P.W. Cross's Blog
September 10, 2020
Let’s chat (or visiting Loonytown)

I’ve been thinking about this—my first post on writing—for some time now. There are many areas I could have focused on: point of view, scene definition, character development, . . . Or I could have discussed writing tools: text editors, outliners, grammar checkers, . . . And then there’s the tsunami of information surrounding publication and marketing. Whoo!
So I asked myself: What’s most important to me? What’s the one thing that makes or breaks everything else for me as a fantasy book writer?...
The Gravity Gusher

While browsing the internet the other day, I came across information on a joint partnership between NASA and the DLR (German Aerospace Center) called GRACE that got me thinking about apples. In particular, Sir Isaac Newton and the apple!
You have probably heard the story about Newton and the apple, and how he came up with the idea of gravity when an apple fell from a tree and hit him on the head. Well, it turns out the apple didn’t actually hit him, but just the same was the spark the got him ...
Lost Lake Dig ebook released

The ebook version of The Idea Miners: The Lost Lake Dig is now available as a kindle book on Amazon.com.

The price is only $2.99! —And it’s also available for free on Kindle Unlimited.
That’s only $2.99 for 281 exciting pages of fantasy adventure! (Or 71,615 words if you prefer a more appropriate ebook metric).
A little backstory behind the ebook release:
I must admit the ebook version has been a long time coming. I should have released it years ago, but life got in...
August 23, 2020
Crazy Talk!

My first book in The Idea Miners series, The Lost Lake Dig, ended with the line “Ideas define us: our past, our present, and most importantly, our future.“
In today’s world of instant communications, it’s possible, like no time before, to watch as new ideas evolve and shape our future. But it can also be enlightening to look back and see how past ideas have set the groundwork.
As a computer science major in college, many years ago, I remember researching the developing internet architecture—t...


