The Generals of October by John T. Cullen, Simon & Schuster, October 2004 -- as sinister forces seize power, only two young Army officers, David Gordon and Victoria 'Tory' Breen, can unravel the dark secrets of Operation Ivory Baton to the nation
John T. Cullen has authored over 20 books, including The Generals of October (Simon & Schuster, 2004)—pulse-pounding political-military suspense fiction set in a near-future U.S. Constitutional crisis.
Scorpion--a screenplay by John T. Cullen--out of the horrors of the Balkan Wars rises a strange serial killer
John T. Cullen also writes screenplays, including one for Nebula Express (adapted from his SF novel) and the violent, darkly glistening, utterly strange tale of a serial killer in Scorpion.

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Copyright © 2005 by John T. Cullen. All Rights Reserved.
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Robinson Crusoe 1,000,000 A.D. by John T. Cullen

Robinson Crusoe 1,000,000 A.D.

a novel

by John T. Cullen

First Glimpse

A cold layer of sea fog masks a beach early one morning, a million years from today.

A figure appears on a sandbar just offshore. As the tropical sun slowly burns off the fog, the figure resolves into a lightly clad man fishing in the shallows of the ocean bay with a simple but effective spear. He is young, lean, and bearded, with long hair. He frowns with concentration as he walks about stabbing the water in sudden lunges. His blue eyes glitter with determination to stay alive. The young man is an anomaly, an evolutionary afterthought. Nobody will ever come to rescue him. There is nobody. He is the last human—a Robinson Crusoe with no Friday and no hope of ever being rescued, for mankind has been extinct for eons.

Alex (so he names himself, after his long-dead genetic source) keeps a wary lookout over a half dozen rippers, predatory animals who squat across the water waiting for him to make one fatal mistake. His alert senses hear the sea gently churning, the slap of ocean water onto clean white sand, palm trees rustling, and seagulls cawing. He smells saltwater and fresh air. The rippers watch Alex’s every move from across the water. They fear saltwater, which is why he knows they won’t swim across to kill and devour him. Nature has filled the world with many strange new things, including huge saltwater flowers with tree-trunk bodies that dot the shallows in which Alex fishes; and butterflies as big as a man’s head, dodging among the strange new flowers. The spear stabs suddenly. Alex exclaims sharply and hauls out a wriggling coppery-scaled fish.

Survival is easy. Understanding the enigma of his existence is a much harder mystery he has not been able to solve. Yet.

1.

The world was a mystery to Alex Kirk, and his own existence was an enigma within that mystery.

He kept a wary eye on three rippers as he hunted and fished along the shore of his tropic domain. Nature had made some changes in the past million years. New flowers had grown fantastically large atop stems resembling tree trunks, growing in the ocean’s edge. Some were carnivorous, with sticky surfaces to trap insects and small birds, so the flower’s petals could close up while it slowly digested the struggling prey. Multicolored butterflies large as Alex’s head fluttered about—in reality evolved, diurnal bats. They had pink bodies covered with a light gray fuzz of hair, and their four limbs straddled those wings (resembling the bright yellow and red tree-flowers) with tiny claws at the elbow and knee joints. These butterfly bats fed on certain types of non-carnivorous tree flowers, but there was a gray variety of bat that were blood drinkers. Alex loathed the latter with the same primordial human instinct of repulsion by many-legged crawling things. The bloodsuckers were nocturnal, and he avoided them.

The rippers constantly shadowed him from the beach across a run of cold, foamy seawater, looking for an opening so they could kill him. They would not reach him out here on the sand bars and on the stumps of these fantastic new tree-flowers. A sea breeze made palm trees rustle as Alex foraged so he could eat and stay alive. Sunlight intensified colors and made him squint, but he never lost track of his enemies. The rippers were afraid to cross the fast-flowing tidal stream or they would long since have made a quick meal of him. He had taught them to stay out of range of his deadly, poison-tipped arrows. Several piles of bleached bones lay on their side of the water to remind them what happened when they got within range of his bow.

Hot sand crumbled between Alex’s toes and warmed his bones. He’d fashioned a hat of skin and feathers to shield against a blinding sun in a powder-blue sky. He was a dark-haired, wiry young man with soldiering in his blood. It showed in the alert, confident way he carried himself and the weapons he’d fashioned from stone and wood.

Alex loved being alive despite life’s dangers and its loneliness. He liked the warmth of the sun. He liked the smell of vegetation and ocean, the wind in his hair, the thunder of surf. Seagulls uttered raw screams as they kited overhead in moist air under billowing white cumulus clouds. He loved life itself, and vowed to make the best of it, although sometimes despair nearly drove him to end it all. What he would not give for another soul to speak with, but there would never be another. It was tempting sometimes to just swim across a narrow channel of water and let the rippers take him, but he had a strange faith that something more was meant for him in this existence.

Every day, Alex hunted and fished along the tropical beaches of his small domain. He wore a stone knife in his belt and carried a bow and arrows as he hunted under a powder-blue sky with a few high cirrus clouds. Every afternoon in the tropics, huge billows of white cumulus clouds on the horizon would send brief but intense rain showers, but other than that it was humid and clear under a blinding sun.

Each evening, he would eat comfortable supper by a fire after dark, in the safety of his little redoubt high on the bluffs overlooking a nameless sea. The magnitude of his misfortune was so incomprehensible that he brushed it off, but deep down wondered what had gone wrong. More than once he asked the unanswerable question: Why?

A full moon floated in the blue sky over reddish mountains. The moon looked hazy citron among spindly palm trees that shimmered in wet air. Near the moon hung, always, a gray smudge whose explanation Alex could not find in his memories.

As he went about his simple work, Alex sometimes remembered images and sensations that half drove him mad: cities and roads, skylines and jet airplanes, the touch of other humans, especially the woman he loved, Maryan...He could not find a shred of evidence that she or any of it had ever existed.

In his dreams when he slept in his hut at night, he floated down rainy neon streets of a lost world. Those dreams were filled with the scent and the music of Maryan Shurey, the woman Alex Kirk had loved.

The dreams were always about the same. Sometimes he spent a long time floating over a cityscape to get there. He floated through the sky in some fantastic vehicle they must have had back then. The skyline was filled with massive buildings that shimmered lightly in a fog of light, and in that shimmering mist were thousands of tiny square window lights making a sprawl like some alien alphabet that must have meant something to someone, some comforting but exciting message loaded with promises and urgency. Then he lay beside her in a room where they had made love. She slept by his side, with a contented look on her face. He lay awake, savoring the moment. Nearby stood a metal ice container from which protruded an empty champagne bottle. The remains of a fine seafood and pasta meal were hardening into a crust on expensive heavy cream hotel china near the window. In the blue-black darkness, a television set flickered silently, its volume set to Mute. On the television, an ice cream truck slowly turned a corner. On the corner, a store front said Ito’s News. The scene was from a picturesque little town in upstate New York someplace, a slice of Americana. One could see the rustling elm trees of Beacham on one of those summer days when the air is filled with scents of mown grass and hot melting tar. A little girl leans out from the ice cream truck. She is cute as a button, with missing front teeth, freckles, and reddish bangs. The sound cuts in: “Hey, what flavor would you like? Chocolate? Vanilla? Or Strawberry?” She’d fold her hands together, incline her head to one side so her locks bounced, cute as a button, and she’d say: “Personally, I prefer strawberry. That’s because it’s my favorite color. Don’t you think?”

Those dreams were so vivid he sometimes woke up thinking he’d made love to this woman who must have died a million years ago, whose very dust had turned to atoms and maybe floated among the stars by now.

Later in the day, Alex headed home with the plump bass he’d caught among the tree-trunk flowers. Huge butterflies fluttered overhead, sometimes briefly blotting out the sun with their undulating movements. The rippers’ rankness wafted toward him across the narrow saltwater channel as they bounded along growling at him. The smell of his fish, and their long patient waiting, had made them hungry. They took turns to paw the water’s edge, urging him with hooting and barking noises to come over to them. He ignored them.

Suddenly, a faint shadow briefly dimmed the sky with a sizzling, crackling noise. Alex nearly dropped his fish, and the predators scrambled for cover.

Startled, Alex looked up. He stared across the wide bay with its rippling tidal waters. He heard a loud bang that echoed from horizon to horizon. A chrome streak appeared and instantly vanished into a forest on a hill two miles across the bay. The sky was bright as ever, and a fine thread of vapor quickly dissipated, drifting away in the powder-blue sky.

The world looked as though nothing had happened, but some instinct told Alex his life had just become infinitely more complicated and dangerous.

If you like what you're reading, please send at least two other avid readers to this website.
     —Thank you!  …Your grateful author, John T. Cullen.
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Copyright © 2005 by John T. Cullen. All Rights Reserved.

John T. Cullen has been a pioneer in digital publishing since 1996. He is listed by digital publishing historian Karen Wiesner as the sixth digital publisher in history, and the second person to publish serialized chapters on line (starting 1996). His web magazine Deep Outside SFFH was the first to be listed along with the professional pulps in Writer's Market (1999) and was at one time the oldest professional SFFH magazine in the world. John T. Cullen continues to explore new ways to adapt the primordial power of storytelling to emerging new digital opportunities as the Third Millennium springs to light.

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A Walk in Ancient Rome by John T. Cullen, Simon & Schuster 2005, 2d Ed. Summer 2008
A Walk in Ancient Rome John T. Cullen (Simon&Schuster May 2005) innovative, acclaimed walking & teaching tour—explore every corner of the Imperial capital at its zenith almost 2000 years ago; learn its history—smell and taste the very air of Classical Rome.





= Summer 2008 =

A Walk in Ancient Rome by John T. Cullen, Second Edition - Summer 2008, originally First Edition Simon & Schuster 2005
A Walk in Ancient Rome, Second Edition John T. Cullen (Clocktower Books 2008)—New! Many new maps; images from the unique scale model of AndréCaron of Quebec. Read this innovative book, with its acclaimed walking & teaching tour. Explore every corner of the Imperial capital at its zenith almost 2000 years ago; learn its history. Smell and taste the very air of Classical Rome. The new edition is bigger, like an atlas. Some people have carried the 1st edition with them to Rome, and found it greatly enhanced their experience.




Dead Move: Kate Morgan and the Haunting Mystery of Coronado, 2nd Ed. by John T. Cullen, (Clocktower Books, San Diego, Summer 2008)
Dead Move: Kate Morgan and the Haunting Mystery of Coronado, 2nd Ed. John T. Cullen (Clocktower Books, San Diego, Summer 2008). John T. Cullen has tackled the mystery of the ghost at the Hotel del Coronado. He has assembled a dramatic new theory about how and why she violently died on the back steps of the hotel in 1892. A first-class ghost story and whodunit wrapped in one.