Ghost Ship

Past due on dry dock charges, pay up or...what?

Past due on dry dock charges, pay up or...what?

     She sits naked and rusting on dry land, in shabby disrepair like a once elegant grande dame on a doctor's examination table, awaiting word of her demise. Whatever the prognosis it won't be good. The Calypso, the storied adventure vessel of Jacques Cousteau, is experiencing her final chapter.

Flashback. My friend, the swashbuckler, sent me this memory in an email today:

"Years ago I was on Calypso sailing past the Statue of Liberty into New York City.There was an enormous crowd waiting to greet us, fire boats were streaming water into the air and it was quite celebratory.

"I was struck by how different my sailing into this city was from my grandfather's entry 100 years earlier. He entered on a ship full of Sicilian immigrants and disembarked at Ellis Island.

 The Calypso in sunnier days...

 The Calypso in sunnier days...

"Simone Cousteau was standing next to me on the bridge. I asked her if she thought Calypso would become a museum. She replied "Never!"

"She said she didn't want tourists carving their initials on the walls of her home. Said she would take her out to sea and scuttle her."

In other blogs to come, I'm going to chronicle some of the adventures and misadventures of Tim Trabon aka The Swashbuckler. A few blogs won't begin to do him justice; a book too big to hold while eating a sandwich might.

Trabon in deep powder

Trabon in deep powder

He explored the Amazon, was taken captive by a primitive tribe, fought a duel at dawn in the mist, skiid the Bugaboos, camped out ala Hemingway in the darkest reaches of Africa, rendered a small basement letterpress into a global printing business, rode rough stock in rodeo, explored the back streets of Cuba and the temples of Machu Picchu, built a hands-on cattle operation which he tends at calving time, and won awards with horses he bred and trained. And a shit ton more.

But this is not the blog for that. Tim earned a red watch cap from the Cousteau crew, and that in itself was a huge achievement for any man. Not many wear that knit trophy. It's in mothballs, being wool. And the ship he earned it on sheds rusty tears in France where its bill for storage is past due. The story in the Guardian is here.

 

 

 

The Dangerous Time of Year.

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Shit happens, if you'll pardon the inelegance. I wonder when that saying was first expressed, and am guessing it was around this time of year after the high expectations of the holiday season had once more crashed, burned, left a smoking scar on the landscape. Well, maybe that's harsh. I was a good boy I guess, and got a wholly unexpected iPod Touch and a UE Boom. The equivalent of a Red Ryder BB gun and a motorscooter to a twelve year old. Thanks again, F! I spent four joyous days cherrypicking hundreds of CDs accumulated over the years, ended up with 1,200 tunes on this wondrous wafer-slim machine, and still have three or four gigabytes left.

The list, shuffled, will surprise me with a Chemical Brothers electronic beeper followed by a Jimmie Dale Gilmore twanger. James McMurtry sings about giving kids vodka in a cherry Coke to make 'em sleep on the way to a reunion, June Christy smoothes that over with a 3AM of the soul version of Midnight Sun. And the UE Boom travels with me on the highway, the brilliant cylindrical design bathing the truck interior with sparkling sound. Makes me smile. May get me through the dangerous time of year.

Merle Haggard sang "if we make it through December..." in a gruesome song about hard times and low moods; he could have added January and February to this bleak account. Attention wanders, cars bump together creating more bills. A hit and run, close to home. Probably a tweaking drug-addled child-beating texter in a stolen vehicle. There's a word for it, but not here.

James McMurtry (looks like Mad Dog Wihlm, a dear, dear friend) and The Heartless Bastards. Deserves a listen or 20. He's a poet genius

James McMurtry (looks like Mad Dog Wihlm, a dear, dear friend) and The Heartless Bastards. Deserves a listen or 20. He's a poet genius

I am balancing writing another novel with making a draft horse out of some wondrous parts, signs, toys, Kansas relics. The writing flows some days like something through a tin horn, other days like 40 weight oil in the kind of weather we normally see this time of year. The weather is quite nice, however. So there goes a whiny complaint I can't make.

What about tax time, Merle? Sing about that. Add up those deductibles. The truck that sounds so good inside just notified me it needs an exhaust system outside. The pipes, the pipes are falling, from glen to glen and down the mountainside.

Puns even get worse this time of year. But the days are getting longer, F reminds me. More sun. Light. And, if we're lucky we'll make it through the dangerous time of year with its taxes, holiday bills and arctic winds whistling through the wheat stubble with nothing to slow them but barbed wire all the way from Fargo. Brr. What about that, Merle? Let that sink in.

And a surprising word of positivity: Allow. I remember that if one allows the good stuff to seep, it will. As a 40's Nat King Cole song on my iPod reminds me, accentuate the positive, eliminate the negative and don't mess with Mr. In-between. Old badass Mr. Dangerous Time of Year. Have a good one, Allow.

Oh, and just got a guest blog on KILLER NASHVILLE, a super thriller venue--I'm honored. Wrote it back in August and forgot about it, so it doesn't mention the two books picked up by publisher, otherwise it's timely as all getout. Positive stuff. Take a look.

http://www.killernashville.com/junkman-cometh-sometimes-writeth-author-guinotte-wise/

 

 

 

True Detective, Pattern Recognition, and some of my own stuff. (Because I like being in brilliant company)

I did a rave review of Galveston by Nic Pizzolatto not so long ago. (Scroll down, if interested, and hit "next" once or twice) Great noir novel with soul, wit, atmospherics and intelligence. Most noir stuff I've read lately dispense with the last four items. Be that as it may I stand by my statement that he's a (expletive) genius.

Remarkable. And that's a BIG understatement.

Remarkable. And that's a BIG understatement.

True Detective, the radiantly brilliant HBO series bangs that nail right into the pantheon hall of fame wall where they'll hang his certificate. True Detective is simply the best thing to grace TV, ever. HBO is to be congratulated. Best dialogue, best acting, best casting, best direction, best music, best costume design, best cinematography, best stuntwork, best catering probably, best Best Boy and Key Grip, I'd wager. Man, the total is just so far out there as to defy description.

Film students, take note. Script writers listen up. This is the new shoot-for-the- moon aspirational bullseye. It gets no better. Someday when and if this blog gets some audience I will attempt to interview Mr. Pizzolatto. Anyone who could dream up nihiist Rust Cohle and make Marty Hart much more than a cardboard cutout Louisiana cop, has stuff to say, you bet.

Those two: fire and ice, oil and water. The tension built up between Rust and Marty is as tactile and toxic as a freshly creosoted railroad tie. And Pizzolatto's mining of The King In Yellow, a 19th century horror story, as the basis for a cult within a cult, is as gothic as it gets in kudzu country.

If you haven't seen it, do yourself a big ol' solid favor and get the series on disc. You'll watch it more than once. If you've seen it, you know what I'm talking about, because you want to see it again, don't you? See it once for dialogue, once for story, once for acting (McConaughey and Harrelson are Su-freaking-PERB!) once for...on and on. It's The Best.

An edgy look at the present in future tense, or something like that.

An edgy look at the present in future tense, or something like that.

Pattern Recognition by William Gibson is really really good, blew me away actually,-- not like True Detective and Galveston. But it still elicits "wow's" and sky-looks every few pages. The story is rather wonderful--a hot girl who is allergic to the point of hives and anaphylaxis to fashion logos, a mysterious set of film snippets that may be the doing of a genius/auteur that pops up in odd places online frame by frame, the machinations of an evil ad agency CEO and his minions, and the hot girl's shadowy father, almost certainly lost in the Twin Tower horror, but present as a sort of spiritual advisor. This thing whipsaws you from Paris to Tokyo to London and Moscow, back to the USA and whirls you about while showing you a travelogue immersed in detail and fine points enough to make you think you know these places. Masterful. And great fun. Five stars on the Amazon scale, easily, while TD and Galveston get Ten.

And now, some news of my stuff. (it's my blog, how else can I be placed in such grand company as Pizzolatto and Gibson?)

Gardening and boxing prepare a guy for detecting?

Gardening and boxing prepare a guy for detecting?

First off, and least, Amazon ordered two more copies of Night Train,Cold Beer! Must've been a run on it. Joke, son. The real news is, (1) Ruined Days, the novel, is in edit rounds at the publisher. (2) That same publisher issued a contract for Resume Speed, a collection of short stories, that, unlike Night Train, will look like an actual book and not something typeset in WWI Minsk, and another novel, L.A.Hardscape, is slated to be done in April--and, who knows, it may also get a publishing contract.

It's an oddball private eye story, about an ex-Notre Dame champ who has to quit the fight game in Los Angeles due to mob meddling, so he takes up gardening to pay the rent. He's good at it. But he also scored high on LAPD's rookie on-the-street training before he quit that for the earlier re-entry into boxing. Page one he gets into it with a mob enforcer and off he goes. He meets a ravishing older woman in Brooks Brothers on Rodeo Drive and off he goes again, but she disappears and leaves him holding his bags of compost and rakes in a mansion in South Bay plus he's being pursued by someone just as mysterious. Should be done in April.  Resume Speed should be on shelves in 2015, along with Ruined Days.

 

For the heck of it, here's the Table of Contents page for Resume Speed. Maybe it'll whet some appetites

                                                                                   

Table of Contents

 

 

Argo and the Sirens                                                                                     Page 3

A Night at the Jubilee Room                                                                      Page 16

Speaking French in Kurtz Territory                                                         Page 30

Strong, the Pink                                                                                           Page 44

Exhuming Captain Midnight                                                                      Page 55

Desert Dog                                                                                                    Page 79

What Wade Clover Did Summer of 1958                                                  Page 82

Ten (More) Circumstances Beyond Control                                           Page 104

The Hole in the Ceiling at the Refuge Tavern                                        Page 119

Winchester Tattoo                                                                                        Page 138

Coffin a Carload                                                                                           Page 156

Wing Walker                                                                                                 Page 189

The Performance                                                                                          Page 206

Midnight Robot                                                                                             Page 210

Jesus Rust                                                                                                     Page 214

Train Time                                                                                                    Page 218

Acknowledgements

A shorter version of Argo and the Sirens, titled The Sirens of Lake Texoma, appeared in Flyover Country, and the Resume Speed version appeared in Thrice Fiction Magazine, A Night at the Jubilee Room appeared in Dying Goose, Speaking French in Kurtz Territory appeared in Atticus, Strong the Pink appeared in Santa Fe Writers Project, Exhuming Captain Midnight appeared in Amarillo Bay, Desert Dog appeared in Commuter Lit, What Wade Clover Did in 1958 appeared in Prick of the Spindle, Hardball (of Ten Circumstances) appeared in Gravel, Blue Moon, High Bridge and Transgression (of Ten Circumstances) appeared in Randomly Accessed Poetics, The Hole in the Ceiling at the Refuge Tavern was anthologized in Best New Writing, 2015, Wing Walker appeared in Cactus Heart Review, Midnight Robot appeared in Dirty Chai, Jesus Rust appeared in Blacktop Passages, Train Time appeared in Work Literary Magazine

 

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I plan to resume speed on the writing right after the turkey and I get stuffed and the fat guy in the red suit (uncle Fred) is long gone back to a place even colder than this Kansas where the arctic air screams down with little else but a couple barbwire fences between here and Fargo.  Brrr.  I am both thankful and merry. The best of the holidays to you. (A later note, I was real good as I got an iPod Touch and a UE Boom, took me four days to load over 1200 songs from CDs I'd accumulated in the last 25 years. And I have 3.5 gigs left on the marvelous little skinny wonder.)

 

 

 

 

Knucklehead. A Memoir.


(This piece ran in Stymie, a Journal of Sports and Literature a couple of years ago. I drug it out in a fit of nostalgia. Hope you dig it. No names are changed to protect the innocent.)

I recall a beast like this waiting for me under the oaks after high school. I ran to it in slow-mo like that commercial. These days it would have been stolen.

I recall a beast like this waiting for me under the oaks after high school. I ran to it in slow-mo like that commercial. These days it would have been stolen.

            Maybe I inhaled too much model airplane fuel when I was building those free-flight gasoline-powered planes as a kid.  I know I loved the smell of garages and anything that ran on any kind of fuel at all.  I got to mow lawns in the 50's with a rope-start power mower that belonged to a neighbor--I got paid but I'd have eagerly done it for free.  I internalized internal combustion.  Those little airplane engines went from stone dead to snarling angry life with the help of a battery and a finger placed just right on the prop, then flipped.  You learned early how to do that after the propeller chewed up your index finger.  There was danger involved with all of this stuff.  Adrenaline.  Proximity of combustibles.  Heat.  Heady vapors.  A world of its own, and I loved it.  So, 1953.  Before Elvis.  Saturday.  We were hanging out, bored.  Levis, t-shirts, hoodlumesque enough to get a peek from a neighbor window, the curtain falling back into place as we looked.  I was barely fifteen. "Let's go to a show," said Maury.  He knew all the movies, what was showing.  "The Wild One' is on at the Plaza.  It's about gangs.  Motorcycles.  They take over this little town."

Marlon, the master of mumbling, affected a whole generation of us, he and James Dean. Made our folks crazy people.

Marlon, the master of mumbling, affected a whole generation of us, he and James Dean. Made our folks crazy people.

            Motorcycles.  Yikes.  I had always wanted one.  I rented BSAs with a driver's license not my own.  I borrowed a Cushman Eagle from an older friend who was outgrowing it.  I borrowed a Zundapp from a rich kid who didn't care about it.  I borrowed a lowly Solex from another friend--it was a bicycle that you pedaled up to speed, then lowered a little kerosene-powered motor on a hinge down on the front wheel and it would keep you going for an hour.  Pretty dorky, but it had a motor.  I had lots of miles on bikes with playing card spoke-motors, and then motor-propelled scooters and motorcycles.  And here was a movie about people on such conveyances exercising undreamed-of powers.  A true must-see.  We saw it.  My God.  I can remember parts of it to this day.  I absorbed it like model airplane glo-fuel, inhaled it, lived it.  When that waitress asked Brando what he was rebelling against, and he said "Whaddya got?" it caused me to wait, in vain, for years for someone to ask me that, so I could answer, in a barely intelligible mumble, "Whaddya got?"  The question never came.

            An aside.  Never see a movie, over again, later in life that affected you deeply.  Just don't.  If you have, you know what I mean.  See it in your head, and it will retain its power.  See it on the screen, many years later, and it's WTF?  This movie was, is, an embarrassment.  It's, well, stupid.  Poorly directed.  Sucky dialogue.  Just dopey.  They didn't even ride Harleys, most of them.  What did I know?  I wanted a Velocette that I'd seen in Popular Mechanix.  A French motorcycle!  With a shaft drive!  Zut alors!

            But it wasn't dopey in 1953.  It was revelatory.  It was a religious experience.

            I emerged, slit-eyed, into the sunlight, barely listening to my friends.  It was a new world.  I was changed.   Within days I would own my first Harley-Davidson.  I would wear motorcycle boots.  I aspired to take over a small town with a newly-acquired band of friends, nascent criminals and mentally unbalanced pals.  We would mumble like Brando.  Roll our eyes.  Smirk.

            I had a small stash of paper route money that I had saved up due to my mom often declaring we were bankrupt.  She used that term whenever something like a new car or a move was out of reach.  Then she'd paint the living room.

            So, instead of saving the family I made a down payment on a well-worn Harley-Davidson knucklehead.  The knucklehead nickname derives from the fact that the rocker boxes atop the finned cylinder heads resembled two knuckles of a fist. I negotiated for $5 a week payments on this monster.  The older kid I bought it from fired it up for me and that whole gasoline/olfactory thing kicked in--plus the unmistakable sound effects of that big, chunky Harley-falling-apart sound.  I was in heaven.  I never knew the year of this hog, just the aura.  It had a tank shift and a scary clutch which was later to be my downfall.  I'm embarrassed to say I don't know if it was a 61 cubic inch, or a 74.  I'll say 74 because that's preferred these days.  I was never not scared on this thing.  And always delighted.

They didn't always tell you what plates were in which box so I played Wheaties lottery, cheeks bulging with unwanted cereal, hoping the next box would make my Knuck less conspicuous to the cops.

They didn't always tell you what plates were in which box so I played Wheaties lottery, cheeks bulging with unwanted cereal, hoping the next box would make my Knuck less conspicuous to the cops.

            One small problem.  Well, about six small problems.  I didn't have a driver's license.  There was no way I could title the thing so I had no license plate.  And my folks were death on motorcycles.  A big NO.  End of discussion.  So I bypassed them, kept it at Ray C.'s house, a two-block walk from my own.  My paper route got me up at 5am--after throwing the route (from Mr. Ehlers' paper truck; I had the right side and a left-handed kid took the other.  We could lead a dog with these flat sailing Kansas City Times and bounce one right off his head.  We were good.) I had free time until school and it was still dark at that time of year.  I'd coast down Ray's driveway and jump-start the knucklehead halfway down the block.  And I'd cruise Brookside and all around mid-town, the wind in my face, the Harley thrumming a deep, dirty sound bubble all around me.  Dark, chilly freedom.  Citizens slept unaware of the grinning, budding menace in goggles invading their streets.

            I don't think any non-biker can know the...theosophy of this.  The zen.  Maybe a surfer would know.  A skier alone on an expert run with that once-in-a-season rhythm on the moguls.  Yeah there are parallels.  But, in the main, it's like the t-shirt says:  "It's a Harley thing.  You wouldn't understand."  I don't think the graying, paunchy baby-boomers, the Rolex Riders, understand, but I could be wrong.

            I was fifteen.  Elvis and James Dean and Catcher in the Rye would help mold my persona a bit later.  For now I was putty in the hands of William Harley and Walter Davidson. 

            Later in my life I would move my family to Milwaukee for the chance to work on Harley-Davidson advertising.  To this day I own a Harley.  There is no antidote.


            I digress.  There was, as I said, no license plate on the knucklehead.  Fortuitously, at that time, Wheaties cereal packaged small license plates in their boxes for a premium.  These plates were embossed metal and about the size of a motorcycle plate.  Missouri motorcycle plates were white with black letters back then, and the only ones that Wheaties offered in that color combination were Maine, Quebec, British Columbia and a couple of other oddball plates.  My memory tells me I got Alaska, even though they weren't a state until 1959 but I'll go with that.  I hung it on the back of the tractor-type saddle with hanger wire.  I was never stopped.  My folks were a bit puzzled at my accelerated appetite for Wheaties (until the plate showed up), but dismissed it; "He's a growing boy."

            Memory.  This is the strange part; I can't even remember the knucklehead's color although I think it may have been red.  I'm pretty sure it was.  What I recall in detail is the total and complete emancipation from the humdrum, the routine.   The liftoff.  I had no loyalty to brand or configuration or fine points back then.  I was in it for the fix, the release.  The Harley loyalty came later, and it was always tied to my first, albeit brief, ownership experience. 

            A few weeks and about thirty bucks more of payments into this adventure, Maury and I took the Knucklehead over to Loose Park with a stopwatch.  Loose Park had a paved sidewalk all around it in 1953, and we used it for lap timing runs.  He'd clock me and vice versa, and we'd try to beat one another's times.  That day, under a cloudless, sparkling blue sky, on my third or fourth attempt, I decided to wind out low gear much faster, and pop it into second, get up to speed early.  The clutch was referred to as a beartrap and it wasn't made for such shenanigans. Something sickening happened.  I missed the shift, the bike lurched as though I'd hit the brakes and the sound of gear parts and transmission crunches were evident.  Then it freewheeled.  We walked it home.

            Later that week I called the kid I'd bought it from.  Said my folks wouldn't let me keep it and something was broken in the transmission anyway.  He said no refunds, I agreed.   And he came and picked it up in a panel truck.  

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            But I was hooked.  And beginning to figure out that Harleys had magical properties built into them at the factory, probably with incantations and ceremonies.  I wasn't far off. 

            I visited the factory back in the 60's having moved to Milwaukee and signed on to Harley-Davidson's advertising agency.  I'll never forget two things about that visit.  The first was, Walter Davidson, son, or maybe grandson to the original Davidson I believe, despised any changes to factory Harley-Davidsons so he made all the chopper owners park their machines outside the chain link fence to the parking lot.  This effectively advertised the choppers and called attention to their modifications and bizarre designs, propagating more of the same.

            The other thing that imprinted on me was what I call "The Skronk Effect."  On the tour I was led past a bearded and tattooed worker with a chain-drive pocketbook and a weathered leather jacket.  He would affix a two sided flyweel counterweight in a vise, then take a two-by-four, insert it in between the two pieces of iron and force the pieces apart with a noise that sounded like "skronk."  Then he would un-vise it and toss it atop a growing pile of these things.

            I asked my guide about this operation and he said, "Well, ol' Ernie is adjusting counterweights so they don't wobble and shake the bike too much."  My next question was, "Are they adjusted further somewhere down the line?

            "Naw.  Ernie's got a purty good feel for this."

            I only vaguely recall their museum.  In my memory it was a big, dark unheated room with broken factory windows and old motorcycles parked along the walls, then above these, was a shelf-like rack where more were jammed in together.  I believe there was one for each year since their inception but it was such an agglomeration of frames, pipes and motors that the initial visual effect was that of a parking lot at a biker bar at night.

They didn't let these things into the Harley parking lot back then. They were missing the whole point, trying to sanitize the image. Even the suits wanted to be weekend outlaws.

They didn't let these things into the Harley parking lot back then. They were missing the whole point, trying to sanitize the image. Even the suits wanted to be weekend outlaws.

 "Easy Rider" came out that year, and outlaw bikes took on longer front forks and higher handlebars than ever before.  I had bought a Harley-Davidson police bike from precinct #5 in Milwaukee at about the same time.  The main bearings were fried and it was otherwise in disrepair.  I hauled it home and began tearing it down, but I borrowed so many tools from my mechanic neighbor that he wordlessly wheeled the hulk over to his barn and that's where it was transformed.

 I took the v-twin motor to the factory where it was rebuilt and bored out.  I had admired the front tube forks of Fonda's Harley in Easy Rider (they were 8" over stock length) so I ordered a pair from Cheetah Motorcycle Parts in California. I waited for that box with the same anticipation and impatience that, in boyhood, I'd exhibited while awaiting a Lone Ranger Atom Bomb ring (really, there was such a thing, though it makes no sense whatsoever) from Battle Creek, Michigan.

            There had been a mistake and these were not 8" over stock length, they were 18" over stock length!  We re-raked the gooseneck on the frame, and installed them.  I was on the way to owning a chopper that would never be allowed within miles of the Harley-Davidson plant.  No front fender.  Curlycue handlebars.  Camel hump seat.  Bored out "eighty over."

            The tank...we cut the fatbob double tank in half lengthways, so it had the same profile from the side, but looking down at it, it was long and skinny.  It was a tank shift motorcycle with first, second, third...and reverse!  It had been set up for use with a sidecar for some reason that was never satisfactorily explained to me, but the reverse now came in handy.  With the super-long fork, it was a bear to turn around in tight spaces, but a reverse gear would make it more manageable.

            My mechanic friend declared it unsafe at any speed or standing still, wiped his hands and turned to more conservative endeavors.  Like installing a huge hemi engine in a small hatchback, mid-engine so the driver was inches from it.

            This perversion of the Harley-Davidson ideals would have had a longer story but economic realities cut it short.  The deep well pump failed at the house we had bought on the rural outskirts of Milwaukee, and the first item up for sale was this chopper.  My wife and kids weren't going to give up showers.  A member of the Milwaukee Outlaws club bought it, paid cash in $100 bills, slapping them down on my kitchen table.  The motorcycle was unfinished, frame apart from engine, but savvy eyes could surely see the possibilities.  I like to think it is bellowing somewhere on the Wisconsin streets and highways, emitting menace, exacting awe. 

            It would have narrowed the eyes of the older Mr. Davidson to Clint Eastwood gun turrets.  I think Willie G. Davidson, a progressive sort, and designer of the wildly successful machines to come after the buyback from AMF, might have grinned.  He might have withheld enthusisatic approval however, just on the basis of engineering principles, if not aesthetics.

            I have owned Harleys since then.  And Triumphs, and BSAs, and a BMW.  But Harleys have been the stalwarts over the years.  I still own one.  Chopped, raked, lowered.  It sits in back of a 1949 Ford in the metal building where I weld steel sculpture.  It's a beauty.  But it's no knucklehead.

            A drug addict once told me that his whole life until rehab had been an unrelenting search for the euphoria of his first original high.  I know my first cup of Kona coffee in the morning on a Saturday is the best.  The subsequent cups are really good, don't get me wrong, but the first sip of the first cup is nirvana.  And, sometimes, as I'm sipping that, I'm looking at email and wasting that effect on some level.  Like the knucklehead I surely am after all these years. 

            I didn't have any such sidebars or distractions when I first straddled that Harley.  I was into it.  I twisted that throttle and the sound went from the distinctive "potato, potato" idle to a ragged elk holler.  It went through me.  I was that sound.  I was that knucklehead.  Like the t-shirt says, "It's a Harley thing.  You wouldn't understand."  I'm not sure I do either.

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Autumn vs Fall. And other stuff in the air besides leaves.

Obligatory photo of turning leaves and mildly threatening sky...

Obligatory photo of turning leaves and mildly threatening sky...

This isn't about that, but I had to mention it anyway. Some author got his tighties in a wad and said he thought Autumn was pretentious, why not just say Fall. Maybe it was Andy Rooney, that was his kind of BS. Or Hemingway used to get all uptight too. (Truman Capote said on late night TV, "I think Ernest was really more like me than he preferred known," or words to that effect. Anyway i was out walking with the dogs and humming "Autumn Leaves," an old favorite. I decided to substitute Fall for Autumn and the result was really crappy. Made me laugh (at a lot of these guys who say shit, like they had little else to do). So much for that. Hey if they can, I can too. Hence my glob. Blog.

Another splendid Ben Carmean cover...

Another splendid Ben Carmean cover...

Anyway. September. Big month. I got a contract for Ruined Days. Cool. Paperback and ebooks, hardbacks if sales warrant. Thought it was the other way around but what do I know? Really. Anyway, I'll have two books out. More on the way. We'll see how that goes. In the works are these covers. Plus a collection of short stories titled Resume Speed. Awaiting word on these. (All the covers are Ben Carmean designs, wizard stuff)

The invitations to the events: Above, the Denton/Accardo spectacular, Below right, zee plane zee plane.

The invitations to the events: Above, the Denton/Accardo spectacular, Below right, zee plane zee plane.

Also this: "Life Illuminated" by two brilliant minds from VML, Mars Denton and Stefania Accardo. These young ladies put together a "mural" that won the competition hands down--I'll try to explain it: It's a big board that has moss or some growing, living plant that represents the oceans, and on the land areas a myriad of colored, flashing LED pinpoint lights showing conversation about various current exciters such as #GMO, #Gaza, #Ebola, other topics. The moss has to be spritzed and cared for periodically which, to me, exemplifies the care we should be taking with our world water.  Ideally, the hashtags will change to reflect the various topics of world social media. The thing is mind-bending in its implications. And, important enough, in my opinion, to be in a museum or at CNN or NBC news headquarters or somewhere. Just SO impressive.

The Illumunati and this, two more Carmean designs.

The Illumunati and this, two more Carmean designs.

The same night I saw that, I saw an airplane of mine installed at the VML-Wise Gallery, which they kindly named after me when I left.  I'm so proud it houses that Life Illumination mural for now, and my plane along with it as a permanent fixture.

They asked me to put some words on it and here they are:

Something in the air.

Might have been the various chemicals I ingested as a kid building model planes, planes that flew with fuel-propelled engines. The balsa wood frames were covered with a tissue-thin paperlike substance that, once glued in place, was painted with something called airplane dope that tightened and strengthened it into a shell. Dope. That's what it was called. You asked for it at the hobby shop and they sold it over the counter, no furtiveness. No asking if you were a cop.

Dope. That and the tube of cement, or glue, emitted fumes. As did the glo-fuel with which you filled the little hornet engines. Heady fumes. No wonder some kids went on building these things into high school and beyond. The aerospace industry is filled with these happy people.

And when I hear a piston-prop plane, I shade my eyes and look for it in the clouds, sometimes a dot, sometimes low enough to read the numbers. And it means freedom.

When I came upon the fuselage-looking thing in a flea market, the stove dashboard, it beckoned to me. I didn't know quite why until I started on it. Without the benefit of dope I might add. Some loom spindles became floats. A discarded motor from the old days supplied the dream power. Parts jumped to it as to a magnet. It became the ultimate in freedom; a bush plane! In my mind it flew over the hump and landed in glasslike fjords in shangri-la and the whitecaps of moose country. Anywhere. The great uncharted Anywhere.

There were no directions, no instructions. Sort of like VML when it took its maiden flight. Dreamers built it. And the damn thing flew! Did it ever. Flight has been a constant thread from the pre-VML TWA days, the Northwest adventure, the Southwest and Korean Air clients of today. And this bush plane symbolizes the audaciousness of that dream.

Thanks, VML, for letting me be a part of it. And for the honor of the gallery name, and for lots more.

G.

Late addendum: Got two new stories into the literary journals. Noteworthy (to me, anyway) since they get 500+ submissions per issue, and accept few. One editor said " Not our usual stuff, but I like it very much. I'd like to have it in the Winter issue, if still available. No sir, not my usual stuff, but tight, well-written, and I was on page 4 before I knew I started. That's what I'm looking for." Feedback like this is pure nourishment to a writer, as we get little feedback at all except rejections, and they don't really have time to send you anything but a form note. They could be saying why are you sending us this crap, or hey just missed, try again. Sometimes they "strongly suggest" you continue to send them material. Which is feedback of a sort, thus welcome.

If you care to see other, older blogs, on everything from skiing to Dylan Thomas to Revelations click "Next" when you see it at the bottom. Thanks for reading.