A Word of Explanation
By L. Neil Smith
[email protected]
Exclusive to The Libertarian Enterprise
          This issue of The Libertarian Enterprise is something of a 
holiday gift to the many people who've written me over past several 
months, wondering what had become of the publication. It's my hope to 
resume monthly publication in January, when TLE will cease to be 
e-mailed (sorry 'bout that) but will be posted on the web site, with 
notice sent out to all of its "subscribers".
          What happened is several things, really. 
          In the first place, for some reason, the words just stopped coming 
out of the ends of my fingertips after our house was flooded in July 
of 1997. I hate to think that the human creative impulse is all that 
fragile -- I never used to believe in "writer's block", about which 
more later -- but believe me, I spent plenty of time sitting at this 
machine, attempting to prove otherwise, to very little avail. The 
essay that begins this issue is, I think, my fourth in almost a year 
and a half. 
          I used to write a couple a week.
          It's been fairly awful, seeing one of the most "interesting" 
periods in American history pass me by, knowing there were a million 
things I could have written about -- if only I could write -- in a 
manner that (false modesty aside) is absolutely unique and maybe even 
valuable. Sometimes I entertained the notion that "writer's block" is 
caused by having too many ideas. Oddly enough, none of this 
affected my correspondence on the internet. 
          What I felt, though, whenever I tried to write, was an 
indescribable bodily and mental fatigue, and also a great sense of 
futility. Face it: our country is in the hands of a homicidal 
lunatic -- a whole horde of homicidal lunatics -- and the only 
people who even make a semblance of opposing them in Washington are 
cowards, idiots, criminals, hypocrites, and losers. In short, 
Republicans. I've been struggling politically for 36 years and during 
that time things have only gotten worse. It's a pretty grim picture 
when you're already feeling low.
          The good news, though, is that more people are politically "awake" 
today than at any other time in American history (and more of them 
have guns and know how to use them), and as bad as things are -- and 
as hysterical and dangerous as the death throes of the Leviathan may 
be -- things seem to be changing. While 60-odd percent of the 
American people (if you believe the polls, which I don't) want to keep 
Clinton in office, 60-odd percent of those online want him 
impeached. 
          I think that's important and a sign of progress.
          More recently, another bit of good news has been responsible, 
ironically, for keeping The Libertarian Enterprise offline. As many 
of my readers know, I was contacted a while back by the great Aaron 
Zelman, HMFWIC at Jews for the Preservation of Firearms Ownership, to 
co-author a very political novel with him to be called The 
Mitzvah. I don't know why or how, but Aaron's offer got me writing 
fiction again. For the rest of my life, I will owe him ... well, the 
rest of my life.
          At this writing, we're on Chapter 12.
          Almost as soon as that happened, I decided to see whether science 
fiction publisher Jim Baen would be interested in republishing the 
books you know as Contact and Commune, Converse and Conflict, and 
the Warner-cancelled Concert and Cosmos as the single big novel I'd 
originally conceived, with the title I wanted, Forge of the Elders. 
He did -- his only stipulation was that I keep it under 300,000 
words -- and my deadline for the re-edited version is January 1, 1999.
          Can I make it? Time will tell ...
          And on the heels of that, I finally succumbed to the blandishments 
of Pulpless.com's J. Neil Schulman, and authorized him to put The 
WarDove, prequel to Henry Martyn and Bretta Martyn back in print. 
I have a very soft spot in my head for that book, so I'm happy. And 
years ago, I outlined two more books to follow it, making it the first 
volume of the Nathaniel Blackburn trilogy. 
          We'll see what happens.
          By the way, I've been notified that Bretta Martyn has been 
chosen by Tor/St. Martin's Press as part of its initial foray into 
the market served by Rocket e-Books. I'm particularly pleased, 
because I predicted this technology almost 20 years ago in The 
Venus Belt. 
          Last but not least, my lawyer (Tom Creasing of "Fuzzy Bunny 
Militia" fame) and I are still waiting to hear from Tor about The 
American Zone, the definitive sequel to The Probability Broach. I 
want to write this book very much, as it's going to be a classic 
exercise in "reward your friends and punish your enemies". I have 
others in the mental hopper, too, including an important book that 
will, in some sense, redefine science fiction, and an absolutely 
dynamite collaboration with cartoonist and National Lampoon veteran 
Rex F. May that might well redefine Texas. 
          So, as you can see, I went from almost no activity, literarily, to 
almost frantic activity, virtually overnight. I'm still fatigued, but 
the feeling is good this time.
          I'll do my best to see that The Libertarian Enterprise -- which 
is one of the great loves of my life -- comes out on a fairly regular 
basis. Things being what they are, and all, it'll have to take a back 
seat to exercises that feed the family kitty. I have two womenfolk, 
Cathy and Ryllie, who are very serious about figure skating -- the 
little one may be headed for the Olympics -- so the kitty takes a lot 
of feeding.
          But thanks for your concern. It's very gratefully appreciated, 
and won't go unrewarded.
Happy holidays,
Neil
Looking for a perfect gift? L. Neil Smith's The Probability Broach, 
Pallas, Henry Martyn, and Bretta Martyn can be ordered from 
Amazon.com via http://www.lneilsmith.org//index.html, from Laissez 
Faire Books at http://www.laissezfaire.org, or call 1-800-326-0996. 
And THE BAIRD COMPANY, http://www.bairdco.com [email protected]
phone 909-943-4180 fax 909-943-8491