Raised by his mother, Josef was a rather spoiled child. He never wanted for anything, including pocket money, provided he attended daily lessons. When younger, that was spent on sweets, so that he never really lost his baby fat. As his mind expanded and he learned to read, his daily diet of empty calories began to include penny dreadfuls - adventure stories with no real literary value, chock-full of villains up to no good, heroes being all noble, damsels being distressed, and, of course, unrealistic portrayals of derring-do. How Jo avoided tooth decay we may never know, but he developed a very bad case of mental cavities: hero worship. His favorite type was the Noble Thief - he strikes from the shadows, to bring low those who abuse their wealth and power! Usually in the motif of some forest animal.
Wednesday, May 6, 2026
Josef - D&D character background story
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
Vampire: The Masquerade character bio
From 2015, never played.
Sean McWilliams was a morning DJ working at a medium-ranked St. Louis radio station in the Crestwood suburb. He had no particular ambition, nor any particular creative originality. His program consisted of the usual silly songs, prank calls, and trading banter/insults with callers. He posessed one singular talent: his voice. It could get him hired at any station that still used live DJs, and he may have spent his entire life skipping from one such job to the next, across the country.
Sunday, February 15, 2026
Offer From a Facebook Page

Apologies to the original poster if this offends. When I saw the picture, it reminded me so much of the fabric, crochet, and crafting scraps that my late wife saved, and we stored together through 40 years. Right down to the ziploc bag. I recently gave away most of those second-hand memories, too. I'm sad to have done it, yet glad to have spared my children the task.
Wednesday, January 7, 2026
My Dad was a Cop
> Updated, and that is super interesting. I bet that must have been quite interesting, and also nervy at times with your dad being a cop. I bet you heard loads of fascinating stories.
Saturday, November 8, 2025
The Sardine Shop
Donald’s Sardine Shop—which was active in the old town of Celer, during the time of Joseph Walker and Sheriff Adrien Baker—existed primarily for the sale of good sardines, but it also inhabited a maniac hidden in plain sight. A lifetime among fish, cut off from human contact, had slowly and eerily worked Donald down into madness; to the point where the voices taking hold of his brain began prompting him to do things unspeakably vile. His life as a store owner—and psychopathic crackpot—is hereby recorded in intimate detail; for the purpose of informing future sardine shop customers of the underlying danger lurking behind those shop doors. ‘The Sardine Shop’, the new novella by Rob Ryan—author of ‘Erland’, ‘Clementine’ and ‘The Kallors’—is available now on Amazon.
Wednesday, September 17, 2025
Earth 856: A Kaiju Task Force Story
This is my sixth audiobook, but Audible shows it as my fifth because for some reason "The House on the Bend" was removed. I gave this one the full radio-play treatment, with music, backgrounds, and sound effects. BIG shout-out to the Pixabay free sound community.
Earth 856: A Kaiju Task Force Story
Kaiju Task Force, Season One, Book 4
Vance Hadrian has led his research team through a rift at the bottom of the ocean-a shimmering, unnatural doorway between worlds. On the other side lies Earth 856, a savage mirror of our own. Vance says they're here for answers. But the truth runs darker than his crew suspects. He's haunted-by the day Kaiju emerged, by the destruction they left behind, and by the terrifying potential they revealed. Vance doesn't want answers-he wants to control them. To bend one of these living weapons to his will.
Saturday, August 2, 2025
The Dungeon & the Labyrinth Audiobook by Rob Horner
Wednesday, July 16, 2025
Review: The Headphones
The Headphones by Steve McElhennyMy rating: 4 of 5 stars
Reminded me quite a bit of series such as Twilight Zone, or Monsters. A misanthrope, who has never known happiness, attempts to use a magical artifact that reminds people of their happiest time.
I've read a lot of McElhenny's work - he comes up with unique ideas and tributes to the entertainment of earlier days. Sometimes I think that he's too optimistic for horror -- where Steve King would allow his characters to spiral into misery and eternal damnation, Steve McElhenny gives them an escape to redemption.
The narrator was talented - all characters were distinct and separate, all voices well-done, and the overall mood appropriate - but the way he used accents made me question exactly where the book was supposed to be set.
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Wednesday, July 9, 2025
Review: The Mysterious Case of the Alperton Angels
The Mysterious Case of the Alperton Angels by Janice HallettMy rating: 1 of 5 stars
An annoying format for a story. Only at the very end does the reader learn why they're reading case files, and I suppose it makes sense, but it didn't make it any less annoying. Were it not for the fact that this was selected by the local mystery book club, I would not have finished the book.
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Wednesday, July 2, 2025
Review: Mockingbird
Mockingbird by Steve McElhennyMy rating: 4 of 5 stars
McElhenney has a unique style; his humor shines through even when he's writing horror. Always entertaining, and always with an optimistic view of humanity - even as he parodies our foibles.
Alan Aldersley-Byrne is a talented reader. He conveys the mood of the piece well, keeps all the character voices distinguishable, and has taught me a few things about UK accents. I would love to workshop with this guy.
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Wednesday, June 25, 2025
Review: Hollow Kingdom
Hollow Kingdom by Kira Jane BuxtonMy rating: 5 of 5 stars
I kept wanting to read it aloud just so that I could do all the voices.
ST (for "Shit Turd") is a crow who thinks he's human. At least, in his soul. He was adopted by a redneck (Big Jim) who has now, unfortunately, become a zombie. The world is adjusting, and the humans are changing. Can ST find his place in this new world?
I found this story poignant at times, funny always, and ultimately it left me wanting more. The crow is essentially embarking on a classic hero's journey, and along the way we get to glimpse how a few other animals, scattered around the globe, react to change in the world.
Can't wait to read the sequel.
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Wednesday, June 18, 2025
Review: The Framed Women of Ardemore House
The Framed Women of Ardemore House by Brandy SchillaceMy rating: 1 of 5 stars
I never ever shook the feeling that this was basically a Harlequin romance with a mystery in the background. And the penultimate chapter describing what really happened got kind of tedious. By the time the last chapter came around, it was past time for the book to be over."
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Wednesday, June 11, 2025
Review: Shards of Earth
Shards of Earth by Adrian TchaikovskyMy rating: 4 of 5 stars
December 2, 2024 –
0% "Once upon a time, mysterious beings appeared, made a bunch of planets unlivable, then went away after one man spontaneously developed superpowers and managed to defeat just one ship. The splintered masses of humanity, including the genetically engineered and the AI offspring, are not truly ready for the BBEGs to come back.
Oh, and one Amazon falls for this man, who is surprisingly youthful for his years."
December 3, 2024 –
0% "Let's see - an all-female warrior race with relaxed social mores regarding sex. Check."
December 8, 2024 –
0% "Everybody has too many names. I'm beginning to think that Tchaikovsky is hostile toward audiobooks.
This is turning into a sidequest story."
December 9, 2024 –
0% "Oh, they found the Infinity Stones!"
December 10, 2024 –
0% "These AIs sure are sarcastic.
I like the spacer's wake.
Can't help but think that the mystical ability of a select few to navigate un-space and mentally connect with Originators and Architects, is just a wee bit like The Force."
December 15, 2024 –
0% "The early text stated that Ollie could not adapt to standard limb prosthetics because she was not born with standard limbs and couldn't operate them efficiently. And yet, she routinely operates an arachnid form with several more limbs, AND was able to plug directly into a ship's controls? She wasn't born with those, either!"
December 16, 2024 –
0% ""Oh, pay no attention to the veteran with PTSD. No WAY the enemy could come at us again!""
December 22, 2024 – Finished Reading
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Wednesday, June 4, 2025
Review: The Second Murderer: A Philip Marlowe Novel
The Second Murderer: A Philip Marlowe Novel by Denise MinaMy rating: 3 of 5 stars
While the media of the 40's did not cover it extensively, it was a dangerous time to be any flavor of queer in America. That absolutely does not mean that such people did not exist, merely that society would rather that they didn't.
From what I understand of Philip Marlowe, he was a live-and-let-live kind of person, and would absolutely not have judged anyone for their sexuality.
He does judge people upon their privilege level, though.
Overall, I liked this book, didn't love it.
Below this point are my in progress notes.
November 17, 2024 – Started Reading
November 17, 2024 – Shelved as: owned
November 17, 2024 – Shelved
November 17, 2024 – Shelved as: mystery-book-club
November 17, 2024 –
43.0% "I'm not an afficionado of Chandler's work, but it seems to me that the author kept true to the character. The narrator sounds like an upright fellow, but in my opinion lacks he nuance needed."
November 24, 2024 –
100.0% "Overall, I think that Marlowe (as usual) goes the long way around to solve things."
November 24, 2024 – Finished Reading
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Monday, June 2, 2025
Dog Prop
Saturday, May 31, 2025
Review: An Ugly World for Beautiful Boys
An Ugly World for Beautiful Boys by Rob CostelloMy rating: 2 of 5 stars
One might think that this sort of book is not my cup of tea ... and one would be right. Not because I'm straight and CIS, but because I've reached an age where I find much more in common with the adults in a book, than with the teenagers. I found Toby just plain annoying, and remarkably unaware considering how often he self-reflects in the narrative. Found myself thinking, "listen to your elders, you little punk!" way too often.
The overall plot is very similar to older stories about young women being seduced into the sleazy culture of the Big City - the author has merely changed the gender of the protagonist.
That being said, I was impressed with Dabb's narration. He differentiates very well between character voices and attitudes (with the possible exception of the sleazy older guys in the nightclub; they seemed to blend together -- perhaps on purpose). I had some minor questions about pacing, and look forward to speaking with Myles about his process and techniques.
Overall, I didn't hate it, I'm just aged out of the target audience.
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Don't Hire Remodel Work From Home Depot
Original rant: 12/18/2024
I work nights. I have a sign next to my doorbell telling people so, and asking them to not disturb me. Today I have had to take that sign down. Apparently no one can understand that this does not apply when I'm expecting them - and more than one person has used that sign as an excuse to not do the job that they were hired for. Today's incident is a case in point (but not the only example).
I've a kitchen remodel in progress since June, because we wanted it done before Christmas.
It is now mid-December, and still not finished.
This project has been mismanaged every step of the way.
Starting with the delivery of materials. We were given a window of delivery that fell outside of our vacation plans, but received notice of delivery DURING our vacation. The only recourse was to cancel delivery and reschedule later. That cost an extra month.
The boxes sat in our house for weeks before the project manager came to unbox/inspect. Items were missing, and had to be ordered before installation could occur.
When installation finally was scheduled, the install team found one of the cabinets was broken - which the PM missed. Installation was half-done, awaiting a new cabinet. They also found that the studs in my house are 24" apart, not 18" as estimated by PM - requiring bracing be installed, additional work for which the contractors were not originally hired.
And then there are the drawer pulls that never got ordered. We picked out handles/pulls to match the other cabinets, but those never got ordered because "I thought you wanted to get something special for that." We never said that. We wanted something to match the existing cabinets.
After another 3 weeks wait (during which time I bought and installed drawer pulls myself, thank you very much). Replacement cabinet is here (no PM inspection) and today the installers were scheduled to show up (between 8 and 10, ha ha).
They were not here by noon, and no communication. Wife called the PM and was told that they were on their way. We waited.
My outside camera shows that they were here shortly after 1:00, knocked so softly that even the dogs didn't hear it (did not ring doorbell), and left. Without knocking again, without calling.
The countertop/backsplash can't even be started until the cabinets are done. This will likely not be finished until well into January - and that's optimistic.
Look, I understand about scheduling, and how sometimes you can't follow through on a promise no matter how much you want to. But is it too much to ask for a bit of notice when you can't make an appointment?
I work nights. I literally have to sacrifice sleep to be present for anyone coming to my home during the day. A little common courtesy would have turned this ranting negative review to a simple "oh well, shit happens" shrug. But I have not received that from anyone involved in this project.
I cannot recommend that anyone use this storefront to arrange any kind of contract work. No one communicates anything, no one does the job that they were hired to do.
(The install was not finished until February '25.)
Tuesday, May 27, 2025
Review: Vera Wong's Unsolicited Advice for Murderers
Vera Wong's Unsolicited Advice for Murderers by Jesse Q. SutantoMy rating: 4 of 5 stars
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Sunday, May 25, 2025
Review: A Dirty Job
A Dirty Job by Christopher MooreMy rating: 5 of 5 stars
On my most recent read, I caught a number of foreshadowing events which I'd missed. I've also become a lot more critical since I started narrating audiobooks - I even found fault with a few of Steven's choices, mostly of inflection.
I enjoyed Moore's prose - usually do. The local flavor has always been a hook for me, and this was no exception. Though Moore's San Fransisco is fictional, he bases it heavily upon the real one. I especially like his insertion of the historical Emperor of California, although his version is a lot nicer. I also enjoyed seeing cameos from other books - it's like watching a crossover episode of two favorite TV shows.
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Friday, May 23, 2025
Review: The Lager Queen of Minnesota
The Lager Queen of Minnesota by J. Ryan StradalMy rating: 3 of 5 stars
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