Friday, February 14, 2020

Where we are

mark@marktreble.com


Did You Ever See Allegro? Is back from my editor, and what I thought would be the equivalent of painting a couple of rooms has turned into restoration after a major fire. She’s absolutely right, I’ve got to add a lot of information, and at the same time make the whole book shorter. I had been shooting for 95.000 words, hit 107,000, and I’m up another thousand with added material in the first ten pages. Three hundred pages to go. This will take a while.

In other news, I have three other projects:

Story of the lifelong friendship between two men, beginning when they meet in kindergarten in 1953. Their lives are displayed through the Cold War, stagflation, the fall of the Berlin Wall, the Millennium, the Internet up to today. Gray and Ralph remain the best of friends, although their lives are shaped differently by events and choices. Working title: The Greatest of These.

Medical mystery starring late sixties podiatrist Fran and equally aged dental surgeon Elvis. They accompany an even older internist on a medical mission to Africa and perform as general surgeons, hundreds of miles from the nearest hospitals in emergency conditions. The duo uncovers a sinister plot to weaponize a naturally-occurring substance in the human body. No working title.

First book of a new series on the Frankenbuzz Detective Agency. Two young men, one a mechanical prodigy, the other a survivalist, join forces to investigate stuffs and mysteries and crimes. Oh my. A good time will be had by all.

2 comments:

  1. Revising after edits is by far the hardest part, but the sense of accomplishment after it's complete has to feel great!

    That medical mystery sounds like quite a fun read. Sounds like things may get intense.

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    Replies
    1. Yes, revising after edits is difficult, but I'm finding revising after an honest beta read to be near impossible. I'll get through it.

      The medical mystery is about a year away.

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