Monday, October 27, 2025

Howling at the moon with Cement

There’s this old joke that I very much love. Two people are talking, the first person asks “What Howls at the moon and has cement in it?”

The second person responds, “I don’t know.”

The first person responds, “A wolf.”

This causes the second person to ask, “What about the cement?”

To which the first person says, “Oh, I just put that in to make it hard.”

 Yeah, I know, a total Dad Joke. Which I get to tell because I’m not only a dad, but a grandad. (To be sure I did also tell the joke prior to actually being a dad.) But I digress.

Some 19 years ago I was at home when I was called by a publisher and tasked with developing an eight-page comic story that frightened me. I told the caller that I was the wrong guy for the assignment, as I didn’t like horror, hadn’t written anything in a year, and hadn’t written fiction in over 10 years. The publisher insisted that I was the guy he wanted. Again, I begged off, stating that I had to go pick up my then 15-year-old son at his job. I hung up and went to pick up my son and returned home.

By the time I returned home, less than an hour later, I called the publisher back and pitched him the story of Wülf Girls—two under-aged sisters who were werewülves that hunted pedophiles. Needless to say, he loved it. So, I went ahead and wrote it. It took me two weeks—a week to write the first six pages and a full second week to write the last two, because, frankly, it was that gruesome, even for me.

Well, the issue came out and when my father read it, he nearly stopped talking to me because of the content. I had to convince him that not only was it just a story, but I had turned the sisters from prey into predators. Once the comic was published, we shopped it at a horror convention in New Jersey, while there I met Melvin Ylagan, the cover artist, and he loved the story and wanted to know what the next story was. I told him there was no next story, because you now knew the punchline of the story. Melvin wouldn’t let up, pointing out that the Girlz were 150 years old so there had to be other stories.

That was the spark that kicked off the rest of what was to come. I went on to write a second and third chapter (as well as two short vignettes, as well as a prose story where the Girlz co-stared with another creator’s character, plus as a comic story for a different publisher where they had a cameo). Between the time of the publication of the second and while waiting patiently for the the original publisher to print the third chapter of the Wülf Girlz saga (2006-2008), I busied myself with writing a prose story about their training into the werewülf community. That story became the prose novella Taste the Moon (now available through Dark Fire Press, yet another publisher). During that time while I was working at a job, I used my coffee and lunch breaks to write two long texts on my (semi-smart) phone that I later downloaded to my computer, stitched together, and edited to become the novella.

In 2019, after having split from the original publisher of Wülf Girlz (the third chapter of which still unpublished), I reconnected with my friend J.M. DeSantis and asked if he was interested in continuing the saga. J.M. agreed, and he and I began our collaborative efforts to do just that. This process involved me getting the three chapters and two vignettes colored, laying out and formatting the novella, getting contracts written, updated, and signed, as well as agreeing to a business plan on how Dark Fire would operate, and ultimately bringing the books to get published.

All of which was complicated by COVID, J.M. and my sometimes conflicting, and often erratic schedules, as well as other complexities of living in the world. Needless to say, against many odds we have finally done it, and both The Wülf Girlz comicbook, and the Taste the Moon novella are now in print and available across multiple platforms, including, but not limited to Dark Fire Press, IndyPlanet, GlobalComix, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Net1World, as well as, of course direct from me at shows.

One of the more important parts of the story that I skipped over, is that, long before I had conceived of the Girlz, I had met and interviewed Steve Bissette in my role as a journalist working for Amazing Heroes. After I had written the first couple of stories and had finished writing the novella I reached out to Steve and asked him if he’d pen a forward to the book, and he graciously agreed. Sadly, it has taken some 17 years to bring the novella to print, and for his part, Steve has patiently waited (thanks Steve).

In the background for all of this, I’ve written two other (unpublished) Wülf Girlz scripts, a short story, and the plots to several other scripts. Currently I’m writing a follow-up novella (yes, on my now Smart Phone), and I’m looking for an artist to illustrate their further adventures. I’ve also written a short prose story of another female wülf character as well as a 500-word flash fiction story involving a female wülf character (neither of whom are Hope or Grace).


What started as a one-off challenge has turned into an on-going collection of stories featuring female wülf characters, and I, for one, couldn’t be happier.

Thursday, October 09, 2025

That time Napoleon conquered the stars.

Imagine an alternative timeline where Napoleon not only conquers not only Europe, but all of Earth and then reaches out into the stars to extend his imperial realm throughout all of the galaxy! Napoleon was a polarizing character in history, to say the least. As with so many figures in history, he was a mix of positives and negatives.

On the one hand he was hailed as a great commander and leader, yet, on the other hand, he was also a ruthless raider of antiquities and a looter of artwork. During his campaigns in Egypt, he discovered the Rosetta Stone, used to unlock the ancient Egyptian language, but then subsequently took much of what he discovered back to France with him. Throughout his military career he won over 50 battles and ruled more than 44 million people in Europe and overseas colonies.


Now imagine if this shrewd and unrelenting emperor-general had access to modern-day technology and took his conquering ways across the solar system to other inhabited planets so that Napoleon could Conquer all of Space itself!

Napoleon’s Starship is a hardbound, sci-fi graphic novel published by Wayward Raven. The story is told through the eyes of the main character, Gavroche, a young revolutionist and artist. On Earth, she joined the protests against Napoleon’s cruel rule. No longer being able to stand his tyranny, Gavroche stows away on Napoleon’s Starship, determined to assassinate him.

Napoleon’s Starship is told through the eyes of Gavroche, a young revolutionist and artist. On Earth, she joined the protests against Napoleon’s cruel rule. No longer being able to stand his tyranny, Gavroche stows away on Napoleon’s Starship, determined to assassinate him.

When she is caught by Napoleon’s troops, Napoleon’s Master of Artistic Propaganda attempts to force her to use her art for propaganda. Gavroche resists, eventually meeting the denizens of this new planet. A kinship is formed with these creatures that speak through scent and Gavroche devises a desperate plan to overthrow the galactic emperor!

Katherine Blakeney the creator of this amazing book is an artist, writer, animator, archaeologist and pilot. Her stop-motion animated short films have been screened at numerous international film festivals and have won several awards. Katherine’s paintings have been exhibited at Cork Gallery in Lincoln Center. Every summer she works in ancient Egyptian tombs, uncovering the secrets of Ancient Egyptian craftsmanship.

The story of Napoleon’s Starship directly draws upon Katherine’s experience as an archeologist and what she has seen on her digs in Egypt. She is very passionate about preserving our ancient history and art while still bringing it to the people. Art isn’t just something for the privileged,

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