by Kris Rusch | Jun 28, 2018
Buckey’s best friend loves to recite limericks and can travel in time. Not bad for an oak tree named Fred.
But Fred must help Buckey and the love of his life find a way to live together. Not an easy problem considering Mary lives a hundred years in the past.
But an oak tree that recites limericks knows tricks of time.
Can true love be blocked by the simple passing of time?
And can Fred come up with a limerick that fits the situation in time?
by Kris Rusch | Sep 15, 2015
Available in:
ebook, $6.99
Trade paperback, $19.99
978-1561466498
Stories from July
Dean Wesley Smith
USA Today bestselling author Dean Wesley Smith decided to take his love for short fiction a step forward. In July of 2015, he wrote thirty-two short stories, one per day and one extra. Then, every day, he also wrote a short article about the writing of the story.
Now the articles and stories combine into this major collection that also works as a master class on the art of storytelling.
Follow a professional writer through a month of creation and enjoy some wonderful fiction at the same time.
by Kris Rusch | Feb 23, 2014
Cutting Down Fred
Dean Wesley Smith
One fine summer night Buckey the Space Pirate takes his girlfriend for a little excitement to a local park. He hoped for a sexual adventure and ended up meeting Fred, a talking oak tree.
With a talking oak tree, adventure and bad limericks never end.
by Kris Rusch | Feb 23, 2014
The Waiting of the Wind
Dean Wesley Smith
When Buckey the Space Pirate decides to take a creative writing course, of course he turns for help to his best friend, Fred the talking oak tree.
Fred knows the English language better than any human alive. But Fred is still an oak tree, and oak trees do have their quirks when it comes to writing.
by Kris Rusch | Feb 23, 2014
Long Dead New Love
Dean Wesley Smith
Sometimes you must go back to find the future.
Buckey the Space Pirate travels back in time with his friend Fred, the talking oak tree, to learn why Fred refuses to recite his new limerick, the last limerick in Fred’s first poetry book.
Over a hundred years in the past, in a forest of oak trees, Buckey finds more than just the reason for the rhyme.