CHRISTIAN COMIC ARTS SOCIETY :: A NETWORK OF CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP FOR COMICS FANS, PROS, AND AMATEURS

Michael Kayser

I'm trying to post in the Writer's List section. If it winds up saving to somewhere else, then it might not belong.

Anyway, I have earned some money from books I've written, so I guess that makes me a professional novelist.

Honestly, I'm here at CCAS on the lookout for artists who would be interested in working on graphic novels. There seem to be a lot of very talented artists working in the industry today--usually paired with some poor-to-mediocre writers. But I'll leave it at that because this is supposed to be about me.

I've written a couple hyper-niche novels in a genre that I guess doesn't exist outside my repertoire (I'll call it "gearhead adventure"), a western, and a Biblical epic; in addition to other novels under pseudonyms. I hope and pray God is glorified in all my efforts.

I used to blog as Captain Gearhead at virtualpulp.net. Reviewed a few Arkhaven titles there when it first got started (before Arktoons). Also at Seven Thunders (elijahdispatched.blogspot.com). Should still be blogging there, probably.

The aforementioned Biblical epic (Gods & Proxies) is a novelization of a screenplay I wrote for what I wanted to be an animated feature based on the Book of Joshua--but with spiritual insights gleaned from Bible scholars like Chuck Missler and Michael S. Heiser. I still think that the story would be best told in a visual medium.

I'll add that it's also the most difficult prose work I've ever brought to completion, and it took monumental effort on my part to write it. I simply am not an author who likes to write from an outline. I know writing from an outline is the pat advice for aspiring writers given prolifically from other aspiring writers; but whenever I have formed a plot outline, I've lost all interest in taking the project farther. Well, I had to work from an "outline" for this project of neccesity. The Book of Joshua is the source material and, though there are gaps in the Biblical narrative to fill; and probably a thousand different ways to "interpret" or flesh out the narrative, I refused to take creative license with the Word of God. I kept as true and accurate to the source material as I knew how. I did add a narrator who is one of the Watchers (angels referenced by Peter and Jude) who did not rebel. Maybe some would say that is creative license; but even using that device, I didn't change anything from the Biblical text.

Of all the Biblical epics brought to the big screen, none to my knowledge have centered on Joshua. He was a strong supporting character in narratives centered on Moses; and that's about it. That's a shame. Joshua and Revelation were two books I read repeatedly for years before I made Jesus Lord of my life. It's a book with the action and adventure to appeal to an unbeliever--which makes it a sort of ministry tool. And it's packed with a whole lot of awesome stuff that is missed upon casual reading.

I see a place for an excerpt below. I'll see if I can just paste my afterword there.

Well, some of it fit without the footnotes, anyway.