Adventures in Plagiarism April 3, 2008
Posted by Don in "Challenger" Storm, Meanwhile at the MARDL main offices....Tags: "Challenger" Storm, Adventure, Clive Cussler, MARDL, plagiarism, pulp, The Oregon Files, The Skipper, writing
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In planning the second Challenger Storm novel (”Sons of Poseidon”), I devised something new for Storm and co. to utilize in the story: a mobile, seagoing base of operations, housed in a tramp-steamer (a boat inspired by the Venture in the Recent “King Kong” remake.) The Godspeed would be full of 1930’s high-tech gadgets, weaponry, a small plane that could be launched from a catapult, and a mini-submarine. In short, it was a pulp-era James Bondian thing, and I thought it was a cool invention that I came up with. Gave myself a gold star and everything.
Then last night, the roof fell on that idea.
Challenger Storm art, and an update April 1, 2008
Posted by Don in "Challenger" Storm, Meanwhile at the MARDL main offices....Tags: "Challenger" Storm, Red Phantom, pulp, art, Johan Manandin
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M.A.R.D.L. feedback scientist Gabriel has been working with an artist to bring his characters to life, and now the artist (Johan Manandin) has turned his skills toward a depiction of my character, Clifton Storm:

Kind of an anime-flavored influence here. This guy is extremely good. Check out more of his work in these posts on Gabriel’s blog:
Also, for anyone interested (and I hope SOMEBODY is), I’m still working on the book. I have the last 5 chapters to write now… essentially, the good part of the story. Then there’s the touching up, tweaking, etc. Then the art… still not sure what I’m going to do for the spot illustrations and cover. I don’t think my skills aren’t strong enough to do it on my own… we’ll see. I have a few ideas.
For now, I just want to get this current adventure done. From there, I don’t know what’s next. The first Cipher novel? Maybe. A new Challenger Storm adventure? Could be; it looks more and more appealing for me to stick with Storm and Co. for a while longer. I’m taking this in baby steps.
Challenger Storm: A Brush With The Unknown November 14, 2007
Posted by Don in "Challenger" Storm, Character Background, Meanwhile at the MARDL main offices....Tags: "Challenger" Storm, writers, pulp, heroes, pulp-heroes, writing, Adventure, Lovecraft
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Note: The following is a post I wrote for a role-play by e-mail group that I (and Storm) have joined, The Liberty Brigade. For the hell of it, I decided to post this flashback, a bit of a Lovecraft / “The Thing” pastiche, here while I continue to work on “Isle Of Blood”. It’s not meant to be too detailed or long, it’s just a role-playing flashback post, but I figure I’d put it here. Enjoy.
“Storm was anxious. He had seen some remarkable things, most of which could be explained through reason or science.
“The direction that he was being led now, however, was those realms that belonged to the things he’d seen that COULDN’T have been explained away.
“He was the lone witness once to something that happened in the antarctic circle. He had been flying supplies to a research station, but upon landing he had found it completely empty. He investigated.
“In a chamber in the bowels of the station was the bodies of the research crew… they’d seemed to have been taken apart and put back together in what appeared to be an unsettling attempt to create a new creature.
“They had still been alive in that state too, crawling pitifully across the floor. They looked at Storm with pleading, agonized eyes, and their moans would reverberate in his memory for the rest of his days.
“So, too, would the tittering sound of the other thing in that room, an abomination that was wearing a skinned human face like it was a mask.
“Cliff had shot the thing with his pistol until the gun’s chamber clicked empty. After the shots’ echoes died away, however, an appalling slithering sound came from beneath the room.
“Cliff had hurried back to his plane, then returned to the room with a Tommy-gun and satchel-charges. These he set at the main support columns in the station, then hurried out to his plane. Something beneath the ground chased him, though… something huge and angry… the ice crackling and buckling behind his running feet. He managed to get the plane airborne, thankfully, and as he banked the big Ford tri-motor “tin goose”, the charges exploded, putting the tangled mass of flesh that had once been men out of their misery. His mind scrambled, trying vainly to put the panic and the crawling fear behind him. His curiosity persisted, however, and he looked down into the pit that had once been the station.
“Through the smoke and vaporized ice, he saw…
“He could never recall what he had witnessed as he looked down. The memory of what he saw refused to come back, leaving a whited-out patch in his continuity.
“He was found several days later, the plane a near-wreck where he’d managed to set it down on a small island. He had never been able to shake that tingling fear whenever he thought of that incident, and had never confided it to anyone, even those closest to him: his secretary, Marie; the former MARDL head-mechanic, Willy Avis; or even his best friend, The Red Phantom.
“The promise now, for another excursion into the unknown, had set upon him the same tingling fear somewhere in his mind, like a nest of spiders…”
The Storm and The Phantom: notes towards crossovers October 19, 2007
Posted by Don in "Challenger" Storm, The MARDL-verse.Tags: "Challenger" Storm, comics, crossovers, pulps, Red Phantom, video games, writers
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In comics, crossovers always fascinated me. The idea of a meeting between two characters who never before interacted, whose universes never before seemed connected at all, appeals to me. It expands their universes, while shrinking them a bit, and opens up new possibilities for both.
The pairing of a high-adventure character with a mystery-vigilante character is one of the most potent and enjoyable versions of a crossover. The Superman-Batman pairing practically dominated my experiences reading The Brave and The Bold when I was growing up, and when The Shadow met with Doc Savage in their late ’80’s DC comics, my world was rocked.
In the world of my characters (the MARDL-verse, if you will), it’s a given that eventually Challenger Storm will cross paths with The Cipher, and eventually the aviation theme will bring Storm and The Black Wing together. But the collaboration between authors, the push pull of like-minded but differently themed creators and creations… that would be a load of fun.
One of my faithful MARDL feedback-crew, Luis-Gabriel Leal is no stranger to pulp styled creations. His creation, The Red Phantom, is an interesting amalgam of The Spirit, The Shadow, and Hellboy: an “occult detective” who investigates the otherworldly and the fortean. He’s generating a lot of interest in his character with a site blog similar to this one (but HE gets FAN LETTERS and COMMENTS… I’m not bitter, I’m just saying). He also shares a very similar view as I do regarding the comeback of pulps and their place in the world of entertainment.
The Red Phantom takes on a recurring foe, the assassin known as The Quiet Man, by artist Mike Wood.
Of course, over multiple email and IM conversations, a crossover began a ‘brewin’.
Here’s a bit about their first meeting, a story hammered out by Gabe and myself:
“Storm and his associates were returning from a mission in Greece. The others had gone back via a tramp-steamer of Storm’s employ, while Cliff himself was going to fly his supply plane back. An unexpected detour landed him in Italy, where he was contacted by a mysterious message that persuaded him to take on a passenger… a disguised Red Phantom. Mistaken identities landed the two at the opposite sides of bullets and fists, but the two were sidetracked from their struggle by Mussolini’s forces, whereby they realized they were on the same side.
One adventure and one bout of heavy drinking in Miami later and they were fast friends.
Since then, they had worked together numerous times, often involving things that Cliff had a hard time believing existed. He was starting to come around from the skeptical side, though…”
It would be another classic yin-yang pairing: high-adventure and mystery-man all over again. But the opposites don’t stop there: Clifton Storm is a man of science, Red Phantom more versed in esoterics. Storm’s identity is known publicly by the world at large as “Challenger”, the adventurer, while the Red Phantom is so mysterious we wouldn’t even know how or where to start looking for his secret identity.
Personalities: Storm is calculating, self-doubtful at times. The Red Phantom is impulsive and cocky. However, they are both intelligent and knowledgable. They are also both reckless… Storm’s recklessness is done with meditation and knowledge of the possible outcomes, while the Red Phantom’s is pure blind impulse. He follows the words of Adolph Adler: “Trust only movement. Life happens at the level of events, not of words. Trust movement.”
Even the creators of these gentlemen are alike, yet different. Gabriel is more fond of basing his stories around “what ifs” based on actual historical events, while I (although I love history) like to base my creations in a pulp-era world that never happened, a la Sky Captain. But, like our creations, we share common grounds… like sammiches.
It’s actually a good mix of characters, though. The characters have a great back-and-forth banter with each other, making the team-ups a lot lighter-hearted than you’d expect.
And what form would these tales take? Well, so far everything is in the planning stages, but we have a few ideas.
-Storm and Red fight a mysterious, apocalyptic cult known as Ouroboros.
-The duo learn the mysterious, conspiratorial truth about Amelia Earhart’s disappearance.
-The final crossover idea is slated to be a video-game. Gabe and I both are gamers, and the discovery of FPS Creator software has us collaborating on a game-crossover featuring our characters:
December, 1939…
In the final days of the decade, as a new World War looms ahead, fear grips the globe.
Armies of the undead erupt from their graves. Strange airships attack helpless cities. Mechanically augmented soldiers strike at unsuspecting military bases, then disappear without a trace.
And in a fortress in a forgotten and ancient city… a war-scarred madman, kept alive by magic and technology, plots his next move…
The world in peril turns to the only men who can save it, the greatest heroes of their time: the mysterious occult detective known as The Red Phantom, and the globe-trotting adventurer and troubleshooter Clifton “Challenger” Storm. But they are also under attack themselves. Can they hope to overcome the odds to stop the plans of the mad lich known as The Prussian?
From the gritty streets of New York to the sunny beaches of Miami, from the hidden tombs of Egypt to the lairs of Nazi super-science in the heart of Berlin, The Red Phantom and Challenger Storm must overcome staggering odds and ever-increasing hordes of bizarre enemies… leading them straight to a forgotten land and the final showdown with The Prussian… a man who has overcome death itself!
We are standing in the middle of a hurricane.