Always on the lookout for new authors to take part in the ongoing interview series Better Know An Author.
If you are interested in being featured, drop a comment below or message me directly. I will reach out to any of those who express interest.
You can also reach me by email at daniel@totonyproductions.com
The link to last week's feature is here:
https://totonyproductions.com/blog/2021/09/29/david-e-gates/
Thanks so much in advance!
Daniel Hess
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Hi Daniel, I am interested!
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Daniel, my friend! Always interested in having conversations about this! If I can still be a "new author" two years in, I'd love to hop on with you sometime.
Elizabeth Hamilton let me know your best email and I can get you over the information for the series!
Chad! I'll get an email over to you with the information!
Daisy White can do!!
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Was it really a year ago? Jesus! So much has happened since then... Was great taking part in this series. Would recommend it.
Yeah, an extraterrestrial dug a crater off our beach and I even offered to post pics. I would have thought you, @David E. Gates, in the very least, would have been interested.
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Are you sure it was an extraterrestrial? Not someone just digging a hole. Or a turtle? Etc.? Not seen any message from you in respect of this before.
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Don't know what made the hole(s). Maybe terrestrial space rubbish, we're up a jungle estuary, super remote, sipping fruity tropical beverages on deck, watching the sunset and kablooie! Flash of light, crazy thunder roll, and salty mist/drizzle. Clear sky lightning? But first thought was meteorite. Nurse sharks and stingrays have been nosing about in the craters since, which is weird because there is nothing organic or food like in em.
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Lightning frequently starts from the ground upwards (whereas the common thinking is that it always comes from the clouds). So, with a salty mist or drizzle, that's entirely possible.
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The salty mist was caused by the kaboom. All was calm, the sky was clear. This thing hit shallow seawater. It was the ejected seawater (fallout) that was the mist. There's also shattered coral scattered about that wasn't there before. Even in the trees.
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Could have been a falling satellite.
Something fell, either a satellite, a meteor, or an errant missile. Thing is, there's no debris so I'm thinking carbonaceous chondrite, thus the extraterrestrial origin. Lord knows, we've been dragging magnets through the craters and ejecta fields hoping to find a piece of nickle-iron space rock, but nadda. They're in about 2 metres of water, so easy to explore without mucking em up.
Hi Daniel, I am very interested and would love to learn more.
Hi. I'm interested. CV available on my profile.