Tuesday, June 30, 2015

You need words? I've got them for you.

Chadwell Marketing Communications is me. I'm not some big advertising or public relations agency (though I do work for them) where you're just another job. My products are words. I sell them one at a time or in bunches.
As a freelance writer, I work for you, whether you need an article about your company, yourself or product. You need copy for a brochure or collateral, I can handle it. You need a ghostwriter, I'm invisible for you. How about a script? I can do that, too.
I've been operating on the Internet for more than 20 years, so it doesn't matter where you are. You need the words; I can supply them to you.

Sunday, June 28, 2015

God's Wrath Against Mankind

Very strong and timely sermon this morning at SVCC, which pretty much focused on Romans 1: 28-32, which states:

Furthermore, since they did not think it worthwhile to retain the knowledge of God, he gave them over to a depraved mind, to do what ought not to be done. They have become filled with every kind of wickedness, evil, greed and depravity. They are full of envy, murder, strife, deceit and malice. They are gossips, slanderers, God-haters, insolent, arrogant and boastful; they invent ways of doing evil; they disobey the parents; they are senseless, faithless, heartless; ruthless. Although they know God's righteous decrees that those who do such things deserve death, they not only continue to do these very things but also approve of those who practice them.

It's a strong message, given in love and grace, but it is from God's word and there will be many who are offended. We are all sinners and all are welcome into our church.

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Donating My Novels to the Troops



Giving to a good cause. Donated 40 copies of my seven novels to Hollister Gives Back that will be sent to deployed military. Shared the moment with David Westrick​, Hollister Chief of Police.

Sunday, June 14, 2015

Women's Roller Derby




Roller derby is back in a big way, and women are at the head of the pack.
Once thought of as sports entertainment, roller derby evolved from a transcontinental race held in 1935 where 25 teams raced on a banked track for 3,000 miles over 30 days, according to USA Roller Sports, to pseudo-bloody slugfests in the 1950s and ’60s that mirrored staged wrestling matches. Roller derby of the 21st century is now a sport that emphasizes athleticism rather than mayhem.
Most of the time.
“There’s a type of derby called ‘renegade’ that basically has no rules,” said Michele Bell, league manager and skater for the Faultline Derby Devilz, which practices and plays home bouts at Bolado Park near Tres Pinos. “You can hit. You can clothesline, grab hair, all that kind of stuff. It’s not that popular. In regular roller derby you can be ejected from games for too many violations.”
With the colorful nickname, “Princess Crush-Her,” Bell said: “Now, none of it is rehearsed or staged. It’s real hitting, real skills, and sometimes people get seriously injured. The game today is played the same way they did back then. The player positions are the same: the jammers, the blockers, and pivots.”
By 1987, roller derby had pretty much faded from the national scene, morphing into other skate venues, such as RollerJams and RollerGames, according to the New York Times. Then in 2001, a group of women skaters in Texas formed Bad Girl Good Woman Productions (BGGW), creating a new generation of roller derby, open to women only. The sport took off and leagues quickly formed in the U.S. and Canada, the Times reported.
The first international bout took place in 2006, between the Oil City Derby Girls, from Edmonton, Alberta, Canada and the Rocky Mountain Roller Girls, of Denver. The sport has since spread to Australia, the United Kingdom, New Zealand, Germany, Belgium and Sweden. By 2009. there were 425 all-female leagues.
Roller derby came to San Benito County in 2010.
“Stasha ‘Irish Kreem’ Maroney, Stacy ‘Supersonic Pebbles’ Vanderlel and myself were with another league (Derby Girls), which kind of fell apart,” Bell said. “Stacha went on to skate with Monterey for about a year, but she still lived in Hollister and got tired of the commute. So she thought she had a lot of experience and wanted to form another league here. And that’s how the Derby Devilz came about.”
Each of the 24 skaters with the Faultline Derby Devilz has her own reason for being in the league. Money isn’t one of them. None are paid to skate and all have financial skin in the game.
Each skater carries her own health insurance. Then there’s an additional skater’s insurance that will cover them if they are injured while playing or practicing.
“That costs about $70 a year,” Bell said. “It’s required if you want to compete. Then there’s the gear that costs about $400.”
Additionally, each pays a yearly $50 fee that covers rent and other essentials such as matching helmets.
“When we host a bout, we charge the public to come and watch. There aren’t any salaries. It’s more of a hobby than a profession,” Bell said.
The reasons for subjecting themselves to the grueling sport range from friendship to therapy.
Gena “Gena-ATOMIC” Horwood, who owns Gilroy Medical Supply, comes all the way from San Jose. “I play blocker position. I do it for the exercise and to be with my best friend,” she said. “Originally, I had no desire to be on the team. I never thought I’d make the team, but she was very encouraging and told me that I could, so she made me believe in myself.”
Horwood said she’s been with the league since January.
“I had my first bout two weeks ago. I fell down once and had only one penalty, so I think I did pretty good.”
Shavaun “Sha-‘BAM’” Hagemen, lives in Hollister and works as a bartender at Cheap Seats. She has been skating for about five years.
“I’m a blocker and I also play pivot,” she said. “I started off with Hollister Derby Girls. It’s a lot cheaper than therapy. It’s really fun, and it’s great to be a part of a team where women empower women.”
League coach, Berglind “Ice Rock-her” Burrows, originally from Kópavogur, Iceland, has been skating since 2010.
“I love it,” she said. “I’m a stay-at-home mom of five kids and it’s a way to get my aggression out,” she said somewhat jokingly. “It’s also fun and good exercise.”
Bell said the league is always looking for new skaters because some burn out after a couple years or they leave because of injuries. No prior skating experience is necessary.
“We have an eight-week boot camp where they learn all the basics,” she said.

“After you complete it, you get assessed. We don’t want to put you in there if you’re not ready because you could get hurt if you don’t know what you’re doing or if you’re not strong enough.”

Saturday, June 13, 2015

Not Your Everyday Hero for John Chadwell's next Historical Novel



David Lynch is the hero of my next historical novel, "Ghost of the U-85." He's not your everyday kind of guy who you'd expect to be the hero.
Excerpt from the book:
In his rush to get another angle, the videographer collided with a rumpled and ever-grumbling Richard Lynch, the long-suffering, Pulitzer-prize winning reporter for the Virginian-Pilot. His face and general rumpled demeanor were testimony to thirty-two hard-lived years.
Those years began with stellar ambitions, beginning with graduating at the top of his class at the Naval Academy in 1962, after which he survived three tours in Vietnam as a marine infantryman, for which he was awarded the Silver Star, along with the Purple Heart and assorted other medals.
Then the nightmares began, followed by the headaches. Then the drinking. Then two ex-wives whose alimony payments pretty much drained his bank account each month. And then there was the beautiful five-year-old daughter who adored him for some unexplainable reason.
Lynch could not remember what a good day felt like.
And this wasn’t one of them, he thought as he paced frenetically while suffering through one of the many cluster migraines he knew he would be experiencing this day.
“Hey, he isn’t going anywhere, shithead,” he growled at the videographer.

Monday, June 8, 2015

Science-based Sci-Fi Movies

It is exciting to read that Matt Damon is staring in "The Martian." As I understand it, the book that the film is based on was self published by Andy Weir, and contains quite a bit more actual science than a lot of science fiction films normally do.



This give me hope that perhaps one day someone who has the juice to make such films may read my own two sci-fi novels, "Legends and Liars" and "The Kid and Wild Bill," both of which are based on actual sciences: space travel and mining asteroids, as well as cloning and 4D bioprinting.
Both books are available at Amazon and Barnes & Noble's website.

Thursday, June 4, 2015

Ghost of the U-85 Coming Soon

There were at least two German operations where saboteurs were landed by submarines on the East Coast. This is a novel based on the story of the one most people never heard of. I'm hoping to have it done in a month or so.


Wednesday, June 3, 2015

5-Star Review on Amazon for Hunt of the Sea Wolves



This book opens like a Tom Clancy novel...interesting geographical, social and historical background as a way of setting the scene for the action to follow. Like Clancy, 

Chadwell's topic is relevant to current events, and serves as a cautionary tale for the threats faced by the West today. I hope this becomes required reading for U.S. Navy SEALS and the Royal Navy Special Boat Service.