
Personal Work
This is the first fan fiction I wrote based on Young Blades, a short-lived television series that starred Karen Cliche, Tobias Mehler,
Mark Hildreth, Zak Santiago, Michael Ironside and Bruce Boxleitner. The story focuses primarily on Cliche's character, Jacqueline.
The piece was also published in a table-top volume as a project and present for Cliche from the members of Unofficial Young Blades in 2005.
This is the second fan fiction that I've been working on for the better part of two years, focusing on Hildreth's character, Siroc.
This is a semi-twisted piece that I wrote way back in the day when a textbook was my best friend.
I cannot remember what disturbing frame of mine I was in when the pen hit my notebook (because that is where it all starts),
but this is what came from that journey into darkness. It's a short piece.
So, I'm into twisted mind benders. What can I say, I've always been fascinated with anything that will give me a head trip,
but isn't blood, guts and ick. This was actually a short story that I had to write for a college level English class five or six years ago,
maybe even seven. Strangely, my Nathanial Hawthorne obsessed professor liked it.
This is a role playing game between Jessica and I. It started as part of the Unofficial Young Blades RPG on the forum,
but this is the stuff we wrote between our characters. It's written in tandem - I write one character; she writes another -
so it does not flow like a normal novel. There are plenty of typos, grammer issues and editing work to be done on it
so please keep that in mind when you read it. Jess an I are aware of those corrections, but the 900+ page master
takes a long time to copy edit. In case your wondering, this was previously called: Something Old, Something New.
We're still trying to find a title we like.
This is a research paper I wrote for my communication history class in 2004 at the University of Oregon. I'm going to emphasize
again that this is a research paper and part of what is an on-going project for me regarding the first Native American newpaper,
The Cherokee Phoenix, by the Cherokee Nation in Northwestern Georgia in the early 1800s. The paper was also submitted for
the UO School of Journalism Price award at the insistance of the professor. The project is near and dear to me because through
this research I also found a piece of my history since I am Native American.