Read for Free: “Dear Parents, Your Child Is Not the Chosen One”

I’m a few days behind announcing this here on the blog, but my short story, “Dear Parents, Your Child Is Not the Chosen One,” can now be read for free at Diabolical Plots!

This story came out of two things I was wondering when I wrote it:

(1) My kids had been listening to a lot of Harry Potter audio books (still are, in fact), and as a teacher, I kept wondering what kinds of professional responsibilities the Hogwarts faculty were dealing with behind the scenes.

A story about all the grading work they probably have wouldn’t have been that interesting (one supposes the faculty all have time turners to get through the marking), but a story about dealing with overbearing parents? Now that might be something… (Lord knows the Malfoys must have eaten up a lot of Dumbledore’s time).

(2) I was wondering about the kinds of people who crave some special mantle they feel entitled to, but just… aren’t. We all know about sf’s actual Chosen Ones: the Harry Potters and the Skywalkers, the King Arthurs and the four Pevensie children, and so on.

But what about the ones who want to be Chosen, but just aren’t cut out for it? Or worse yet, the ones whose parents want them to be the Chosen One?

And so was born one Ms. Madeleine Whimbley, teacher of Intermediate Feats and Virtues at the Avalon Preparatory Academy for Adventurers, and the present story, collected from her correspondence with the parents of one Rodney Goodblood, unacceptably average student.

I had a lot of fun writing this one! Hope you enjoy.

https://www.diabolicalplots.com/dp-fiction-55b-dear-parents-your-child-is-not-the-chosen-one-by-p-g-galalis/

Out Now: “Sir Geoffrey and the Dragon”

My story, “A Truer Account of Sir Geoffrey and the Dragon,” is out now in Galaxy’s Edge Magazine No. 40! It will be free to read there from now through October.

Two or three years ago, while teaching The Hobbit, I was talking with my class about Smaug and dragons in general, and their propensity for hoarding gold, and how it might symbolize (among other things) the greed of a bad king. You can certainly see this in Beowulf, and it also resonates in The Hobbit, where the real antagonist turns out not to be Smaug, nor even really the goblins, but the dragon hoard that the good guys nearly come to blows over.

In the course of that class discussion, I quipped that it might be funny if there was one dragon who had actually earned all his gold legitimately, but knights-in-shining-armor kept challenging him anyway. It got a chuckle from the class, but the idea stayed with me. Eventually it turned into this story. Whether or not the dragon narrator actually has earned his hoard legitimately…? I’ll let you be the judge!

Hope you enjoy!