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Now Available: Dreamhealer on Kindle and KU

Dreamhealer Large Cover With Type-500 wide.png

Some time last night after I hit the switch and the sack, Amazon approved my upload of Dreamhealer to the Kindle store and KU. So it’s ready to rock–go get it! I’ll have a trade paperback edition in a week or so, unless Amazon decides to arm-wrestle me over it, like they did with Firejammer.

Unlike most fiction these days, the cover is a from-scratch painting that represents a scene from the book itself. (It’s Larry healing a man’s falling nightmare–falling from 90,000 feet. See Chapter 1.)

This one was a long time coming. Part of it was starting a novel in the middle of a move that included renovating two houses 850 miles apart.I’m sure part of it was just starting a novel at age 64. Part of it was the…peculiar… nature of some of the background concepts. There is tension between witches and lightworkers. I worked some of that tension into the plot. I bought a whole book on the “etheric double” as understood by Theosophists. I read and reread a lot of material from the late Colin Wilson. Oh, and material about tiger moms, phantom pregnancies, Elk Grove Village, steampunk mechas, the bicameral mind theory of human evolution, and more. Way more. (I actually explored Elk Grove Village back in 2017 and chose the street where Larry the Dreamhealer lives.) Of course, I invented as much as I borrowed, especially regarding the Elemental Cycles of the Canidae and the quantum computational substrate underlying dreams. Researching the background is the fun part of creating a novel. The writing itself is butt-kicking hard work.

I was going to summarize the plot here, but there’s always the problem of spoilers. So I’ll be brief: Larry gets on the wrong side of what turns out to be the Architect of All Nightmares. He finds his true love, who has a thing for chainsaws. The spirit of Isambard Kingdom Brunel builds one helluva mecha. Dogs. Dogs everywhere. Talking dogs. Dogs who eat the creatures that create nightmares. Fights, more fights, a skeletal flying saucer, searching for calculus class, imaginary friends…hey, what more do you want? Whatever it is, it’s probably in there somewhere.

Go get it. Have fun. Write a review. Tell your friends. And…thanks.

10 Comments

  1. Jim Fuerstenberg says:

    consider it done.

  2. Bob Halloran says:

    Enjoyed the book thoroughly (as usual…), well done.

    1. Thanks! And thanks for the review. That always helps.

  3. Don Doerres says:

    Got it. Read it. Liked it (a lot). Put a review up on Amazon

    1. Thanks for the vote of confidence. That was a tough one to get down, trimmed, and polished.

  4. Orvan Taurus says:

    Just started it. *Just*. Ox slow.

    1. So what? Ox got there. I’m happy. And thanks!

      1. Orvan Taurus says:

        Finally finished it (ox slow, yes). Good read!

        1. Very glad you liked it! I’ll grant it will probably remain the weirdest single thing I’ve ever written (or at least finished.) But I appreciate the time you spent on it. Reviews always welcome!

  5. Carrington Dixon says:

    Excellent! This replaces The Cunning Blood as my favorite of your works. I’ll be adding some good words on Amazon shortly.

    One thing I won’t say on Amazon, as it would probably confuse everybody, is how much I was reminded of Campbell’s Invaders From the Infinite. I am not even sure why. Perhaps, it is that your dream ‘technology’ matches so well with Campbell’s 1930s super-science. Certainly characters and situation don’t match in even a superficial way. And you are a much better writer than Campbell was in the 1930s.

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