Wednesday 28 December 2011

As Nutty as a Fruitcake

      Christmas congures up visions of sugar plums.  That said, by the time November rolls along, after consuming the last of the Pumpkin Pies I endevour to make my annual Christmas Pudding and Christmas Cake. Steeped in tradition, the Christmas Pudding, a quissential British Christmas staple, is steamed on Stir-Up Sunday (the last Sunday in November) by many a British housewife.  The Christmas Cake is also made months in advance and feed a steady diet of brandy and placed in a tin and hidden away in a dark cupboard until it is unveiled in all its glory on Christmas Day.

    The Christmas cake, a cousin of the fruitcake, is a spicy, dense or light cake, swimming in a sea of Brandy and made with eggs, flour, brandy soaked dried fruits, candied peels, glaced cherries and almonds. The cake is then covered in a blanket of marzipan and fondant icing.  It is hard to fathom that this majestic cake, the highlight of the Christmas dinner, has in its infancy and origins, once been a porridge  made of oatmeal, plums and raisins.

   In the 16th century the porridge was re-invented; this time cooks no longer used oatmeal but flour in the recipe and with the introduction of sugar cooks no longer used honey to sweeten the cake.  It was much later that eggs and almonds were added to the recipe.

  The term, 'As nutty as a fruitcake', meaning a derranged or eccentric person, was first introduced to the English language in 1935.  The word 'nuts' to describe insanity was first coined in 1700's.

So why are we so obssessed with fruitcake?  Why are our tastebuds so craving this type of cake in December?  Why do cooks and houswives slave to make this type of cake which, consequently, takes four hours to bake plus many days to ferment only to give it away as gifts?  The fruitcake has been a topic of jokes for centuries.  Johnny Carson often cracked jokes about it.



But the proof of the pudding is in the eating....the fruitcake is a very tasty and spicy cake to enjoy this holiday.  With its sturdy composition which packs well and is great for posting in the mail, no other cake can hold a candle to the fruitcake.





Sources:  http://www.foodtimeline.org/christmasfood.html#fruitcake
               http://find.mapmuse.com/interest/fruitcakes

Friday 4 November 2011

Nanowrimo 2011

I am participating in this year's Nanowrimo.  Last year, I won with my latest Gothic Novel, The Curse of Anna Greene, which has now been published and is availiable on Amazon.  This year, I am participating again with my Novel, Love's Flaming Torch. 

         I have currently written 12,224 words as of 4th November.  It is currently in first draft stage. I hope to write 50,000 words by the end of November.  I am planning to publish it next year.  Here is my page on NanoWrimo.
My Nanowrimo Page

Friday 23 September 2011

Autumn

Of all the seasons
I love autumn most of all...
The lovely essence of serenity...
Of watching nature's tale retold
By a lady dressed in gold;

I love to sit back and absorb
The splendor of the autumn dawn
And watch the beauty of October's sun
Cast deep shadows on the lawn.



Autumn gives off splendor
Fall leaves collapse on the ground
In shades of red, amber and crimson brown...
A kaleidoscope of brilliant colours---
Of multi-pattern hues.



Amidst the mums, pumpkins and gourds sits autumn’s queen
Reminiscing of her lost innocence,
Upon her throne of evergreens
Weaving a tapestry of reveries of younger days gone by!
When autumn’s beauty gives way to winter...

Autumn's beauty does fade and wither
Yet life goes on beyond the grave...
For even in the icy grip of death
Lies beauty and rebirth!



© Mary Aris, All rights reserved.




Thursday 1 September 2011

Character of the Month of September

Name:  Princess Mary  Rose

Date of Birth:  7th April

Parents:  The Majesties King Anthony and Queen Anne of Carlisle

Residence:  Carlisle

Occupation: Royal Princess; heir apparent to the throne of Carlisle later crowned  Queen of Carlisle

Spouse:   Prince Phillip of Aragon

Issues:  Prince Jonathan Anthony Phillip of Aragon; heir apparent to the throne of Carlisle



From the book  Princess Rose by Mary Aris
Copyright 2009  Lulu

Image copyright 2011 by Mary Aris
 All Rights reserved.





Friday 26 August 2011

Love's Flaming Torch

              I'm writing a new Novel titled Love's Flaming Torch.  It is a story set in Buffalo, New York during 2011.  The story is told in the first person by the Character, Mary Reily, an English Literature student at Buffalo University who met Eric Garcia, a fire-fighter and paramedic who saved her friend, Professor Paul Smith from a burning house.  Eric is hailed as a hero when a series of fires rage through the city and Eric saves several people.  Eric and Mary go on several dates and slowly fall in love.  At first Mary is reluctant to go out.  She is burnt by love very early in her life and is careful not to let anyone hurt her again.  But Eric re-ignites her passion and Mary falls for him; but when she is about to reveal how she truly feels for him she is shocked to find a secret about Eric so shocking that she loses faith in love forever.

           Here is a short beginning piece for the story:

 "Love waits for no man."  That's what I have learned from my ordeal.  Love creeps into one's life no matter how prepared one is.  No one is exempt.  Love ignites like a gentle flame inside one's heart and with time , if one's not careful, the winds of change can fan the flames and next thing you know there is an unquenchable fire  that rages in your soul.  Sometimes the fire  rages for days on end destroying anything in its path; other times it extinguishes quite easily with indifference or disappointments just as easily as it ignited.  For some the fire of love is like a bonfire that warms the soul in the depth of winter.  When you feel this fire burning, you can either extinguish it right away with indifference or let it warm your soul with its' sweet passion.

   I let the fire burn slowly in my heart, warming my coldest nights with the passion of its' incandescence.  Before I met Eric Garcia the fire of love had extinguished from my heart and all was left was an empty void and ashes.  Once upon a time, I too, was full of hopes and dreams.  I thought love was a silly intangible that only happened in romance novels.  Girl met boy, they fell hopelessly in love,  found something in common, got engaged and got married.  That was before I  got burnt by the fire for the first time in my life. I can't believe that I let that creep, Justice, suck me into taking me to my Senior Prom.  He was the class clown.  One kiss was all it took for him to seduce me into accepting to go to the prom with him. I was nineteen at the time.   This was the biggest mistake of my life.  Justice almost ruined my life the night he raped me.  It took four years of therapy for me to even feel comfortable going out of the house.  Brien Thorpe, my therapist, convinced me to take a few literary courses at White Plains University.  That's where I met David.

     I was twenty-two at the time and thought I had met a wonderful man.  David swept me off my feet just like in those romance novels.  He was a student at White Plains University. Like me. he was working towards a Bachelor's degree in English literature.  In a month we became friends and shortly after that we became an item.  Then he proposed to me and I was over the moon.  I had just turned twenty and thought my life was about to turn for the better.  Not only was I going to earn my degree in English Literature the following summer, but I was also going to be a bride.   Then in December of that year, a little before Christmas, I caught David in bed with a swanky freshman.  That's when the fire in my heart extinguished.  That was the end of my love life.  David swore he was drunk and didn't even realize he had brought this girl to our apartment....the apartment we had bought together as a couple with the money we earned working part time.  I threw the engagement ring....a 1 Karat diamond ring which he had bought from a friend of his who owned a  jewellery store on Main Street.  He picked up the ring from the floor,  put it in his pocket and said, "Your loss, Babe!"  Then he looked at this crack whore lying on the bed, gave her a nod and asked her to get dressed.  The game was over.  He picked up his things, opened the door and walked out.  He never looked back.    I never saw David again after this.   Furious,  I stood there with tears in my eyes vowing never to let any sweet -talking man with fire in his eyes waltz into my life again.

      Then I met Eric Garcia and at first I resisted him, putting up an internal fight within myself; telling myself it would never work; telling myself this was David all over again.  But his blue eyes bore through me like an unquenchable fire and won the argument.  There was something about this fire fighter that lit my soul completely.  We went out on a couple of dates and I thought I was wrong about love all along.  Love was this unquenchable fire that raged within one's soul and lit one's soul like a candle.  Then, I learned something so shocking about Eric that extinguished the fire once again-- and for the second time in my life  I was left in total darkness.    I knew Eric was too good to be true and so I resisted telling him how much I loved him until it was too late.  Now all I have left is the memories of Eric  and this little boy who looks so incredibly like Eric.  Every time I look into  this little boy's  blue eyes,  I see Eric.   I learned love's lesson on that cruel September morning in 2011 and it was this:   Love comes into your life and when it does, you should hold on to it; embrace it. Never let Love's candle extinguish because if you do,  in a fleeting moment; in a wink of an eye the sweet flame of love will extinguish forever,  leaving you with nothing but darkness and regret.

Thursday 11 August 2011

Character of the Month





Name:  Bartholomew Barnel
Date of  Birth:   September 7  2008
Residence:  William Wayne Public Library
Diet:   Anything with leaves;  Books
Occupation:  Book Worm;  Story Hour Mascot

From the Book:  Bartholomew
Image copyright 2011 by Mary Aris
All rights reserved

Friday 29 July 2011

Writer's Excercise


   I did a simple writer's prompt excercise today using a list of words.  I came up with the following story using all or several of these words.  This is a good excercise to use to beat Writer's Block.



Word List

 rancid
 acid
 exotic
 gluttonous
 hunger
zealot



---

The Seige of  Calliope


 Harry Rodgers hunched over his notebook.  Globs of sweat, like rancid rain, mingled with the metallic globs of ink.   His hands shook like an addict’s who has just gone into rehab and was experiencing the first hard-core taste of withdrawal.  The lantern on his desk illuminated his work, like the penetrating light bulb that flashed in a suspect’s eyes as he was being interrogated for a crime.  Harry squinted as his hand quivered, hovering over the page.  “Oh, this is useless,” thought Harry, “I’ll never make the deadline.”

Harry Rodgers, a prolific writer of Adelle, a novel he has been working on for the past five years was recently published by Sampson & Son.  It was a huge success.  The novel sold over a million copies and was on the New York Times Best Seller List for five consecutive weeks. The novel, about an African American woman growing up in the South during the heat of the American Civil War, who had an affair with a white Confederate soldier was an instant best-seller. Adelle’s lover, Henry Smyth, was currently being court marshalled for falling in love and pursuing Adelle. Adelle triggered international and interracial phenomena.  He signed a contract with Sampson & Sons to write a sequel to his best-selling novel. Sampson & Sons paid Harry a staggering quarter of a million dollars in advance money in exchange for Harry’s upcoming book, A Woman of Class.  Harry remembered the joys of writing his Novel, Adelle.  He recalled every aspect of the writing process and the incredible delight he felt when he first saw his name blazoned across the cover.




Whilst writing Adelle, Harry’s fingers flew across the page as he dotted each ‘I’ and crossed each ‘T’.  Like a sanctimonious scholar he religiously poured his soul into writing this novel.  Night by night he’d sit on his favourite chair as his muse dictated words into his ears which he, Harry Rodgers, author extraordinaire, wrote down fervently, like some sanctimonious zealot, from the deluge of words that poured throughout his soul like a flood from his favourite muse.  He finished Adelle in eight months.  When he finished the Novel he poured a bottle of chardonnay into a goblet and drank in celebration, toasting to the success of his first Novel.   His heart beat within him like a ravishing bird flapping its wings wildly within its cage.  He glanced at the finished novel with a gluttonous hunger for success and fame.   His first thought was the small fortune in royalties that this epic would accrue. Yet, the Novel was yet sitting on his desk, gleaming and polished...but quite...unpublished.  

Next morning he walked over to the A perfect Print and had the printer print three copies of his beloved manuscript.  Don Simon, the printer looked up from the enormous machine that whirred and applied ink that would produce three replicas of his work.  “Is this your work, Mr Rodgers?”  Harry squinted at the guy and nodded greedily.  “Yes, this is my manuscript.  I laboured feverishly over it.  I wish to have it published as soon as possible.” he said to the lanky fellow behind the roaring machine.  “Good luck, Signore!”


“Hmmm,” he thought to himself, “Who can be crazy enough to publish this Novel?”  There were dozens of publishers in town who published women sagas.  Two, in particular, were big publish houses whose criteria for submission were quite harsh.  He read about the astounding amount of unsolicited material from aspiring authors like himself who submitted their manuscripts in hopes of getting noticed, only to be heartbroken when the rejections notice came knocking at their door.  “It isn’t fair,” thought Harry, “I’ve worked my fingers to the bone, burning the midnight hour over this Novel to have some snobbish book seller turn its nose to it.”   He thumbed through the list of publishing houses.  He took a gulp of wine, and then picked three publishing houses on the list to send the manuscript to.  His heart continued beating as he placed each copy of his beloved Adelle into each manila envelope.   Three long weeks flew by and Harry waited impatiently for the response from the publishing houses...but none came.  He thought about phoning them to find out the outcome of his manuscript, but had second thoughts.  He didn’t want to sound desperate either.  Weeks turned into months and still he waited for a reply but there was no joy.  Then, as he was settling into his cosy chair near the fire on a cold wet winter’s day, Harry received a knock on the door. “Now who can at this late hour?” he asked himself.  Rising from his chair he answered the door and was surprised to find Mr O’Mara, the postman standing there in the threshold baring three manila envelopes in his hand.  Harry accepted the envelopes and thanked the postman for delivering them.  This warmed his heart on a winter’s night.  His blood ran through his veins, pumping warmly into his heart which began to beat again like a wild exotic bird.  This was the moment of truth...this was his chance for success.  He was giddy as a scholar on the Eve of graduation.   He took a goblet and his Chardonnay and poured the drink into his empty goblet.  Before sitting down in his chair to open the envelopes, he paused, meditated about his success as an author, swirled his glass in mid air and drank to his success.  His fingers rattled as he tore open one of the envelopes.  He glanced at the pink page printed in black Sans Serif font.  He read:

Dear Mr Rodgers,

We regret to inform you that your manuscript Adelle has not been considered for publication. 
The editors at Grutton and Grutton, Inc thought the material to be too racy and controversial for publication.
We wish you success in your literary career.

Sincerely yours,
Mrs Sally Eggleston


Harry sunk in his chair, crestfallen.  The bastards! How dare they trash his Novel, his baby like that?  “They thought the material is too racy and controversial?” he said aloud.  “I made Adelle into a heroine. Every African American will identify with Adelle.  How can these bastards murder his heroine like that...stifling Adelle before she even breathed life into her lungs?”   Harry tore through the other two envelopes.  To his disdain, each publishing house refused to publish his manuscript.  “Bastards!” he breathed as he gulped down the last dregs of Chardonnay.   Angrily he threw the manuscripts against a wall.  The pages all scattered about in a cacophony of leaves.   


He had a good mind to rip his Novel to shreds.  How dare some snobbish little Editor with half moon glasses refuse to publish his Novel? Was his Novel no good? He considered himself a good writer.  He used action verbs, used perfect grammar, and created well-rounded characters.  There must be a decent publisher out there who would adore his Novel and publish it.  He leaved through the pile of publishing houses again.   Then he came across this little publishing house on Sacred Oaks.  The name sounded promising and their criteria for submission did not seem so daunting.  Harry thought he should give Sampson & Sons a try.  With great pride, he placed the manuscript inside a manila envelope and penned an impressive cover letter with a short bio and the description of his work.  He carefully wrote the name and address of the publishing house on the front of the manila envelope.  It was time to mail the manuscript.

Winter turned to spring and Harry was busy preparing meals and running errands. He didn’t give any thought to his manuscript.  He laid it to rest deep within his drawer somewhere out of his mind.  He couldn’t bear the thought of another rejection letter.  It tore his heart to shreds thinking about his poor unpublished Novel....murdered before it even got a chance to live. He shook his head in disbelief.  Then, one day, as he was preparing a cool salad for his afternoon meal, the telephone rang.  “Hello,” Harry said. “With whom do I have the pleasure of speaking to?”

“Mr Rodgers?” echoed a lady with a Scottish accent. “This is Ms Anderson-Mackenzie Larrouse from Sampson & Sons Publishers.  I am phoning to tell you that your Novel, Adelle, has been considered for publication.”   Harry stood there with his teeth gritting against each other.  He suddenly didn’t feel hungry anymore.  His stomach churned.

“Thank you, Ms Anderson. This is the fourth rejection notice I have received within months of each other!” said Harry.  He was about to hang up when Ms Anderson spoke again.  When she finished speaking Harry’s heart leapt within his chest.  Sampson & Sons had accepted his manuscript.  They wanted him to sign a contract. Harry was overwhelmed.  “Thank you, Ms Anderson....and may I say, that’s the sexiest accent I have ever heard!  Is it Scottish?” he asked.

  Chloe Anderson-Mackenzie Larrouse blushed and said, “Yes it is, Mr Rodgers.  I’m half Scottish.  My Mum was born in Aberdeen and my father was born in France. Now, Mr Rodgers, when can you come in and sign your contract?”  Harry was dancing on air.  He felt all light headed and dizzy.  He thought he was about to faint.  The clock on his wall said twelve O’clock. That’s when, according to him, the world stood still...that was the moment Sampson & Sons breathed life into his beloved Adelle.

“Can I come in tomorrow, Ms Anderson?” asked Harry.  He was dancing in his kitchen. Ms Anderson glanced at her boss’s diary and pencilled in a time slot for Mr Rodgers to meet Mr Henderson, Editor-in-Chief of Sampson & Sons. “Will ten O’clock be convenient for you, Mr Rodgers?” asked Ms Anderson.  Harry breathed into the receiver a little drunk. “That sounds perfect, Ms Anderson.  I cannot wait to meet and kiss you.”   Ms Anderson blushed and glanced at her boss.  “It is Mr Henderson you have to impress.” she said.  Chloe congratulated Harry again and put the receiver down.  When the conversation ended, she walked over to her boss and showed her his diary.  “You have an appointment with Mr Rodgers tomorrow at ten O’clock, Mr Henderson, to discuss Mr Rodger’s contract.” she said as she walked over to fix her boss a cup of coffee.  

Mr Henderson accepted the cup of coffee and smiled at Chloe.  “I’d love to meet the author of Adelle.  Chloe, My dear....I think this could be a best-seller!” Chloe smiled at her boss and then quietly left the room.  Harry was ecstatic when he got off the phone with Ms Anderson-Mackenzie Larrouse.  He quickly ate his lunch and headed towards the wardrobe to put together a three piece suit for his ten O’clock meeting with Mr Henderson.  His hands shook with excitement.   What tie should he wear with his Pierre Cardin suit?  He chose the one with the books.  This, he thought, would be appropriate.  After a nice bath he walked into the study. His writing desk was neat and tidy.  He had not written anything else since writing Adelle. He was pissed off with all the amounts of rejection notices he had received these past few months that it put him off his writing. Diligently he removed his key from the upper drawer and bent over to open his bottom drawer. He carefully unearthed the original manuscript of Adelle from its burial ground in the bottom of his writing desk and kissed it.


Success came quickly after publication.  He received a handsome cheque for $300,000 from Sampson & Sons in royalty money from the sale of his Novel.  Adelle was at the top of the charts on the New York Times best seller list for eighteen consecutive weeks.  This was followed by talk shows and interviews on many talk shows around the country.  Many young girls read Adelle and admired the courage of the heroine who met Harriet Tubman in her struggle for freedom from slavery in one of the South’s cotton plantations.  The book encouraged young adults to read about Harriet Tubman and about the slavery in America and Europe.  He had received several threats as well from prejudiced political activists who threatened to boycott the book and burn the book for its pro-African American themes.  It was written, after all, during the Civil Right Movement in the 1960’s when the country was torn in two.  Harry thought he had to publish it.  The book, Adelle must fight against all prejudice and win the fight against racism in America and the world at large.   Harry signed a contract with Sampson & Sons to write a sequel to Adelle.  They paid him a handsome quarter of a million dollars in advance to write the sequel.  Harry had a tight deadline.  He had until the summer of 1966 to write the sequel.  The title of the Sequel came easy to him.  He would call the sequel, ‘A Woman of Class’. The story would begin from the moment that Confederate Army soldier, Henry Smyth was out of jail and married Adelle.  Henry Smyth was sentenced to five years in jail for failing to adhere to orders given to him by his superiors to abandon and turn over Adelle, a ‘negro’ woman, the daughter of a slave.  A Woman of Class told the story about how Adelle Smyth, now married to a Confederate officer, fought for freedom against slavery with the help of Harriet Tubman and carved a name for herself.

The ideas for A Woman of Class were easy enough...yet when it came to put pen to paper, Harry was stumped.  For weeks he sat on his desk attempting to write the first sentence, but failed. He’d stared down upon the black page with sweat pouring down from his forehead mingling with that of the metallic ink from his pen.  Harry wracked his brains and wiped his forehead with a clean handkerchief then looked up at the portrait of the Muse Calliope hanging from the wall above his writing desk.  He prayed to her for inspiration, but the Muse remained silent. He tapped his pen against the wooden desk, hummed a few tunes to himself, poured himself goblets of Chardonnay, but nothing came to him as he sat there attempting to draft the first sentence to  A Woman of Class.

The nights dragged on and at the end of his wits, Harry sat there trying to come up with an opening statement to mark the empty page.  It was ridiculous! He, a renowned author stymied by the silence of the Muse.  “Come on, Calliope, Darling...talk to me!  Inspire me with your musings!”  Yet nothing came to him.  Staring at his blank page he pulled on his earlobes, massaging them for inspiration...nothing!  “Great...what am I going to say to Mr Henderson when I have nothing to show him?”  In a few weeks’ time he had a meeting at Sampson & Sons with his Editor and he had no story for him.  Mr Henderson would sue him for breach of contract and his writing career would be over in a blink of an eye.  Exasperated he brushed his hair back and prayed to his favourite muse to speak to him. “For the love of God, inspire me, Oh Calliope!”  Then he took out his poetry pad which he kept in a special drawer and he let his pen glide through an empty page.  It took him an hour to produce a poem.

The Poet

Like
Shakespeare,

The Poet writes his poem,
With a steady hand round his yellow quill.
Dreaming sensual dreams, his soul yells
Speaking wisdom with bodacious words he fills
blank pages into books-- pen in ink well;

He burns the midnight oil as he writes--
A radical young rebel with new ideas,
Staring out the window his fancy takes flight
Like a dozen butterflies in velvet skies;

His heart skips with each rhyme and rhythm
From his quill as his words glide across the page
His words paint a multi-coloured scene like a prism
Reflecting his heart with the sagaciousness of a sage;

Projecting love, hate, compassion with each stroke
Like a craftsman he knits and weaves his words;
Playing with the ancient language he spoke
Not with tongue but with words to be heard
Not by the ear, but with the eyes;

The author, connives and schemes all day
Knitting his brows he opens up his mind
And listens carefully to the Muses' symphony;
And then inspiration comes like the minnow.


Spinning tales of love between a man and a woman,
Making love in a small yellow dingy out at sea;
The poet weaves each story with a crafty hand
Into these lacy tapestries he calls Poetry;

Like Shakespeare, taking pen to paper,
The poet sits by the window near his lamp;
And dreams of being a famous author;
His name engraved upon his book like a stamp.



Harry put down his pen.  Why couldn’t he write a single sentence to A Woman of Class and yet write this stunning poem?  It didn’t make sense, did it?   He got up from his writing chair, stretched himself and walked into the kitchen to pour himself a cup of coffee. Morning dawned and he didn’t get a drop of sleep.  He grew tired from exhaustion.  How long had it been since he slept, eight days....a week?  Surely this wasn’t healthy.  He had to sleep and he had to produce a new manuscript.  He lay on his bed and let his mind wander till he drifted into a peaceful dream. 

Harry tossed and turned in his sleep.  He dreamed of meeting Mr Henderson.  In his dream, or nightmare, rather, he met with Mr Henderson.  Mr Henderson asked how far he got with the sequel to Adelle.  Harry began to sweat profusely and played with his tie.  “I’m sorry to have to tell you this, Mr Henderson,” Harry began, “But I’m afraid that I cannot write anything...I have nothing to write about.”  Mr Henderson’s smile turned into a grimace and his demeanour changed abruptly.  “I will give you until noon tomorrow to produce a spanking new manuscript, Mr Rodgers....or we, at Sampson & Sons will sue your assets off for breach of contract.” Mr Henderson said through gritted teeth. “Am I making myself clear, Mr. Rodgers?” said Mr Henderson. 

Harry felt a tad sick.  He sat in a puddle of sweat nervously untying his tie and looked at Mr Henderson in the eye.  “Yes, Sir, I understand quite clearly.” Harry said. Mr Henderson smiled at him and buzzed Chloe in to escort Harry out of the office.  Harry returned to his flat that afternoon and began to write, but nothing came out; the page defiantly stared back at Harry...blank and empty. Harry grabbed his pen and forced his hand to write.  His hand shook and tried desperately to write, but no words formed.  He looked up at Calliope who sat on a throne with her writing tablet laughing at Harry as he struggled to write.  “Write, you bastard...write!” he told his hand.  His right hand shook and then....it stabbed his left hand with the tip of the pen.  Harry yelled in pain and exasperation.  He was going mad!

At noon the next day, Harry felt sick.  There he was....a famous author on the brink of a nervous breakdown with no manuscript to hand his Editor. He knew he was a dead man.  Mr Henderson looked at Harry and smiled. “Well, do you have something for me, Mr Rodgers?” he asked.  Harry couldn’t look at Mr Henderson in the eye.  “No, Sir...I’m so sorry.  I don’t know how to tell you this....I have no manuscript for you.”  Mr Anderson rose from his seat.  He pulled a revolver on Harry.  Harry shook with fear.  “I told you, Mr Rodgers....you have signed a contract with Sampson & Sons....a legal and binding contract.  I warned you that if you didn’t produce a manuscript by Tuesday, the thirty-first of August, you would be sued.  But I am going to cut a deal with you, Mr Rodgers...I will be nice and hold you captive here until you write that manuscript.  You will write that manuscript or I will kill you!  Now, write, you dog...write.” Mr Henderson pointed the revolver to Harry’s head.  Harry was forced to sit on Mr Henderson’s desk and write his manuscript.  Mr Henderson buzzed Chloe who came in with her pad and pencil. “Yes, Mr Henderson?” asked Chloe.  Mr Henderson stood with his revolver still pointed towards Harry, never taking his eyes off him, and instructed his secretary to bring him in two cups of coffee and pastrami on rye sandwich for Harry.  “Mr Henderson, why are you holding a revolver? What’s this all about?” she asked.  Mr Henderson explained to his secretary how Harry was going to sit in his office writing all night till he produced the sequel to Adelle. “And Chloe, dear...don’t say a word of this to anyone in the office.  If you do, you’ll be out of a job...got that?” Chloe nodded and a few minutes later she walked out the door. 

The office workers were finishing their reports and were about to put the covers on their type writers when Chloe came back with a tray of coffee and the pastrami sandwich.  Bertha, one of the secretaries to Mr Scheilheimer smiled at Chloe and asked rather curiously.  “Is Mr Henderson going to stay all night with that young man? We saw him going into Mr Henderson’s office and he is still there. It’s six O’clock and he’s not out yet.”   Chloe smiled at Bertha and said that Mr Henderson and Mr Rodgers were having a rather long meeting.

Knocking at the door, Chloe entered and placed the tray on top of the filing cabinet.  Mr Henderson was sitting on the brown leather sofa near his desk, revolver pointed at Harry’s head. Harry was busy typing away while buckets of sweat poured down his cheeks.  The black leather chair was damp with sweat.  Harry typed any key...he wasn’t thinking about what to write. It was difficult to write having someone pointing a gun at you.  “Thank you, Chloe, you may sit down next to me and shut your mouth. We are going to sit and wait for this Bozo to finish his Manuscript.”  Mr Henderson pointed the gun at Chloe and beckoned her to sit down next to him on the brown leather couch.  

The clock kept ticking into the night.  The atmosphere was tense in that little office.  Chloe sat and looked at poor Harry sitting there typing his life away while Mr Henderson pointed the Smith and Wesson at him.  This wasn’t what publishing was all about.  It was about good writing and a mutual understanding between author and publisher. Around nine O’clock, Harry stopped typing.  Mr Henderson stood up and walked towards his desk.  “You finish, Mr Rodgers?” he asked.  Harry couldn’t move. He looked down at all the incoherent cacophony of words that he typed...and cried.  He cried like a baby...pleading for a little comfort and kindness.  “Is this your idea of a joke?” growled Mr Henderson.  “What the devil is this garbage?” he asked.

Chloe stood up and tried to plead with Mr Henderson.  “Thomas, please!” she begged. “Can’t you see how frightened he is?”  She stood between Mr Henderson and Harry and cuddled Harry.  Mr Henderson pointed the gun towards the two of them.  “No...He promised me a manuscript and he is going to deliver!  I told him he had until nine O’clock to finish the manuscript.”  He looked at the clock on the wall.  “It’s nine O’clock and he still hasn’t produced a manuscript except this garbage. Now, I am going to finish him and anyone who steps in the way of me.”  A shot went off and a flock of birds sitting on the ledge flew off.

Harry sat in bed, his face all covered with sweat.  His heart went on over-drive.  What happened?  Was he dead?  Was he in heaven? He looked about and found himself in his room.  It was three O’clock in the afternoon.  He must have dozed off at seven that morning and he had a hell of a nightmare.  The phone went and he was startled by the sound of it.  He rose himself out of bed to answer the phone.  “Hello,” he said.  It was Chloe. 

“Mr Rodgers, Mr Henderson would like to meet with you to discuss your progress.  Would eight O’clock next Thursday morning be convenient for you?”  Harry’s heart raced faster. “Yes, that’ll be good.” He lied.  Chloe pencilled the date into Mr Henderson’s diary.  “Ok, Mr Rodgers....we’ll see you next Thursday.”  Before he hung up, he blew Chloe a kiss.  Harry hurried to his writing desk. In a panic he grabbed his pen and praying to his favourite muse with all his might he asked the muse to inspire him.  To his surprise, his pen rolled and glided upon page after page of prose. “Oh, thank you mighty Calliope...I knew you wouldn’t be silent forever!  Thanks for saving my hide!

 By the end of summer a Woman of Class was finished. Mr Henderson was pleased and delighted with the manuscript.  The book was a masterpiece rolling off the shelves at the drop of a hat.  Harry became a well-known writer.  Sampson & Sons Publishing Company became a big name in the publishing industry with dozens of well-established authors. “Shall we open another bottle of bubbly?” asked Harry as he opened his first proof of his latest Novel.  “Yes, Harry...this calls for a celebration!” said Chloe as she kissed Harry.  Harry opened the bottle of Chardonnay and poured two goblets of the bubby and handed one to Chloe.  Together they clinked glasses and toasted to Harry’s success.




















---
 ©Mary Aris, All rights reserved
No part of this story can be duplicated or stored in any retreival system without the written consents of the author. 

Sunday 17 July 2011

I wrote this poem the other day and uploaded it to Allpoetry.com   I also illustrated the poem.



Poetry

       Dog Days of Summer


Dog days of Summer swelter away,
Like a flame to a candle
Bodies merge with the heat of the day;
Nothing left of 'em but open sandals;

In these dog days of summer people dream
Of snowy January days
Whilst enjoying vanilla ice-cream
Staring into space with a sweltering gaze;

Too hot to sit; too hot to stand
What's a person to do, but take to the beach
With a cool lemonade in each hand.
In these dog days of summer life's truly a bitch!


Mary Aris


Copyright 2011 by Mary Aris



Saturday 16 July 2011

The Etymology of Love

                 I love to study the Eytomology of words.  I always loved to study the meaning behind words and know the history of the words behind the language.  It is quite interesting to learn about the history of words.  It adds to one's knowledge, enriching one's vocabulary on a much deeper level.  One of my favourite words in the English language is the word 'love'.   The word 'love' originates from the old English word 'lufu', meaning to love.  The term 'love bird' was first coined in the Sixteenth century to describe a certain West African parrot.  The term was used because of the way these parrots mated with one another.  It wasn't until much later....until 1911, to be precise, that the modern meaning of the term 'love bird' came to imply the love between two lovers.

              The word 'amour' comes from the old French word amorem, meaning to love.  The word paramour caught on in the 13th Century in france to describe an illicit or clandenstine type of love.
The word 'minion' is a term applied to a servant or mistress; one who pleases another.  The word 'minion' is of Celtic origin.  I used this word in my Novel, the Curse of Anna Greene when her mother gave birth to the girl following her mother's rape.  Anastasia's mother called the infant the Devil's minion for in her eyes that was what she was....the Devil's daughter and mistress...born out of a diobolical rape and sodomy; fathered by the Devil himself.

                I've used the word 'paramour' in my poem,  'Tea Cozy'


                                            Tea Cozy


A crocheted table cloth was spread
Over a finely walnut-colored table.
The cloth sparkled with gilded thread.


On the Stove a lovely song
Penetrated the kitchen with its' melody
The water danced in rhythm as it gaily sung along


Miss Mary set the cups and saucers ceremoniously
Taking dire care
To match the china for this Special Afternoon Ceremony


Silence did a great job of cutting the Tea cakes and pastries,
And the sugar bowl and milk pitcher sat quietly in the midst
While The Teapot bowed a timid bow at the Grand Tea Cake from Sal's Bakery


At half past four the Master of the house came punctually
With a bouquet of roses in hand
And a present for the Mistress Mary


Taking a seat, She, with outstretched hands did pour
A cup of hot freshly brewed tea
and served fresh cake and crumpets to her paramour.

© Mary Aris, All rights reserved

Monday 11 July 2011

A Little Introduction

     

      A Writer's Journal is a journal about writing.....my writing to be precise.  In it lie tidbits of ideas gathered here and there to help me grow as an author.  I am an Independent Author who has written and self-published eight books.    I have just published my first full length Gothic Novel titled The Curse of Anna Greene.  It is the story about a thirteenth Century witch who was murdered by a lynch mob who believed she was the devil's minion, the daughter of a Warlock who was burnt at the stake for kidnapping and murdering an infant; the murder of the infant's mother; the rape and sodomy of a fifteen-year-old girl; the murders of a seven-year-old boy, his dog and the boy's mother; the murder of a French farmer and for sorcery.  Here is a list of my bibliography:


  Poetry Books


Fiction Books

Non Fiction

                   Jewelz the Juggling Cat is a story about a seven-year-old girl, Lucy Fletcher who discovered a mother cat giving birth to a litter of kittens on her way home from school.  She fell in love with one of the kittens and decided to take him home with her.  She had a tough time convincing her mother to let her keep the kitten.  Her mother made Lucy take the kitten back to its mother the following day; but the kitten, its mother and brothers and sisters returned to Lucy's house.  Seeing how happy their daughter was Lucy's parents allowed Lucy to keep the kitten.  To their surprise Lucy and her brother, Lucas soon discovers that Jewelz has a special talent.  He can juggle!  I entered this story at the Goodreads Book Club's Slide Show Story Contest.  I uploaded the story on to Microsoft Powerpoint and drew the illustrations.  I have published the story on Lulu as a Kindle version and am planning to release it as a soft cover in the Autumn.