R.W. Krpoun's Blog, page 14
July 13, 2020
It is official
As you know, I am hesitant to public ally state what my current project is, because I have countless projects that have stalled and been set aside. In fact, Grog, Wastrel, and numerous of my novels have lurched to completion in fits and starts over a period of years.
However, I am now prepared to risk it: my current project, weighing in at 31,000 words of rough draft, is a sequel to Grog, currently with the working title of ‘Grog II’.
I will post weekly updates as to my progress, hopefully until the book is finished.
July 10, 2020
A great landmark for me
Grog just hit 100 reviews, the first time one of my novels has hit three digits. This is especially important to me as I while I will not shy away from asking for a review, I have not purchased or traded for reviews.
So I feel very revitalized and motivated, and will continue writing with renewed ambition. There’s no new word on the audio version of Grog, but I will report in when I have something.
Stay healthy everyone, and thanks for all the support.
July 6, 2020
Two of us
Two more Krpouns have immigrated to the USA, buoying our numbers to a whopping six, which is as high as it’s been since 1971!
I only know the newcomers via the Net. There’s still a number in Germany, the Czech Republic, Austria, and Brazil (that bunch came over after WW2).
We are the mithreal of the modern world.
June 1, 2020
Conspiracies
The interesting thing about conspiracies is that they take on a life of their own. People become invested in their pet theory. And should the truth come out on a mature conspiracy, a significant part of the interested parties will simply refuse to believe it, and incorporate the event into their ongoing theory.
A conspiracy theory, IMO, is a means to an end, not a search for the truth. It comforts, it neutralizes a threat.
Conspiracy theories are a hedge against fear because they bring order back to the world. They deny that civilization is an incredibly fragile mesh of imperfect systems operating one step ahead of disaster, and instead focuses on the idea that events happened because they were planned. It is much easier to live in a world where malignant forces cause events, than one where terrible things happen for no good reason.
Taken to the next step of belief, a conspiracy theory empowers: you’re not some pointless wanker who doesn’t matter to your government or the economic powers-that-be or 99.99999999% of the population, you’re one of the ones who really KNOWS whats going on.
Conspiracy theories are beautiful; they are a direct, living link back to the distant days when oral traditions were the foundation of shared culture. They are the foundation of our writer’s trade, and they are proof that Humans are not as faceless a mob as they so often appear, but a community of people with depth.
The muse is upon me, and I am writing well. More as the project develops.
May 18, 2020
Still writing
The audio paperwork is done, so that project is out of my hands. Meanwhile, I am still pounding the keyboard. No major break-throughs to report, but rough draft is rough draft, and I expect most projects to someday reach the finish line. As to which will be next, I cannot say, but I am hoping to release another book before the end of the year.
What will it be? I can’t say just yet. But I believe it will break loose.
May 12, 2020
A New Venue, and a big surprise
Well, last week I received an inquiry from Tantor Publishing for the rights to release an audio version of Grog.
Obviously, I was very pleased, as Tantor is a well-established publisher in the audio field. And a couple exchanges of e-mails, we hammered out an agreement, and I should be signing the contract this week.
I’m actually getting an advance! A very small advance, but an advance all the same. I am very excited about expanding into the audio realm, which can only help my name branding.
I’m hoping that success with Grog will lead Tantor to pick up a couple more of my titles.
In the meantime, I am still hammering the keyboard and hunting inspiration. Stay safe, everyone.
April 28, 2020
Ode to a destroyed series
I’ve always been a fan of the Gotrek and Felix novels; while the early books were a little rough, and they frequently changed authors, it provided a tour of a vast and detailed setting such as has been seldom been done.
The novels were only loosely tied together at first, but as the series went on, they moved towards a coherent and intriguing central core, especially the five by Nathan Long.
Then the Black Library changed authors again, and abandoned the plot Long had built up. And for inexplicable reasons, they deliberately killed off every major character set in the War Hammer setting.
It is inexplicable to me why anyone would do this.
Yes, I have killed off a main character or two in my time; I have done it for the sake of the story, and to avoid being the sort of author who has a predictable plot line. But to destroy a number of series? Unimaginable.
So I re-read the last few books, and mourn beloved characters. Much as I watch my Firefly DVDs.
April 6, 2020
Haunted by opening paragraphs
Some people are haunted by loss, by what could have been, by lost loves and days gone by.
Me, I’m being haunted by opening lines to unwritten books. I’ve had it before; Zerk’s opening was written after a couple weeks of this feeling; finally I knocked out the first chapter, the project stalled, and life went on. Several other inactive projects have gone that route as well. Perhaps someday they will become novels.
But for the nonce, I am haunted. It is there when I go to sleep, it rushes in when I wake, it hangs over me like an itch. Simply sitting down and writing it will not work, I need a bigger picture, so until the entire picture comes together, I’m haunted by what will be.
It’s not a bad thing.
March 30, 2020
Stay and home and read more books
Preferable some of mine.
Personally, I think the stay at home policy is doing far more damage to the economy than to the virus’ chances, except in hard-hit areas such as New York or Louisiana.
Still, politicians need to feel like they’re doing something.
I hope all my readers (and people everywhere) are safe and healthy, and weather this pandemic with nothing more than the trauma of living with dwindling supplies of toilet paper.
In the meantime, I am hammering at the keyboard on the next book. I have to say, for a writer of zombie tales the news is conducive to inspiration.
Good luck, and God Bless, everyone.
March 27, 2020
Nation building: the failure of cumulative effort
For years I have studied the Vietnam War with a growing emphasis on the advisory effort, and as of late I have been studying the advisory efforts in Iraq prior to the advent of ISIS/ISIL. The inescapable conclusion I have reached is that both efforts encountered the same problems, and both failed to achieve their intended goals.
The US doctrine in Vietnam was sound, and in three parts: 1) use US military force to hammer down the invasion of North Vietnamese regular forces coming south while suppressing the indigenous Veit Cong. While this was going on, 2) the existing advisory effort would build up ARVN (the South Vietnamese Army) and the associated forces to a point where they could exert government control on their own. And 3), civilian advisory would help the South Vietnamese government institutions mature and earn popular support.
The VC were utterly destroyed by 1968 (it helped that the Soviet-trained North Vietnamese was not unhappy to see them go, as having experienced indigenous guerrillas around was not conducive to a calm absorption of the target nation; the Soviets used similar tactics with the Polish Home Army in 1944). The NVA were fought to a standstill. When Nixon brought the bombing campaign back, the North Vietnamese went to the peace table.
This should have had a happy ending, except that the advisory campaigns wre by and large complete failures.
The concept of the advisory effort was sound: experienced US personnel would integrate at every level of the army and civilian government and help their Vietnamese counterparts absorb the lessons, training, and experience that an instant nation created from an abruptly freed colony lacked. They would also help the Vietnamese absorb the military and civil aid being pumped into the country. Key Vietnamese personnel would be sent to the USA for advanced and technical training. North of the DMZ, the Soviets and Chinese were doing the same thing.
On the technical side, the US effort was an unqualified success; by the time the US ground forces withdrew in accordance with the peace agreement, the South Vietnamese had, and could operate/maintain, everything from long-range radio systems to combat jets.
On the Human side, the US effort was a complete failure. Corruption was epidemic in both military and civilian organizations. Promotions were issued on the basis of political reliability, and the US utterly failed to convince the majority of ARVN and civil leaders that the USA would actually pull out and go home.
The advisory effort failed to build a military where professionalism and competence were routinely valued and rewarded, and where the organization was valued and served as an institution.
John Paul Vann, the shining star of the advisory effort, observed that after 12 years of advisory effort, the Vietnamese had ‘one year of advise repeated 12 times’. While the South Vietnamese were capable of fighting as well and hard as their northern counterparts, their military lacked the technical and organization values of an well-grounded system, so consistent performance was impossible.
Advisers rotated out every year, and with each rotation a new team had to struggle with language and cultural barriers while trying to incorporate organizational change while lacking any real authority. There was no cumulative effect of years of advisory effort: each new set of advisers rotated in and found the clock was set back to near the starting point.
When the NVA invaded south in 1975, using more tanks than Patton had ever commanded, many ARVN units stood and fought well, while an equal number simply collapsed and fled. Coupled with the decision by Congress to not honor our treaty obligations to provide military munitions, supplies, and air support, South Vietnam was doomed.
How it could have turned out differently is amply demonstrated by two examples. The first is the Army of North Vietnam: the Soviets and Chinese sent advisers in even as WW2 was waning, but instead of offering advice, they were empowered to give orders. Locals who did not cooperate or perform to desired standards were sacked, and often jailed. The result was a professional, modern military.
The second example was the Special Forces/CIA controlled MIKE Forces, which were battalions of various ethnic minorities and Cambodian volunteers who were commanded, trained, and paid by US forces, and which uniformly performed as well as any combatants in the conflict.
Ironically, these methods mirror that of the birth of the US Army, in which Baron von Stuben, a German professional soldier, was made a flag officer of the Continental Army and charged with training the US forces to a professional standard.
Fast forward to Iraq. The US handily toppled Saddam Hussain’s regime, and then undertook to build a democratic nation in its place.
To do so, we applied a three-part strategy: 1) the US military would defeat the various insurgent/loyalist factions, 2) military and contract advisers would organize and train a new army and revamp the existing police forces, while 3) civilian advisers would build a new government.
Part 1 went well; the US/Coalition military crushed the opposition, and stability extended control over the nation (over time, but we are talking in strategic terms).
Parts 2 and 3 were more rocky; once again, the technical aspect went well. Pilots, mechanics, and the like were trained and the force was equipped with suitable gear, a mix of US gear and legacy equipment from the Saddam regime. But the Human aspect failed miserably: corruption was rife, and the differences between muslim faiths, and tribal groups, and the Kurds/Iraqis were never significantly addressed. Team after team arrived, struggled with language and cultural barriers, and attempted to persuade the local leaders to follow new doctrines, only to rotate home on shedule as new teams arrived.
The job basically done, the US/Coalition forces withdrew, and once they were safely out, ISIS/ISIL, with solid foreign backing, hit the Iraqis. Once again, some units stayed loyal and fought well, while others simply folded.
I firmly believe that the lessons are inescapable: advising does not work. Either send in personnel on multi-year tours with the authority to command, or do not try at all.