Showing posts with label David W. Thompson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David W. Thompson. Show all posts

Friday, March 14, 2025

A Trip to the Dump #OurAuthorGang

 A short story by David W. Thompson

OK, we’ve gotten fancy these days, so “dump” isn’t correct anymore—politically or otherwise. Nowadays, we take journeys to the “Convenience Center,” so named because we’ve added a couple of recycling bins. The vast mountain ranges of cast-away rubbish are now compressed into a ginormous dumpster. After crushing, our kitchen trash, along with many forgotten keepsakes, are hauled away to parts unknown. Sad, but we humans are a wasteful lot.

Behind our local convenience center is a large acreage comprised of our old and now defunct “dump.” It is tons of trash covered with mounds of dirt.  It will be many years before people deem it anything other than a wasteland. But is it? In the evenings, before closing time there, I’ve seen herds of deer chasing each other and foraging in the wild grass that has sprouted despite our meddlesome intrusion.  Our “dump” has become a sanctuary for them. No houses will be built there, and no shopping malls or parking lots will disturb its unlikely tranquility. Nature is reclaiming its own. It gives recycling a whole new meaning.

A cottage industry has grown around garbage. Those without the requisite pickup truck essential for rural life hire others to haul away their weekly cast-offs. It seems trash is good for the economy.

I remember when my kids were small. My youngest loved going on ride-a-longs to the dump—yes, it was still a dump back then. As the youngest of three, she and I had a rare opportunity to spend some “us” time together. At least, I think that is why, although the occasional tossed aside and outgrown toy might also have been a draw for her also. But as she is now a military spouse and too often stationed many miles away, I treasure those memories of then.

Maybe we lost something when the dump became a convenience center. Many treasures were once found among the piles of forgotten gems. Today’s dumpster divers don’t have the same positive connotation as pickers, the ultimate recyclers.

While disposing of several bags today, I noticed people are friendlier at the “convenience center.” Total strangers take a moment to share pleasantries while completing the shared, if unpleasant, task. It’s as if we realize we can let down our protective masks here. There are no false facades at the dump—everyone is equal when their trash is exposed for everyone to see. Our world can be divisive, but our similarities are never more apparent than when accomplishing the mundane.

My parents kept many of my feeble attempts at art and a story or two that I penned over the years. I did the same for my once little ones—boxes full. How do you decide what stays and what goes? I even have several baby teeth bagged up that the tooth fairy passed along as mementos… Strange to modern ears, I guess, as we are a throwaway society. I worry that that mentality might go beyond material things to our moral code and our faith in each other…? Out with the old and in with the new?  I pray not as I weigh what is important to keep and what is past its usefulness to me.  

I’ll ponder it some more…on my next trip to the dump.   

David W. Thompson

https://www.david-w-thompson.com

David is a multiple award-winning author, Army veteran, and graduate of UMUC. He’s a multi-genre writer and a member of the Horror Writers’ Association, and the Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers Association. When not writing, Dave enjoys family, kayaking, fishing, hiking, hunting, winemaking, and woodcarving.



Monday, March 3, 2025

Campfire Stories 9 at #OurAuthorGang

 A short story by David W. Thompson

Old Man Jenkins

My old gang and I always agreed that the best stories we’ve known always started in a circle around the flickering flames of a woodland campfire. As we got older, we assumed adult responsibilities like jobs and maintaining our homes. Over time, fishing and camping trips gravitated to changing diapers, soccer games, band recitals, and dance classes. You get the idea. Our outdoor adventures became few and far between, especially as a group. I’m not complaining.  I wouldn’t have had it any other way. But when Sam McDaniels called about an upcoming weekend campout, a bottle of Clorox couldn’t wipe the smile from my face!

My wife, Cathy, and my kids, Josh and Susan, dropped me off at our meeting place, The Olde Village Diner. After our tearful goodbyes, I threw my duffel bag in the back of Jack Dawson’s truck.

“I’ll be back Sunday night, guys. You’ll have a good time with Mommy at the movies. But don’t eat too much popcorn.”

“We promise, Daddy,” they assured me.

Cathy reached through the car window for a hug and goodbye kiss.

“You be safe, Dan. We will miss you. Be careful of bear…”

“There’s hardly any bears up there, and they are as scared of us as…”

“I meant your buddy, Bear Blake. He doesn’t have the best reputation since his divorce.”

“I’ll be good, Cathy. Promise.” I winked and went into the restaurant.

***

Bear jumped up from the table and yelled a greeting over the breakfast patrons’ heads.

“Dan Baker, well as I live and breathe. You ain't changed a bit, buddy. Not counting that gut, of course.” He threw a fake punch toward my midsection.

“Thanks, Bear. You seem to have grown a few pounds and lost a few hairs also.”

Sam McDaniels (Mac) and Jimmy Smith (Smitty) stood to shake my hand. Of the four of us, I was the only one in the “family way,” Smitty lost his wife in a car accident the year before. Mac and Bear were both divorced.

“It’s been too long, Dan,” Smitty said. “The waitress already took our order. We remembered you were a western omelet guy and ordered one for you. Hope that’s OK?”

I nodded. “So, what’s the plan? Are we headed for our usual spot?”

“We were just talking about that. Bear thinks we should camp on the river by the old sawmill. You remember the place?”

“C’mon, Mac. Not where that old hiker was killed five years back?”

“That’s the place, Dan, but it wasn’t the old man. Some freak killed his wife and kids while he was up on the mountain.” Bear said. “I don’t reckon he ever recovered, though. He died a short time later.”

They must have read something in my eyes.

“Don’t worry, Dan,” Smitty said. “That was years ago. I’m sure the culprit was caught. But you always were a Nervous Nellie.” They all laughed.

When we left the diner, I spotted a groundhog dead on the side of the road. It must have just happened, as it wasn’t there when Cathy dropped me off. But vultures had already discovered the grisly feast and fought among each other for the choicest entrails.

“Death sustains life,” Bear said.

***

The campsite was much as I remembered, although the brush was thicker, and the trails were less well-defined. Today’s youth didn’t keep it beaten down as we once did. There were no video games on the mountain or reception, either.

We were old hands at camp setup, and our skills weren’t as rusty as I feared. With our tents up, sleeping backs rolled out, and the campfire started, we tried our hand at fishing. We didn’t catch anything big enough—except to use for bait. We settled on hotdogs and beans over the fire.

“It’s been a while, guys. Anyone remember whose turn it is for the campfire story?” I asked.

Mac and Smitty turned toward Bear. The man’s eyes shone in the dim light of the crescent moon, and he hunched up his shoulders. His lips curled into a dark smile.

“Sure, I’ll go. I’ll piggyback off the old hiker story. It seems appropriate for where we are. As you know, my dad was the Sheriff then, and I guess I heard a little more about it than most folks.

“Mr. Jenkins was a sprightly old man. He was as narrow as a board but wiry, with thick, work-hardened hands like meat hooks. Dad said he could hold his own in a fight with any man. But he was a hot-tempered soul.  I never heard of him hurting his wife or kids, but the screaming matches coming out of that old cabin were the stuff of legends hereabouts.

“This particular night was no exception. It was so intense that folks clear on the other side of the holler claimed dishes rattled in their cupboards.”

An owl’s sudden: “Whoooo! Hooo! HooHoo!” broke the story’s spell. We looked up at the trees, and the great horned owl’s large yellow eyes glared back at us.

Bear picked up a stick we’d collected for the fire and tossed it at the large bird. It dropped from the tree and swooped low overhead. Its silent wings carried it to its next perch nearby, where it continued its haunting serenade.

“Why did you do that? Isn’t that bad luck?”

“No,” Mac said. “You are mixing up your old wives’ tales. It’s worse. Owls mean death is coming.”

“Now, who is the superstitious one?” I asked.

“Probably just smelled our hot dogs and hoped we’d share,” Bear said. “Still, it is interesting as that was the first thing old man Jenkins heard on his fateful night.”

I glanced at my cell phone, but it had no bars.

“See, old Jenkins,” Bear continued, “he enjoyed a little nip of moonshine now and again. But it didn’t much like him. I don’t know what the cause of the ruckus was that evening, but you can be sure some “corn squeezings” were at the root of the trouble.

“Misses Jenkins, the sweetest lady there ever was, by all accounts, had enough of the old man’s shenanigans. She told him to get out and stay out. Jenkins never knew what was good for him, so he headed up the mountain, bottle in hand. He tried sleeping it off in the old mill but said an owl wouldn’t shut up. Kept him awake most of the night. He passed out in the wee hours only to have a flock of ravens wake him at dawn.

“Jenkins told my dad he knew something wasn’t right. He could feel it in his bones and raced home. The scene when he got there was beyond description. The blood began on the front steps. The floors and walls inside were covered with it. Dad said he’d never seen so much, even at community hog killings. I’d like to tell you they caught the murderer, but it never happened. My dad retired, but it’s the one case he never forgot.”   

I suspect we all had a restless sleep that night. My dreams were unnatural, dark, filled with haunted shadows, and too real by far. A shriek from the river jolted me awake. A woman’s scream of horror, only broken by moments of insane laughter. I slipped on my boots and crept towards the sound.

Peering from behind an old oak, I spied an old woman knee-deep in the water. Her gray hair was greasy and matted to her skeletal head. Her dress was of a style long out of fashion. What was left of it anyway, as it hung from her in tatters. She raised her face to the heavens and screeched again. The sound sent shivers down my back.  She was washing something in the river, and I stretched my neck to see. It was Cathy’s favorite dress—covered in blood! She turned towards me and cackled, then smiled with pointed yellow teeth. She raised one shriveled hand toward me, pointing at me with long, yellow fingernails.

“Death comes for us all,” she said. I woke in my sleeping bag, drenched in sweat.

***

I crawled out of my sleeping bag Sunday morning and saw Smitty had revived our campfire. An unkindness of ravens squawked in the trees around camp.

“I know,” Smitty said. “I wish those damn things would shut up. Got some venison sausage cooking if you want some. Did you sleep OK?”

“Did you hear anything at the river last night?”

“Like what? Was Bear up making growling noises like every camping trip?”

“No, more like an old woman screaming…”

Smitty shook his head.

“Guess it really was a dream then—well, a nightmare. It was an old woman dressed in rags who screamed so loud it hurt my ears, then laughed disturbingly, like you’d hear in an insane asylum.”

“Dreaming of banshees, are ya, Dan? Another portent of death—you read too many horror novels, my friend. I’ll bet my ex-wife has a few romance novels you can borrow.”

His joke did nothing to relieve my anxiety. Still, the sausage was delicious, even if the fishing was poor. Otherwise, our day was uneventful.

A heavy fog settled over the camp well before sundown. The woodland came alive with the sounds of night birds and coyotes fooled by the early darkness. As we packed up camp, a swarm of bats flew overhead.

As I tossed my pack in the truck bed, my phone rang. It was Cathy’s number.

“Daddy? Help us. Please! We need you…”

“Susan? What’s wrong, honey?” but the line went dead before she could answer.

***

I’ll give Bear credit; he could fly down mountain roads. The boys tried to reassure me, but the concern written in their eyes betrayed their true feelings.

The four of us rushed toward the house like an avenging army.

The front step was covered in a thick red liquid, and tears sprung from my eyes. I followed its trail to the kitchen, then ran up the stairs, screaming each of my loved ones' names in turn.

“Cathy? Josh? Susan? Where are you?”

“Dan, come quick. Down here,” Mac yelled.

I raced back down the steps, tripping over the section of loose carpet Cathy had been after me to fix, but catching myself before I fell.

My three friends stood at the kitchen window,

“There’s a light. I can’t make anything out, but there’s movement too,” Bear said.

I grabbed a baseball bat from the hall closet and hurried out to save my family!

***

Halfway to the flickering light source, a flashlight beam hit me in the eyes and blinded me.

“Daddy! Daddy! You came to save us!” Susan squealed.

“Mommy figured it out, Daddy,” Josh said. “She said that damn tent is worthless.”

“Let’s not use words like that, Josh. Mommy was upset,” Cathy said. “Welcome home, Dan. The kiddos wanted to go camping just like their Daddy.”

“We had s’mores,” Susan added.

“But the blood? It’s all over the steps and on the floor. Who was hurt?”

Cathy frowned, and her lips pinched together. “Hmm, I’m not sure, but I can make an educated guess.  Josh decided that strawberry syrup would go perfectly with s’mores. I guess it got away from you, huh, Josh?”

Josh ducked his head, “I’m sorry, Mommy. I meant to clean it up.”

Bear, Mac, and Smitty left laughing with another story to tell.

I can’t predict the future; maybe I’ll go camping again—someday. But no time soon.

David W. Thompson

https://www.david-w-thompson.com

David is a multiple award-winning author, Army veteran, and graduate of UMUC. He’s a multi-genre writer and a member of the Horror Writers’ Association, and the Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers Association. When not writing, Dave enjoys family, kayaking, fishing, hiking, hunting, winemaking, and woodcarving.

Saturday, March 1, 2025

Poetry Day at #OurAuthorGang

 A poem by David W. Thompson

We’ll Remember

 

You left us way too early.

No time would be enough.

Still, time heals all, or so I’m told

But if the years do dull the pain

What then of the memories?

Will past joys, too, slip from sight?

 

Will my mind’s eye distort your visage

‘Til only faded photos remain?

Will your voices not whisper in the wind?

Soothing my fears, answering my prayers?

Will the taste of a freshly picked tomato

Not recall the loving labor of your hands?

 

For I’d bear this grief with a smile,

Pray the lash cut even deeper,

To never forget your names

To not know a day without you…

 

I saw your dreams forgotten.

While making our dreams come true

You did so forever smiling

Could it be that they were the same?

 

But my grief makes me selfish

For I knew you oh so long.

Others have missed you deeply

And now your pain is gone.

 

I know you’ll always be watching

To guide, to comfort, to cheer.

I know you’ll not be lonely

With so many in your arms.

 

But know this heart is empty.

Until I am too reborn.

 

And we won’t forget

Love you, Mom and Dad.


David W. Thompson

https://www.david-w-thompson.com

David is a multiple award-winning author, Army veteran, and graduate of UMUC. He’s a multi-genre writer and a member of the Horror Writers’ Association, and the Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers Association. When not writing, Dave enjoys family, kayaking, fishing, hiking, hunting, winemaking, and woodcarving.

Thursday, February 27, 2025

The Song of #OurAuthorGang

 What is #OurAuthorGang?

#OurAuthorGang is a diverse group of writers from around the world, united by their love of literature and support for each other's creative endeavors, and each member brings their unique style and voice to the group.

#OurAuthorGang is not just a name or hashtag - it represents a community built on mutual respect, creativity, and passion for storytelling. The members may come from different backgrounds and cultures, but they are connected by their shared love for literature and their determination to make an impact through their writing.

This diverse group showcases the power of collaboration and the potential it has to elevate individuals and create something truly special.

Click to watch the video and listen to our song

Enjoy our stories:

The song and video created by:

Erika M Szabo

https://authorerikamszabo.com

Erika loves to dance to her own tunes and follow her dreams, introducing her story-writing skills and her books that are based on creative imagination with themes such as magical realism, alternate history, urban fantasy, cozy mystery, sweet romance, and supernatural stories. Her children’s stories are informative and educational and deliver moral values in a non-preachy way.

Sunday, February 16, 2025

Book Sunday #OurAuthorGang

 A short story collection by David W. Thompson


How dark do you like it? Brace yourself for a journey back in time to face a Native American Wendigo! Or let the creatures hidden in the dark woods stir your blood. Fairies are sweet, gentle creatures...right? Perhaps the terrors of day to day life are enough. (You'll find them here too.) 'Possum Stew is the sure cure to quench your thirst for dark adventure. Are you brave enough to turn the page? Don't turn off the lights!

'Possum Stew is a collection of short stories from multi-award winning paranormal and dark fiction author David W. Thompson. Beginning with the New Year, it follows the seasons through all the major holidays. From dark tales inspired by ancient mythology to those flavored with cutting edge technology, they'll provide dark fiction treats that are impossible to forget or put down. How much spectral spice do you desire? You'll find it here. Why wait? Begin your adventure today!

Read a short story from the book

Eternal

“There you are, Ben. I’ve looked all over for you. Where have you been?”

“I had some early morning chores to do, Nina. Thank you for the coffee.” Benjamin sat at his customary seat at the kitchen table, facing the front door and at Nina’s side.

“You’ve always been such a busy man, running here and there and back again. Come sit with me. Do you remember what tomorrow is?”

“Indeed, I do. In all our years together, have I ever forgotten? It’s a doubly special day—Valentine’s Day and our anniversary.”

“How many years has it been since I let you talk me into being your wife.?”

“As I recall, I didn’t have to twist your arm so much. Fifty-two years—neither of us had a single grey hair in our heads back then. Before the kids and diapers. Soccer games and choir practice, then in a flash, the graduations, and it was like we started all over, you and I.”

“It was also before that terrible scare last year. I thought I’d lose you, Ben.”

“Let’s not dwell on that. We have too many good memories to share. I was thinking the other day, do you remember what your father said to you after I asked him for your hand?”

“Do I! The girls and I still laugh over that. He said, ‘Now I like your young man, Nina, so don’t misunderstand me, but his prospects aren’t so good. I don’t think he can care for you as you deserve, and he couldn’t love you any more than I do.’”

“You did hold your father’s heart in your hands. So, have I?”

“Have you what?”

“Cared for you and loved you?”

“You silly old fool. We’ve hit a rough patch or two, as everyone does, but you’ve made my life a very happy one, my love. But I wonder about you. I don’t see you as much as I used to. My memory isn’t what it was, but some days I don’t see you at all until we cuddle in bed at night. Do you still love me, as old and wrinkled as I’ve become?”

“You are as lovely as the day I met you, Nina. More so, given all we’ve shared. There’s no one I’d rather spend my time with, and there will never be another you.”

“Where do you go then, when you leave the house? Tell me there isn’t someone else?”

“Never. Remember when I was in the Navy and spent so many months on that ship? I’d get so disheartened when I didn’t get a letter from you, sometimes for a whole week. I was terribly afraid you’d forgotten me or found someone else. Then the day would come and the clerk would hand me a dozen or more letters. It was like Christmas for me, a letter for every day I was gone. You never missed a day writing me. I’d hole up on my bunk and read your thoughts, savoring every word. So, know this, dear Nina, wherever I am, you are never far from my thoughts.”

“I remember those days, but they aren’t in my happy memories file. My heart ached for you so. We were no more than newlyweds, and I cried myself to sleep every night. Why did they have to take you away from me? It didn’t seem fair.”

“Then I came home on another Valentine’s Day, and again we started over.”

“Started over? I felt like I was in a time warp, and you were still courting me. You brought me flowers after work every week. You worked at Smitty’s Garage then. He told me once you were the best mechanic he’d ever had, as long as he could keep your mind from wandering back home to be with me.”

“Smitty said that? The old rascal, telling my secrets.”

“You were still working there when Cathy was born. That was before Smitty had his heart attack.”

“I was scared to death I’d be a miserable father, but you seemed to know exactly what to do. You took to motherhood like a fish to water.”

“Except I got so fat.”

“Yes. I heard that for months. If anything, you were even more beautiful. People say that women have a “glow” when in the family way, but with you, it lasted so much longer. In fact, I can still see it.”

“You old flirt. Do you remember our date night on our 25th anniversary? We went to see the movies at that new theatre that opened up. I can’t remember what we saw, but it was popular at the time. You took me by the hand and led me up to the front row, and you knew I hated sitting up so close. The theatre was packed, so I thought you hadn’t noticed the empty seats a few rows back. The previews were showing, and you stopped in the middle of the aisle. Then you went down on one knee and asked me to marry you again.”

“And the most important part—you said yes. It didn’t take me twenty-five years to know I had that in common with your dad. You also hold my heart, Nina. I will always be here as long as you want and need me.”

“I’ll always need you, but I must tell you something, Ben.”

 “I thought we were sticking with happy memories, my love.”

“I know, and…perhaps I shouldn’t, but the secret is weighing on me. There was time, a man…”

Ben stared into her fawn brown eyes as his own misted over.

“No, nothing happened. It was when you were so sick. The doctors said you weren’t going to make it, and I couldn’t accept that. I spent hours in the hospital chapel, praying for a miracle…and once I met this man there. His name was Frank Page, and his wife passed away that night. I tried to comfort him in his pain. Days later, he visited me in your hospital room. You were sedated and I doubt you recall?”

Benjamin shook his head.

“Well, after that first visit, Frank returned a few days later. He asked me to have a coffee with him in the cafeteria. You were asleep with the morphine, and I didn’t see the harm in it, so I went.”

Ben looked down at his cup of coffee and took a sip to avoid her eyes. It tasted bitter, and he pushed it away.

“Frank was very attentive and very interested in how you were doing. I had no one else to talk to after Flo moved away, and he was there, ready to listen. This went on for a few weeks. He’d stop at the hospital every few days to talk with me. He’d ask how you were. Some mornings, we’d have coffee together. Then, when you got out of the hospital, I didn’t think any more about it…about him. But one night last week, he showed up here at the house.”

Ben cleared his throat and rubbed his forehead. “What happened, Nina?”

“He said he knew you were gone and that I might enjoy his company. Then he…he kissed me, Ben. I didn’t see it coming, and I slapped his face! I don’t know if I’d misunderstood his intentions the whole time or if I’d somehow led him on. I feel terrible, Ben. I can’t sleep at night for thinking about it. You’re my everything. I told Mr. Page he needed to leave this house, and I never wanted to see him again.”

Tears fell from her beautiful eyes, and Ben’s heart melted at the sight.

“Dear wife, it was a misunderstanding and no more than that. I know how faithful you are. I trust you with my love and my soul. Do not linger another minute on this…unless Mr. Page pushes it, then I’ll have to take measures.”

Nina stood and skirted the table's edge to take her husband in her arms. “God knows I love you.”

“I love you too, sweet Nina.”

“Never leave me?” she asked.

“I promise.”

Nina wiped at her eyes and looked down at Ben. “I swear, though, dearest, you’ve wasted away since you were sick. You weigh less than nothing. Let me fix you something to eat. We need to fatten you up.” She wiped the remaining tears from her eyes and kissed his forehead.

“Did I tell you that Cathy is stopping by later this morning? She said she has something she wants to talk to me about.”

“Ah, some girl talk.”

“I suppose so.”

Nina went to the refrigerator to begin their breakfast. She pulled out the container of eggs and the special brand of sausage that Benjamin favored. As she set the table, a knock came from the door.

“I bet that’s Cathy now, early as usual.”

“I’ll give you girls your privacy then,” Ben said.

Nina turned to smile at him, but he was already gone.

“Mornin,’ Mom,” Cathy yelled from the door. “I know I’m early, but I have some things to catch up on around the house later. What have you been up to?” She stepped into the kitchen, and her eyes swept the room.

“Oh, your father and I were chatting. Tomorrow’s our anniversary, you know.”

“Jesus, Mom. Two place settings at the table. Who’s the second one for?”

“Don’t be silly, Catherine. It’s for your father, of course.”

“Mom, when are you going to stop this? You know Dad is gone.”

“Nonsense, I was talking to him a moment ago. Benjamin, come say hello to your daughter!” Nina stared at the spot her husband left moments before, then continued. “I guess he’s out in his work shed. But I told him about that man, Cathy. I couldn’t keep it a secret any longer. I’d felt sorry for him because he was grieving for his wife, but that gave him no right to take such liberties. Your father is such a kind and considerate man. He understood.”

“Dad’s gone, Mom. We buried him last year. God, I hate to see you like this. You need to get out of this house some and move on with your life. You’re still healthy and independent. You should go out with Mr. Page sometime, to have a companion your own age. Mr. Page told me he’s worried about you.”

“He needn’t. I felt sorry for him but won’t have anything more to do with him.”

“Dad wouldn’t want you going on like this, Mom. You know he wouldn’t.”

“He said he’ll always be here as long as I need him, and I’ll always need him, Cathy.”

Cathy shook her head and changed the subject to more mundane matters. Nina advised her of the sale running at the grocery. Cathy shared her concern about her daughter’s report card. Nina spoke of the new flower seed she ordered to plant in the Spring. When there was little else to discuss, Cathy took her leave.

“Mom, you should talk to someone about your “visits” with Dad. There’s a doctor in town that some of my friends rave about…”

***

Nina watched her daughter’s car pull out of the drive and returned to preparing breakfast. When she cracked an egg in the frying pan, she felt his arms wrap around her.

“She’ll never understand, Ben.”

“Maybe someday.”

“I love you, Benjamin Mills. Forever.”

“I love you, too.”

“Do you remember that time…”

David W. Thompson

https://www.david-w-thompson.com

David is a multiple award-winning author, Army veteran, and graduate of UMUC. He’s a multi-genre writer and a member of the Horror Writers’ Association, and the Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers Association. When not writing, Dave enjoys family, kayaking, fishing, hiking, hunting, winemaking, and woodcarving.