Yea... awhile.
I came here in 2004 specifically to post on this forum thread, and then in 2005 I forgot to come back.

<- me
But I got better, so here I am again.
Okay, what really happened is I got this e-mail from Furtopia saying, "The board's been hacked. Run for your wives!" (or something like that). Then a couple of days ago I got another e-mail that said, "We fixed it, y'all can come back now." So I did. And here I am.

What have I been doing? I left a greeting in the "furry greetings" forum that 'splains some o' that. The most significant is that I've been writing, and I took over the management of
a furry writing contest in spring of 2006 when the former manager was forced to drop out.
I participated in NaNoWriMo 2005 and did
terrible! Little more than a vague idea only capable of sustaining a short story, will do that to ya. Then I studied storytelling, trying to hone my skills. Mixed results. NaNo again for 2007 and did better, but I seem to have this flaw/feature where I can't effectively write anything if I know at the time it's largely useless/filler/junk. That doesn't meant that what I do write is worth saving--only that I thought so at the time. I'll probably toss out my 4,100 word first chapter and start with the second. The second needs some editing, but the opening's pretty hot.
I've got a lot of partly written stories: shorts, novellas, and that novel. I think I'm ready to start submitting to the professional markets, but I need to finish something so I can submit it. My completed stories have all been Internet published. My two latest short story starts are for professional sale (at least that's my hope).
The first is cyber/sci-fi/anthro set in a far future post-human world (geeeee, sounds familiar) and explores the psychology of the animal bride genre. In this case the human husband role is played by a genetically uplifted fox--although exactly what he is isn't revealed until the third act. And the animal bride role is played by an AI living in VR.
The second story is a far more conventional myth/fairy tale set in present times. It's a retelling of the classic selkie story, but the twist is that rather than capture her and force her to live as a human (selkies are shapeshifers, as most animal brides in the old stories are), he follows her into her world and
he is transformed.
The shape of the animal bride story has changed throughout history and is a reflection of how the storyteller's society relates to the natural world. In very early stories a human marries an animal (animals are treated like people) and this animal brings some gift or skill to her husband's tribe--end of story. In feudal Europe and Asia the story shifts to the man either captures a shapeshifting animal and forces her to retain her human shape, or she beguiles him in her human shape; they marry; she regains her shapeshifting ability, or he breaks some taboo, or her secret is discovered; they part, sometimes fatally--end of story. In the last few centuries this second type of story has further evolved so that after they part, he purses her and wins her love, and then brings her back home--end of story. What I'm doing with my new myth is pushing that even further to where, when her true nature is revealed and he is given the choice to give up humanity and join her in her world, he does.
So in the first story type, society is living with nature; the world is filled with spirits and all--plant, animal, and human--are a part of the spiritual cosmos. In the second story type society is struggling against nature--building cities, growing crops, and keeping livestock; humans have risen above the natural world, which is a scary and dangerous place. In the third story type humans are starting to realize that maybe living apart from nature makes us a lonely species, so the pursuit of the lost bride can represent the pursuit of nature--but nature is brought back to civilization and tamed. In our fourth story type the human word represents a failure; in rejection of that world the husband goes in pursuit of nature and becomes one with nature.
I say "our" because
Wild Rose Country is of this fourth type. It's an animal bride story. Sure, John doesn't have a choice, but you did and that's what you chose for him, and he accepted it. Your characters don't shapeshift, but John joins a society much like the societies that embraced the first story type--at one with nature; living with nature and not against it. He becomes a wolf. I think that's why, when I first read your story back in 2004, I had a "Wow!" reaction. Given today's ecological, political, and economic climate, there will be a lot of readers who want to
become John. Furry or mundane, who you are has nothing to do with that desire.
So yea. I been keeping busy.
Scotty