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The Star Shard by Frederic S. Durbin
The Star Shard by Frederic S. Durbin








The Star Shard by Frederic S. Durbin

Brown’s younger brother) - who lives in an abandoned bus draped with a Confederate flag. His chief recruit is Gilly (played by Mr. Brown played a lone guy in a post apocalyptic North America (his home province is called “Illiana”) whose goal seems to be locating other survivors of good character and banding them together into a peace-keeping force.

The Star Shard by Frederic S. Durbin

Yep, we have to bring these creations to wider audiences!Īs far as I know, it was my Cousin Phil and I who did the WWII fighter-pilot movies (aircraft carriers being blown up amid thrown handfuls of flour). and your years of experience, of course, tracking Komodo Dragons through the creek bottoms and corn fields of Illinois. and then, completely disguised in a different-colored T-shirt, you played the Komodo Dragon exterminator (whom I assume my character found in the yellow pages). You actually played two characters in that film - not that audiences would ever, ever, ever notice. And surely you remember The Komodo Dragon, in which a gigantic Komodo Dragon goes rogue in the rural Midwest and, in one of moviedom’s iconic scenes, devours my dad, leaving nothing but a torn shirt, some fruit pulp, and coffee grounds. Brown Snowflake was the Bigfoot researcher who comes to seek you out for your firsthand experience with the mysterious hominid. You played the hermit who lives in the little metal pre-fab building in the wilderness. It was the one that featured the pretty cool sequence of the creature walking, half-obscured by trees, in a way that paid homage to the Patterson-Gimlin film.

The Star Shard by Frederic S. Durbin

Hagio, are you saying that you don’t remember the Bigfoot and Komodo Dragon movies? I think the “official” title of the Bigfoot one was In Search of Bigfoot.

The Star Shard by Frederic S. Durbin

Tagged encouragement, Flaubert, nature, urban ruins |Ģ9 Comments 29 Responses to Two Nice Quotes Writing is going well! I guess Stephen King and I better keep at it! Between us, we’ve got a few fans out there. All glory to God! Once in a great while, we hear about instances, and those are precious gifts. We cannot imagine what impact our work is having, sometimes in far-off places, and on people we’ve never met. Thank you for helping me to get to where I am. I am thrilled to inform you that I have been accepted to the Graduate Program in Creative Writing at University! Your book Dragonfly and Stephen King’s Langoliers are what got me into creative writing ten years ago. “I love above all the sight of vegetation resting upon old ruins this embrace of nature, coming swiftly to bury the work of man the moment his hand is no longer there to defend it, fills me with deep and ample joy.”ĭoesn’t that remind you of a near-constant theme on this blog? See especially the old posts “The Essence of Pittsburgh” and “June.”Īlso, I received a wonderful letter out of the blue that made my day.










The Star Shard by Frederic S. Durbin