This is my introduction to this blog, which will be a written
report on the progress of the books that I have been
working on. The first project was the Drink of the Gods
trilogy, the first book The Brothers Jade. I have completed
it in partnership with my brother, Herbert Thomas who
is co-author of this project. My name is Donald Lawrence Thomas,
and I am a writer.
The idea for the Drink of the Gods was my brother, and I hope
that we were able to do it justice. It is an amazing story that was
discussed intensively. I personally think that the kernel of the
original story was created when I wrote a short story called
<<<Andar and the Farmer>>> presented in chapter two,
that I thought might have the potential for a possible book.
The idea was in its infancy, when my brother came to me and
asked him to write the tale of the heroes. Andar was one of the
principal characters in the story, and I had already established the
way that I wanted him to be represented in print. It was not long
before we had a general storyline that we wanted to establish.
Books are written, word by word, page by page. It takes
real determination to keep going at it, even when it would be easier
to take another break, or make another excuse. Things were made
easier because this was a partnership, which meant that the whole
thing was not only on the shoulders of myself, but also the shoulders
of my brother.
I am very proud of my brother, for he has shown a determination
that far exceeded my expectations. Things are much easier for me,
since I can devote more of my time to writing since I am on disability.
He has had to maintain a full time job, while working on the book
when opportunity presented itself.
I had it a little easier for another reason. I had always been known for
writing short stories that were a little too long. A couple of years after
my divorce, I seemed to have a lot of time of my hands,
and wanted to do something constructive. I had always been interested
in the movies, and writing screenplays had always been something
of a dream of mine.
So I sat down at the computer and wrote, and I wrote, and before long
I had finished my first screenplay. It was rough, and the format was
unforgivable, but it was a finished project that I was proud of. I found
that writing screenplays was something that I could do, and that
I needed to hone my craft to the level where it would be acceptable
to my own criticism.
After I had written my sixth screenplay, I decided to take
a serious look at my chances of getting one of my scripts produced.
The prospect of a one in a million chance did not look good.
Undeterred I decided to work on something different,
and that was when I got the idea for my short story starring
Andar Thule.
The thing with the short story about Andar, is that I
never seemed to be able to finish it. I had left it for other projects,
and called that one finished, because the short story itself was
finished, I just felt that there was more story to write. I had
decided that one of the banes of writing was the unfinished project.
Every writer knows the horror of the unfinished project. A
good idea, rough notes put down on paper, but never experienced
in its entirety as a completed project. Everyone has what I call a ten
second idea, but very few can put in
words the very fabric of the reality of that idea.
I am making it sound more complicated then it really is,
but the truth is that good writing takes effort. The mind has to
think out a scene, and put it in thereality of black words
on white paper. It is something that you think over,
even at the last second of actually writing down what
you had decided.The thing is that most writers have
an unfinished project locked away somewhere. I cannot speak for
everyone else, but I personally hate the idea
of the unfinished project.
.
Everyday that I can write is devoted to finishing a project.
I have several projects in the development stage, and I considered
the short story that I wrote to be one of them. It kept coming back
to me, and a month would pass, and then I would leave it again.
It was getting to the point where I was writing
an odd page here or there, but that was it.
Then I took a long look down the horizon at the book
that I wanted to write.It did not take long before I had
started the Chronicles of the Assassin.
I worked diligently on that project for months, and was
in the full swing of the story, when I met with my brother.
We started talking about story ideas for books, and then he
talked to me about his idea for a series of books. They
would detail the adventures of the group from which Andar
had been a member.
It was a good dream, and I was happy to help my
brother fulfill his dream. I loved the characters that he wanted
to use, and was more then happy at the very though of writing
out their adventures. It was then that I left my story
about the assassin on the back burner while we finished
the first book The Brothers Jade concerning our trilogy
- the Drink of the Gods.
You might ask if that short story that I wrote about
Andar Thule, is it in the book? The answer to that is yes and no.
The problem is that a computer mishap occurred and the original
story was lost. The only solution was for me to rewrite the entire story.
This was not so bad, because I could then write it in the context of
the entire story, and not just a brief glimpse.
There are things in this book that will simply amaze you. There is
a large cast of memorable characters. I think that we have a story
that will be well received. It is about this group of people and their
influence on the world around them. The world is full of allies and
enemies, and it is my pleasure helping my brother bring it to print.
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