Kathleen O'Neal Gear & W Michael Gear

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Groundhog Day!

We can’t believe it’s Groundhog Day already. We hope Pete walks out into brilliant sunshine, because we’re really tired of the cold and snow. The weather-guessers say we’re supposed to have sub-zero temperatures for most of the week. Boy, we are yearning for spring. Big time. I actually got out my seed packets (tomatoes, jalapenos, squash) yesterday just to look at them and imagine what it’s going to be like when I get to plant the garden…in May. Maybe. If I’m really lucky and it doesn’t snow for the entire month. On the other hand, if it snows the entire month the buffalo will be ecstatic, because spring snows mean lush summer grass. Here’s to dreams of spring wildflowers! Happy Groundhog Day. Kathy

COPPER FALCON

We have just received the cover for COPPER FALCON a novella, or short novel, that will give readers an introduction, or prequel, to PEOPLE OF THE MORNING STAR. In the story, the exiled Flint Knife Mankiller and his father Red Mask–distant Copper Falcon town’s high chief–have returned to Cahokia in search of warriors to help them repel raiding barbarians. To Flint Knife’s dismay, the great city is fraught with political intrigue and betrayal. When Red Mask is arrested, Flint Knife must trust his fate and future to a foot-loose thief. In the end, he must gamble the COPPER FALCON, a priceless family heirloom, against his father’s life. COPPER FALCON is available for pre-order now, and will be released in March through Amazon, Nook, Kobo, Sony and all the usual ereaders. We hope you enjoy this introduction to Cahokia and get a different view of some of the characters you will meet in PEOPLE OF THE MORNING STAR when it’s released in May. Read in health!

We’re off to the National Bison Assoc. meeting…

Hi All, Tomorrow morning we will be headed to the National Bison Association meeting in Denver. It’s always a great time of seeing old friends, laughing a lot, and discussing the current climate for buffalo in America. This is an especially critical year because of the “wild bison” issues in Montana. We will keep you updated about the happenings! Hope the world is treating you well. Mike and Kathy

Is RIVERTON, WYOMING, part of the Wind River Reservation?

Hi All, At the risk of being assaulted on the streets of Riverton the next time we’re there, we would like to comment on an issue that is sure to stir tempers over the next few years: the correct boundaries of the Wind River Indian Reservation in the state of Wyoming. The EPA recently ruled that a 1905 ACT passed by Congress which allowed settlers to claim lands within the boundaries of the Reservation did not nullify the Reservation boundaries, which means that the current town of Riverton, Wyoming, sits on the Wind River Reservation. For those of us obsessed with history, this is not news. Honestly, we think the State of Wyoming is wrong in its attempt to have the EPA decision overturned. When you look at the 1905 Act, and then the legal history that follows, it is clear that the State of Wyoming considered Riverton to be part of the Reservation all the way up until at least the 1970s, when the State seems to have “forgotten.” For example, in 1907 the State of Wyoming published its annual “Book of Reliable Information Published by Authority of the Ninth Legislature” where it described Riverton as “within the Reservation.” In 1913, and again in 1932, DOI described the Reservation as encompassing 2,238,644 acres” which included the town of Riverton. Then, in 1972, Senator Teno Roncalio (WY) introduced a bill in the US Congress to authorize federal funds for the construction of an Indian Arts and Cultural Center in Riverton. The bill stated that Riverton is “located within the Wind River Indian Reservation.” Since the 1970s there have been a number of contested legal cases involving the reservation boundaries where decisions have gone back and forth. However, in the end, we think our beloved Wyoming will spend a lot of money waging legal battles it cannot win. For those who think the EPA decision relates only to issues of the Clean Air Act, think again. If Riverton is within the reservation boundaries, the Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho tribes have jurisdiction over police, fire, water, and may be entitled to all State, county, or city property, within the disputed area, which totals over one million acres. We wish both sides would just sit down and talk this out. The ramifications are far-reaching and potentially explosive if logical minds do not prevail.   Hope everyone is having a great 2014 thus far. Mike and Kathy

The Holidays

Io Saturnalia, Merry Christmas, Schmiha Chanukah, Solstice Greetings, Happy Kwanza, Tidings of the Season, and Happy New Year to all. We’ve been deluged with tasks over the past month, all beginning with the Western Bison Association show and sale in Ogden the first week in December. We had a great time, and some of the finest bison in North America went for bargain prices in the sale. Anyone starting a herd could have picked up magnificent animals for a song. Kathy picked up a bad cold in Ogden, and was kind enough to share it with Michael, so we were both knocked off our feet for the following weeks as we tackled end-of-year tasks, made an emergency run to Billings, and tried to prepare for the holidays. Brother Mike and Mama came out for Christmas dinner with all the fixings, a feast orchestrated and prepared in the midst of vaccinating and tagging the buffalo calves, preg-testing the cows and yearling heifers, weaning, and penning. Most of the calves and yearlings were sold to Boyd Meyer at Cold Creek Buffalo just south of Cheyenne. Boyd is an old and dear friend, and we offered to deliver. Which meant we had snow each night before we were scheduled to make a trip. Despite plowing the road, we had to chain up to get the trailer out of the canyon. And then came the icy trip across Wyoming. The silver lining was a lot of road time where we were finally allowed to listen to the Graphic Audio performances of PEOPLE OF THE EARTH and PEOPLE OF THE RIVER. Wow! We were alternately amused, scared, stunned, and totally charmed and delighted. The actors’ interpretations of the characters was so remarkable, the quality of the production so ingenious, we wondered why the entire nation wasn’t beating Graphic Audio’s doors down for more. We could have done it in two trips, but a packrat had chewed the wiring on the big trailer, and the tires are nearly ten years old–we don’t take changes on crummy tires. Which meant three trips towing the smaller Titan. We take hauling animals very seriously. For us the sensation is of ten glowing souls back there in the trailer, all precious, and depending on us to get them where they’re going in health and safety. When we’re doing it on ice, with a bumper-pull trailer, we pray a great deal…and to just about every deity in the book! Thankfully, they listened. As this is written, everyone is where they are supposed to be. But wow, has it been a busy time. On the book front, we’re still dickering with Tor/Forge over the MORNING STAR series that we wanted to write about Cahokia. We’ve been waiting more than a month now for a marketing plan. Our new editor may not be enthusiastic about the project, which is a let down after the enthusiasm shown by the sales and marketing bosses at Macmillian this last summer. Hopefully by the time we come to some sort of agreement, the momentum will not have been squandered. As it is, negotiations have now been on-going for nine months. For us, 2013 has been a year of disappointments and set-backs; we’re looking forward to 2014. After a slow start we’ve seen several new projects make their first tentative steps into the publishing world, and hopefully, after an initial discouragement, they will find homes and flower. Starting over is always a trial, but then, tribulation is where a person is forced to measure character. Why, oh why, do we have to have so much character? Oh, yes, we’re delighted to see 2013 disappear in the past and hopefully become nothing more than faded memory. Coming in the new year, we’re anxiously awaiting the release of PEOPLE OF THE MORNING STAR in May. Hopefully the free-roaming buffalo movement–the people who put the “con” in conservation–will fade into the woodwork and go create trouble for some different species. (Maybe they could take up the call to preserve “wild” malaria or dengue, and plague the microbiologists for a while?) Kathy will be on a panel addressing the subject at the National Bison Association meetings in January. And we’re looking forward to escaping to the Texas Hill Country for the Society of American Archaeologists’ meetings in April. And, as always, ThrillerFest is coming up in July. Michael is already scheduled to teach at CraftFest again. And who knows? A miracle might happen? Our new editor at Tor/Forge might even manage to come up with a marketing plan? For everyone reading this, we wish you health and happiness, prosperity and fulfillment.

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