If you have been following this blog you know that it has been sometime since I posted. I've been very preoccupied with putting the final touches to my new young reader's novel, seeing it into print and starting marketing process. I've found that final step to be the most tedious and time consuming of the entire process!
Over 42,000 people have visited this blog as of August 2014. I'm humbled and gratified for that and I thank everyone who has visited here. This blog will stay in place, but new blog posts, when I have time to write them, will be on my new author's website which you can find at www.mehubbs.com.
I encourage you to check my blog there from time to time, or sign up for website updates to let you know that something new has been posted. I'm currently writing a sequel to my first book and it has already taken more of my time than I expected.
My latest book was release in July 2014. The Archer's Son is getting great reviews and stayed #1 for a month in Amazon's Hot New Releases for Kid's Medieval Fiction. You can read reviews or purchased at this LINK.
The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou is also on Amazon and is also available at most Books a Million stores.
Showing posts with label The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 12, 2014
Thursday, October 10, 2013
The Boy in the Shadows
I’ve been asked by several readers how my publisher
was able to capture the photograph on the cover of The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou.
They are surprised when I tell them that the photo was taken in my
backyard! Well, sorta taken in my
backyard.
Photoshop is an amazing tool. The background photo of the swampy red sunset
was purchased from an on line image seller.
The front image is a combination of computer magic and household
devices. I dressed the model in 19th
century clothing and then put him in front of my back porch light. My wife, Phyllis, then trained a red colored
spot light on the young man from out of the frame. The photo, taken from the model’s back in low
light, resulted in a nice red tinted out-line around his silhouette. He was then “lifted” from the photo frame and
layered on top of the swamp photo.
Who is the model?
Meet seventeen year old Jalen Lanier.
Jalen was sixteen when he posed for the book cover. He is the son of a
co-worker and was happy to play the part of Ephraim Wright, the main character
of The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou, for
the book cover. Jalen is a fine young
man and I enjoyed working with him on two photo shoots to get the light just
right on this shot. I appreciate his
help and patience immensely!
I’ll be using a similar technique for my next book, The Archer’s Son. I already have a gorgeous background photo of
a European Castle at sunset. A
photographer in Russia has graciously given me permission to use his work. Now, who will be my young archer?
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
My First Hate Mail - I Guess I Should Be Proud!
Someone told me that bad publicity is as important as good publicity.
I recently received my first bit of hate mail concerning my historical novel, The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou. I welcome constructive criticism as it will help me become a better writer. But this hate filled message, which came to my author's Facebook page, had little to do with my book and much to do with Southern apologetics and racial tinged hate that the Son's of Confederate Veterans (SCV) and other such Neo-Confederate organizations spew. I recognize the talking points.
I've tried to be a member of the SCV on two different occasions. The fist was in my home town when I was in my teens. The second in my adopted home during the early 1990s. I viewed it as a heritage organization to remember the four years of sacrifice our southern ancestors endured during the Civil War. Both times I was disappointed to find the leadership was more interested in making excuses for the Southern cause and denying that slavery had anything to do with the decision to go to war. I found few scholars, and many haters.
I don't know if Charles Wright is a member of the SCV, but his letter exemplifies the rhetoric that I heard over and over again during my time in that organization.
I'll post his letter below and my response. There were 35 other comments between Mr. Wright first message and the last comment. Mr. Wright's vitriol intensified as my supporters responded. It seems that he was bashing a book that I had not yet written. His complaints had little if anything to do with Wattensaw Bayou. If you would like to read the entire exchange you can find it on my author's Facebook HERE. Look for the Charles Wright's post under "Recent Posts by Others" on the right side of the page.
Sir: The terrible bias in your book, the Secret of Wattensaw Bayou, degrades an otherwise wonderful book. The Union army invaded a sovereign nation, committed war on civilians as a matter of strategy, raped all colors, stole from all colors, burned out all colors, killed for the fun of it all colors, salted ground, poisoned wells, etc. The Confederate army, always offered Confederate Script for anything they took, plus even rounded up men that didn't abide by these rules, and court marshaled them even putting them in front of a firing squad. The war was with the Godly South, vs the godless north, your story is a travesty to the memory of Good Confederate Soldiers. I would hope that you would study history, and be ashamed of shaming the memory of such good people, while sanctifying the aggressors, who committed these atrocities against our civilian people! Please study the history of these two people, and learn the truth! The war wasn't about slavery, and slavery was on it's way out. I enjoy even fiction work about this area, but don't enjoy someone putting such bias into it, and trying to damage the names of good people, states, and nations.
Mark Hubbs
I recently received my first bit of hate mail concerning my historical novel, The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou. I welcome constructive criticism as it will help me become a better writer. But this hate filled message, which came to my author's Facebook page, had little to do with my book and much to do with Southern apologetics and racial tinged hate that the Son's of Confederate Veterans (SCV) and other such Neo-Confederate organizations spew. I recognize the talking points.
I've tried to be a member of the SCV on two different occasions. The fist was in my home town when I was in my teens. The second in my adopted home during the early 1990s. I viewed it as a heritage organization to remember the four years of sacrifice our southern ancestors endured during the Civil War. Both times I was disappointed to find the leadership was more interested in making excuses for the Southern cause and denying that slavery had anything to do with the decision to go to war. I found few scholars, and many haters.I don't know if Charles Wright is a member of the SCV, but his letter exemplifies the rhetoric that I heard over and over again during my time in that organization.
I'll post his letter below and my response. There were 35 other comments between Mr. Wright first message and the last comment. Mr. Wright's vitriol intensified as my supporters responded. It seems that he was bashing a book that I had not yet written. His complaints had little if anything to do with Wattensaw Bayou. If you would like to read the entire exchange you can find it on my author's Facebook HERE. Look for the Charles Wright's post under "Recent Posts by Others" on the right side of the page.
Sir: The terrible bias in your book, the Secret of Wattensaw Bayou, degrades an otherwise wonderful book. The Union army invaded a sovereign nation, committed war on civilians as a matter of strategy, raped all colors, stole from all colors, burned out all colors, killed for the fun of it all colors, salted ground, poisoned wells, etc. The Confederate army, always offered Confederate Script for anything they took, plus even rounded up men that didn't abide by these rules, and court marshaled them even putting them in front of a firing squad. The war was with the Godly South, vs the godless north, your story is a travesty to the memory of Good Confederate Soldiers. I would hope that you would study history, and be ashamed of shaming the memory of such good people, while sanctifying the aggressors, who committed these atrocities against our civilian people! Please study the history of these two people, and learn the truth! The war wasn't about slavery, and slavery was on it's way out. I enjoy even fiction work about this area, but don't enjoy someone putting such bias into it, and trying to damage the names of good people, states, and nations.
Mark Hubbs
Mr.
Wright, I think it is time that I chime in this discussion. I'm gratified that you took time to read my
book, "The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou." Did you have ancestors in the DeValls Bluff
area? If so, we might be cousins. The Jonathan Wright in the books is a real
person - my G-G-G Grandfather. He was
one of the first settlers in the White River valley, there long before
statehood.
If you
did indeed read the book, you will know that the story is a snapshot in time
for one family in Prairie County Arkansas between June 1862 and August
1863. I'm perplexed about your concern
that I portrayed the Union in such a good light and did not describe atrocities
committed by Union troops. Heck, I
hardly portrayed Union troops at all!
There is a second hand account of the Union Navy raid at DeValls Bluff
half way through the book and then in the last chapter the US Army marches near
the family's home. There were no
Northern atrocities at those places on those days. I would have had to fabricate any atrocities
to fit them into the story. In the
interest of accurate history, I'm sure you would not have me do that.
I sense
that you are actually more upset that I have portrayed the south and the CS
soldiers in a negative light. I can
assure you that all of the issues that the Wright family dealt with are actual
problems that many southerners caught in the War, saw firsthand.
·
Slave
patrollers did search for, capture and mistreat slaves who were away from their
homes without permission. This went on
before and during the War.
·
After
the Conscription Act of 1862, men were indeed forced into the CS Army,
sometimes at gunpoint.
·
Men
did desert in large numbers, and they did have the threat of trial and
execution if caught.
·
Slave
owners were compelled to "lease" their slaves to the CS government
for use in the War effort. The death
rate from disease in those labor camps was just as appalling as those in the
soldier's camps.
·
The
CS government did not protect their citizens from the lawless bands of men who
terrorized the remote areas of the state.
·
Slavery
did exist, 4 million people were in bondage, and their lives and labor was
being stolen from them. Many of them
suffered terribly, physically and emotionally, at the hands of their
masters.
As far
as "dishonoring" CS soldiers.
There was only one character in the book portrayed as a villain (Capt
Campbell.) There are others who are
treated neutrally or as honorable and loyal men of the community.
As far
as your statement that the War had nothing to do with slavery, we cannot know
the hearts of men who lived 150 years ago, unless they left their thoughts on
paper. As a result, we don't know the
motivations of the average CS soldier.
However, we do have clear insight into the motivations of the decision makers
who precipitated Secession and the War.
This is the central point of a letter from Alabama's Gov Moore when he
called the Secession Convention for Alabama in 1861:
"Who is Mr.
Lincoln, whose election is now beyond question? He is the head of a great
sectional party calling itself Republican: a party whose leading object is the
destruction of the institution of slavery as it exists in the slaveholding
States. Their most distinguished leaders, in and out of Congress, have publicly
and boldly proclaimed this to be their intention and unalterable determination.
Their newspapers are filled with similar declarations. Are they in earnest? Let
their past acts speak for them.
Nearly every one of the
non-slaveholding States have been for years under the control of the Black
Republicans. A large majority of these States have nullified the fugitive slave
law, and have successfully resisted its execution. They have enacted penal
statutes, punishing, by fine and imprisonment in the penitentiary, persons who
may pursue and arrest fugitive slaves in said State. They have by law, under
heavy penalties, prohibited any person from aiding the owner to arrest his
fugitive slave, and have denied us the use of their prisons to secure our
slaves until they can be removed from the State. They have robbed the South of
slaves worth millions of dollars, and have rendered utterly ineffectual the
only law passed by Congress to protect this species of property. . .
All these things have
been effected, either by the unconstitutional legislation of free States, or by
combinations of individuals. These facts prove that they are not only in
earnest and intent upon accomplishing their wicked purposes, but have done all
that local legislation and individual efforts could effect.
Knowing that their
efforts could only be partially successful without the aid of the Federal
Government, they for years have struggled to get control of the Legislative and
Executive Departments thereof. They have now succeeded, by large majorities, in
all the non-slaveholding States except New Jersey, and perhaps California and
Oregon, in electing Mr. Lincoln, who is pledged to carry out the principles of
the party that elected him. The course of events show clearly that this party
will, in a short time have a majority in both branches of Congress. It will
then be in their power to change the complexion of the Supreme Court so as to
make it harmonize with Congress and the President. When that party get
possession of all the Departments of Government, with the purse and the sword,
he must be blind indeed who does not see that slavery will be abolished in the
District of Columbia, in the dock-yards and arsenals, and wherever the Federal
Government has jurisdiction.
It will be excluded from
the Territories, and other free States will in hot haste be admitted into the
Union, until they have a majority to alter the Constitution. Then slavery will
be abolished by law in the States, and the "irrepressible conflict"
will end; for we are notified that it shall never cease, until "the foot
of the slave shall cease to tread the soil of the United States." The
state of society that must exist in the Southern States, with four millions of
free negroes and their increase, turned loose upon them, I will not discuss--it
is too horrible to contemplate.
I have only noticed such
of the acts of the Republican party as I deem necessary to show that they are
in earnest, and determined to carry out their publicly avowed intentions--and
to show that their success has been such as should not fail to create the
deepest concern for the honor and safety of the Southern States.--Now, in view
of the past and our prospects for the future, what ought we to do? What do
wisdom and prudence dictate?--What do honor and safety require at our hands?"
Here is
a link to the minutes of the Alabama Secession Convention. It is amazing how much the preservation of
slavery is discussed during this convention
http://docsouth.unc.edu/imls/smithwr/smith.html
Best RegardsSunday, June 23, 2013
My Book Availible in Kindle Format Now - and FREE for limited time!
Its Out! My publisher has just released Wattensaw Bayou in ebook/Kindle format and it is FREE for the first four days. You must hurry, they will start charging for it after June 25th. There is an Amazon link below.
Thanks!
Mark Hubbs
... The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou is an action packed yet sometimes touching tale of war, family and forgiveness set during the twilight days of slavery.This is a side of the Old South that is seldom seen.If you love Civil War or Southern history, The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou is a must read!
Thanks!
Mark Hubbs
... The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou is an action packed yet sometimes touching tale of war, family and forgiveness set during the twilight days of slavery.This is a side of the Old South that is seldom seen.If you love Civil War or Southern history, The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou is a must read!
You can download it HERE: The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou
Friday, January 25, 2013
Cover art for my new book!
My novel, The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou, is slated to be released in early March, 2013 by Blue Water Publications. I was very excited to see the first draft of the cover art last week. Still a bit of work to be done, but this is essentially how the cover will appear.
Stay tuned for an official announcement when the book is availible at Amazon and Barnes & Noble.
This is the blurb that will go on the back cover. Let me know if this would grab your attention as a potential buyer!
"In the twilight days of slavery, Ephraim Wright suffers the depredations of war along with the white family who reared him. Raised with the family since he was two years old, he is never once required to call Jonathan Wright, his benevolent owner, "master." He is stranded between two worlds; that of free whites, and of enslaved blacks. His life is irreversibly changed when Confederate conscript officers take the family's oldest son at gun point and a bushwhacker gang guns down Jonathan Wright. The law forbids a slave to touch a firearm, because a “negro with a gun is a nervous thing to white folks.” But where his family is concerned, Ep is never one to care about what the slave laws say. By seeking to send men to hell, will Ephraim send himself there as well?"
Stay tuned for an official announcement when the book is availible at Amazon and Barnes & Noble.
This is the blurb that will go on the back cover. Let me know if this would grab your attention as a potential buyer!
"In the twilight days of slavery, Ephraim Wright suffers the depredations of war along with the white family who reared him. Raised with the family since he was two years old, he is never once required to call Jonathan Wright, his benevolent owner, "master." He is stranded between two worlds; that of free whites, and of enslaved blacks. His life is irreversibly changed when Confederate conscript officers take the family's oldest son at gun point and a bushwhacker gang guns down Jonathan Wright. The law forbids a slave to touch a firearm, because a “negro with a gun is a nervous thing to white folks.” But where his family is concerned, Ep is never one to care about what the slave laws say. By seeking to send men to hell, will Ephraim send himself there as well?"
Sunday, August 12, 2012
"She Washed and Ironed Till She Died" Amanda Hulett, Former Slave
My novel, The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou relies a great deal on attitudes, experiences and dialog of former slaves taken from the Slave Narratives: A Folk History of Slavery in the United States from Interviews with Former Slaves. These are transcribed interviews with ex-slaves that were done by the Federal Government in the early 1930s. 2,194 such interviews were conducted. My home state of Arkansas had the largest number of interviews at 677. The slave girl Mandy, who appears in Chapter Twenty of The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou, is based on Amanda Hulett mentioned in the Slave Narratives. She was owned by Dr. Williams C. Hazen, also a character in my book.
(You can read about another character based on a real slave and my chance discovery of his grave site in an earlier entry here: http://erasgone.blogspot.com/2012/07/goosebumps-and-headstones-in-addition.html)
Amanda was one of 25+ slaves who were brought to Prairie County Arkansas from Tennessee by Dr. Hazen in the early 1850s. When the Union Army approached in August 1863, Hazen took his slaves and refugeed to Texas. Hazen burned everything he could not carry with him, including his entire cotton crop. He returned to Prairie County in 1865, but left his young wife Mary in a lonely Texas grave. Many of Hazen's slaves continued to work for him and his sons after freedom came. An interview with Amanda's daughter for the Arkansas Slave Narratives indicates that the Hazens treated their former slaves well and provided fair wages, homes, and land for a church and school. The town of Hazen, Arkansas, founded in 1872, encompasses much of the area of Dr. Hazen's farm.
Here is the complete transcription of the interview of Emma Smith, Amanda's daughter:
Interviewer: Miss Irene Robertson
Person interviewed: Emma Hulett Smith; Hazen, Arkansas
Age: 66
Person interviewed: Emma Hulett Smith; Hazen, Arkansas
Age: 66
"I was the first colored baby born here or very near here. There was only three houses in this town (Hazen). I think they muster been log houses.
My folks belong to Dr. Hazen. He brought families from Tennessee. When the war broke out he took em to Texas. Then he brought em back here. When they was freed I heard my mother say they worked on for him and his boys (Alex and Jim Hazen) and they paid them. He was good to them. They had er plenty always. After the war they lived in good log houses and he give em land and lumber for the church. Same church we got cept a storm tore it down and this one built in place of it. He let em have a school. Same place it stands now. My mother (Mandy Hulett) got a Union pension till she died. She cooked at the first hotel in Hazen for John Lane. She washed and ironed till she died. We girls helped and we wash and iron all we can get now. None of us not on relief (Fannie nor Emma). I can't wash no more. My hands and arms swell up with rheumatism. I still iron all I can get.
The present conditions seems awful unsettled; wages low, prices high and work scarce at times. Men can get work in the hay two months and bout two months work in the rice or pickin cotton, either one. Then the work has played clean out till hay time next year.
"How do they live? Some of their wifes cooks for white people and they eat all they make up soon as they get paid. Only way they live."
Just like Israel Thomas, I found Mandy's grave after discovering her in the Slave Narratives and writing her into my novel. It seemed that she and Thomas were waiting for me to find them in this lonely graveyard not far from Wattensaw Bayou.
If you look closely at Mandy's headstone you will see a curious inscription. This is the symbol for the International Order of Knights and Daughters of Tabor. It is often found on the headstones of African Americans who passed in the late 19th and early 20th Centuries.
![]() |
| Knights and Daughters of Tabor Pin. Courtesy of Pris Weathers at http://www.arkansasties.com/ |
Rev. Moses Dickson founded the International Order of the Knights and Daughters of Tabor in 1872 as a fraternal order based on benevolence and financial programs. It also encouraged education and some chapters held literary and social entertainment. It was organized similar to Freemasonry and Woodmen of the World, except that it accepted men and women on equal terms. The order offered a burial policy and weekly cash payments for the sick and infirm. Mandy's headstone was probably provided by the Order, and the "Union pension" that Emma mentions may have been Order benefits.
The Order was most active in the former Slave States, but had chapters in 30 states, England, and the West Indies. Very little information is available on-line concerning the Order. It seems to have died out sometime in the 1960s. The Arkansas headquarters for the Order, Taborian Hall, is still standing in Little Rock and is on the National Register of Historic Places. More photos and information concerning the building can be found at this website: http://www.arkansasties.com/Pulaski/Structures10/TaborianHall1.htm
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| Taborian Hall in Little Rock. Courtesy of Pris Weathers at http://www.arkansasties.com/ |
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/snhtml/
Sunday, July 29, 2012
"The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou" will be published in March 2013
Huzzah! I finally signed my book contract Saturday July 28th Blue Water Publications for "The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou." My thanks go to Scott Lyndon. He introduced me to Angela Broyles of Blue Water Publications. And, an equally big thank you to Angela for her confidence in me, and the story of Ephraim Wright.
Angela would like a sequel as soon as possible, so I'll be parking the novel I have been working on ( The Archer's Son ) and moving from 15th Century England back to 19th Century Arkansas to finish "Poison Springs." "Poison Springs" will hopefully be the second of a three part series.
Stay tuned for news on the release of the print version next spring.
Now, where did I put that first chapter of Poison Springs that I wrote over a year ago?
Angela would like a sequel as soon as possible, so I'll be parking the novel I have been working on ( The Archer's Son ) and moving from 15th Century England back to 19th Century Arkansas to finish "Poison Springs." "Poison Springs" will hopefully be the second of a three part series.
Stay tuned for news on the release of the print version next spring.
Now, where did I put that first chapter of Poison Springs that I wrote over a year ago?
Monday, July 16, 2012
Goosebumps and Gravestones
In addition to some great family stories, an inspiration for my book, "The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou," are The Slave Narratives. These are transcribed interviews with ex-slaves that were done by the Federal Government in the early 1930s. 2,194 such interviews were conducted. My home state of Arkansas had the largest number of interviews at 677. I read many of the interviews before I realized that there was a search engine for the entire collection. I had already developed characters for my book, including a young slave man who was a lay preacher. This character was important because of his spiritual influence on my protagonist.
I searched the collection and, to my surprise and delight, found the names of three slaves who were actually owned by Dr. William Cogswell Hazen, a historical character in the story. It was almost like finding a needle in a haystack, and I had found three of them! One of these was Israel Thomas, and my young lay-preacher was soon christened "Israel" in the pages of the book.
![]() |
| Grave of Rev Israel G. Thomas |
Fast forward several months and my first opportunity to visit the old Hazen farm near Wattensaw Bayou (and now inside the town of Hazen, Arkansas.) With Geological Survey maps of the area, I was looking for cemeteries, specifically those on the old Hazen property. The first that I located on the ground was small, maybe 2 acres. The front held recent burials, but older plots dotted the back of it. There were many unmarked graves, and it was not long before I realized it was an African American cemetery. You can imagine my surprise when I found the marker in this photo. It took me a moment to realize that this was "my" Israel. The hair on the back of my neck stood up, and I got the proverbial goose bumps up my arms!
Israel was a preacher, just as I had fictionalized him in my novel. Later research told me that he founded the first Freedman's church in the new town of Hazen, Arkansas soon after the end of the War. I am still moved by this discovery.
Both of the other "Hazen" slaves that I found in the slave narratives are buried in the same poorly maintained cemetery. Their stories will come another time. It is almost like they have been waiting there all these years for someone to come and find them, in the narratives and in their graves.
"A writer must have a blog!" I've heard this many times over the last few years, from many different people. I tried my best to ignore the advice. I've seen too many blogs where the author has abandoned the effort, posts infrequently or just rambles about day-to-day personal things that do not interest me. How could I find time or inspiration to post meaningful content with any regularity?
Besides, am I a writer? Do I have any right to pretend that I can hold such an auspicious title? In the end, others will have to answer that question.
I can call myself other things. I was a soldier for many years, and still consider myself a "grunt" in my heart.
I am a historian, but my BA in history does not give me the right to claim the title. Years of research and writing articles for various magazines and publications, and several years as an Army historian grants that nomenclature. Notice I mentioned writing. To be a historian, one must be able to take the data that one has mined from the archives and impart it effectively to others. It doesn't count if you keep it to yourself. The historian's vehicle for interpreting his research is by writing. But I don't think a historian is necessarily a "writer."
| Toton Island Archaeological Survey, 2000 |
I am an archaeologist. Again my MA in archaeology gives scant credence to the title. But, my time in field (albeit limited) gives me leave to call myself an archaeologist. I don't think I embraced the title myself until I brushed the sand from the empty eye sockets of a Japanese skull in the first burial I helped to recover. The writing I may do that is associated with archaeology, does not make me a writer. It makes me a better archaeologist.
Now I've embarked on a new course where someday I may feel comfortable calling myself a "writer." I've started writing historical fiction. That is the only genre of fiction in which I will ever have an interest. Vampires, wizards, dragons or zombies will never live on any of my pages. The best stories are based on reality - ordinary people facing extraordinary circumstances. History will never run out of stories to fire my imagination.
I finished my first novel, The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou in 2010. Events have occurred that give me hope that it may be in print soon. You can read more about The Secret of Wattensaw Bayou here: https://sites.google.com/site/whenfreedomcome/home
I'm nearing completion of The Archer's Son. This is the story of a young boy who accompanies a company of archers on Henry Vs famous march into France during the Hundred Years War. It culminates is the bloody battle of Agincourt.
Some writers I know say that they must write. It is in their blood and they cannot help but write. I've never thought that. In fact I did not think I could ever produce enough to fill a blog such as this. Angela Broyles of Blue Water Publications finally convinced me that I could do so. I realized after we talked, that I write all the time. I share history, travel, artifact, historic site and archaeological information almost daily. I do it through private email, work emails, Facebook and other social media. Why couldn't I focus that writing energy on a blog instead?
So this is the first installment. Lets see if I can do it and where it will take us. This blog will have spots on many past eras (hence the name,) and may include stories, places, historical sites, artifacts from many places and times. I will also share tidbits of information that I uncover when researching and writing (there's that word again) my books and articles. I hope you enjoy it and visit often.
M.E. Hubbs
July 14, 2012Huntsville Alabama
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