Addendum

Oh, I just remembered why I opened up the blog to post something. I actually had a purpose beyond just ranting about cancer.

For fans of New World Order, book one: Turning, I wanted to let you in on a little deal: anyone who recommends the book to at least three friends (they have to actually start reading it) will get a free sneak peek at part one of New World Order, book two: Anarchy.

That’s not a cheesy freebie, either, folks. I’m talking a solid fifteen chapters worth of material (it was just twelve, but I’ve realized the last three chapters I’ve written still belong in part one.)!

So here’s the way this works: you recommend the book to three friends who begin reading it and just shoot me an email, and I’ll send you the first fifteen chapters in either pdf, mobi, or epub format (if you need it in another format, let me know and I’ll see what I can do).

Naturally, I’m asking you NOT to send this material on to your friends as well. If they want the sample, they can get it the same way you did.

RECOMMEND THIS                              GET 15 CHAPTERS OF THIS!

Cover 4      Anarchy Cover

Cancer Sucks

Let me just say this as concisely and as compassionately as I can:

Cancer sucks.

My beloved wife is now home after a double mastectomy due to malignancies found in both breasts. Been a helluva week here at the Scott home. For those who didn’t know, just understand that a) we found out about this fairly recently, and b) we didn’t want to be answering a lot of questions over and over again, and c) we didn’t want to do the Facebook thing, either. Guess we’re both just a little too old school and uncool for the social media thing. And some of you are quite busy around graduation time, and we didn’t want to detract from someone else’s celebration. Don’t want to be the rain on someone’s picnic, y’know?

At any rate, she’s now made it through two different cancers–kidney and breast–and yeah, they both sucked. I’m hoping things can get back to something resembling normal, now that the hospitalization is over. We’re still facing a long recovery and the whole reconstruction phase, but once she gets past the initial surgeries, things should start calming down. I don’t believe we’ll be looking at either chemotherapy or radiation, because her lymph nodes were clear. Still waiting for 100% confirmation from pathology, but we may be out of the woods. Yay.

Downright exhausting, though, lemme tell ya. Mostly for her, of course, but also for me a bit, too.

We’ve been blessed to have so many friends bringing over meals and stocking our pantry, and my job has been great about giving me time off. I did put in a couple hours this afternoon, but honestly, I’m grateful my son called with bike trouble, because I think I was pushing myself. Haven’t been sleeping right at all these past several nights. My parents are also in town, and were great about hanging out with the kids while I hung out with my wife in the hospital. Oh, and a shout out to Rochester General, too, for the awesome recovery room. They practically gave us a suite!

There’s a couple of people whose phone calls I’ve yet to return. I’ll get a hold of you, soon, I promise.

As far as writing goes, I’m still plugging away, albeit a little more slowly these days. I’ve got one book almost finished, one 2/3rds done, two about half done, and two more about a third done. ‘Course, that’s also written on the sidebar, so  you can see for yourself. I’m on target to get at least three of these finished this year, if not four. But we’ll have to see how that pans out. I couldn’t have predicted the cancer thing, so who knows what might get in the way of that goal.

That’s all for now. Later!