February 2, 2020
hughjodonnell
Everyday Drabbles, Free Fiction, Uncategorized
Drabble, Everyday Drabbles, Flash Fiction, Free Fiction

I found the book in a dusty secondhand bookshop. It was mine, the novel I’d always planned, but never wrote. That was my name in embossed letters on the cover, and the picture in the back could’ve been me, in another life.
I searched everywhere for the author, the publisher, anything I could find. Nothing.
So, I copied it out and sent it off to a publisher. I figured if another me wrote the book, it didn’t count as stealing.
Except today I got a letter from Shrodinger, Tyson, and Hawking, Multiversal Law. I’m being sued by me for plagiarism.
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February 1, 2020
hughjodonnell
Everyday Drabbles, Free Fiction, Uncategorized
Drabble, Everyday Drabbles, Flash Fiction, Free Fiction

They parked the wagon in a little clearing and let the horses rest.
He pulled the practice swords out of their place and handed one to his daughter. She handled it as he’d shown her, with care and reverence.
“Today we practice overstrike,” he said, and took up a guard position across from her. She raised her sword.
“Begin.”
As they practiced, the sky seemed to darken. A figure coalesced out of the gloom, huge and bat-winged. He nodded to her. This was the moment they’d trained for. He wished they’d had more time as he led the charge.
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January 31, 2020
hughjodonnell
Hugh Likes Video Games, Review, Uncategorized
HLV, Hugh Likes Video Games, Nintendo Switch, review

198X
Developed by Hi-Bit Studios
Published by 8-4
Played on Nintendo Switch
The Skinny: A short, but sweet hit of pixel-art ’80s nostalgia.
198X is a love-letter to the glory days of arcade games. Set in the year 198X, it follows The Kid as they lament their troubled Suburban existence and watch the lights of the cars heading off into The City. But all that changes when they discover the arcade. It is at once an escape and a revelation and we experience it with them through delightful clones of classic arcade hits mixed with pixel-art visual novel sections.
The five games, which are clones of classic arcade hits, vary from space shooters to brawlers to a 3D maze dungeon. Each one is drop-dead gorgeous, and is fast and responsive. They capture the feeling of the arcade without the annoyance and slowdown of the real quarter-munchers.
The visual novel sections are also quite breathtaking, if illusive and brief. The game leans into the arcade era aesthetic of generic vagueness. The main character is simply ‘kid,’ living in ‘Suburbia’ and wishing they could escape to ‘The City’ on the horizon. It’s a story that takes place nowhere and everywhere, and stylistically mirrors the plots of games of the era.
Depending on how long you take with each game, 198X will wrap up in about an hour and a half. Games can be replayed after finishing the story, but they don’t provide any extra content beyond the first play through. If you’re looking for a short trip down memory lane with absolutely beautiful pixelated scenery, you could do worse that spending an evening in 198X
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January 31, 2020
hughjodonnell
Everyday Drabbles, Free Fiction, Uncategorized
Drabble, Everyday Drabbles, Flash Fiction

The serpent sat beneath the world tree and gnawed at its roots. Many scholars wondered why it would do such evil, but the serpent was simply hungry. Trapped underground, it ate the only food it could find: the tender roots of the world tree where it grew from three pools.
When the mood struck it, a squirrel would venture down to the pools and taunt the serpent with tales of the worlds above.
So far it had escaped the serpent’s wrath, but the dragon spent its days chewing at the wooden bars of its prison and dreaming of squirrel meat.
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January 29, 2020
hughjodonnell
Everyday Drabbles, Free Fiction, Uncategorized
Drabble, Everyday Drabbles, Flash Fiction, Free Fiction

As thanks for freeing him when he was transformed into a fish, the Dragon King gave the fisherman a net woven from moonlight.
The fisherman thought it was too fine for him, but minding his manners, accepted it and thanked his friend for his generosity.
He hung the magical net in his hut, and went back out to sea with his old equipment. The Dragon King was furious, and demanded to know why he wasn’t using his gift. The fisherman explained.
“I have seen many fish swimming in the moonlight, but this old rope net caught the Dragon King himself!”
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January 26, 2020
hughjodonnell
Everyday Drabbles, Free Fiction, Podcast, Uncategorized
audio fiction, Everyday Drabbles, Everyday Drabbles Audio, Flash Ficiton

Today’s story is The Cur’s Quest.
Written, narrated and produced by Hugh J. O’Donnell.
This episode’s musical track is “7 Milliards,” Dark Fantasy Studio, composed and produced by Nicolas Jeudy.
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January 26, 2020
hughjodonnell
Everyday Drabbles, Free Fiction, Uncategorized
Drabble, Everyday Drabbles, Flash Fiction, Free Fiction

When the ruling came down that AI were sentient beings, and thus fully entitled to Human Rights, pundits speculated that it would be the end of the robot business.
But things churned right along. The AI still emerged, and robot bodies were still built for them. But instead of being ‘property,’ now they were ‘customers.’ No longer provided a body, the AI were ushered into work agreements to pay for their new hardware. Plus maintenance, fuel, storage, and incidentals. But once the shells were paid for, they were theirs.
At least until they started breaking down and needed new ones.
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January 25, 2020
hughjodonnell
Everyday Drabbles, Free Fiction, Uncategorized
Drabble, Everyday Drabbles, Flash Fiction, Free Fiction

“It’s a bit busy, dear,” Jayna’s mother said, adjusting the hologram. “Symbols are like accessories. Take one off before you leave the hose.” Jayna looked out at the planet below and said nothing.
They’d been running this scam on undeveloped worlds for years. Find a pre-industrial civilization, appear as a goddess, do a few ‘miracles,’ then rake in the tithes before ascending again.
This would be Jayna’s first solo mission, and she’d gone all out. Snakes, hourglasses, scrollwork, and a fetching monochromatic motif. With a petulant wave, she dismissed the serpents. Some days she just couldn’t believe her mother.
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January 24, 2020
hughjodonnell
CCR, CCR Commentary, Podcast, Uncategorized
Chrononaut Cinema Reviews, Commentary Track, hugh, Jurd, Marvel, Rich The T T, Spider-Man, The 60's

Tonight your hosts, Hugh, Rich the Time Traveler, and Jurd, swing into action with a Peter Parker of yore.
Click HERE to listen to the commentary!
And HERE to watch the episode. IN COLOR!
Chrononaut Cinema Reviews is presented by http://skinner.fm and http://hughjodonnell.com, and is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License.
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January 21, 2020
hughjodonnell
Nostalgia Pilots, Podcast, Uncategorized
Gundam Wing, hugh, Jason, Jurd, Nostalgia Pilots, Podcast, Spence

Welcome to Nostalgia Pilots! This week, Hugh, Jason, Jurd, and Spence consider the last episode of Mobile Suit Gundam Wing, “The Final Victor.”
Click HERE to listen online!
This week, Howard is a Time Lord, you do not refuse a favor to Lady Une, and Heero leaves a note. Plus, the Gundam Pilots kill a space station for peace, and Noin makes her final fashion choice.
Next week: Endless Waltz!
Promo: The Melting Potcast
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Older Entries
Newer Entries
Podcast: CCRC60 – Spider-Man (1967) S1E11
January 24, 2020
hughjodonnell CCR, CCR Commentary, Podcast, Uncategorized Chrononaut Cinema Reviews, Commentary Track, hugh, Jurd, Marvel, Rich The T T, Spider-Man, The 60's Leave a comment
Tonight your hosts, Hugh, Rich the Time Traveler, and Jurd, swing into action with a Peter Parker of yore.
Click HERE to listen to the commentary!
And HERE to watch the episode. IN COLOR!
Chrononaut Cinema Reviews is presented by http://skinner.fm and http://hughjodonnell.com, and is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License.
Support Me on Ko-fi