In this podiobook: Part comedy. Part soap opera. A fiction blog. A serialized sit-com. A daily comic strip in prose.When Rantz takes a job as Circulation Director of Fiddle and Burn: Guide to Fandom Magazine, he hauls his family to a new home. None of them realizes that this will lead to one bizarre adventure after another.There's an epic struggle to throw away an old garbage can.There are embarrassing incidents involving a very rude laptop computer.There's a heroic quest to overcome parental objections and acquire an upgraded version of a violent computer game.There are profound metaphysical breakthroughs revealed in the dentist's chair.And, running through all the story lines, there's the strange figure of Coyote Man - Is he a noble superhero who defends the suburbs from vicious villains? Or is he a sad old man who lives in a dream world inside his head? It's a tale both comic and tragic, inspiring and pathetic. Some might even say... quixotic.Whether it's comic book and science fiction fandom, the publishing industry or modern American family life, Fiddle and Burn squeezes out the humor and delivers it in easily digestible bite sized doses.Podcast Special: Now including 75% more silly voices performed by the author!
-In this episode: Impossible Dreams 12. As Coyote Man lies dieing of a terrible disease, Pan Boy searches for an antidote - aided by an unlikely ally...
-In this episode: Week 20: Impossible Dreams 7. Coyote Man and Pan Boy struggle to save LongIsland from atomic destruction - even if it means committing a federaloffense in the process!
-In this episode: Bad Judgment. Is it (a) a satire of todayâs outrageous medical insurance costs, (b) a cautionary tale about the dangers of drug abuse, (c) an allegory about the futility of seeking philosophical certainty, or (d) all of the above?
-In this episode: The Wet Laptop. This week, a Laptop gets wet. That's why it's called 'The Wet Laptop'. See, we're not trying to trick you with these titles!
-In this episode: Impossible Dreams Prelude 1. Powell is thrilled to interview Donald Lamont, owner of the largest comic book collection in the world. But things are not quite as they seem...