Nurse of Pain

Nurse of Pain

Nurse of Pain

This was taken at one of my last visits to the Whitby Goth Weekend as a photographer.

At the top of the steps to the church there is a nice place to sit and you can catch people in quite natural poses as they get to the top of the climb rather than all the staged poses that are available throughout the town.

This woman seemed to breeze up the steps and pause for a moment waiting for her struggling companions, and I was really pleased with the photograph.

but what I wasn’t really pleased with was the pack of male photographers hounding young women to get the perfect shot, I felt tainted by what I saw that year and haven’t returned as a photographer, just as someone who enjoys the spectacle.

This is available to buy on my Redbubble account.

Failed Summer Vacation

Heuijung Hur, Paige Aniyah Morris. Scratch Books, (183p) ISBN: 9781068355509. Contemporary Fiction, read 11/04/25, Paperback ★★★★☆

Failed Summer Vacation

Failed Summer Vacation

I was initially unsure of getting this one as I was feeling a bit burnt out with contemporary fiction at the time I was offered it, but I thought a collection of short stories should be OK.

So happy I took the chance as this is such a compelling debut collection from Heuijung Hur.

Each story stood strong within itself but they all added to a greater whole within the collection, all had a deep feeling of isolation with lots of nuance about that isolation throughout. Going from weird to disturbing, each had such a strong hook that kept you going to find which path the pain was coming from and where it would go in the end.

The only frustration I found was a purposeful one in that some of the stories felt fragmented and unfinished, but this is a reflection of the pain and uncertainty we all feel through life, especially in our relationships where sometimes we are so unsure of our place within our own life.

Enjoyed is not the word that I could really use for this collection, though there was a sense of enjoyment in following the stories and deciphering what was happening and feeling the mirroring of these emotions from your own experiences, working its way into your psyche through great turns of phrase and observation of the feelings of people detached from ‘normal’ emotional responses.

If you want an emotionally challenging read, and one that turns the mirror onto your own emotions this is a treat, being well written and full of recognisable behavioural observations.

I received this from Scratch Books in exchange for an honest review.

Return of the Lazy Dungeon Master

Michael Shea. Independently Published, (94p) ISBN: 9781726631822. RPG Guide, read 28/05/25, Paperback ★★★★☆

Return of the Lazy Dungeon Master

Return of the Lazy Dungeon Master

I’ve had this sat on my shelves for about four years now as I bought it just before I stopped having anything to do with group gaming, so I just didn’t bother reading it.

Until now, as I’m starting to think about getting back into group gaming once more and I really used to enjoy DMing.

This is a set of ‘rules’ to help run your campaigns and sessions easier, to help you be a ‘lazy’ DM.

It was a fascinating read as each of the steps make a lot of sense especially if you’re time poor and want to get the most out of your sessions, and the emphasis on the DM having a core knowledge of the players at the heart of the game makes so much sense.

I’ll probably end up using quite a few of these aids to DMing, but since I love the whole world building malarky they will probably end up as tools in the toolbox for anything that needs to happen on the fly, especially if players decide to make their own merry way through the world and ignore most of the hints and hooks as they usually do…

The best use of this for me would be for impromptu sessions, getting new players on board with a quick low-level adventure and such.

Well written and well executed toolbox to make running your tabletop sessions smoothly and with minimum fuss.

It has also reminded me that slyflourish.com is out there.

Hunting Harkonnens

The Road to Dune

The Road to Dune

This is the start of the Dune Universe readathon, a short story by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson collected in The Road to Dune book

An interesting story set in pre-Butlerian Jihad times and showing the main Harkonnen lord as still being ruthless and exploitative. Though his son Piers wants to change.

It introduces us to the Cymeks and thinking machines.

Overall had a very 70s feel to the story which seems very appropriate for the start to the universe.

Exciting little adventure with a lot of foreshadowing

Future Planning

The All Is One

The All Is One

I’ve had a reseller account at Heart Internet since around 2004 and was reasonably successful for quite a while but over the last several years people have been dropping off and I’ve found I’ve no energy to work to replace them.

This is where I’ve been hosting my own domains as I had no need to pay for the hosting costs as it was covered by incoming fees from my clients, this has changed and I’m now having to pay some money each month out of my own pocket and it’s getting close to where it’s becoming uneconomical blogging from there.

In preparation for the time when I move from Heart I’ve setup this blog where I’ll be mirroring everything from the other blogs and Ko-Fi.

The added benefit of here is that it has https which everyone seems to complain about the others not having.

This is all in anticipation of change and with me not wanting to be all out there much longer, I’ll be turning back to clocks to the GeoCities days where I blogged about whatever I liked and had a small social media footprint.

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