Paul Carney’s blog

  • Remembering past lives

    Reincarnation: There are many compelling cases of children who recall past lives. They are able to provide such convincing accounts and details of events that are not easy to dismiss. One such case is that of James Leininger, a young… Continue reading

    Remembering past lives
  • My beautiful, time travelling, adventurer 

    A time travel short story about a soul lost to time: Priya paused before putting the sleek, black headset over her weary, hungover eyes. A sudden surge of reflux engulfed her mouth, no doubt a residue from last night’s ill-advised… Continue reading

    My beautiful, time travelling, adventurer 
  • The kindness conundrum 

    How kindness can become your human superpower: Kindness is linked to improved happiness and a reduction in stress, anxiety, and feelings of isolation. There’s hard science to say it boosts mood, compassion, empathy, and self-esteem. But why are we kind?… Continue reading

    The kindness conundrum 
  • Free CPD Professional Development training videos for art teachers

    Since I retired from education in 2024, I ​have released most of my art teacher training sessions as free videos for teacher development. Hopefully they will serve as support and guidance for art teachers in Key Stages 1-3, I wish… Continue reading

    Free CPD Professional Development training videos for art teachers
  • Emotions in the driving seat

    Far from being a weakness, your emotions may actually be a source of strength: All of my life I have been labelled as an emotional person. “He’s moody.” “He’s a sulker.” “Cry baby.” “Whinger.” “Moaner.” Later in my life, work… Continue reading

    Emotions in the driving seat
  • Microbe Series 2

    Microbes 2 – pencil on paper. Another very satisfying transfer of digital drawings into traditional media. There’s something beautiful about this subject matter combined with the process of drawing. #drawing #microbes #scienceart Continue reading

    Microbe Series 2
  • The will to live

    What is the mysterious force that pervades all things and drives all of life on Earth? How knowing it can help us lead richer lives: Throughout recorded history, thinkers and natural philosophers have commented on the innate, energetic spark that… Continue reading

    The will to live
  • What should life be like?

    An analysis of life in the 21st century. What you should expect from being alive: What should life be like? What can we reasonably expect from our existence? I’m not referring to those ultra people, with extreme lifestyles, who live… Continue reading

    What should life be like?
  • Draw Like a Boss

    In this interview, author Ashley Edge and Paul Carney explore the purpose of drawing and learning to draw, including explicit instruction. Ashley Edge is a Lake District based artist and the author of the Draw Like a Boss series of… Continue reading

    Draw Like a Boss
  • Mind Control

    Oh, how I wish I had the ability to control my thoughts like a meditation master. Bad thoughts would occur, and I’d simply swat them away, able to resume my super-controlled, zen-like mental state without a care in the world.… Continue reading

    Mind Control
  • It’s Life Jim!

    How the building blocks for life may be scattered around the universe : Some scientists now believe the chances of life emerging on Earth by itself are too remote. In a very honest, refreshing, (but complex), scientific paper, Robert Endres… Continue reading

    It’s Life Jim!
  • Finding God in an age of reason

    What is the evidence for a Deist Creator and how can this belief bring a sense of purpose to our lives? What evidence is there that God exists? In my opinion, the likelihood of the universe springing into existence by… Continue reading

    Finding God in an age of reason
  • The Blob

    An evolutionary short story that illustrates the origins of complex life forms: The blob floated mindlessly in the darkness. It had no eyes, or senses, save the ability to touch. To feel. It had no explicit conscious thoughts as such.… Continue reading

    The Blob
  • Welcome to the spirit world.

    A ghostly short story. It had been another excellent meeting, Wendy thought, as she tidied her props away into her handbag and picked up her phone. Her back was killing her from sitting on a hard seat all night, but… Continue reading

    Welcome to the spirit world.
  • Come on down, try your luck on Fortuna’s Wheel of Fortune!

    There’s no such thing as luck or fate. Everything has already happened. If physicist Sabine Hossenfelder is right, then it means we live in a Predetermined Universe – everything that can happen has already happened, we just don’t know it… Continue reading

    Come on down, try your luck on Fortuna’s Wheel of Fortune!
  • Star Trekking

    If you could be someone else for a day, who would you be, and why? As a huge Star Trek fan, I would be Captain James T. Kirk for the day. I’d lead a mission to go boldly where no… Continue reading

    Star Trekking
  • Beyond Words

    How do the limitations of language affect your existence?: All of our thinking is through words, all of our actions, all of our science, all of our literature, all of our history, all our technology, all our kingdoms and empires.… Continue reading

    Beyond Words
  • Pure awareness is heaven

    What will life after death be like?: What are your thoughts on life after death? Where do you think we go when we die? Perhaps you think you’ll live eternally in a heavenly paradise surrounded by your loved ones. Maybe… Continue reading

    Pure awareness is heaven
  • Here’s some flowers for you…

    Some examples of my most recent paintings I’ve been doing. These are hand-painted and a return back to traditional media for me. I’m loving it! Continue reading

    Here’s some flowers for you…
  • False Perceptions 

    How you might find truth and peace in a world of hate and misinformation: Perceptions, the Buddha said, are very often false, which leads to suffering. We see people as threats, we weave fake narratives, we create all kinds of… Continue reading

    False Perceptions 
  • Movie Night

    A mysterious short story about the struggle to find the meaning of life ‘Where the hell am I?’ she muttered to herself, as the vortex gave way to a dimly lit room, complete with brightly-coloured, patterned furnishings and the kind… Continue reading

    Movie Night
  • Roads to Happiness

    Learn profound insights into human existence from two Holy men: Two eastern mystics with profound insights into the nature of existence and how to lead happier lives are Sri Ramana Maharshi and Thich Nhat Hanh. Maharshi was a Hindu sage… Continue reading

    Roads to Happiness
  • Classroom Catastrophes

    Learn about Paul’s autobiography as a teacher, written under the pseudonym Peter Carling. Continue reading

    Classroom Catastrophes
  • Old man Hokusai

    How do significant life events or the passage of time influence your perspective on life? “From the age of 6 I had a mania for drawing the shapes of things. When I was 50 I had published a universe of… Continue reading

    Old man Hokusai
  • How can an inanimate force become a God? 

    This article will give you an eastern insight into the nature of God: When we think of a force such as the quantum field, we don’t think of an omnipotent, personified being, we think of an abstract mass of crackling… Continue reading

    How can an inanimate force become a God? 
  • The axis of evil

    Instead of pointing in random directions, fluctuations in the Cosmic Microwave Background radiation point roughly along a common axis relative to our Solar System. Aristotle’s geocentric model of the universe, with earth in the centre, fitted with western Biblical ideologies… Continue reading

    The axis of evil
  • Bhagavad Gita

    What books do you want to read? Books I’m reading at present: The Ethics of Aristotle The Bhagavad Gita the Upanishads The Varieties of Religious Experience, William James Concentration & Meditation Swami Paramananda Tao Te Ching, Lao Tsu The Complete… Continue reading

    Bhagavad Gita
  • True Survivor (the pom-poms)

    Harry woke up before the alarm and instinctively woke his wife, Jacinda, too. ‘Hey Jac, come on, you’ve got a long day today, you’re on lates.’ ‘What? Huh, oh God, my head hurts.’ ‘I’ll let you go in the shower… Continue reading

    True Survivor (the pom-poms)
  • The grand coder

    Eastern metaphysics on the nature of reality: A computer coder creates a virtual world which replicates our ‘real’ world, and the characters have a form of artificial intelligence. Characters in this world have the ability to sense their environment, and… Continue reading

    The grand coder
  • Find your inner creative

    If you had a freeway billboard, what would it say? Find your inner creative. Being creative, in whatever form that takes, is a powerful way to make meaning in your life. It is fun, enjoyable and stimulating. It enhances brain… Continue reading

    Find your inner creative
  • The Hench

    A David and Goliath short story about a young girl who faces an overwhelming adversary. Continue reading

    The Hench
  • How to be creative

    How are you creative? There’s a common misconception that creativity is only an artistic pursuit, which is wrong. Throughout my career as a teacher of art, I regularly had to correct people who would state that they weren’t creative. We… Continue reading

    How to be creative
  • Best of Friends

    Who are the biggest influences in your life? In previous posts, I’ve outlined how I didn’t have any older male role models to look up to and guide me through life’s challenges, but I certainly had the best of friends.… Continue reading

    Best of Friends
  • Love Conquers All ❤️

    What skills or lessons have you learned recently? I’m learning philosophy at present, which I’ve been studying since last year. It’s a huge topic, of course, and though I’m mainly focusing on Western philosophy, I have also been reading Chinese… Continue reading

    Love Conquers All ❤️
  • The Secret of Life

    There is a secret to life that is so simple, yet so elusive, and it is this: all the life that has ever existed, in every corner of the universe, has one primary purpose – to find happiness. What is… Continue reading

    The Secret of Life
  • An Origin Story 

    An old man helps a young girl come to terms with her grief. A young girl was seated alone in a plush café, talking into her friend through her smartphone. The friend was on speakerphone, and the girl, although clearly… Continue reading

    An Origin Story 
  • One, two, three, four, five…

    Share five things you’re good at. I would rather describe 5 things I enjoy doing. Whether I’m ‘good’ at them is a matter of opinion. These are 5 things I do fluently: Art – here is one of my recent… Continue reading

    One, two, three, four, five…
  • Nietzsche

    Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche was a philosopher who advocated the rich, elite and powerful and was against the mechanisms of the church who he saw as shackling people with guilt and shame. His ideas and beliefs have been manipulated and absorbed… Continue reading

    Nietzsche
  • Dragged kicking and screaming

    Dragged kicking and screaming into a better world. Continue reading

    Dragged kicking and screaming
  • Transcending Time

    What is the nature of time? Time. We all know it. We all feel it’s passing and are bound by its earthly laws. Time is integral to every culture, every place, every epoch. It is known by many names: Father… Continue reading

    Transcending Time
  • Dark Matter

    What is dark matter? What does dark matter look like? As the early universe expanded, dark matter clumps formed. However, the dark matter didn’t expand as quickly as the universe, leaving a sprawling cosmic web of dark matter strands and… Continue reading

    Dark Matter
  • Gratitude

    What could you try for the first time? I’m struggling to think of anything I’d like to try that I haven’t already. Which tells me that I’ve lived a privileged life and that I should be very grateful for what… Continue reading

    Gratitude
  • A heart full of hate

    When I see people being racist, I am reminded that racial hatred has a long history in Britain: In Celtic Britain, the Iceni hated the Coritani, who hated the Parisi, Then the Romans came and everyone hated them. The Scoti,… Continue reading

    A heart full of hate
  • Believing in Nothing

    A third way: But what if there was a third way? What if a Higher Being designed the universe in such a way that it grew and evolved to laws it had previously set out? What if evolution is God’s… Continue reading

    Believing in Nothing
  • Has feminism destroyed the traditional family unit?

    Feminism is a force for good: I heard a young US woman talking recently about how Feminism has destroyed the traditional family unit. She called herself a Trad wife, which is another new term to me, and she said that… Continue reading

    Has feminism destroyed the traditional family unit?
  • Poisonous Thoughts

    The effect of poisonous thinking: You don’t persuade someone of something via aggression and hostility. You do it by relating to them, by identifying with their concerns but not agreeing with them, you give them their right to an opinion,… Continue reading

    Poisonous Thoughts
  • Cubism: was there any point in it?

    Cubism was borne out of artists’ desire to subvert traditional perspective and interpret objects in new ways. Essentially, it was a new way of seeing. But when all was said and done, was there any point in it?A new way… Continue reading

    Cubism: was there any point in it?
  • Impressionism

    Misinformation about the Impressionist movement on the internet is rife. Even art education resource providers are guilty, lumping Van Gogh and Seurat into the Impressionist movement when they were nothing of the kind. Four young men Impressionism was developed by… Continue reading

    Impressionism
  • Who invented abstract art?

    Up until recently, it was believed that Wassily Kandinsky ‘invented’ abstract art. These days, many popular social media posts claim that Hilma Af Klint got there before him. Neither of these beliefs are correct. The truth is, abstraction has always… Continue reading

    Who invented abstract art?
  • Hokusai: the great wave & the secret of immortality

    The Great Wave off Kanagawa, 1831 by Hokusai is one of the most iconic images in the world. But it’s important to understand that this Japanese print was not simply a picture of a wave, but a highly symbolic work… Continue reading

    Hokusai: the great wave & the secret of immortality
  • Is Starry Night a religious painting?

    Starry Night by Vincent Van Gogh is a hugely symbolic painting which represented his feelings about the afterlife. He wrote to his brother Theo that he had a “tremendous need for, shall I say the word—for religion—so I go outside… Continue reading

    Is Starry Night a religious painting?
  • Where are your missing years?

    Are your childhood memories real? I was dismayed when listening to a podcast: The Guardian Science Weekly: where do our early childhood memories go? with Nick Turk-Browne, a professor of psychology at Yale University, to learn that in his professional… Continue reading

    Where are your missing years?
  • Interview with my deceased mother & father

    A very raw and personal interview with my parents. Continue reading

    Interview with my deceased mother & father
  • The Ouroboros

    How can people with ADHD manage their emotions? Continue reading

    The Ouroboros
  • Surfing, Sinking, Swimming

    What daily habit do you do that improves your quality of life? The habit I do that improves the quality of my life is to employ the strategy of surfing, sinking, swimming. It is a technique I used to use… Continue reading

    Surfing, Sinking, Swimming
  • How to be a creative genius

    There are so many misconceptions about creativity it’s hard to know where to begin. The general trope is that creativity is some kind of arty feeling of free expression. Make a chaotic mess and you’re being ‘creative’. The problem with… Continue reading

    How to be a creative genius
  • An Atheist Rebuttal

    A rebuttal of a New Scientist article by atheist Victor J. Stenger In his 2012 New Scientist article, the God Hypothesis, Victor J. Stenger focusses on the Judaic-Christian-Islamic version of God, and then looks for empirical evidence for it. Here… Continue reading

    An Atheist Rebuttal
  • A biased old football dog

    How your biases control your whole life. Our minds are a hodgepodge of biased, untrue, poorly informed opinions and beliefs. In my club, Middlesbrough, we sing ‘we’re the greatest team of football, the world has ever seen’. If you’ve ever… Continue reading

    A biased old football dog
  • Part of something greater

    Is the universe alive? If the Earth were a hydrogen atom, and I looked out from my window at the electron whizzing past in the air above, I might be tempted to think that this was all there was. After… Continue reading

    Part of something greater
  • What is the purpose of our existence?

    How can you find more happiness and meaning in your life? For the majority of the world’s population, God is the purpose of their existence. According to the 13th-century Italian scholar Thomas Aquinas, the ultimate goal of human existence is… Continue reading

    What is the purpose of our existence?
  • Loneliness of the long distance space traveler

    Why you’re unlikely to ever see your loved ones again if you went into deep space. I’m a huge fan of Sci-Fi programmes such as Star Trek where they travel from star to star, trekking the universe in search of… Continue reading

    Loneliness of the long distance space traveler
  • A universal SATs exam

    What are you curious about? I don’t know about you, but for me, I’m curious about God. I’m pretty sure God exists, but I’m also pretty sure there is no Divine Intervention. This is because I have enough evidence to… Continue reading

    A universal SATs exam
  • The Toymaker

    A short story about changing perceptions. A man makes wooden toys. Every day he goes to his workshop, to lovingly craft and fashion his beautiful toys. He carefully displays them in his shop window, but no one ever buys them.… Continue reading

    The Toymaker
  • Believing in Something is better than Believing in Nothing

    Why believing in implausible things can be good for you. Learned people tell us that there is nothing to this world, save that which can be observed, measured and recorded. They state quite firmly that we must savour things in… Continue reading

    Believing in Something is better than Believing in Nothing
  • A Spiritual Journey

    How my own life journey might inspire yours. Life is taking me on a journey at present and it’s one I didn’t seek. Of course, all life is a journey, but this is something completely different. These last few years,… Continue reading

    A Spiritual Journey
  • Near Death Experiences

    Why do so many people experience overwhelming spiritual experiences when faced with death? I’ve been reading an old book about Near Death Experiences called Life After Life by Dr Raymond Moody. It very much relates to a topic I wrote… Continue reading

    Near Death Experiences
  • Beautiful Insect Art

    I’ve been inspired by the wonderful insects in my garden this year. So, why not I fuse them into my art? I wanted to weave bright, vibrant colours with wallpaper patterns, comparing and contrasting nature with human design. Here are… Continue reading

    Beautiful Insect Art
  • Life and time

    How does time affect you, scientifically speaking? Einstein showed that, rather than there being a single unified time, time is relative, and so every phenomena has its own time. There isn’t a single entity of time, there are numerous times,… Continue reading

    Life and time
  • Story Lines

    What do you think gets better with age? Some things improve with age. Wine, whiskey, antiques and furniture, even steaks or cheeses. Other times, age spoils. Fruit, bread, cake, and flowers for example. Time can be a friend to some… Continue reading

    Story Lines
  • Was the world made for us?

    Imagine there was a safari park, complete with big cats, monkeys, zebras, giraffes etc. Now, imagine that the human keepers became extinct and the park was left to its own devices, with all the cage doors left open. There would… Continue reading

    Was the world made for us?
  • The Spirit Within Me

    How important is spirituality in your life? I define the spirit as the living essence of a person, which includes consciousness, and the bioelectrical life force within all living things. In this way, the spirit is my mind and my… Continue reading

    The Spirit Within Me
  • Beyond Words

    Knowing what lies beyond the limits of language is an incredibly powerful and profound aspect of our existence. All of our thinking is through words, all of our actions, all of our science, all of our literature, all of our… Continue reading

    Beyond Words
  • Artists and their beds

    What’s the one luxury you can’t live without? I couldn’t live without my bed. I love it so much, and beds have been a constant theme in art for centuries. Here are some artists who have depicted beds: Continue reading

    Artists and their beds
  • How to lead a good life

    What are the most important things needed to live a good life?Here are five life lessons I’ve accumulated over the years. I hope they will help you become happy and healthy when you grow up. There are many more life… Continue reading

    How to lead a good life
  • Make your head a nice place to be

    What fears have you overcome and how? Phobias have been a constant ‘associate’ of mine throughout my life. They have sometimes been so crippling that I have been unable to work and my relationships have certainly suffered. Breakdowns and traumas… Continue reading

    Make your head a nice place to be
  • Get away from it all

    It’s hard to be happy if you’re constantly looking inward. When we focus on ourselves too much, when we live inside our own heads, or even when our ailments occupy more of our time than they should, we suffer. It’s… Continue reading

    Get away from it all
  • Unitarians

    Do you practice religion? A few months ago now, I began attending services by a Unitarian church in Newcastle. Unitarians believe in the oneness of God and they affirm the essential unity of humankind and of creation. Unitarianism has no… Continue reading

    Unitarians
  • What am I?

    “What am I in the eyes of most people? A nonentity? An eccentric? An unpleasant person. Somebody who has no position in society and never will. In short – the lowest of the low. Well, even if all that were… Continue reading

    What am I?
  • Chemical Queen

    In the nitric town, The furnace fires have faded, And melting pigs lie cold and charred on foundry floors. Desolate towers of concrete and steel, Like tombs that betray the blackened hearts of beaten men. Trains of fire and flame… Continue reading

    Chemical Queen
  • Going where the Evidence Leads

    My reason for believing that a Deist, non-interventionist God created our universe, is that, while no evidence for God has been found within the universe, there are enough reasons to assume one created it. This is because: The universe is… Continue reading

    Going where the Evidence Leads
  • The Way of Paul : updated for 2025!

    How do you balance work and home life? It’s easier for me to answer this question now I’ve retired. When I was working, I can tell you I was a workaholic. I had a full-time teaching job, and I built… Continue reading

    The Way of Paul : updated for 2025!
  • Facts about electrons

    Taken from the article What is an Electron? by Peter Ripota Continue reading

    Facts about electrons
  • And Still the Weeds Grow

    A story about a lifetime with ADHD. My seed was not chosen from the finest organic stock, then gently scattered on a bed of finely tilled soil. No, mine was a mangy spore, spread through the root of an irksome… Continue reading

    And Still the Weeds Grow
  • Suspicion album

    In 2010 I recorded an album of my own songs, using what was then state-of-the-art software in GarageBand and Logic Pro. Everything was either played and recorded by me, or built from samples. The vocals were done by singing into… Continue reading

    Suspicion album
  • The Arthrobot Scriptures

    I used AI to create some illustrations for my young adult fiction novel, the Arthrobot Scriptures which is out on Amazon. It’s a humorous adventure about an old woman who has her brain uploaded into a robotic insect and must… Continue reading

    The Arthrobot Scriptures
  • Strict Father Model

    The strict father model of government is the mainstay of the Conservative, Reform, and Republican party’s manifestos. It helps keep the rich, rich and the poor, poor, yet it is incredible how many poor people think it is ‘right’. It… Continue reading

    Strict Father Model
  • I am that I am

    I am that I am. A poem by Mike Flanagan, to be read at my funeral. Continue reading

    I am that I am
  • Classroom Catastrophe’s: Silver Spoon

    The thing I learned in school was that there are some people with a hell of a lot more advantage than others. For example, there are people my age now who talk about how much they loved their Crombie coat,… Continue reading

    Classroom Catastrophe’s: Silver Spoon
  • Is God an invention?

    Are religious people deluded? Do we simply invent Gods that don’t exist in reality? Evidence shows that religious belief is actually a natural state of human consciousness. This may actually prove God’s existence, rather than disproving it. I argue that… Continue reading

    Is God an invention?
  • Classroom Catastrophes: My opening line

    You’re writing your autobiography. What’s your opening sentence? The opening paragraph to my autobiographical book Classroom Catastrophes is: Autobiographies tend to be written by famous people who have led incredibly rich and exciting lives, so I suppose I’d better start… Continue reading

    Classroom Catastrophes: My opening line
  • Art and philosophy

    Kenshō philosophy believes in seeing nature as it is, by aesthetic, rather than rational means. I love this quote by Japanese philosopher Kitaro Nishida: ‘It is the artist not the scholar, who arrives at the true nature of reality.’ We… Continue reading

    Art and philosophy
  • A bit of a twitch

    The birds in my garden are a constant source of pleasure for me. I am lucky enough to live near a nature reserve and so get some real beauties visiting me. Here are some birds I’ve drawn or painted. I… Continue reading

    A bit of a twitch
  • Sweating the small stuff

    I made several observational drawings of microorganisms a while ago, and I tried to make them in the style of Renaissance drawings of the masters. Here are two drawings I really like. I hope you like them too! Continue reading

    Sweating the small stuff
  • Abstract Art

    When I was an art student, many moons ago, I hated abstract art. Back then, I believed that art required skill to be ‘good’. I thought that art was a craft that needed to be honed and developed. Abstract artists,… Continue reading

    Abstract Art
  • Crows, crows, and more damn crows

    I went through a period of drawing nothing but crows for about two years. I really love them and enjoyed this drawing period immensely. The problem I had was that I just couldn’t get enough high quality images in the… Continue reading

    Crows, crows, and more damn crows
  • Digitally hand-made crafts

    Digital art gets a bad rap from some people. I’m regularly told I can’t enter my art for competitions or excluded from exhibiting because it has been produced digitally. I certainly don’t get the same social media validation as other… Continue reading

    Digitally hand-made crafts
  • Wise advice

    I really love this quote from Plato, written nearly 2,400 years ago. It’s still resonates with me now and I think it’s good for younger people to bear in mind. Us oldies are here to help and guide. (The illustration… Continue reading

    Wise advice
  • Anatomical Self-Portraits

    Here are a few anatomical self-portraits I did in 2022. I find it incredible that all of this is stuffed inside our heads! Continue reading

    Anatomical Self-Portraits
  • Anatomical art

    I produced these drawings during lockdown from medical atlases. I have a long obsession with the human body and its many intricacies. I hope you like them. Don’t forget to hit subscribe and like! If any medical students want to… Continue reading

    Anatomical art
  • Everyone is Better than Me

    I think this is a common thought among artists. We all doubt ourselves at times don’t we? It’s so easy for me to get caught up in negative thinking. I am diagnosed as OCD ADHD anxiety and depression. Apart from… Continue reading

    Everyone is Better than Me
  • Four types of play that help us be more creative

    Play is a profound way to learn and is inherent to our species. We can formulate play activities, engineer them in ways that facilitate particular experiences. In other words, we can teach it. #creativitycanbetaught 1. Conceptual Blending Combine or juxtapose… Continue reading

    Four types of play that help us be more creative
  • AI – the artists friend, not foe

    A while ago now, I wrote a post called Art is dead, long live AI. In it, I spelled out how AI works creatively, and gave some practical ways in which we can teach AI skills in art rooms in… Continue reading

    AI – the artists friend, not foe
  • My Art

    A huge reason why I chose to retire from education was my burning ambition to spend more time in my own art and creativity. I reckon I have a few years left in me yet and so I want to… Continue reading

    My Art
  • The Arthrobot Scriptures

    My new novel is finally in the Amazon bookstore. It’s only taken me over 15 years to get it to this point! I wrote and re-wrote it several times during this period, pushed it one side, abandoned it, then picked… Continue reading

    The Arthrobot Scriptures