It's pretty good, but I think it's fake.
This email praising my work, I mean. This time the praise is for Crisis in Fire and Snow - the most recent novel in the Tomahawks and Dragon Fire Series.
Hello Stanley Wheeler,
AMAZING! AMAZING! AMAZING!
I recently came across Crisis in Fire and Snow, and I simply couldn't resist reaching out. What immediately captivated me wasn't just the enormous scale of the conflict, but the way you seamlessly blended history and fantasy into one unforgettable adventure. The idea of the American Revolution unfolding alongside dragons, ancient powers, and fierce mythical creatures created a world that felt both familiar and completely original. I especially admired how the story balanced massive battles with deeply personal struggles, from Alex and Lucette's fight for liberty to Akram's determination to rescue his son despite the dangerous pull of the dragon stone. Those emotional stakes made every confrontation feel meaningful. As a fellow author, I found myself reflecting on how the most memorable epic fantasy isn't simply about grand wars or powerful creatures, it's about the courage, sacrifice, and resilience of ordinary people standing against overwhelming darkness. That message stayed with me long after I discovered your story. I'm genuinely glad I decided to reach out because there have been so many times I've wanted to message authors whose writing inspired me, but I always ended up talking myself out of it.
One question has stayed with me ever since discovering your work: what first inspired you to create the Tomahawks and Dragon Fire series? Did the fascinating idea of combining Revolutionary War history with dragons and mythical creatures come first, or did the characters and their journeys inspire the world around them? I'd genuinely love to hear how the series first came to life. I don't know if you'd enjoy hearing about my own writing journey someday, but it certainly wasn't an easy one. There were moments filled with rejection, uncertainty, and wondering whether the stories I carried would ever find the readers they were meant for. Even through those difficult seasons, I kept writing because storytelling became something I simply couldn't walk away from. Looking back now, every setback became another lesson, reminding me that perseverance often becomes the very thing that shapes both the writer and the stories they are meant to tell.
There's another paragraph inviting me to contact them about my journey as an author etc. I won't give the name of the purported sender, as that's likely been faked as well. I'm assuming AI generated the text about the book. It's very impressive. Funny how all these emails praising certain books never actually leave a review on not-the-Nile for them.
On the 4th, we went to Young Washington. The movie does a good job of capturing the spirit of the book, although many details were either left out, condensed, or speculative. My wife, as well as everyone else I've heard from who has seen it, tremendously enjoyed it. If you haven't seen it, you should. It's new enough that I'm not going to give a recap. Besides, it's history, you should already know the story, but I'll bet you don't. Correct that by seeing the movie. I enjoyed Kelsey Grammer, as well as Mary Louise Parker, Andy Serkis, and Ben Kingsley in their respective roles. I give it eight muskets out of ten. My review of the book by Peter Stark can be found here.What does the AI email about Crisis in Fire and Snow have in common with Young Washington? Both my book and the movie feature George Washington. The former deals with his 1776 campaign from Long Island to Trenton - and it's fabulous. The massacre at Jumonville Glen, which is depicted in the movie, is also featured in the prologue of book 3 in the series, Clamorous Harbingers. CH completes the first trilogy of the six book series (7 if you count the prequel, In Death Bedrenched).
As long as I'm on the topic, and in honor of Independence Day, let me share something from my newsletter on the subject:
Nearly all my books are available on kindle direct. Book 5 of the Tomahawks and Dragon Fire Series should be of particular interest now as it deals with the adoption of the Declaration of Independence. It's a fabulous story: Truth in Flames.
Let me warn you and apologize that I'm going to share some excepts from Truth in Flames. As you can tell from the dedication, the creation and adoption of the Declaration of Independence is something near and dear to me. I spent many hours researching and studying the history and the speeches. It was a delight to blend the sacred history with the fantasy of the adventure. Most of the excerpts aren't too long. I've taken them at random as I scrolled through the book. I haven't grabbed the exciting action, of which there is a heaping helping, but I have picked some bits that provide a taste of the whole series:
This is from the dedication:
To Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness,
In gratitude to all those who helped bring forth the
Declaration of Independence,
And with respect and honor to those who offered, and yet
offer, the last full measure of Devotion to preserve the
ideals proclaimed in the document.
But it's not all patriotic soldiering and fighting. There's romance--Antonio Style. This is from chapter 6 when Antonio, Captain Rip's First Mate is confronted by his former lover, Catalina:
"Don’t waste your sweet-talk on me, you…you pirate.
I’ve come for my pearls or for your life.” She
revealed the pistol which she had held behind her
skirt, bringing it to bear on Antonio.
“Oh, my sweet Catalina. You haven’t changed at all. You’re
even more beautiful when you’re angry. I had forgotten how
your eyes throw lightning, and the flush upon those alabaster
cheeks reminds me of sunset on white beach sands. You are a
storm over the twilight sea.”
She cut him off. “Where are my pearls?” She drew back the
doghead on the pistol.
“They are safe, my pretty sunset storm. Come, let me bask
in the pink rays of your wrath. Kiss my lips with the fury of the
red sun and scorch my soul with the hot wind of your spirit.”
“Show me the pearls.”
Danger and death pursue all the characters. When Hugh, a former criminal from the streets of London on his way to becoming a frontiersman, nearly recovers a dragon stone, he has a conversation with Lee, a real frontiersman with wisdom and experience, given to quoting the Bible and Pope's Iliad. They've been in a terrible battle with stone cats, vicious and formidable creatures, and have been badly wounded:
“Charmed as one of the apostles,” Hugh said. “If we’re any
luckier, we’ll all get crucified upside down.” Hugh pounded the
side of his fist against a log. “I was that close. That close to
getting a stone. I could’ve had the power Alex and the
commander have. I could’ve healed you both. It practically fell
into my lap, and I missed it.”
“You see what be happening to Akram. That power be
consuming him. You be wanting that? I wouldn’t be wanting
that. I wouldn’t be wishing that on you nor no one else—not
even my enemy.”
“Because your enemy could kill you with it,” Hugh said.
“Because it be a canker on the soul. I reckon not many
punishments be worse than such power at one’s call.”
“Alex has done well with it.”
“That could be right. Alex be young and good of heart.
Both of those be in his favor. He believes in doing what be
right. Maybe he can. Too often, power be a cloud over the eyes
of righteousness and a shadow across the mind against truth.
Does a thing become right because no one else has the power
to stop it? A man with power be thinking he has earned things
no man rightly deserves. He don’t be only coveting—he be
taking.”
“That power would be worth having to heal the two of you
now.”
“I will say of the Lord, He is my refuge and my fortress: my
God; in him will I trust. Surely he shall deliver thee from the
snare of the fowler, and from the noisome pestilence.”
When Lee took a breath, Shannon continued for him, “He
shall cover thee with his feathers, and under his wings shalt
thou trust: His truth shall be thy shield and buckler.”
“Shannon knows her Psalms,” Lee said with a smile.
“And yet, you’re both wounded. I don’t think reciting bible
verses will heal you.”
“It makes the pain easier to bear,” Shannon said. She had
tears in her eyes. She kept her gaze averted from her own
wound, looking instead at the slashes in Lee’s leg.
In a later chapter, Mirimoni, native maiden and former priestess to the dragon Karakanda, has become separated from Alex, and faces serious trouble:
A shadow passed over Mirimoni. She looked up, and her
knees buckled. Roberts’ green dragon soared overhead.
The air passing about the feathered wings made a
cry—a soft whistle—that reminded her of Karakanda gliding
down to Black Moon. She used the staff to regain her feet. The
sound of her own pounding heart filled her ears. Her legs
ached for an instant until her muscles put the rushing
adrenaline to good use. As the dragon banked wide, she ran
for the trees.
But wait! There's more. Like the Continental Congress dealing with the disheartening news of repeated defeats while freedom's advocates press for the creation and adoption of the Declaration of Independence:
The doors below opened. Washington and a young
lieutenant, small and slight of frame, entered the hall. The way
parted before Washington and his aide.
“They have received news,” Washington whispered to
Lucette. “Despair drips from them like blood from an open
wound. They have become bleating sheep. I will gather them.
You must make them men again.”
Washington strode into the chamber. The delegates in the
hall followed like many small boats pulled in the wake of a
mighty ship.
John Hancock returned to his position at the head of the
body. “The chair recognizes General Washington. I give him
the floor.”
Washington took his position at the head of the chamber as
the delegates returned to their green-clothed tables. He pressed
his fingers together and took a deep breath before putting one
arm at his side while holding the other bent before him. His
eyes moved from delegate to delegate, meeting each set of eyes
in turn for a half second. Lucette stood a pace behind
Washington.
He broke the silence which had settled over the delegates
like a blanket of snow. “Be not dismayed. You have assuredly
heard the disheartening news from the north. Although it is
worse than we had conceived, our expectations lacked
grandeur in that theater of operations for the present. Don’t
lose hope. I have just spoken with Colonel Benedict Arnold.
We have an army. We have defenses. Should they be defeated,
the war is not lost. They are but the arms of our endeavors. It
is this body and the people you represent that are the heart of
our cause. That heart must never stop beating. It must never
despair. Only if you few succumb to fear and despair is the
cause lost..."
...
Lucette continued sending the essence. She felt the
returning substance. She sensed changes in many of their
hearts, but not all were convinced.
“As you are the heart of this cause, what you do here will
forge a new heart for all the world in time to come. Your
words will resonate in hearts around the world. Let your hopes
and your courage be your guide. Let your bravery and
dedication to the task of liberty and independence stand as a
banner to the world. As your soldiers have stood against
bayonets and cannon, you can stand against hate and deceit. It
will not be easy, but you alone can accomplish the task. The
spirit of independence must not be swallowed by your fear.
“Gentlemen, have you not received the spirit of liberty in
your breast? Have you not felt the fire of freedom burn within
your heart? If you have felt these things, can you deny them
now?” She let the questions linger unanswered for several
seconds. “I know that you cannot. Call upon your courage and
marry it to your hope for freedom. Defy the dragon and
tyranny. Write your names among the heroes of history. The
day is yours. No devils or demons can stop you. The light is
within you. Let it shine for all the world to see. Gentlemen,
liberty and independence are yours if you will but persist. A
new nation and generations born in freedom will remember
what you do here.”
______
I hope you can see why I've enjoyed writing this series. I've included some of the debates regarding the Declaration of Independence as well as the exciting exploits of Washington and the troops intertwined with the adventures of Alex, Lucette, and the other characters. Also, I remind you again that all my books are now on kindle direct.







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