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DDoP Everyday Drabbles #13: The Duelists

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Welcome to Everyday Drabbles for the Dog Days of Podcasting! Today’s story is “The Duelists.”

Image is “Deadly in So Many Ways,” by Falashad, presented under a CC Attribution 2.0 Generic License.
Music by Kevin MacLeod.

Have a fabulous day!

DDoP Everyday Drabbles #12: The Stakeout

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Welcome to day twelve of Everyday Drabbles for The Dog Days of Podcasting! Today’s Drabble is “The Stakeout!

The Image in today’s episode is “Market Day” by John Haslam, presented under a CC 2.0 Generic License.
Music is by Kevin MacLeod.
Have a fabulous day!

DDoP Everyday Drabbles #11: The Archeologists

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Hello and welcome to Everyday Drabbles by Hugh J. O’Donnell

Today’s story is “The Archeologists.” Music provided by Kevin MacLeod.

DDoP Everyday Drabbles #9: The Car

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Welcome to Everyday Drabbles by Hugh J. O’Donnell!
Today’s Drabble is “The Car.”
Image: MotorBlog.com
Music by Kevin MacLeod.

Have a fabulous day!

DDoP Everyday Drabbles #7: Macroeconomics

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Music in today’s Episode by Kevin MacLeod.
Image is “Lognboat” by Theo Laugh, shared under a Creative Commons, Attribution, Non-Commercial 2.0 license.

I’ll see you tomorrow for another story. Until then, have a fabulous day!

DDoP Everyday Drabbles #6: Upgrade

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DDoP Everyday Drabbles #03: Lazy Saturday / Hatchet

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Welcome to day three of Everyday Drabbles for the Dog Days of Podcasting! Today I took it easy and recovered from the week, ran some errands, and caught up on the DDoP feed while making dinner.
Today’s story is “Hatchet.”

Music in today’s episode is from Incompetech.com.
Subscribe to the Dog Days of Podcasting Feed at their website!

DDoP Everyday Drabbles #2: Preparation / The Chosen One

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Hello!
Welcome back to day two of Everyday Drabbles for the Dog Days of Podcasting! Today I talk about preparing for the Better Off Read Summer Book Festival at the end of this month.
Today’s Drabble is “The Chosen One!”

Music in today’s podcast is from Kevin MacLeod!

DDoP Everyday Drabbles #1: Introduction / Landing

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Hello!
Welcome to Day one of the Dog Days of Podcasting! This year I am performing some of my favorite Everyday Drabbles and discussing editing, tabling at the upcoming Better Off Read literary festival in Lewiston, NY, and whatever else strikes my fancy.
Today’s Drabble is “Landing.”

Music in today’s podcast are “Danse Macabre” and “Ghost Processional – Alternate” By Kevin Macleod.

Hugh Likes Fiction: The Butcher of the Forest

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The Butcher of the Forest
Written by Premee Mohamed
Published by Tordotcom

The Skinny: A dark fairytale about the rules of power: how to bend them, and how they break you.

The villagers stay away from the North Woods. They raise their children on the stories of the things that live in the forest and the strange, magical realm in its heart. They memorize the rules they will need to survive should they wander too far into the trees. But while the knowledge was passed on, it never reached the Tyrant, who conquered the village and established his castle on the outskirts. Nor did it reach his two children.
So when Veris is roused before dawn and brought before the Tyrant, she knows what he will demand before he tells her: His two children are missing, and as the only living person to venture into the North Woods and the Elmever that lies within its boundaries, she will bring them back.
In this dark fairy tale reversal over Hansel and Gretel, everything resolves around power, and the rules it follows. Contrasting the typical rules of entering a fairyland (don’t eat anything, don’t give your real name, don’t try and negotiate) with life under a dictatorial regime is a brutal and brilliant choice. Fascists are as capricious and dangerous as the fey. Their rules are no less byzantine, and the penalties for breaking them are no less deadly.
Mohamed’s writing is spare and sharp as a knife, compressing the story into a single day. This is a quick but by no means easy read. The story is gripping, and the characters have depths that peek in just at the edges of their dialog and the narration. This book will get its hooks in you until the final, brutal reveal. I highly recommend it. The Butcher of the Forest is available in print from your local independent book store, or in digital formats from the usual online storefronts.

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