Jamie Brindle
Bio
Jamie writes mostly fantasy, often with a humorous slant. He has been doing this for some years, and this may have been instrumental in his developing the habit he has of writing about himself in the third person.
www.jamiebrindle.com
Stories (7/0)
On Music
Music - as is well known - does not actually exist. Until the 1800's, the smallest divisible unit of music was thought to be the note. The emergence of newly discovered radioactive isotopes, however, led scientists to the famous 'splitting the note' experiments, which opened up whole new vistas of musical research. It is now known that there are many, many units of music smaller than the note*. Still, the fact remains: music does not exist.
By Jamie Brindle2 years ago in Beat
Animals
Animals are a diverse group of organisms, encompassing anything that fulfills the Reese Criteria*. In this chapter, we will explore why animals exist, before moving on to consider the place they have held in human societies throughout the ages, and then discussing some of the most famous animals.
By Jamie Brindle2 years ago in FYI
A Clean Death
"Dig for the bones!" shouts Commander Cross, and the men do as they are bid. Before long the air is full of dust, and not a hand there that is clean. Sweat sticks, hearts hammer, and the sun beats down, heavy and uncaring. It is Bants who strikes the hard white, pulling back at once like he has been bitten, and giving a cry like a babe. Commander Cross comes a-running, pushing forward while those around draw back.
By Jamie Brindle2 years ago in Fiction
Broken Places
There weren’t always dragons in the valley. That’s the truth. Dola says that there weren’t always people in the valley either, and that maybe the dragons have a better claim on the place than we do. But then, Dola is old and crotchety, and a lot of folks think she’s half-mad anyway, and what does she know?
By Jamie Brindle2 years ago in Fiction