![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Oh, it wasn’t fine-tuned or finished by any means. (Okay, okay, it was orthopedic plaster, but to my way of thinking it was more like the mob had a vendetta against me and had prepared me to sleep with the fishes, but for some reason hadn’t thrown me in but simply abandoned me on the roadside instead.) Anyway, the day they put me in the cast was the day I started the novel, and, coincidentally, about a hundred days later, the day they took me out of that imprisonment was the day I wrote “The End” on that tale. ![]() And so, for some ten to fifteen hours a day seven days a week, I ran, swam, rode horses, fought battles, cried over deaths of loved ones, and helped the Dwarves regain their lost homeland, all while confined in a cement block. My arms would get tired and I would rest and think about what came next in the tale and then repeat the vertical exercise-write, rest and think, and then write again (rather like rinse and repeat over and over again). Since I was flat on my back as stiff as a board, I held the tablets up and wrote more or less overhead. My lovely wife got me a large batch of yellow legal-sized tablets and lots of sharpened pencils. You see, I needed something to keep me sane while I spent the next few months in a cement block. The day they put me into a cast that went from my armpits to over my toes was the day I began a novel. My writing career began in 1977 when I got run over by a car-it shattered my left femur into about fifty pieces. ![]()
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