Saturday, May 24, 2014

May, 2014

The Journal of Frank Rudd Bybee (1897 - 1900)
Frank Rudd Bybee (circa 1950)
Grandson Jack Bybee (2012) -
Author: The Journal of Frank Rudd Bybee 1897 - 1900
In 1897, Frank Rudd Bybee ran away from a farm in Paradise, Iowa and an abusive, alcoholic, ironmonger father. At age 16, while exploring San Francisco in search of his brother, Charlie-Elmer, Frank wass shanghaied on the Barbary Coast of California. He awoke in the brig of a brigantine bound for Cape Horn and London.
After encountering  a 'rogue wave' off the Argentine coast, during which Frank saved the life of the First Mate, a mutiny ensues and the captain is 'persuaded' to head for the nearest land.

'Nearest land' is Cape Town, South Africa where Frank is granted his Freedom. In short order, he meets Miss Mini (this writer's grandmother) Rudyard Kipling, (then resident near the University of Cape Town) Cape Colony Premier, Cecil-John Rhodes, and Col. Baden-Powell, founder of the Boy Scout movement.
Frank befriends Baden-Powell, while helping to relieve the siege of Mafeking, during the Second Boer War, in the process, he contributes to the foundations of the Scouting movement.

In 1953, Frank Rudd Bybee, died near Worcester, Cape, South Africa. He died a sad, lonely and confused man, still suffering, I believe, from PTSD, caused by the rogue wave encountered in the South Atlantic.
While The Journal... is mainly fiction, it is heavily based on factual events, relative the life of Frank Rudd Bybee, as this writer has researched.

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The Synopsis of JoFRB
Further Writings
Agent / Publisher Info 

Monday, May 19, 2014

Further Writing (Most rights available)

Articles on Death or the NDE (Near-Death Experience):

Something Funny Happened on the Way to the Morgue (Word Count: 1403)
Steve Job's Last Words (Word Count: 586)
Death, Preparing for it (Word Count: 960)
Three Most Important Questions (Word Count: 887)

Short stories based in Africa
Kimdog's Tale (er... Tail) (Word Count: 15,078)
        Tales of A Border Collie in South Africa.

Along a Dusty African Road (Word Count: 892)

Agent / Publisher Info

As the author of The Journal of Frank Rudd Bybee, 1897 - 1900, and as Frank's grandson, I am more than proud of this accomplishment. While a professional technical writer and editor, this is my breakout novel.

Here is what I seek with a (traditional) publisher or responsive agent versed in electronic, movie and international rights, while still being willing to, ever so gently, where needed, guide my progress:
  • As agent in historical fiction, have you sold, this passed year (2013-14) more than six titles? If so, to which publishers?
  • Do you charge fees of any sort?
  • Do you have affiliated agents who handle foreign rights, for you? TV and movie rights? How about electronic and e-book rights?
  • What is your commission on domestic sales? On foreign sales? On sales where sub-agents are involved?

    You were able to answer yes to a majority of the above? Wonderful ! Why not e-mail me?: 'journalofrudd at sign gmail dot com'.

JoFRB Synopsis



SYNOPSIS of: Journal of Frank Rudd Bybee, 1897 - 1900
The voice of this novel is that of Frank Rudd Bybee, as written in his Journal, which he kept for years, from the plains of Paradise, Iowa to the Hex River Valley, near Worcester, South Africa. The Journal of Frank Rudd Bybee, 1897 - 1900, is complete in its creation. Still needed are sketches, a cover, a comprehensive copy-edit, and e-book style formatting. This writer seeks an agent versed in  traditional publishing, including movie, electronic and international  rights for this title.
Follow us on Twitter@Journal_of_Rudd
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The Journey West:
In 1897, responding to an urgent note from his brother, Charlie-Elmer, Frank Rudd Bybee (hereafter FRB), runs away from the homestead in Crawford County, Iowa. He runs away from a violently abusive and alcoholic ironmonger of a father, who supports his habit by earning an ironmonger’s wage. Well, an iron-monger when he is sober.

 FRB will help Charley-Elmer in San Francisco, even if it means leaving his beloved farm, and his goals of one day farming produce to Dennison, Iowa. His big fear is leaving Ma, to the vilification of Pa.

Before leaving Arion Depot, Frank and Clarissa find each other in their first romantic encounter. Promising to return to Clarissa’s arms and a family on the farm to be created, FRB ventures forth. At the last minute, Hunter bounds up, to join Frank as the train is pulling out. He certainly needs a dog along for the ride. The train journey, via Red Cloud, Nebraska and the Upper Platte river has it’s excitement of ‘injun action’, in which FRB proves his mettle as a sharpshooter, as he demonstrates to Malcolm, the train’s flagman:
Here, Malcolm, see that pigeon circling the elm down there…?” as the box car sways this way and that, I snap the Winchester to my shoulder, the way Oliver always teach me, ‘fast, hard, sight, aim, pull’.

“…now, you don’t.” And the feathers came, drifting, drifting.



Over the Donner Pass, and across the Great Basin to Sacramento, California, where Clarissa and Aunt Bea catch up with FRB, playing the part of the mythical Threshold Gaurdians, noting that the Barbary Coast of San Francisco, is a hive of criminal activity and kidnapping.


The Journey South:

FRB, through circumstances, attends a psuedo birthday party on board a ship, only to be shanghaied by being drugged. Waking up in the brig, he is told that the Hornet_II is bound for London, via Valpairiso, Chile, and Cape Horn.

Scores are leveled slightly when Bunko Kelly, FRB’s crimp, appears in a clipper off the starboard bow, racing for Valparaiso. Kelly is, in turn, kidnapped, and FRB is made one of the crew, as they prepare for the harshness of the Straights of Magellan and Cape Horn.

Rescued from drifting onto the rocks by a pod of wales off Punta Concepcion, off the entrance to the Straights of Magellan, this horrifying event merely intensifies FRB’s desire to return to Iowa and start the farm (and a family) as soon as possible. However…

The Journey East:

Shortly after breaking out the rum, as dictated by nautical custom, when entering a new ocean, the South Atlantic, off the coast of Argentina, the vessel is hit by a ‘rogue wave’, “…it was a giant swell”. In the process, FRB, while battling Kelly, saves the life of Bart, the Hornet_II’s First Mate. After calm returns, not only is Rippens, the ship’s cat, and FRB’s only on-board friend, rescued from clinging to the stern sheets, but mutiny follows in which the Captain is ‘persuaded’ to head for the nearest shore. Catching the South-East trade winds off the island of Tristan da Cunha, the nearest shore is soon realized as Cape Town, South Africa.


The Journey North:

Landing in Cape Town, FRB wastes no time when he meets Mini-Clara Harriman, who, in turn, has recently arrived from Somerset, Kent, in pursuit of her literary hero, Rudyard Kipling. Kipling, friends with Cape Colony premier Cecil-John Rhodes, convinces FRB to help Colonel Baden-Powell relieve the Siege of Mafeking, a garrison town in the North-West of South Africa. In the process, the ideas and foundation of the Boy’s Scout movement are formulated by Baden-Powell and FRB.

Baden-Powell, the young Winston Churchill, Boer kommandos, Harriboi, the ancient Khoi-khoi aborigine, Lady Sarah Wilson, aunt to Churchill, are all involved to some degree or another, in the relief (or otherwise) of Mafeking. While the Boer War was often portrayed lopsidedly, the atrocities FRB experiences, including the death, in his arms, of Harriboi, after being whipped horrendously by the Boers, leaves this young Iowa farm-boy totally shaken and disillusioned. After helping relieve the Siege, FRB is only to pleased to return to the waiting, open and most receptive arms of 'Miss Mini'. They establish a small farm in the idyllic Hex River Valley, where grape and fruit production is the major industry. FRB works for the Cape Orchard Company, a subsidiary of Cecil Rhodes’ Rhodes Fruit Farms. FRB’s ‘vision in the woods’ has now been fullfilled as the mountain on a cloud, and the farms with grapes, have been realized, and the mythical Hero, has not quite completed the Journey, he still needs the accolades of returning to his Community. This does not happen for FRB.



Frank Rudd Bybee, dies in Worcester, in 1953. His Journal, unknown until his death, is discovered by John Bybee, his grandson.



FRB died a sad, lonely, confused man. His last words being: “… I am walking back… I must find Ma, Hunter, and Clari… walking back to the farm in Iow….”

Sunday, May 18, 2014

JoFRB Home

The Journal of Frank Rudd Bybee (1897 - 1900)
Frank Rudd Bybee (circa 1950)
Grandson Jack Bybee (2012) -
Author: The Journal of Frank Rudd Bybee 1897 - 1900
In 1897, Frank Rudd Bybee ran away from a farm in Paradise, Iowa and an abusive, alcoholic, ironmonger father. At age 16, while exploring San Francisco in search of his brother, Frank was shanghaied on the Barbary Coast of California. He awoke in the brig of a brigantine bound for Cape Horn and London.
After encountering  a 'rogue wave' off the Argentine coast, during which Frank saved the life of the First Mate, a mutiny ensues and the captain is 'persuaded' to head for the nearest land.

'Nearest land' is Cape Town, South Africa where Frank is granted his Freedom. In short order, he meets Miss Mini (this writer's grandmother) Rudyard Kipling, (then resident near the University of Cape Town) Cape Colony Premier, Cecil-John Rhodes, and Col. Baden-Powell, founder of the Boy Scout movement.
Frank befriends Baden-Powell, while helping to relieve the siege of Mafeking, during the Second Boer War, in the process, he contributes to the foundations of the Scouting movement.

In 1953, Frank Rudd Bybee, died near Worcester, Cape, South Africa. He died a sad, lonely and confused man, still suffering, I believe, from PTSD, caused by the rogue wave encountered in the South Atlantic.
While The Journal... is mainly fiction, it is heavily based on factual events, relative the life of Frank Rudd Bybee, as this writer has researched.

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