Platterland the book
nine stories and a novella—coming 2010
A follow-up to Lost in Willipaq was never in the works. Yet here it is. Visitors to the website onetinleg.com had been promised a fresh compendium of collected tales, Platterland. As of this writing (Summer, 2009) the Platterland project is shifted to the back burner. Some of the stories I wanted to include will not be mine again free and clear for a year or so. Plus the world-wide financial embarrassment has thinned the ranks of publishers, in the case of speculative fiction, never overcrowded. I should be happy. And I am—the characters, citizens of the tales—are browsing yet again in the pastures of plenty afforded by the small press venues where I submit. In the fullness of time they will call home and Platterland will fly in 2010.Two of Swords
Capt. Futvoye Halfnight, F.R.S, popped his dropped eye into its socket. “Ahh.” What he saw ahead was not reassuring. “Ohh...” A great gnarly man was leaning against a tree and staring at him. He was naked but for the skin of a tiger which he wore nonchalantly over one shoulder. “You pilgrims should carry rearview mirrors. You leave an inventory of lost lesions and dropped appendages all over the landscape,” said the man.
Mark Twain in Milan
A woman popped out of thin air beside me. She was swinging a serious looking cavalry saber; She gave me the once-over and attacked. I ducked. Her pale gray eyes grew huge. “Oh, terribly sorry, old chap. I thought you were someone else,” she said. “Are you still alive?" I said yes. “I say, good fun, what?” she remarked. A bullet zinged past and we dived under the desk.
The Return of the Orange Virgin
Lechery, debauchery, total annihilation―the usual stuff as two prime movers contend for power. Not power to do anything in particular―threaten, coerce, destroy: illuminate a city, tighten the skeins of a siege engine, or wind up the bowels of a child’s clockwork toy―just power to have around. Just in case. Just the familiar, reassuring bulge of potential, there to quiet unease was not much to ask. But who to ask? read more >>
The Francher
An odor of mint attracted the francher to an unpromising patch of brown scrub. It munched contentedly for some minutes then collapsed. Wide speckled eyes bulged; oval pupils stared. A pounding bright blue sky watched, thin and close, as the francher’s body stiffened. Under the brilliant glare of the high, dry sun its knee joints cracked, emitting soft popping sounds. An Andean vulture circled closer.
The Tirewoman Gabriel
Giant bumblebees prowl thick wisteria; vines knot to frame a lovers’ bower. Before the foreground, hogging the floor, lies a toppled faun, his lips curled in a sneer of passion. At his side is a sawed-off fluted plaster column with a shattered capital nearby suggesting old ruins. I could not bear to throw the stuff out. Some day someone would want to be photographed with a leering, panting satyr.
McMuckle Makes a Minyan
The ineffable, unnamable God of Hosts stood with a burly, bearded personage who held a bar towel draped over one arm, a symbol of his trade. The golem toyed nervously with an ear. “My people should quake at My unutterable Name, not fall on their tukhes,” God sighed. The ear came off. “Bim... this is not about you. Try to stay on topic.” read more >>
The Death of James A. Garfield
Short and overalled, a small figure stepped out of the roadside scrub and declaimed. “You are Lost. Lost Forever. I am Delilah,” she said. “James A. Garfield has guided your feet. It’s a sure thing. President Garfield never misses. After the tomatoes, of course,” she said with wide-eyed innocence. This is a kid trick: getting inside your head so you trust them. read more >>
Plus three more tales:
Chimaera Constant, the third chapter of the Libby the Quilter triptych, Platterland, wherein a rugged Mainer rents out space aliens to perform household chores, and Daphne Longhandle's Last Flight, a tale of a dragon, macaroni and cheese and Eleanor Roosevelt.
Any comments?
Your name:
E-mail address:
Hide my email address: YesNo
About
Alarms & Excursions
- Lovers, losers, and part-time demons
- Why Rain of Frogs?
- Jelly side down
- Aldo and the Bristleheads
- Death of a Species
- Alistair Cooke's bones
- Robert Sheckley and Basil Rathbone
- The Year We Invented Rock N Roll
- Mehitabel the Cat
- Hooray for the Pulps
- The Illuminati Owe Carl .57
- The Night Telegraph Operator
- The Fastest Hound Dog in the State of Maine
- The Nooz at Newn
- That Old-tyme Religion
- Why William Powell?
- Judge Crater's First Miracle
- Judge Crater's Second Miracle
- Necrophilia Jones
- Tom Ashley and the coo-coo bird
- Loose Lips Sink Ships
- Harry and the Mudman
- A Deuce of Moose
- Zeitgeist is the Right Geist
- 3 Days with Claudette Colbert
- 3000 Beatniks Riot in Square
- McMuckle makes a Minyan
- Night bowling in Taunton, Mass.
- The Death of James A. Garfield
- The Manticore's tale
- The Bookworm #1
- The Bookworm #2
- Miguel Santandrea
- Miss Sweet Potato Pie
- Lucy and the Mouse
- St Velcro™ and the Swan
More Stuff
- Platterland—2010
- Libby book—2011
- Mark Twain in trouble
- Play it (again), Sam
- Sylvester and Beany
- Scrotum, a wrinkled old retainer
- Fred Splendid, a radio relic
- A Rob Hunter Reader
- Acknowledgements
- Rob Hunter bio
Alternate Realities

- Anna Wilkenfeld
- Bobbie Jean Pentecost
- Charlie Hunter
- Jennifer Claire Hunter
- Markus Neidel
- Barbara Beeman
- Barbara Baig
- Tina Blondell
- Chris Dodkin
- Ray Korona
- Orange Crate Art
- Dum Luk’s
- Tony Trischka
- Ralph Lee Smith
- Elizabeth Ostrander
- Hot Club of San Francisco
- Marshall Payne
- Mom & Pop Culture Shop
- Mondolithic Studios
- Sara Jane Sparks

