The rules are simple. I show you a picture of a location along with a vague sense of where it is (nothing more specific than
I just mailed off five free signed copies of Dismantle the Sun to some lucky so-and-sos at librarything.com. Of the five winners, two are residents of
Yesterday, a conversation with a student somehow turned to the Michael Bay movie Armageddon–a film that shares the same real estate in my cortex as the
Todd “Legitimate Rape” Akin is thinking of writing a book. Because the Earth’s population includes a high percentage of awful, awful people, I’m sure Akin’s
I haven’t bothered to publicize this, but it is possible to read my novel without spending money. Follow this link and you can read it
How NASA might build its first warp drive. How I feel about life today: [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BiMbiRa_gnY&w=420&h=315] I always enjoy November sweeps because that’s when Fox News
Lee Rourke, editor of 3AM, on the pleasure of the ambiguous ending: It’s no surprise that most novels are ruined by their forced “endings”; by our
NASA tells us the announcement of a historic discovery is in the offing, proving that there’s a little showman in all of us. Feel free
Okay, the premise of the Red Dawn remake is that North Korea invaded us? North Korea, the country that can’t feed itself because it blows all