won’t know that I spent hours researching the song to get it right, but I do.  You can’t always get the answer you need, but when you can, I think you owe it to the reader to do so.

Robert-Petway-240x300

Here is an example of the section I have used for 1880 America:

Early 1800s to the Civil War

 

Civil War

Post Civil War

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Iron Man 3 – Movie Review

Iron Man 3

Movie Review

by Michael Bradley

 Iron-Man-33

As a huge comic book fan and reader of the original Iron Man comics, I would probably go see any movie made about Marvel or DC Comics heroes.  Unfortunately, that is what Hollywood banks on too often.  Film producers do not understand the fascination with comics and rely on the old tried and true formula of big stars, big trailers and lots of computer generated special effects.  It is what makes Iron Man 3 interesting, but also what makes it fall short of the mark.

I try to avoid spoilers in movie reviews, but in this case, I have to discuss the scenes themselves.  If you have not seen it before, I give it high marks for eye candy and low marks for plot and acting.  You should stop here if you want no spoilers. 

Iron Man 3 starts off with The Mandarin, the mystical head of the Ten Rings shadowy organization.  The Mandarin played horribly by Ben Kingsley, a man who other than Gandhi has played every stupid role in a film.  The Mandarin turns out to be an idiot actor with no villain qualities at all.  It is a real insult to the comic fans.  Robert Downey as the title character seems to call it in on this movie, having already announced he might not do future ones.  His acting is wooden.

You start off with Tony Stark narrating how he made innocent people into demons.  This narrative is heavy handed throughout the film, including The Mandarin being a fake terrorist to prop up military industrial spending.  They come out and tell you over and over, that we make our own demons.  The point of the movie is clear, that all terrorists are created by our military to sell weapon systems.  It is just as crassly portrayed in the movie, a political charge that is without any depth.

At the beginning, we find Tony Stark beset with anxiety attacks, worried about Pepper Pots, but never spending any time with the person who is indispensable to him.  Then he makes a stupid taunt in the press and nearly gets both killed.  He spends most of the film trying to get one partially functional suit to work, only to have forty fully functional suits magically appear at the end of the film for the finale.

An army of Iron Men suits appear for the finale.

An army of Iron Men suits appear for the finale.

The best part of the movie, and there are not a lot other than the computer action scenes, come when Tony Stark is relating to a young boy named Harley Keener, played by Ty Simkins.  Ty steals the scenes and you wish the movie dwelt more on real characters like that than on the incessant assault on the senses of loud destruction scenes.  The other good part of the movie is the humor inserted.  A henchman actually leaves a scene, putting down his weapon and saying, “I hate this job, the people are weird here, I’m just going to leave if that is ok.”

The end has the Vice President being part of the conspiracy of course, so he can take over and you guessed it – get in more wars to sell more weapons for the defense industry.   When Stan Lee created his characters they were about social commentary.  The X-Men represented the viewpoints during the Civil Rights movement.  Spiderman was the boy coming of age and learning how to be a man.  Iron Man was created during the Vietnam War as a challenge to make a warmongering weapons manufacturer popular at the height of protests and hostilities.  Stan Lee always played against type.  That is one reason turning Iron Man into a pacifist who still builds violent personal robot exoskeletons by the score attacks the very foundation of the canon.

The worst attack on the canon of Iron Man is at the end.  Tony Stark decides to get his heart “fixed” by removing the metal shards in it.  What?  The one thing that made Iron Man was that his heart was inoperable, that he had to create the power device that made him part human, part machine.  The scene lasts less than a minute, and then he is all healed and throws his chest power plant into the ocean.

They even made over Pepper Potts from the spunky, smart, moralist to a superhero with compromised moral viewpoints at the end.  Last, after waiting through the longest credits in history, was the let down of the end clip.  In previous films in the Avenger line, the end clip reveals some cool clue about an upcoming movie.  In Iron Man 3, the end clip is just Tony Stark finishing his narrative to a sleeping Incredible Hulk in human form, who tells him he is not a psychologist.  Of course Tony Stark in the comics would never open up about anxiety disorders, his love of Pepper Potts, or giving up his powers to a fellow Avenger, but hey, every other thing about Iron Man seems to be lost in this movie as well.

If you are an Iron Man fan, you will see this movie no matter what I say, and probably already have.  Once your adrenaline settles back down from the cgi and sound track, see if you don’t agree with these comments.  Movie producers, please pay attention to character development and not just special effects.

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Check out My Guest Blog On BryanHayden.net

Bryan Hayden posted a guest blog of mine on “Is Writing Creative?”.  I have sent him a number of columns for use over the next several months.  If you have not tried guest blogging yet, I suggest you give it a go.  It is a great way to cross-pollinate and support your fellow bloggers.

Here is the link:

http://brianhayden.net/guest-post-by-michael-bradley-writing-is-it-creative/

Enjoy!

 

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The Travelers’ Club – Fire and Ash (The Travelers’ Club #2) by Michael Bradley

Ionia Martin was nice enough to read my book The Travelers’ Club – Fire and Ash and post a review on her blog site, Readful Things Blog.  Here is the link:

The Travelers’ Club – Fire and Ash (The Travelers’ Club #2) by Michael Bradley.

Thank you so much Ionia!

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Twisted Nightmares now on Kindle for just 99 Cents!

Twisted Nightmares now on Kindle for just 99 Cents!  I definitely recommend you pick up a copy of this anthology of horror short stories and poems.  It is a steal at 99 cents and includes works from yours truly – Michael Bradley.  Edited by Andrew Terech.

http://www.amazon.com/Twisted-Nightmares-ebook/dp/B00CNWVXLI/ref=sr_1_16?ie=UTF8&qid=1367870457&sr=8-16&keywords=twisted+nightmares

T-Nightmares-Cover

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Thank You! Over 200,000 hits!

As of right now, my blog site received 201,600 plus hits!  As you regular followers know, I put a lot of work and love into posting one to three times a day with a peculiar mix of things I find interesting.  I am so happy that my weird interests are also often of interest to you as well.  I do not get any compensation or advertising dollars for the blog site, but I would appreciate you consider stopping by my store on occasion.  If you get a copy of The Travelers’ Club and The Ghost Ship, you can buy it on Kindle for just 99 cents, of which I keep 35 cents.  Obviously, not in that for the money either, I just want more readers.  Thank you for your ongoing support!

200000

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Twisted Nightmares Will be Out Soon!

The latest book project will be out on Kindle, Nook, and print versions soon.  I just got the proof copies and we are making a few small changes.  Twisted Nightmares is the second is a series of books that will come out once per year.  The first was Twisted History, an anthology of alternative history stories written by writers from all different genres, making it “twisted.”  The purpose is to induce fresh perspectives into standard genres by having new authors take different approaches to the work than regular genre writers.  In Twisted Nightmares, writers all submitted horror short stories and poems.  Our editor, Andrew Terech, then reviewed and selected them anonymously, and put them through a rigorous edit process.  Thanks also to Chris Wilke for his outstanding work on the cover and in the compilation process.

I am glad to say I have several that made it into print, including Future Sport, Humanity Won, Humanity Too, Terror Insertion, and The Hair.  This is the fourth time The Hair has been picked up for publication.  I will post when Twisted Nightmares will be available.  It will be 99 cents on ebook format and a bit more in print version (have to pay to get it printed, and if at a bookstore, they have to get paid too).  Thanks to all the great writers and readers out there!

T-Nightmares-Cover

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Oblivion – Movie Review

Oblivion

Movie Review

by Michael Bradley

Oblivion is the latest Tom Cruise science fiction movie.  I have never really cared for Tom Cruise or his acting, and special effects tend to be overdone in his movies, so that was my expectation entering the dark expanse of the theater.  I was in for a refreshing surprise.  Yes, there is Tom Cruise strutting, shirt off, close ups of his face as in all his films, and there are special effects full of eye candy, but there is also a fascinating sci-fi story as well.  This makes Oblivion definitely worth seeing.

The role of Jack Harper is portrayed by Tom Cruise, who gets nearly all the screen time as well.  Andrea Riseborough, an English actor portrays Victoria and does an outstanding job.  Olga Kurylenko, the Ukraine born woman who played the Bond Girl in Quantum of Solace, plays Julia.  Morgan Freeman, as always, plays himself, but the character is named Beech.  They are the only four with significant airtime.

oblivion_ver3

The story starts out with flashbacks and narration by Jack Harper that let you as an audience know that aliens called Scavengers, or Scavs, for short, attacked the planet.  Earth won but was destroyed, so the people went off to Titan, but they have to harvest the seas for energy.  Jack and Victoria are left behind to fix the patrol drones and keep the harvesters safe from the remaining Scavs who are bent on causing them troubles.

I hate the fact that movie trailers reveal too much.  I have to confess that the first couple of “twists” in the story I had already guessed from the trailers.  It is impossible not to see them in this mass media world we live in where they spend almost as much marketing as they do filming.  Still, the movie takes several turns and some were not expected at all.  The movie moves along at a good pace, revealing things one at a time, not making you wait to long, but having you reassess what is going on along the way.

A few caught me unawares, which is what I really enjoy.  Oblivion is not a movie that you will talk about for weeks.  It has no deeper meaning to it.  However, it is a refreshing bit of eye candy, action film, that is not mindless, but actually tells an interesting tale as it goes and you use your mind a bit to keep up.  I would like to comment on a few things that did not work as well, but I won’t.  They would require spoilers, and I won’t duplicate a movie trailer by giving too much away.

oblivion_ver5

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