Thursday, April 22, 2021
Friday, March 19, 2021
OBSERVATIONS REGARDING NON-PRIME ODD NUMBERS
This past year has been a challenge to all of us and with so many facing dire circumstances, the moment seemed to ask something of me other than my usual writing fare. So, instead of writing fiction I used the time to explore a topic that has long intrigued me -- the nature of prime numbers. Those odd numbers that have no factors other than 1 and themselves. No one seems to know quite how they are formed, or why, and no one has found a way of determining the identity of the next prime number without resorting to a trial-and-error method. For a system such as math, that relies on logic, not knowing these things struck me as out of character. So, I decided to have a look at the matter for myself.
My first attempts involved a direct inquiry into the nature of primes. That effort quickly proved frustrating. Primes appear with an aggravatingly complex irregularity. After wrestling with that a while I decided to try an indirect approach - determine the nature of numbers that are not prime in the hopes of exposing something about the number system that might give insight into the nature of primes. I did this by exploring on my own - discovering patterns and relationships between the non-prime composite numbers - finding those patterns first, before turning to academic sources for an explanation. The effort turned out to be not only productive, but adventurous. Transforming math from a subject endured in a lifeless classroom to a marvelous journey through an elegant and intriguing kingdom.
My latest book - Observations Regarding Non-Prime Odd Numbers - contains the result of my study so far and is available now. You can buy a copy through all the usual places: Amazon - Barnes & Noble - Books A Million - and through independent bookstores everywhere.
Tuesday, January 05, 2021
COVER FOR ELECTRIC BEACH RE-ISSUE
Electric Beach is the third novel in the Mike Connolly mystery series and was originally released in 2006. It will be re-issued by Dunlavy + Gray on February 1 and will be available in print and as an eBook. This is the new cover.
Tuesday, October 06, 2020
The Art Dealer's Wife - - Available Now!
Friday, September 25, 2020
The Art Dealer's Wife
We are running a giveaway right now on Goodreads for my next book - The Art Dealer's Wife - enter for a chance to win 1 of 10 autographed copies - click here to go to the site
THE GIVEAWAY HAS ENDED - THANKS TO EVERYONE WHO ENTERED AND CONGRATULATIONS TO THE WINNERS!
Monday, September 14, 2020
Speedboat
SPEEDBOAT is a novel by Renata Adler. I came across it in my Goodreads feed. The cover caught my eye. Then I read some of the reviews and was intrigued enough to order a copy. Finished reading it recently.
The story is often described as a "plot-less" novel. Actually, it is a very cleverly designed and well-written collection of memories. Told by a fictional character about her fictional life. Arranged in short segments - some only a single paragraph. It reads like a conversation you've had with friends after dinner. One of those conversations that moves from topic to topic and back and forth and you hear something and wonder what happened next but before you can ask, the conversation moves on to another topic. Then it comes back again to the one you were interested in and you find out a little bit more, but before you can get the whole story the conversation veers in a new direction. Something like that.
The book was written in the 1970s and has the feel of the era. New York writer, movie critic, social critic. A bit of an edge to the voice. Adler was at times very much on the inside of the New York literary crowd, and very much on the outs. I like her work and was fascinated by the way she did this book.
Friday, August 28, 2020
A Moveable Feast
I recently finished reading A Moveable Feast, by Ernest Hemingway. Required reading for an art history course I'm taking this fall.
Early in his career, Hemingway lived in Paris with his wife and young child. They had a rather miserable existence but it was a heady time when other writers and artists of the era were there - Hemingway, Gertrude Stine, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, to name a few. This book provides a glimpse into what they and their era were like. The so-called "Lost Generation." A well-known moniker for the group that arose, as it turns out, from a throwaway comment made by an automobile mechanic and repeated by Stein. Hemingway did not like it. Great source for insights regarding the people and the time. I enjoyed it.
Tuesday, July 21, 2020
The Last Gentleman
Tuesday, June 23, 2020
Night Train to Lisbon
Everyone who writes or wants to write has suggestions about "keys" to great writing. Getting started is the most important. Never quitting is next. And then - - - reading well. I've tried to read well most of my adult life and with the pandemic quarantine I've redoubled that effort.
Friday, May 22, 2020
OTHER VOICES, OTHER ROOMS - TRUMAN CAPOTE
Wednesday, May 06, 2020
THE MOVIEGOER - BY WALKER PERCY
Tuesday, April 14, 2020
OBSERVATION ON PRIME NUMBERS - 3
Wednesday, April 01, 2020
OBSERVATION ON PRIME NUMBERS - 2
Monday, March 30, 2020
OBSERVATION ON PRIME NUMBERS - 1
Wednesday, March 25, 2020
LIFE IS LIGHT AND DARK
Monday, January 13, 2020
THE LEGEND OF DELL BRIGGERS - A NEW BOOK FROM JOE HILLEY
My latest book - The Legend of Dell Briggers - a novella and two short stories - was released everywhere on February 3. You can ORDER IT NOW at BOOKS A MILLION - BARNES & NOBLE, AMAZON and at Powell's Books and wherever you buy books online.
Tuesday, December 10, 2019
GRADING SATSUMA ORANGES
Grading satsuma oranges in Grand Bay, Alabama. November 2019
Sunday, August 25, 2019
ANDY BURCHAM INTERVIEWS JOE HILLEY
An interview with Andy Burcham from 2006. Andy is now the radio Voice of the Auburn Tigers football team. The cover pictured above is from the re-released version of Double Take, published by Dunlavy + Gray. It's available everywhere in print and as an eBook.