Tito Kithes Athano's Blog
March 11, 2020
Give me the Epidural!
After more than four years, delayed for more reasons than I could list, Pope Barnabas is about to be born!
Published on March 11, 2020 16:54
April 8, 2018
Writer's Constipation
No, not Writer's Block. That's when the blank screen stares back at you, hypnotising you. What I have is one book on the brink of publishing that is chewing up all my nervous energy, so I'm not able to pay proper attention to the next four books in their final polish. These other books have backed up behind the first, and it's painful.
Now my mere male brain, never good at doing two things at once, has seized with the difficulty of trying to write a fifth while the others are stuck in traffic.
Looks like I should do a bit of beta-reading to keep the neurons ticking over.
Now my mere male brain, never good at doing two things at once, has seized with the difficulty of trying to write a fifth while the others are stuck in traffic.
Looks like I should do a bit of beta-reading to keep the neurons ticking over.
Published on April 08, 2018 06:07
July 12, 2017
the bones of 'Bones'.
My theological/archaeological thriller is down on cyber-paper now. Many thanks to Paul Lawrence for his very helpful critique and suggestions, which I am now allowing to ferment.
In the meantime, I'm doing another read-through and polish on my 'Argo' books. This sci-fi trilogy examines matriarchy and and an Ethic arising from time travel, and hence the nature of the universe. Pretty small in scope, actually. Free Word files will be sent to anyone who asks, in exchange for whatever comments might be thought relevant.
In the meantime, I'm doing another read-through and polish on my 'Argo' books. This sci-fi trilogy examines matriarchy and and an Ethic arising from time travel, and hence the nature of the universe. Pretty small in scope, actually. Free Word files will be sent to anyone who asks, in exchange for whatever comments might be thought relevant.
Published on July 12, 2017 00:33
February 4, 2017
Argo Trilogy is finished!
'Legends of Erde', 'Mission of the Argo' and 'Return of the Argo' are now done and and being polished. Tentative plans are to put them out in early 2021, after 'Bones'.
These are 'hard' sci-fi, in that they stick to Physics as we more-or-less know it, but the science plays only a small part in the books. They are really about how four different versions of Matriarchy might develop and interact, with a plot line that develops a strong ethical paradigm.
Reviewers welcome!
These are 'hard' sci-fi, in that they stick to Physics as we more-or-less know it, but the science plays only a small part in the books. They are really about how four different versions of Matriarchy might develop and interact, with a plot line that develops a strong ethical paradigm.
Reviewers welcome!
Published on February 04, 2017 04:35
August 24, 2016
In the Beginning...
G'day, everyone!
I've come late to this game, being in my sixties when I self-published my first book. But being senile, I persuade myself that many years of experience and reflection go into what I write.
Reflection on what, you might ask.
My personal interests have long been History, Politics and Religion. Only recently have I come to recognise the common thread to all of these is that all three focus on people.
Humans and how they relate to one another, understand each other, and often how they abuse each other. Reflect on history in this light. Reflect on what politicians say and what this reveals about how they think humans should relate. And in religion perhaps more than any other realm you will be dealing with humans trying to understand themselves and their place in the Universe. Yes, even the most militant atheists engage in 'religion' to this extent!
Sounds profound? Not really! Everything ever written that deserves to be read has been based on this. But saying it, putting it out under the light of day, helps us understand what we are doing.
Tito's four books in the 'Other Rome' series notionally start with just one minor possible alternative outcome in History, the assassination of Marcus Livius Drusus the Younger in 91 B.C.
It plots what might have happened had he survived. The subsequent admission of the Italian Tribes to full Roman citizenship, and later the extension of formal legal rights to the citizens of Rome's provinces by the Italian Silo, establishes a trajectory of what we moderns would call 'Rule of Law'. This tended to form an inclusive Body Politic, in which each part would support the others. This would be a robust Body Politic, like my native Australia as a Federation of different states, instead of a fractious quasi-empire held together by force such as was the Soviet Union or the old Yugoslavia.
This contrasts with the actual history of exclusion, civil war and militarism that brought about the collapse of the Roman Republic and the institution of the Empire. From this point onwards Rome had locked itself into an attitude of arrogance and brutality that could last only so long as it could muster the military strength to enforce their rule. It was inherently fragile.
What could such a different attitude in the First Century B.C. have achieved? Tito's books play with that question.
I've come late to this game, being in my sixties when I self-published my first book. But being senile, I persuade myself that many years of experience and reflection go into what I write.
Reflection on what, you might ask.
My personal interests have long been History, Politics and Religion. Only recently have I come to recognise the common thread to all of these is that all three focus on people.
Humans and how they relate to one another, understand each other, and often how they abuse each other. Reflect on history in this light. Reflect on what politicians say and what this reveals about how they think humans should relate. And in religion perhaps more than any other realm you will be dealing with humans trying to understand themselves and their place in the Universe. Yes, even the most militant atheists engage in 'religion' to this extent!
Sounds profound? Not really! Everything ever written that deserves to be read has been based on this. But saying it, putting it out under the light of day, helps us understand what we are doing.
Tito's four books in the 'Other Rome' series notionally start with just one minor possible alternative outcome in History, the assassination of Marcus Livius Drusus the Younger in 91 B.C.
It plots what might have happened had he survived. The subsequent admission of the Italian Tribes to full Roman citizenship, and later the extension of formal legal rights to the citizens of Rome's provinces by the Italian Silo, establishes a trajectory of what we moderns would call 'Rule of Law'. This tended to form an inclusive Body Politic, in which each part would support the others. This would be a robust Body Politic, like my native Australia as a Federation of different states, instead of a fractious quasi-empire held together by force such as was the Soviet Union or the old Yugoslavia.
This contrasts with the actual history of exclusion, civil war and militarism that brought about the collapse of the Roman Republic and the institution of the Empire. From this point onwards Rome had locked itself into an attitude of arrogance and brutality that could last only so long as it could muster the military strength to enforce their rule. It was inherently fragile.
What could such a different attitude in the First Century B.C. have achieved? Tito's books play with that question.
Published on August 24, 2016 16:53


