Unpublished works and ephemera
The following list is not exhaustive. I’ve been writing for more than thirty years, and inevitably there will be stories, story fragments, and other works that I’ve completely forgotten about. Most of the high (and low) points should be covered here, though.
Novels
Untitled (early-
The Littles (late 1970s) — The earliest incarnation of Fool on the Hill’s sprites. The Littles were a race of tiny people who lived in the walls, cabinets, and other secret spaces of a huge house. They were organized into clans based on what part of the house they occupied: the Monster Littles lived in the basement, the Aqua Littles lived in the plumbing, etc. Like the previous work, there was no central plot, just a series of episodes—each chapter was like a short story featuring a different clan—but I always thought of it as a single, coherent tale. I think I wrote about five or six chapters in total before getting bored and moving on.
Untitled (late 1970s/early 1980s) — A fantasy novel whose plot I’ve long since forgotten. It did have one, though, and I remember too that I came very close to finishing it, completing thirteen out of a planned sixteen chapters. Once again I got bored—it really wasn't that great a story—and gave up just shy of the finish line.
The Gospel According to St. Thomas (1982-
Today’s Tom Sawyer (1985) — A very loosely Twain-
During my sophomore year, I’d developed a crush on a girl in one of my classes. Rather
than do something practical like introduce myself to her, I thought it would be fun
to borrow a move from Peanuts creator Charles Schultz—whose Little Red-
Among the many, many things wrong with this plan, I failed to adequately consider the nature of my love offering. It’s one thing to give a stranger a rose or a box of chocolates, and quite another to lob a big stack of paper at her: “Oh muse, please accept, as a token of my affections, THIS HEAVY BRICK... No, seriously, take it!”
She did not fall madly in love with me. She didn’t call campus security, either, so I guess you could say I came out ahead, although, since we were both juniors, I still faced another two years of mortifying random encounters with this woman (“Hello again, person I made a complete fool of myself in front of!”). But, hey, I did get another novel out of it, and by that point, I was ready to start working on something I could actually publish.
Rocinante Understands (1988) — An updated version of Don Quixote with a female protagonist, which I aborted after only five chapters. The story concerned a woman driven mad by the death of her husband; accompanied by a homeless girl and a greyhound named Rocinante, she set out on a quest to save the world. The climax was going to have her tilting at a nuclear power plant.
Venus Envy (1988-
Short Fiction/Serials
As I’ve noted elsewhere, my main writing focus has always been on novel-
“Soup” (1978) — My riff on the controversial TV series Soap, with the seventh-
“Soup II” (1979) — “Soup” proved popular enough that I eventually produced a sequel, just in time for graduation. For this one I invented an imaginary classmate (with telekinetic powers), so I’d have somebody I could kill off.
“From the Depths of the Mind of a Permanently Greedy and Very Sinister DM” (1979-
“This Novella was Conceived in Sin” (1985) — An extended dirty joke I wrote for Alison
Lurie’s creative-
“Novella” was set in a dystopian future where man-
“Novella”’s protagonist was an outlaw pornographer named Peter Richards. The story,
such as it was, had him visiting a brothel and ordering something called the “Around
the World” special, a complicated perversion involving seven prostitutes, each one
playing the role of a different continent (Antarctica was a 500-
“Nobs for Wog” (1986) — A comic fantasy short whose plot escapes me now, although I remember there was a werewolf in it. Not having entirely learned my lesson from Today’s Tom Sawyer, I wrote this to impress a girl (in this case, one I actually knew and had spoken to). Didn’t work.
Picture Books/Comics
Squirrel Stories, Vol. 1 -
Squirrel Stories, Vol. 2 -
The Acorn People (late 1970s) — An offshoot of all those squirrel drawings, the acorn
people were acorns with arms, legs, and hyperviolent tendencies who spent all of
their time killing each other. Whenever things got slow at Our Saviour Lutheran school,
I’d break out a spiral notebook and work on the latest battle scene. These days,
this sort of anti-
Escape From Black Castle (early 1980s) — My last foray with the acorn people, and the only one to involve an actual story, though it was still mainly an excuse to have them fight and kill each other. In .pdf format (3.5 MB).
Plays
The Musician of Hamlin (1983)* — Stuyvesant High School had an annual theatrical competition called SING, in which the senior, junior, and combined sophomore/freshman classes each put on an original musical production (the dialogue and song lyrics were original; the music was usually cribbed from other sources).
For my senior year, I submitted The Musician of Hamlin, about a magical statue that comes to life and rescues a peasant village from the local tyrant. Musician had its champions on the selection committee, but Senior SING director Ben Munisteri convinced them to go with another play, Please Pardon the Interruption, which featured song parodies from Cats—proving once again that You Can’t Stop Andrew Lloyd Weber.
*With musical contributions by classmate Brian Ross.
Films
Risleyians (1987) — A parody of James Cameron’s Aliens that I did for my Cornell filmmaking class. In this version of the story, the Cornell campus administration sends in Colonial Space Marines to wipe out the “subversives” living in Prudence Risley Hall, my dorm. I was Corporal Hicks, the character Michael Biehn played in the original movie; Lisa Gold, the woman I would one day marry, was the Risleyian queen mother.
For many years, my only copy of Risleyians was an aging VHS tape. Thanks to Vonda McIntyre, I now have a clean DVD transfer. If I can work out some additional technical details, I will eventually upload this to YouTube; in the meantime, here are some frame captures from the movie.
Games
Morningstar (1979) — A boardgame simulating “a last, desperate attack on a starbase
by a group of human mercenaries,” i.e., your basic blow-
“Role Up for the Mystery Tour” (1980) — Co-
Congress: the Gathering (1997) — A political variant/satire of Magic: the Gathering
which I wrote for possible submission to InQuest magazine but never got around to
sending in. My final draft is here, but be aware that it won’t make much sense if
you’re not a Magic player (and an old-
Letters to the Editor / Op-
“Dear Abby” (1992) — Written in response to an article called “Men, Women, and the Sex Thing,” by Abby Ellin, that appeared in the The Boston Phoenix. While I can’t reprint Ellin’s article (see the June 19, 1992 Phoenix if you’re curious), my reply (which ran on July 17) gives enough context that you can imagine it well enough—and I still like what I wrote here.
“Cannibals & Bibliophiles” (2002) — An unpublished op-
“The Universal Library Card” (2005) — Another unpublished op-