Govenor Mike
Back in the late 1980's Wolf wrote a screenplay, which
he then presented, to ex-NFL star (and uber-steroid abuser) and
aspiring action-adventure genre film star Lyle Alzado. Wolf
was offered $2 million to write and develop it too. And he turned
it down. Anyhow, if you wanna read the two million-dollar
screenplay it is included here at the archive.
"From the beginning, DeVoon competently combines the pull of a space story with suspenseful twists and turns of a thriller, focusing on a young lawyer who's somewhat reluctantly agreed to an appointment to the bench on Mars. But things aren't what they seem, as he discovers en route. While Book One opens engagingly enough, it almost seems that the lawyer's hesitations are matched in DeVoon; but as the story progresses, both author and judge rise to their full potential." - Sunni Maravillosa
Mars is My Planet
Three chapters of additional fiction based on the scenario and
charactors featured in the Mars Shall Thunder series
listed above. I hope some day Wolf decides to finish this work.
But I am not holding my breathe either.
"Roth's admiration and excitement meant nothing, vanished in
dead air as soon as the words left his mouth and cataleptic
sunshine from two tall windows hushed: so what? Like a lot of
younger men reaching to say something important, Cliff Roth
suddenly felt like a moron, missing the structure and meaning of
events in the ken of his elders. The NewsPic story was cops and
robbers, something to gawk at and rave about in your living room
or office -- not here, not now. The real Mitch Warburg was an old
man with crumpled skin and gray sprigs of wiry beard. He was in
pain, ignoring it, thinking about something else, letting Roth
gush because it didn't matter one way or the other. When it
happens at the right time, right place like this, elders lead by
example and younger men learn. Roth found himself wondering how
he could help."
The Good Walk Alone
First serialized in Laissez Faire City Times, this is
Wolf's action adventure saga of an anarcho-capitalist utopia in
the year 2050. Plutocractic playboys and private police grapple
with assassins, a war zone in Southern California, corrupt London
bankers, and myriad cloak and dagger
identities. Rated "R" for racy language.
Pelada Red
Wolf's
last screenplay, written in 2002, tells the story of life on
life's terms on the beach in Costa Rica. There's been a murder
and the local cops are incompetent and useless.
Flibbet-Part One
An absurdist work from Wolf.
"It was approximately 2:38 pm Thursday when suspicion began
to swirl innocently, like a wisp of lazy gray stink from an old
fire. Then it exploded suddenly and shook the streets of
Poughkeepsie with determination because CBS News had been
deceived. You can get away with a lot nowadays, including murder
and self-mutilation, but you cannot lie to CBS."
Three Mile Island
An autobiographical short story based on Wolf's early adulthood.
"Seeing another hurdle in his path and nothing else, Whitney
drilled nine words deep into his opponent's eyes. "I have an
appointment," he said firmly. 'My name is Robert Whitney.'
The guard blinked, his 12 years of training suspended by the
magic of an authentic command. Perhaps this odd-looking shrimp
really did have an appointment to see the president of
Philadelphia Edison."
Death of An Innocent
Wolf's innocence that is.
"Whitney flushed with embarrassment. He had neither the
money nor courage to wear anything other than the plain slacks
and long-sleeved shirts he wore like a uniform. He winced at the
thought of trying to wear the sophisticated, casual sportswear
that Richard looked so good in. Blue jeans and a T-shirt were
about as far as Whitney could experiment. He almost put them on
todayhis only pairbut decided that it would be
inappropriate for a business meeting."
A Life in Work
A list of every job Wolf has ever had. The list is fascinating in
its variety.
Filmography
A list of Wolf's work in film and the entertainment industry.