Showing posts with label #guestauthor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #guestauthor. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Guest Author Alice Marks

 Happy Christmas to All


Two souls in Heaven have a chat. “Do you know what I miss most up here, Holly?”

“I guess, Merry, it’s your family that hasn’t joined us yet?”

“Of course, I miss them, but, Holly, what I miss right now is Christmas.”

“What do you mean, Merry? We always have The Holy Birthday on December 25.”

“Yes, of course, but what I miss is . . .” Merry pauses and looks downward. “I miss secular Christmas, with all the trimmings.”

“Now I understand! I miss all that, too—Christmas trees, decorations, Santa, shopping.”

“Yes! Especially shopping! Three friends and I had red sweatshirts that we wore when we Christmas shopped. On the back Cindy’s had, ‘Shop’, I had ‘Until’, Ruthie had ‘You’ and had. . .”

“Drop it!” interrupts Holly who continues, “I wonder if people still shop in stores? I’ve heard that most people order anything they need using their computers, from a huge store along the Amazon River.”

“Really? That doesn’t sound like much fun! I think we should find out for ourselves! What if we ask St. Peter for a pass to visit the earth before Christmas?”

“Hmm. We must catch him in a good mood.”

“A good mood? You mean, when not too many bad people are trying to get in here?”

Holly was quick to correct her. “Nonsense, you’re thinking of earth. All who believe they are welcome here. I am going to ask him now.”

Holly floats away to the Pearly Gates and says, “Hey, Pete. Do you think you could give Merry and me passes to go to earth to view Christmas preparations? Of course, we’ll be back for the real Christmas birthday celebration.”

“Well, I’ll have to get approval from my boss, but first I’ll check my records to see if you two have been ‘Naughty or Nice?’ Ho, ho!”

* * *

Unseen Holly and Merry, arrive below early in the Christmas season. A Santa stands shivering in a corner with a bell in his hand. He rings the bell twice, and both Holly and Merry feel wings sprout at their shoulders. “Just like in ‘It’s a Wonderful Life’,” whispers Merry.

“Speaking of movies, I was just thinking,” Holly also whispers, “We aren’t the first ghosts to visit at Christmastime. Remember all the ghosts in ‘A Christmas Carol’?”

Merry replies, “I shudder when I see those poor children the last ghost conceals, but all those ghosts did change Ebenezer Scrooge’s whole life.”

Merry agrees but is thinking, maybe we could change some lives while we are visiting.

Holly says, “My happiest Christmas memory is our Christmas tree.”

Merry comments, “Well, that’s a good place to start. I see a tree lot in the next block, and we can fly right over there to see what’s going on!”

“Look!” Holly says, “There’s Ralphie, the kid who wanted ‘a Red Ryder, 300 shot carbine with a compass in the stock’ and his family picking out a tree!”

Merry complains, “This doesn’t do anything for me. Our family always went to the forest and cut down a tree.”

“That sounds like fun! Let’s see if we can fly around and see someone doing that!”

In no time they find a cold, snowy tree farm in Minnesota. They see a man bundled up a in buffalo plaid coat, chopper mittens, purple knit Vikings hat, and high snow boots. His black lab, Bubba, crisscrosses in front of him, almost tripping the man several times as he trudges upward and pulls a sled occupied by two young children. The tykes sip hot chocolate from recyclable paper cups and spill it all over whenever the sled hits a bump.

The dad has a determined look on his face and an axe over his shoulder. All of a sudden, the little girl howls, “I gonna frow up”, and she does. Dad stops, certain someone else will spot the tree ahead that would look perfect in their living room. He cleans up his child with the red rag he intended to tie on the trunk of the tree so it could poke out of the back of his Nissan.

The little girl begins howling, “I cold, I want Mama.”

“I’m freezing,” says the girl’s slightly big brother, who makes a snowball. He throws and almost hits an elderly lady trailing behind a family looking for their perfect tree. They all yell at the dad for not having control over his son.

Another perfect tree seeker, yells at him, “Hey, buddy. leash your dog. He just lifted his leg on the tree I was gonna cut down.”

Dad has had it. Pointing to the perfect tree he intended to chop down, he says, “There, take mine.”

He pulls the sled downwards as the children, looking behind them scream, “You forgot to cut down our tree.”

Dad explains, “We’re going to some place warm –Target!” The kids chant, “Target! Toys! Target! Toys”. The two angels fly alongside the Nissan. Reaching Target, Dad puts the kids back on the sled and the axe over his shoulder. To the look of consternation on faces of other shoppers, he enters the store.

He heads towards the display of pre-lighted, in three colors, faux trees. He unplugs one and pretends to chop it down for the benefit of his children. He pulls out his phone and asks one of the assembled dropped-jaw crowd of shoppers to take a photo to show his wife the perfect tree she wanted him to chop down.

Someone summoned a very tall, red-vested Target employee wearing an elf hat festooned with jingle bells. The towering elf says gently, “Hey, buddy, you can’t take a tree from a display.”

“Just watch me!” Dad throws the tree over his shoulder, which means leaving the axe behind.

As he races to a register, he sings ‘Jingle Bells.’ The children join in and pretty soon everyone in the store sings Jingle Bells in competition with a loudspeaker playing Feliz Navidad. The Dad tosses money at a clerk and is out the door with tree, sled and kids before security arrives.

As Holly and Merry watch the family pile into their car, Merry says, “I don’t remember that movie. Oh, wait wasn’t there one called ‘Elf’?”

“Yes! But this whole saga wasn’t a movie. The author who is writing this story about us wrote it for a contest years ago,” explains Holly.

“Did she win?”

“You would have to ask that.” Changing the subject, Holly suggests, “While we are here, we might as well see all the great stuff Target has for decorating and gift-giving.”

There is no argument from her shop-loving friend. Every place they go in the store, it’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas. They begin oohing over all the enticing home decorations as they grab a copy of the store’s ads flyer: Replace your regular wall pictures only with Christmas paintings! What about a fireproof garland for your electric fireplace? Replace all tree ornaments with new exquisite silver and purple ones! Replace your old Christmas dishes that have been used three times with the latest design! How about a Christmas comforter for your bed with new curtains to match, a Christmas throw for all of your living rooms chairs and sofa and matching drapes, a cutesy Santa Christmas shower curtain, rug, toilet and tank cover. Don’t forget magnetic Christmas scenes to decorate kitchen appliances (and garage doors).

The two angels progress to self-inflating Christmas figures for the yard, the most popular being Santa, snow people, reindeer and the Grinch. Remember to buy the speakers for broadcasting your choice of carols from the outside of your house.

“By the way, who won the election, Merry?”

“How should I know/ There are no politics in Heaven!”

 “Praise the Lord!”

They look at toys. As always there are dolls for girls including an almost life-size Taylor Swift doll that has a microphone. Merry pushes a button on the mike, and Taylor dances as she belts out “Shake It Out”.

There is a new atomic ball that will take three days to return to earth after it’s thrown. The angels resist taking it outside to see if it works.

“Merry,” says Holly. “Do you see what I see?”

“Why it’s Clark Griswold, navigating two carts filled with electric lights. Let’s follow him to his house to watch him put them up.”

The angels fly to the Griswold house and watch him use every extension cord he owns and can borrow to put up lights inside and out.

“Oh, no!” squeals Holly though, of course, only Merry hears. “He doesn’t seem to know much about electricity.”

“We must intervene so that poor cat isn’t electrocuted. As Griswold wonders why the tree doesn’t light up, the cat escapes unscathed.

“I like that movie better now,” says Merry, and Holly agrees

“Holly, let’s fly to a small town to watch a parade. They have the best ones.”

The two angels clap with the crowd assembled along streets in Whoville as the local High School Band leads the parade with their rendition of “Jingle Bell Rock.” The mayor of the town drives a brand-new Red Cadillac trimmed in holly and ivy. Behind him is the Parade Queen and her attendants, in red or green gowns on a dazzling float.

“Aren’t they darling?” says Holly when she sees a troop of tiny kids dressed as stars that twinkle as they toddle down the street.

Next comes a group of carolers on a float, dressed in Victorian costumes singing Olde English Carols. Next comes an Elvis singing “Blue Christmas” on a flatbed truck and bundled up people singing “I’m Dreaming of a White Christmas” as their float leaks fake snow down the street. The junior high band plays a Christmas medley as they try to keep in step.

Finally comes Santa ho-ho-ing as he hangs onto a rung of a hook and ladder fire truck while his elves throw candy to the kids.

“Let’s fly to New York City to watch The Nutcracker Ballet!” suggests Holly. After the delightful performance, Merry says,” If we hurry, we can slip into the Gala Theatre to see ‘A Christmas Carol’.

After that delight, they decide to go to all-night grocery store to view holiday treats.

“Oh, look at all the different Christmas cookies and cakes! I used to bake the entire month of December!” purrs Merry.

“See that beautiful spiral ham wrapped in a red bow. It’s pricey but not as bad as turkeys! I guess people need to roast a chicken.”

“No, Holly, look at the price of chicken. Turkeys are less per pound. How on earth do people afford to eat down here?”

“Merry, look at the ‘Toys for Tots’ box. There are only two little Teddy Bears in it.”

“No surprise there. With grocery prices so high, customers have nothing left for charities.”

“We have to do something about this, Merry!”

Off they fly to Santa’s workshop, where the elves load up two grocery carts filled with Fisher Price toys, dolls and stuffed animals for little ones plus age-appropriate games and puzzles for older kids. The elves tie Toys for Tots signs on the carts. The invisible angels push them through the skies towards the grocery store.

The flying carts soaring through the sky in the US remind folks they haven’t contributed, and soon every Toys for Tots box in the US overflows with dolls, stuffed animals, games, puzzles.

The angels beam. “It must be getting late,” Holly says, noticing, Santa’s eight original reindeer led by legendary Rudolph, even though it isn’t even foggy.”

Merry saw this, too, and shared a memory. “My kids must have watched the TV show a million times!”

“Merry, do you hear what I hear?”

“Yes! Christmas carols are floating from churches having midnight services.”

“And look! A star, a star shining in the night.”

“That means we better fly back to Heaven,” says Merry. “With wings both of us will be able to join the Hark the Herald Angels Choir to begin the Holy Birthday as we sing ‘It Came Upon a Midnight Clear’.”

As Santa notices two angels ascend into Heaven, he shouts from his sleigh, “Happy Christmas to all, and to all a good night.”

https://www.amazon.com/stores/Alice-Marks/author/B07BB1NZ2D

Author Alice Marks has moved around as much as Sandra Lewis, heroine of her suspense novels Missing and Breaks. Born in Wyoming, she grew up there and received her undergraduate degree at the University of Wyoming. In 1967 She and her husband, Sam, and two babies moved to Minnesota where both had careers in education and reared four children. In 2005 Sam and Alice moved to Port Aransas, Texas, an island town on the Gulf of Mexico. Corpus Christi is by accessible by ferry and highway or by highway, JFK bridge and Causeway. After soaking up the sun for eight years and enjoying life in a much different culture, including the energy of Spring Break, the couple returned to Minnesota in 2013 to spend their retirement years. They live in Duluth, where both are involved in music (Sam directs the Duluth Civic Orchestra, and Alice plays flute) and where Alice is involved in many aspects of writing including activities of Lake Superior Writers, leading a writers group, Ink Slingers, and teaching writing workshops and classes. Alice has been published in several anthologies for short stories and poetry. One of her poems will be featured in a dance-poetry collaboration.


Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Our Guest Author Today is C.R. King

Tombstone 


Tombstone is a very popular place for those of us who enjoy history, especially facts about Wyatt Earp and his brothers Virgil and Morgan; Add Doc Holiday for he was very close to the Earps.

We dwell on the most famous gunfight in the old West, the Gun Fight at the OK Corral. The above names fought part of the Cowboy faction and won. The word ‘Cowboy’ was used as an insult. History is covered up by those who want to hide things for many reasons, and it goes down as factual; that is, whatever was used to hide.  As a Historian, I want and work hard to uncover the truth as all 6 of my books do just that. The gunfight was not at the OK Corral but behind it.  From the Epitaph Newspaper published on April 27, 1881: 

“A reporter obtained some startling facts about the opium dens of Tombstone from a police officer about opium dens of Tombstone and their habitues. One den was on Allen above Sixth Street. The balance was [of dens] were on Third near Allen. All told, there were five or six of them, all kept by Chinamen and well patronized by American men and women. The women patrons are courtesans [ sic courtesans], who no doubt indulge in this dissipation to benumb their faculties and obliterate the memories of innocent, happy days that are past beyond recall. Statistics show an alarming increase in the opium habit throughout the country. The city authorities should look into this matter immediately.”

The Tucson Star of August 4, 1881, said at the end of an article: “There is no dodging the question. These opium dens are being carried on in open defiance to the law.” The article asked for the mayor to see that the city marshal take steps to have them wiped out.”

Butte, Montana had five dens when Morgan Earp was wearing the policeman’s badge. They had 3 dens. When Morgan resigned to join his brother in Tombstone but just before he handed in his badge, he discovered two hidden dens. Wherever there was a Chinese population, there were opium dens, over 50% were white men and female prostitutes.

Of my books, all 6 of them are well researched, and I have at least one item in each book that no one knew of until I published. I have three volumes of A Fraternity of Gunslingers: True Stories of Wild West Gunmen. Volume 3 has 22 stories. I will be ordering 20 paperbacks on this volume. I have more stories in my other books.  


C. R. 'Randy' Has worked in the Broadcast industry most of his adult life. A father of two beautiful daughters, now grown and a avid student of American History. He spent most of his life working, raising a family, involved in community affairs putting his one passion aside until a few years back. King has had in several articles published in historical journals and magazines but has had a desire to share his knowledge with the general public in a format that is a pleasing and easy to read without all of the end notes that his articles normally have but to include as much factual data without the mundane.



Tuesday, December 11, 2018

Guest Author Owen Mullen

 Our guest author today is Owen Mullen
By Erika M Szabo

Owen Mullen graduated from Strathclyde University, moved to London and worked as a rock musician, session singer, and songwriter, and had a hit record in Japan with a band he refuses to name; Owen still loves to perform on occasion. His passion for travel has taken him on many adventures from the Amazon and Africa to the colorful continent of India and Nepal. A gregarious recluse, he and his wife, Christine, split their time between Glasgow, and their home away from home in the Greek Islands where the Charlie Cameron and Delaney series', and In Harm's Way psychological thriller were created.

A psychological thriller, suspense
When no one knows you are in danger how can you ever be saved…
The Baxter house in the Lowther Hills, in Scotland, has been on the estate agent’s books for decades. Dilapidated and near-derelict, nobody is interested in it. But, for one potential buyer, the remote location and rat-infested cellar are perfect.
For the first year, Mackenzie’s marriage to Derek was ideal. But Derek believes she is having an affair and when she realizes her husband is becoming controlling, she knows she’s made a terrible mistake.
But Mackenzie has a drinking problem so when she threatens to leave Derek and then disappears no one believes she has been abducted.
DS Geddes is handed the case but isn’t convinced anything criminal has taken place until a startling development comes to light.
Has Mackenzie been abducted or has she simply left her husband?
And who has bought The Baxter house and for what purpose?

EXCERPT FROM THE BOOK:
Mackenzie thought about yesterday. The guy in the black coat had freaked her out. She hadn’t told Derek. What was the point? She’d intended to talk to Alec about it and changed her mind. It had been such a wonderful evening she hadn’t wanted to spoil it with something that would probably turn out to be about nothing. When she got home she’d gone on the Internet and researched stalkers, surprised to discover how common they were. Most reports were about men stalking women although –occasionally –it was the other way round. She took comfort from the fact that thousands of people –male and female –had had the same experience as her. Occasionally the stalker turned out to be some jilted lover or former husband. Often the culprit was a mentally unstable stranger; sad and pathetic and harmless. Mackenzie made a decision to focus on the positive: this was the third day she hadn’t had any alcohol. The miracle was she didn’t crave it. The first twenty-four hours had been rough –her head ached, she felt ill and whenever she remembered the show she’d made of herself –of both of them –at Adele’s, she thought she was going to be sick. Her sister was due an apology, no doubt about that, except Mackenzie wasn’t ready to face her. Not yet. The second day was better, only shame remained. Even in such a short time clarity had replaced confusion and she was certain she was doing the right thing. Derek couldn’t possibly be happy. God knows she wasn’t. Hurting him wasn’t what she wanted but he needed to accept the marriage was over, that she didn’t love him. Opposites attracted and so it was with them. The attention of a man, older, wiser, and more worldly than she could ever hope to be, had been flattering. Being with him made her feel special and protected in a way she’d never known. Other men were immature boys in comparison. Derek had been places and done things. Had adventures. For Christ’s sake, even Adele liked him. One morning Mackenzie woke up and knew she’d fallen for him. Within months they were engaged. She would’ve married right away, he’d insisted they slow down. If there were second thoughts, he’d said, now was the time. Once they’d taken their vows she would be his and it would be too late. His one condition –that they hold back physically until after they were married –had taken her aback. She’d promised to respect his wish, a promise she’d broken on the couch in his living room one night after they’d shared a second bottle of wine, most of it drunk by her. Slowly, completely, he’d dominated her until she was afraid she might suffocate with the intensity of it. Afterwards, Derek held her in his arms and told stories of how wonderful it would be when she was his wife. Those stories came true and lasted a year before Mackenzie realised the mistake she’d made.

It began with disagreements over inconsequential things which grew heated, difficult to put behind them. And the sex, so fabulous in the beginning, became infrequent, brief and unfulfilling. Derek found fault with her to the extent she couldn’t please him even with the simplest tasks. It was obvious he was as disappointed in her as she was with him. The generosity he’d shown in the beginning dissipated, replaced by accusations she didn’t understand. Mackenzie had managed to keep her drinking to acceptable levels when she met Derek. For a long time, he didn’t see her drunk. But as their relationship deteriorated, she found herself reaching for her old friend. And her alcoholism was where she’d left it; it hadn’t gone anywhere. Giving in to it was easier than confronting the truth. The avenue was deserted except for a group of young girls in the distance, playing a game. It had been a sunny day and, on most windows, the blinds were drawn against the glare. Who knew what went on behind them? Mackenzie was leaving a sham marriage. It wouldn’t be the only one in this respectable suburb. She dismissed the thought. Other people’s relationships were their business. There was nothing to be gained by speculating. She was headed for a new life and freedom and, in case she forgot, hardly in a position to cast the first stone. Her step quickened when she saw the tail-end of the car at the corner. Without meaning to, she smiled. Some women might disapprove of what she was doing. Others would support her, call her brave. Bravery had nothing to do with it. She had no choice, and, for the first time in a long time, Mackenzie was happy. She didn’t pay attention to the white van at the kerb or register the sound of someone behind her. When she did, it was too late. A hand closed over her face and a sweet smell filled her nostrils. She felt herself being dragged backwards before she sank into unconsciousness. The rear doors of the van closed. The driver got in and drove away. No one saw. Like a leaf falling to the ground, it went unnoticed. Mackenzie Crawford’s new life would have to wait.

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Ruth de Jauregui via Google+

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Guest Author Owen Mullen stopped by #OurAuthorGang today and shared an excerpt from his suspense thriller In Harm's Way. Wow!! It is intriguing!
 
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Ruth de Jauregui

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Wow, that is amazing! Thank you so much for sharing!
 
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Chris Weigand

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Nice to meet you.
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Chris Weigand shared this via Google+

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Lorraine Carey

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What an interesting guest today! After reading the excerpt from In Harm's Way I have added this to my To Read List. It will be my next read. Well, done, Owen!
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Erika M Szabo

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Great excerpt Owen!
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Toi Thomas via Google+

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Today, #OurAuthorGang welcomes suspense author, Owen Mullen.
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Saturday, December 8, 2018

Guest Author: Toni Kief at #OurAuthorGang

Our guest author today is Toni Kief
By Erika M Szabo


Toni Kief, author of Old Baggage, is excited to introduce a new work of fiction – and another feisty older woman, Mildred Petrie.
Mildred Petrie expected a comfortable retirement.
Except her husband died and his secrets changed everything.
Desperate, she takes the only job available at the local gambling palace - undercover cop. Drug deals, armed robbery and a mole catapult her into excitement, danger and disguise.
Only Mildred can find the truth!
A breathless, page turner, in sensible shoes

Toni Kief, a child of the 60s, Midwestern by birth, Northwestern by choice, Toni challenges the boundaries for women of a certain age. After a long career as an insurance adjuster, she fell into writing through a challenge from a friend. She has released her first book, Old Baggage, and recently followed with Mildred in Disguise: With Diamonds. There are three more in the grinder. Toni never dated Mick Jagger, but marched for civil rights, shared bread with icons of politics and art. She is spending her retirement, gathering stories prime for embellishment. Writing has taught her inspiration without perspiration is just a good idea.

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Toni Kief

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I was swamped at a 10 hour book signing and two meeting. Finally settling down and catching up. What a wonderful surprise to see my post up. Love the comments so much. I'm thrilled to be part of this gang.
 
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Ruth de Jauregui

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Oh I am totally going to add this book to my "I've gotta have this" wish list on Amazon!! Sounds great!
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Eva Pasco

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I thoroughly enjoyed 'Mildred in Disguise with Diamonds' and will follow up by reading more Mildred--Dred.
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Lorraine Carey

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Toni Kief sounds like she's got herself an interesting read there!
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Toi Thomas via Google+

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Today, we welcome author Toni Kief to #OurAuthorGang
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Chris Weigand shared this via Google+

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Eva Pasco shared this via Google+

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Eva Miranda via Google+

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Toni Kief sounds like she's got herself an interesting read there!
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