Fascinating courtly intrigue and bloody power games set on a generation ship full of secrets―Medusa Uploaded is an imaginative, intense mystery about family dramas and ancient technologies whose influence reverberates across the stars. Disturbing, exciting, and frankly kind of mind-blowing.” ―Annalee Newitz, author of Autonomous

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Michael's Chronicle: Port St. Lucie


I can testify to my brother Michael's obsession with oil slick coffee. I didn't know this about him until we started to do road trips with him within the last five years. We're on the same page about many, many things, politics, dinosaur bones, and thrift shops to name a few, but not when it comes to coffee, my fabbies. Not at all.


Still, when you read his account about the many challenges of living La Vida Road-a, maybe you can understand why the oil slick coffee is a thing. Read his account below, along with some musings about writing.


February 4, ‘26

 

I am lying in my motel room bed in Port St. Lucie. It is late morning. At the moment I am conversing with myself, reviewing elements of my life’s trek (an apt synonym for “journey,” an oft used term of which I have grown weary and suspicious). What has caught my attention and will soon drive me out of bed in the direction of the in-room coffee maker is the elephant in the room directly above me. Again. Just like last night. I’ll get back to Mr. Big but I must first address the coffee maker issue.

 

I don’t drink my a.m. brew for the caffeine. I’m naturally pretty wired even in the morning. I don’t drink multiple cups. Just the same one. For hours. My studio and most of the motel rooms I occupy possess microwaves, handy because if one doesn’t drink all the Java in a compact period of time it becomes cold and requires re-heating. No part of my understanding of coffee includes the word “cold.” (Find the six inch thick Merriam Webster Dictionary you inherited from your great grandparents, published back in 1880. Look for the word cold in the definition. It is nowhere to be found. Get it?). So I respect and appreciate the microzaps in my life. Fresh brewed coffee is too hot to drink. There’s no joy in singeing the hair on my tongue. But, you say, In Room Coffee? From that lame ass countertop contraption with those little packets of CINY (Coffee In Name Only)? Heresy!

 

Many motels these days offer a Continental Breakfast (whatever that means) as a perk of occupancy. Their coffee is invariably concocted from some commercial grade grind such as Folgers or perhaps Boyd’s. Not great but perfectly adequate for a connoisseur such as myself who is absolutely content with what the local gas station serves. Definition: Coffee. “Black water with an oil slick and bubbles.” Do we understand each other?

 

On the day of my arrival here I filled my cup with the motel coffee from their dispenser. The moment it hit my tongue I wondered what the coroner would report as my cause of death. I thought it through and arrived at a plausible conclusion: the oil slick on the surface of my coffee was no doubt the work of an exterminator who had been treating the area for ants, or perhaps coating a body of standing liquid with an oily solution intended to prevent mosquito larvae from hatching. I went to the sink and spit it out. In Room Coffee, I knew in that moment, would be just fine. Better than fine. A palliative.

 

 

Climbing out of bed and searching for my underwear on the way to the coffee maker I looked up at the ceiling for any signs of impending collapse in the area where Mr. Big was prowling. To my relief no plaster was flaking down upon me. Not in the moment, at least. Not last night when I was attempting to drift off to sleep and thankfully not now. But was this simply a matter of not if but when? He piqued my imagination.

 

 

Much of my writing involves third person accounts of fictional characters. I’m not a short order cook. A story properly told is not well served by bones alone. I am not able to treat people who visit my imagination in any cursory way, largely because I’ve known or encountered or observed them in one context or another in my life. To write about anyone in the third person. I need to have had some first person contact with them - perhaps to have worked with or around them or encountered them. I habitually watch people. Especially interactions between people. I can’t help but wonder who I am watching. I talk to strangers, after which they don’t seem so strange to me. Fiction is, if nothing else, an act of projection. Projection involves experience and, often as not, judgement - both quite normal human enterprises.

 

It is said, I believe correctly, that one does not become fluent conversationally in a learned language until one has evolved from converting words and syntax from one’s native language to thinking in the new one. I believe this is true as well of good descriptive writing. One doesn’t need to know the anal little clerk behind the convenience store counter, demanding proof of age from a seventy four year old man (who could be his grandfather) as a precondition to purchasing a beer. His propensity for ignoring common sense in the interest of controlling the interaction speaks of something. But of what? No matter. Imagination can fill in the blanks. Imagination, as it turns out, is a necessary (albeit not a sufficient) ingredient of fiction.

 

 

Actors who are truly “in character” are not at that point actively discussing with themselves what that character might say or do in a given situation. In the moment, they have become the character - the absorption has already occurred. The point here is that we observe and project. So if the seventy four year old guy (a real person I worked with at the newspaper when I was nineteen and he was in his forties) has a case of the ass for close supervision and pointless rules it’s not a stretch to imagine his encounter with the store clerk. Newsflash: it won’t be positive. If I’m writing, he’s the one I’m interested in. He’s easily aggravated - easily offended. He’s a flashpoint guy. He’s going to go off from time to time. The clerk just happens to be the trigger. But you know, he’s a person too. I need to take a look at him. Their relationship in the story is arguably symbiotic from the standpoint of character development. But the anal clerk is more peripheral. He won’t get much ink. Incidentally, the clerk is easy. We see guys like him all the time. We rarely befriend them.

 

 

Back at the motel I found myself in a situation I’d experienced before. Sometimes it’s kids jumping off the bed in the room whose floor is my ceiling. Sometimes teenage boys horsing around. And two years or so ago it was this guy, Mr. Big, (or someone like him) at a motel in Chicago. At about 11:30 p.m. last night he had arrived, the door had closed and the thumping had begun. Periodic and dense, like a sack of lead shot or a dead hammer. I turned on my lamp and read for a short time. No dice. He wasn’t going to bed. He was pacing (perhaps lumbering is a better word) back and forth in his room. He walked to one side of the room, stopped, and walked back - rhythmic and relentless. I turned on the TV. Surely he would retire soon. Nope. At just after midnight I called the front desk and explained the problem. Shortly thereafter I heard a phone ring. Probably his phone. I heard springs whining. He had gotten in bed. I closed my eyes to images of the Michelin Man, which evaporated when he began snoring.

 

I don’t know how many hours, actually, I slept. I do know I’m still tired. If I don’t find my underwear soon I’m going to just brew up a cup and climb back in bed with it. Mr. Big needs to move along to the next town today. His bed needs relief. I need to catch up on some Z’s.February 4, ‘26

 

I am lying in my motel room bed in Port St. Lucie. It is late morning. At the moment I am conversing with myself, reviewing elements of my life’s trek (an apt synonym for “journey,” an oft used term of which I have grown weary and suspicious). What has caught my attention and will soon drive me out of bed in the direction of the in-room coffee maker is the elephant in the room directly above me. Again. Just like last night. I’ll get back to Mr. Big but I must first address the coffee maker issue.

 

I don’t drink my a.m. brew for the caffeine. I’m naturally pretty wired even in the morning. I don’t drink multiple cups. Just the same one. For hours. My studio and most of the motel rooms I occupy possess microwaves, handy because if one doesn’t drink all the Java in a compact period of time it becomes cold and requires re-heating. No part of my understanding of coffee includes the word “cold.” (Find the six inch thick Merriam Webster Dictionary you inherited from your great grandparents, published back in 1880. Look for the word cold in the definition. It is nowhere to be found. Get it?). So I respect and appreciate the microzaps in my life. Fresh brewed coffee is too hot to drink. There’s no joy in singeing the hair on my tongue. But, you say, In Room Coffee? From that lame ass countertop contraption with those little packets of CINY (Coffee In Name Only)? Heresy!

 

Many motels these days offer a Continental Breakfast (whatever that means) as a perk of occupancy. Their coffee is invariably concocted from some commercial grade grind such as Folgers or perhaps Boyd’s. Not great but perfectly adequate for a connoisseur such as myself who is absolutely content with what the local gas station serves. Definition: Coffee. “Black water with an oil slick and bubbles.” Do we understand each other?

 

On the day of my arrival here I filled my cup with the motel coffee from their dispenser. The moment it hit my tongue I wondered what the coroner would report as my cause of death. I thought it through and arrived at a plausible conclusion: the oil slick on the surface of my coffee was no doubt the work of an exterminator who had been treating the area for ants, or perhaps coating a body of standing liquid with an oily solution intended to prevent mosquito larvae from hatching. I went to the sink and spit it out. In Room Coffee, I knew in that moment, would be just fine. Better than fine. A palliative.

 

 

Climbing out of bed and searching for my underwear on the way to the coffee maker I looked up at the ceiling for any signs of impending collapse in the area where Mr. Big was prowling. To my relief no plaster was flaking down upon me. Not in the moment, at least. Not last night when I was attempting to drift off to sleep and thankfully not now. But was this simply a matter of not if but when? He piqued my imagination.

 

 

Much of my writing involves third person accounts of fictional characters. I’m not a short order cook. A story properly told is not well served by bones alone. I am not able to treat people who visit my imagination in any cursory way, largely because I’ve known or encountered or observed them in one context or another in my life. To write about anyone in the third person. I need to have had some first person contact with them - perhaps to have worked with or around them or encountered them. I habitually watch people. Especially interactions between people. I can’t help but wonder who I am watching. I talk to strangers, after which they don’t seem so strange to me. Fiction is, if nothing else, an act of projection. Projection involves experience and, often as not, judgement - both quite normal human enterprises.

 

It is said, I believe correctly, that one does not become fluent conversationally in a learned language until one has evolved from converting words and syntax from one’s native language to thinking in the new one. I believe this is true as well of good descriptive writing. One doesn’t need to know the anal little clerk behind the convenience store counter, demanding proof of age from a seventy four year old man (who could be his grandfather) as a precondition to purchasing a beer. His propensity for ignoring common sense in the interest of controlling the interaction speaks of something. But of what? No matter. Imagination can fill in the blanks. Imagination, as it turns out, is a necessary (albeit not a sufficient) ingredient of fiction.

 

 

Actors who are truly “in character” are not at that point actively discussing with themselves what that character might say or do in a given situation. In the moment, they have become the character - the absorption has already occurred. The point here is that we observe and project. So if the seventy four year old guy (a real person I worked with at the newspaper when I was nineteen and he was in his forties) has a case of the ass for close supervision and pointless rules it’s not a stretch to imagine his encounter with the store clerk. Newsflash: it won’t be positive. If I’m writing, he’s the one I’m interested in. He’s easily aggravated - easily offended. He’s a flashpoint guy. He’s going to go off from time to time. The clerk just happens to be the trigger. But you know, he’s a person too. I need to take a look at him. Their relationship in the story is arguably symbiotic from the standpoint of character development. But the anal clerk is more peripheral. He won’t get much ink. Incidentally, the clerk is easy. We see guys like him all the time. We rarely befriend them.

 

 

Back at the motel I found myself in a situation I’d experienced before. Sometimes it’s kids jumping off the bed in the room whose floor is my ceiling. Sometimes teenage boys horsing around. And two years or so ago it was this guy, Mr. Big, (or someone like him) at a motel in Chicago. At about 11:30 p.m. last night he had arrived, the door had closed and the thumping had begun. Periodic and dense, like a sack of lead shot or a dead hammer. I turned on my lamp and read for a short time. No dice. He wasn’t going to bed. He was pacing (perhaps lumbering is a better word) back and forth in his room. He walked to one side of the room, stopped, and walked back - rhythmic and relentless. I turned on the TV. Surely he would retire soon. Nope. At just after midnight I called the front desk and explained the problem. Shortly thereafter I heard a phone ring. Probably his phone. I heard springs whining. He had gotten in bed. I closed my eyes to images of the Michelin Man, which evaporated when he began snoring.

 

I don’t know how many hours, actually, I slept. I do know I’m still tired. If I don’t find my underwear soon I’m going to just brew up a cup and climb back in bed with it. Mr. Big needs to move along to the next town today. His bed needs relief. I need to catch up on some Z’s.

Friday, January 30, 2026

Michael's Chronicles: I Ask Myself


A man who spends most of his life on the road has a lot to dream about, and my brother Michael dreams more than most.


I Ask Myself

 

I ask myself

Of what shall I dream tonight

Something fine, I hope

Something wondrous

Something impossible

 

Were I the Master

In charge of it all

A wand would I wave

Or perhaps a magical stick

 

Warming the place

Where people stand cold

Inspiring the bigot

To rethink his thoughts

 

Vanquishing darkness

In favor of light

Granting pain and despair

Their permanent adieu

 

But alas

I’m no one so powerful

Only one who dreams

Of better angels

 

Of what might I dream tonight?

Something wondrous or impossible?

Something fine, I hope…..

Something splendid and good

 

Of

What

Shall I

Dream tonight?

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Michael's Chronicles: Imagination


I have to admit -- like Michael, I'm not looking for life's answers. I'm just hoping to live it well.


Imagination

 

The beauty of imagination

Is in its utter indifference

To sanity, rationality

And all that implies

 

There is ample time in one’s day

To balance action with reason

To stay in one’s comfort zone

To be thought of as practical

 

There is no argument

That this is a life well lived

And to many I’ve known

A life well experienced - well managed

 

But what of dreams?

Be they at night or by day

What of the side trips one takes

On the way to somewhere else?

 

When we are old

And balancing life’s books

Will we celebrate achievements

Or things never tried

Paths never taken

 

For my part, the mind wanders

I celebrate the unexpected

That which gives me pause

Makes me ask questions

 

My quest is not to find life’s answers

But rather to leave no interesting stones unturned

No greyhound who ever caught the rabbit

Ever chased it again

 

So keep me in the hunt

Let my mind wander on impulse

I will do my best to stay on point

But be not surprised when I can’t

 

I will feed life’s chickens

And milk its cows every day

But if the sun should set

And I have not dreamed

On that day, frankly

My life will have been an udder failure

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Michael's Chronicles: Parrish


It's been a while since we've heard from my brother, who, as always, is chewing up the highways working the shows that sell the wooden instruments. Work is always on his mind, but it's never the only things that's on his mind.


Parrish

 

Oh thank you Maxfield

You have sent your sky

To comfort the end

Of my too long day

I am grateful my friend

 

Your mind and your hand

The gifts that live on

Indelible images

Transcendent of time

I am thankful my friend

 

Cast across the west horizon

Those pastel blues and sherbet oranges

Easing me into the winter’s eve

Washing my mind’s chatter away

I am quieting my friend

 

My mother knew you well

She was the one

To point out your truth to me

Breathing, not so much speaking it

“Look, son. It’s a Maxfield Parrish sky.”

 

So when I see you coming

I always think of Margaret

She left so many gifts behind

And you…..you are among the best

I am humbled my friend

Friday, December 19, 2025

Michael Levy: Invocation to Athena

Michael Levy is releasing yet another album of ancient music for the lyre, played on one of the most beautiful instruments ever created. Give it a listen!

From Michael:

I am delighted to announce that my new album, “Invocation to Athena”, is now available to pre-save on Spotify, ahead of its release across all the usual digital music platforms on 1st January, 2026:


https://open.spotify.com/prerelease/3XffBOVDbZuA3oVKzO2tQQ?si=cd82616c91734dee

This album features a series of mythological soundscapes, carved out of the ancient timbre of recreated  lyres & kithara, inspired from classical Greece. It is my sincere hope, that the listener will be transported on a 'musical adventure in time travel' through a tapestry of ancient Greek mythology…

The tracks feature both a selection of new, original pieces for recreated ancient lyres & kithara in the distinctive expressive qualities of the original ancient Greek Modes, as well as a completely re-recorded and remastered version of the track "The Apparations of Phantasos", originally  from my 2021 album, "Echoes of Ancient Greece" - the only piece of music that actually came to me in a dream! 

On the morning of 6th March, 2021, I woke up with this tune still in my head & before the trance-like dream-music evaporated back into the ethers, I grabbed my cell phone and used it to record the melodic outline which I sleepily hummed into the microphone. To bring the dream-music more closely back to how I experienced it, this new recording of the track is much more vividly mixed and mastered. It is performed here, with the rich, dark and deep timbre of my Luthieros ‘Lyre of Apollo III’.

January 2026 will be a particularly significant anniversary for me - marking 20 years since I was inspired to order and teach myself to play from scratch, my first ever 10-string lyre! To mark this anniversary, I decided to include in this new release, this very same lyre, with its distinctively dark, mysterious kithara-like timbre it is featured in track 5, “The Dark Magic of Medea”.

Wishing you all a peaceful Christmas & a prosperous New Year.

Michael's Chronicles: Elevator Kid

Michael is on the road again, doing what he does and riding in elevators with strangers who aren't as strange as they could be.

Elevator kid November 19 

The elevator door opened on the third floor where I was staying this morning in Jacksonville. I hadn’t wanted to negotiate the staircase because my arms were loaded behind my coffee and I didn’t choose to spill it all over my fresh shirt. I mean, who rides downstairs anyway if he doesn’t have an excuse. A curly haired kid popped out. Three years old. Maybe four. All alone. The door lingered open. 

“You want company?” he said (or, I should say, declared) as he popped back in and pressed the close door button and then the one directing us to the ground floor. He stood back and flashed an ear-to-ear engaging smile. His next words were Deja vu. “What’s your name? I’m not supposed to talk to strangers.” 

The comment took me back to maybe 1984 or perhaps ‘85. My daughter Sarah. Three or four years old, she then. Her mother, Laura, and I had instructed her on more than one occasion not to talk to strangers. But Sarah, bless her heart, was loquacious and gregarious. Not just one. Both. Not willing to have her nature stifled she had come up with the solution - a variant to that of Elevator Kid. She would ask, “Are you a stranger, because I’m not supposed to talk to strangers.” 

Strange, huh? As I said, Deja vu. All over again, huh? So much for that. 

Back to Elevator Kid. Sorta white but with beautiful kinky hair. Mixed race. I had seen him upon my arrival last night burning endless energy chasing and screaming around the patio area with a band of similar aged minnows. All were of mixed race. Two white moms sat nearby at a table chatting and smoking and occasionally barking warnings at the kids, prime among which was “Stay away from the pool.” 

There was a reason for this. In the lobby while checking in I had read a sign, eight by ten in bold font (perhaps Almie), declaring “POOL AND HOT TUB TEMPORARILY CLOSED FOR SERVICING. SORRY FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE” The sign had been posted, no doubt, at least three years prior. Witness, the pool - large and deep - was caked with mud and leaves and hadn’t contained water in recent memory. Ditto the hot tub. To have fallen in possessed no threat so gentle as drowning. Life and limb were at peril. Amazingly, no fence or rope barrier had been installed to ward off the inattentive. This was a lawsuit begging for its moment. The kids played on with dispassionate disinterest, mom’s periodic admonitions notwithstanding. White noise….. Now I was in the elevator with one of those kids. 

To him the elevator was akin to a carnival ride. I completely got it. As a kid of his age, I frequently rode up and down the escalators at the local Sears and Roebuck. We stayed away from the elevator because the stern-mannered operator of same didn’t view his responsibilities as including those of providing recreational opportunities for unsupervised kids. May as well have been a palace guard. 

“Is that a computer?” the kid said, pointing at my shaving kit. “No,” I responded not knowing how to elaborate on the topic to a tyke of that vintage. 

“What’s your name?” he next asked. 

“Michael.” 

“Why?” he said. 

Who on earth, I thought, asks why you are named as you are? “My mother liked that name.” 

“Oh.” The elevator stopped and he ran out, trailing off his last comment: “Bye.” 

Yeah. “Bye to you too,” I thought but not voicing it. He was gone with the wind. He hadn’t talked to a stranger. Nor had I.

Saturday, August 2, 2025

Michael's Chronicles: Be Who You Are


To quote the old Motown song, You can do what you want to do/But be who you are . . .

Take some advice from Michael, who has had A LOT of things go wrong on the road, and has had a lot of people try to get him to compromise, or take the blame when he shouldn't, or help them with unworthy shenanigans.

Be who you are 

Use what you have 

Do what you can 

And be kind 

You have nothing to lose 

Be grounded 

Be principled 

Be honest 

Know who you are 

Be an example 

The world may go nuts 

As it does from time to time

Don’t go along for the ride 

You have better things to do

Things that need your best 

Don’t be distracted 

Be a witness to truth 

Not a purveyor of rumor 

Stay clear and grounded 

Walk upright, chin to the wind 

Seek the long view 

Listen to those that ask 

Good questions 

Be wary of those 

Who have all the answers 

Never stop searching 

And least not of all 

Look inward 

Long before you blame others

When things don’t go as expected 

Have a good laugh 

And move on 

Friday, July 25, 2025

Michael's Chronicles: On the Road Again


Michael's on the road again, which I guess is kind of a redundant report, because he's there for most of the year. I guess the motels can run together after a while, but at least there are weird dreams.

Another Motel 

July 20 

I’m not trying to sleep 

I am sleeping 

So I don’t care If the train goes by 

He can be part of my dream 

Quacky ducks and geese 

Grass and a pond 

On both sides of the track 

I am a witness 

Watching from my dream 

The engine first, then the cars 

Ka clacketa clack 

Ka clacketa clack 

They’ve seen it all before 

They’re watching me in my dream 

I hop on my carpet 

And fly above them 

I need no wings 

I am free and floating 

My dream has set me there 

The train’s whistle 

Toots through the night 

Across my mind 

Taking my imagination 

For a little cruise 

Who will I meet? 

What will I find? 

I am open you know 

Always open always moving 

Traveling the dreamscape 

The birds ask me 

How they ended up in my dream 

I tell them I don’t talk to birds 

Ask the train, ask him 

I am but a traveler dreaming my night away

Friday, June 20, 2025

Michael Levy: Enchantment of the Tortoise Lyre


I post a lot of musings from my brother Michael, but there's another Michael who appears here: Michael Levy. Michael Thiele makes hardwood music, but Michael Levy plays the ancient lyre, and he has a new album coming out. Read his announcement below. (The image above is not from his album, but I was trying to find something in the "ancient" theme.)

From Michael Levy:

I thought I would like to share with you the creative process behind the completion of my new album, “Enchantment of the Tortoise Lyre” - available now, from all the usual digital music platforms & available to directly download from my website, with lossless audio available from Bandcamp!

In developing my ideas for a new recording project, I usually first conjure up either a specific tune or a spontaneous improvisation for my lyres to quite quickly arrange & record … then spend sometimes months trying to think of some mythologically-based title to add the most amount of meaning to the feeling of each of these tunes (then spend years dealing with comments on YouTube from brain-dead 'fundamentalist religious types', who not being able to separate fact from aesthetic fiction & not being able to resist imposing their moronic mind-set on everyone else, think my music, all of which is just an evocation of ancient historical aesthetic fiction, is literal 'Hymns of Homage' to 'evil' pantheons of pagan gods'!!).

Despite this fact, in this particular project, I almost began to think that track 8, “The Hex of Hecate”, was literally ‘hexed by Hecate’, the terrifying three-headed ancient Greek goddess of magic! I realized a few days before the album was released, that I had uploaded the 'wrong' version of the final master!! Although pretty much nobody but myself can tell the difference between a few reverb overlays etc., this is just frankly too much for my 'nerdy/bordering on psychotic perfectionism to bear...

I then had to spend a small fortune on my cell phone from the UK to the USA to CD Baby, who distributes my music, to arrange to re-upload the ‘correct’ audio for the track…only for them to email me the next day, to say that the hyperlink I provided to the audio file did not work!!

I then had to try & use Dropbox to send the audio, which I had not used for over a decade & spent hours until the late hours attempting to get it to get my track across the Atlantic & across the continent of the USA from East coast to West coast, to the CD Baby offices in Portland, Oregon.

The corrected track finally arrived - but a day too late as the album had just been released!!

I then had to wait almost a week have to wait an infernal week, before the 'correct' audio master had finally replaced the 'subtely incorrect' one (which had by then, had gone out to about 50 digital music platforms!).

To hear the subtle differences between the audio I intended and the ‘incorrect’ version I spent so long attempting to rectify, compare the now thankfully corrected track on Spotify to the original incorrect version of the track which featured on my YouTube presentation of it, before I realized that this was the ‘wrong’ version!