J.P. Linde
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J.P. Linde
Writer
Thanks for stopping by. This site is a quick look at who I am, what I write, and the worlds I build. Browse around, check out the projects, and make yourself at home — the stories are just getting started.
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​J.P. Linde’s love of storytelling began unexpectedly in the sixth grade, when he convinced his male classmates that Elizabeth Montgomery — yes, the star of Bewitched — was his girlfriend. From that moment on, he’s been spinning stories people actually believe.
He’s performed in summer-stock productions of Our Town, Hot L Baltimore, and The Misanthrope — and, to everyone’s relief, managed to avoid appearing nude in Hair. One of the founding members of Portland, Oregon’s comedy scene, J.P. created the sketch and improv group No Prisoners and later took the stage with his one-person show, Casually Insane. He went on to perform stand-up professionally, making his national television debut on Showtime’s Comedy Club Network.
His original musical, Wild Space A Go Go, premiered in Portland at The Embers in 2011. Since then, he’s written five novels, including his latest, The Last Argonaut, coming soon from Reese Unlimited. On the screen side, he co-wrote the horror cult classic Axe to Grind and has collaborated with some of the top producers in film and television.
The long-awaited follow-up to Son of Ravage arrives this fall.
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Now available:

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Where laughter meets terror, one story at a time.  Tales From the Chair!  The new comedy/horror anthology by J.P. Linde.  
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“Wry, weird, and uncomfortably human. Linde’s chair creaks under the weight of our collective nightmares.”

From Reese Unlimited
The Last Argonaut
by
J,P. Linde


​​When Nazi occultists awaken the vengeful spirit of Medea in their hunt for the Golden Fleece, the battle for world domination leaps from ancient tombs to wartime America. Standing in their way is The Peregrine—Atlanta’s masked avenger—and his daring wife, Evelyn. Together they’ll face dark magic, mystic assassins, and a prophecy written in blood. From the mean  streets of Atlanta to deep below Mount Olympus, The Last Argonaut hurtles through myth and history toward an explosive showdown between gods, monsters, and men—and the one hero destined to stand against them all.
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From J.P. Linde Media and El Dorado Press:

A desperate Wyatt Earp pursues Jack London, a boy, and a
grizzled mountain man in a race for a legendary gold mine


Fool's Gold 

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"Not only is J.P. Linde's FOOL's GOLD a barn burner of a snow western adventure tale, it's also a love story. Linde clearly loves his genre, loves creating within it and loves to keep his readers on the edge of their seat."    Richard Melo (Author of Happy Talk and Jokerman 8).
And the book that started it all!

"This book is fun, funny, action-packed, heartfelt, emotional and expertly written. I cannot recommend it enough."

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Visionary Talent Agency
Betsy Magee (Agent)
​646-637-6044
[email protected]
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This is the part where I’d normally say “fade out.” But in my world, this is where the real stories begin. I’ve got a full slate of screenplays—if you want to take a look, request the password and head to Screenplays.
​Contact details.
anewtypeofhero.blogspot.com

The Secret?

3/10/2026

0 Comments

 
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Here's "The Secret"  Oprah didn’t tell you.

Okay, first let’s celebrate that we made it through another week. And let’s also acknowledge that for some people, the present moment is a lot harder than it is for others.

I’m reminded of something Nicholas Romanov once asked rather innocently: “Are we going  far?”

John Lennon once described the Beatles’ rise as reaching the “toppermost of the poppermost.”Not too bad an attitude to have, I must say. For some of us, however, the exact opposite might feel a little closer to home.

I had an interesting conversation with my agent regarding Creative Visualization. Some of you might know the concept from Oprah’s championing of The Secret. The idea is simple enough: close your eyes and envision your creative future. Wish hard and long enough, and eventually you’ll be living it.

Unfortunately, there’s a rather obvious problem with that theory. Plenty of people visualize for days, weeks, months—even years—and never see any such magical manifestation.And when that happens, what are they told?
Well, you must not be wishing hard enough. You’re your own worst enemy. You must somehow be holding yourself back.

Bullshit.

Here’s my version of the visualization secret: don’t spend all your time dreaming about the wealth, the admirers, and the mountains of fentanyl-free cocaine that success in your creative field will supposedly bring you.

If you must visualize something, try seeing yourself with a daily routine where you are actually working your craft. Picture yourself sitting down and doing the work. Imagine rehearsing the steps that might bring you closer to whatever it is you’re trying to achieve.

And for the record, I don’t believe everyone is going to make it. What I do believe is that anyone who works at their creativity—whatever that may be—gets better.

Simple as that.

And I believe the reason I have not been invited onto Dr. Phil, Oprah, or asked to do a Ted Talk is because the real answer isn’t glamorous. Working toward a goal isn’t easy. Sometimes it takes everything you’ve got.

And now this (Sorry John Oliver):

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