Wednesday, November 6, 2013
Pictorial for Invasive Species game
And now here's a pictorial of my game Invasive Speicies: The Game: http://boardgamegeek.com/article/13915471#13915471
Saturday, November 2, 2013
Pictorial guide for Nine Circles of Hell
I put together a pictorial overview of my "Hell" game. Take a look here:
http://boardgamegeek.com/thread/1064598/pictorial-overview-of-hell
http://boardgamegeek.com/thread/1064598/pictorial-overview-of-hell
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
Book Out!
Aaaaaaaaaaaaand ... the book is out! Check out Invasive Species on Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/Invasive-Species-Mike-Mayer-ebook/dp/B00FZ6ZMJS/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1383109913&sr=8-1&keywords=mike+mayer+invasive
Card from the IS game
A card from the full-color version of my Invasive Species game. The text comes straight from the novel: http://www.amazon.com/Invasive-Species-Mike-Mayer-ebook/dp/B00FZ6ZMJS/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1383109913&sr=8-1&keywords=mike+mayer+invasive and the colors relate as well: Red for shed blood, of course. Green features heavily in the eyes of the monsters. And the oily yellow background relates to the invasive slime mold that started it all.
Monday, October 21, 2013
Wednesday, October 9, 2013
Spin-off game for Invasive Species
Here's where you can find a free print & play spin-off game of my novel Invasive Species, called, strangely enough, Invasive Species: the Game: Invasive Secies: the Game
The description goes something like this:
The description goes something like this:
Auuuuuuuugh! Your publisher is breathing down your neck, so now it's a late-night, caffeine-fueled, rattling-keyboard-pounding race to get the first chapter of your thriller novel Invasive Species finished before he decides to tear up your lucrative contract. Through blind inspiration (drawing cards) and expert cut-and-paste editing (arranging cards on your board), you strive to complete your chapter before it's too late.
In the card game Invasive Species, players create a story by using 36 cards that have numbered text showing where each card should go in the story. Each turn, a player draws a card and decides whether he wants to keep it or give it to his opponent. He places any kept cards on his personal board, with the goal of creating an ascending numeral sequence. When the deck runs out, players take turns sliding misplaced cards into their correct positions. The first player to correctly "write" his story wins.
Invasive Species is based on the novel of the same name by Mike Mayer.
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Friday, September 27, 2013
Invasive Species novel
Cover of my upcoming book
The description I'm considering:
Something's wrong with Maggie's swamp. A volatile life form has invaded the ecosystem and compels everything it touches to adopt its bizarre life cycle. The cells of animals, plants, and even people rupture their bonds and unite with other creatures to give birth to conjoined monsters. These newly-made chimeras consume all they catch, but their relentless appetite is only a prelude to the coming horror. The infecting life cycle demands an even greater transformation, and Maggie fights against it. Life as we knows it hangs in the balance.
Invasive Species an
electrifying tale of nature's blind and uncaring need to evolve regardless of what
any mere human might have to say about it.
And some excerpts:
. . . as water
trickled around these strange tumors she realized the heads did not belong to
separate animals. These heads belonged to the same body. . . .
. . . "When a
foreign organism is released into a new environment, strange and unpredictable
things can happen." . . .
. . . Oh God, it was
happening again. He felt his cells breaking apart and joining with the cells of
the beast that was folded around him. There was no resisting it. New memories flooded
in. New thoughts. New desires. . . .
. . . "We may be
part of its plan," Maggie said, "but only in the sense a sick person
might be part of a bacteria's plan."
. . . The end of the
world was nigh, but it wasn't an end prophesied by Revolutions or predicted by
anti-nuclear war activists or climate change doomsayers or soft-spoken
astronomers searching the heavens for wayward meteors. This end was planned by
billions of years of natural selection. Maggie had a plan as well. . . .
INVASIVE SPECIES by MIKE MAYER
COMING SOON at AMAZON.
Writer's Devil's Dictionary
(Article adapted from my old website)
Everyone
loves a cynic. No wait . . . a parade. Everyone loves a parade. Except me, that
is. I could go either way when parades are concerned. But give me a good cynic
any day. Yeah, that's right, I said "good cynic." There are plenty of
bad cynics out there that I have no use for, so many in fact they could form a
parade (and no one would love it). A bad cynic only brings you down. A bad
cynic disparages attempts at creativity and achievement with the objective of
hiding his own lack of creativity and his fear of trying to be anything other
than "cool."
Then there's Ambrose Bierce. Everyone loves Ambrose
Bierce.
He's cool.
He's
dead now, and so he failed at the one true thing that matters, but when he was
alive Ambrose Bierce discarded his faith in the human race with such carefree
abandon you can't help but wish you could do the same. He ridiculed any
enterprise with such creativity you can't help but feel optimistic about your
own failings, and even about the parade you've just been invited to.
He
wrote something called the Devil's Dictionary. If you don't know of it yet, you
don't deserve to know, and I'm not about to waste my time enlightening the
hopelessly ignorant.
See?
Cynicism. It works!
And
no one needs cynicism more than a writer. So below you'll find my take on his
creation. Now I know I should write a better segue, but why should I bother?
The work speaks for itself. You'll either "get it" or you won't, and
you probably won't, and you'll probably disparage me for having even tried.
Well I don't care either way, and you can go off to your parade now.
Writer's Devil's Dictionary
Acknowledgements: The page where an author thanks the people he hopes
will buy his book.
Advance: Ironic gesture given by a publisher to an
author. See: leaving a quarter
tip for a waitress.
Book Contract: A signed and notarized document detailing the amount of
money an author won't be making.
Character: A fictional entity given a personality by a non-fictional
entity that lacks one.
Characters
Writing Themselves: The result of a fictional entity figuring out that
the author doesn't know what the hell he's doing and so takes matters into its
own hands.
Deadline: The absolute earliest an editor wants to see your
latest catastrophe.
Draft, First: An author's first opportunity to stop writing
his latest pile of junk.
Draft, Second: An author's second chance to stop writing his
latest pile of junk.
Draft, Final: Junk.
Ebook: A book that won't burn.
Fiction: A lie that stinks of truth.
Genre: Classification scheme that succinctly alerts
the prospective buyer to which books he won't ever want to read.
Hardback: A book that will burn longer.
Literary Agent: Person willing to work for 15% of nothing.
Main Character: The character that's easiest for the plot to
push around.
Mystery Novel: A novel where it's a mystery how it ever got
published.
Non-Fiction: Truth that stinks of lies.
Novella: An unpublishable work made even more
unpublishable.
Paperback: A book that will burn quickest.
Print-On-Demand
Novel: A book no one will ever
demand be printed.
Rejection Letter: Redundant term. All letters coming from
publishers are rejections.
Science Fiction
Novel: Book about the future
written by a writer who has no future.
Spell Checker: Device that promotes the belief the accurate
spelling will improve one's writing.
Stream-Of-Consciousness
Narration: A narrative written
when the author appears to be unconscious.
Vanity Press: Redundant term. All publication is vain, and
in vain.
Word Count: The number of words above zero an author
should have ever written.
Writer: Failure.
Writer's Group: Concentrated Failure.
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