Tuesday, April 23, 2013

The Phil Naessens Show 4-22-2013 The Surprising Colorado Rockies!


http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/2013/04/22/the-phil-naessens-show-4-22-2013-the-surprising-colorado-rockies/

Diane Turner - London Rocks - 23-04-2013

Diane Turner - London Rocks - 23-04-2013

History Trivia - Vikings defeated at Battle of Clontarf Brian Boru

April 23


215 BC A temple was built on the Capitoline Hill and dedicated to Venus Erycina to commemorate the Roman defeat at Lake Trasimene.



1014 Battle of Clontarf Brian Boru (High King of Ireland in 1002) defeated Viking invaders, but was killed during the battle.

1348 The founding of the Order of the Garter by King Edward III was announced on St George's Day.

1509 Henry VIII was proclaimed King of England.

1616 William Shakespeare died.

1661 English king Charles II was crowned in London.

Gladiator's Pen: Rudiarius

Gladiator's Pen: Rudiarius: His blade sang as it cut through the air of the arena. The gladiator growled as its edge sank into the flesh of his target. A soft s...

From the Desk of Nadia Kilrick: A Visit with Brenda Perlin

From the Desk of Nadia Kilrick: A Visit with Brenda Perlin: I'm excited to have Brenda Perlin visit with us here at the desk today. Brenda is highly energetic, motivated and friendly - so much s...

Monday, April 22, 2013

Congratulations Green Wizard Publishing - Happy First Year



Congratulations to Mark Barry and Green Wizard publishing upon celebrating its first year in a rapidly expanding industry.  The accomplishments achieved thus far continue to entice readers on both sides of the pond, piquing interest by offering quality novels in diverse genres.

 


I, along with your followers, wish you every success throughout the year.

History Trivia - supernova crab nebula seen by the naked eye

April 22

 238 Year of the Six Emperors: The Roman Senate outlawed emperor Maximinus Thrax for his bloodthirsty proscriptions in Rome and nominated two of its members, Pupienus and Balbinus, to the throne.

 960 Basil II was crowned Emperor of the Byzantine Empire.

1073 Gregory VII was elected pope.

1056 Supernova Crab nebula last seen by the naked eye.

1370 First stone of the Bastille laid. The fortress that was later to become a prison was built on the orders of King Charles V of France. It was intended as a fortification to help protect the wall around Paris against English attack during the Hundred Years' War.

1509 Henry VIII ascended to throne of England.

Sunday, April 21, 2013

In the Midst: A Golden Nugget Within the Family

In the Midst: A Golden Nugget Within the Family: Holding a piece of fragile history, I held the torn and scarred book affectionately. Written by my grandmother’s uncle and published in 19...

Mary Ann Bernal - Top 25 Authors Database

Mary Ann Bernal - Top 25 Authors Database


View my author's page:  http://www.authorsdb.com/authors-directory/1446-mary-ann-bernal

Hollywood Shakedown by Mark Barry - an excerpt

Sample Chapter from Green Wizard 2: Hollywood Shakedown by Mark Barry
 
Sometime writer and full time bum Buddy Chinn is in trouble. The ponies are slow, his liver is bitching, the bugs are munching his wallet away and his free spirit squeeze Monique is catting around town with who knows who.  Worse, a big-time manuscript collector believes he’s got the lowdown on some serious buried literary treasure.  Buddy hasn’t a clue what he’s talking about.
Collector guy offers him a deal he cannot refuse. Find said treasure and make a hundred large. Fail and lose body parts. Lots of body parts.  Worse, he’s got two weeks and some bad, bad people on his tail. Some days, it just ain’t worth getting out of bed.

Based on the life of the fictional son of the alter-ego of a brilliant beat poet, Hollywood Shakedown is a surreal, dangerous, funny, knowing, shaggy dog story ideal for the pool this summer.
____________________________________________
 The boys after Buddy are ordered to bring in his girlfriend Monique as an insurance policy against a rip off on the manuscript. She's shopping in an upmarket LA mall and having a great time. The boys have a guest with them, a tracker who is paid to bring in runaways and they don't like it at all.


Chapter Nineteen:
A hectic, almost frenetic lot. 
Three men forced to watch her enter the mall from the road outside. Stuck in a queue for parking places. As soon as they pulled into line, a Lexus tailgated them and that was that. They could have forced their way out if it came to it (or even shot their way out, as they were packing enough hardware to start an LA revolution), but they were under orders from Saxon to stay nice and quiet.
Under the radar. 
Inconspicuous.
Ahead of them, the line snaked thirty strong and though the delay was irksome, the men showed no discernible emotion. 
After all, there was nothing they could do so why worry.
Bishop wasn't concerned. The woman clearly had no idea the men were following her and she wasn't likely to be leaving the mall anytime soon. She was there for the duration. There was shopping to do. They could take their time.
Pick their spot.

The man in the back seat stared out of the window, bored and restless.
Accustomed as he was to the open prairies, he disliked being cooped up in a metal casket like this one but it wouldn't pay to show too much weakness to someone like Bishop. He’d use that against him when it came down to it. 
You give nothing away to a man like Bishop.

 Scanning the lot like a hawk, he spotted a woman in blue jeans and espadrilles, with cherry blonde hair walking to her mini-van. Tall, long legged. He ogled her top, which would have been ample even if her blouse had been the right size. Several large bags of shopping weighed her down. Clearly, she’d been inside the mall since opening time and she prowled the lot with a confident swagger.
It didn't take the woman long to realise that someone was staring at her, but she had no idea who and it unnerved her, her sixth sense, her radar, attuned to the world around her going wild.
If she could see him, she would have seen a thirty two year old man, lantern jawed, bloodless lips the width of pencil points, sandy coloured hair to his shoulders, inlaid with flecks of grey and a days’ worth of rough stubble. 
Lennon sunglasses covered up his pupils, but not the whole of his eyes.
Taking advantage of his position in obscurity, he took aim.
Dark things imagined. 
The darkest of things.
A picture painted intricately in his head. Attached to the mental image, all his black emotions, all the fantasies spawned on long nights wandering the prairie. Because it was morning, and because he was merely amusing himself, he neglected to show her some of the more potent images that existed inside his library. The ones he used when he was being paid to. 
Still, the particular picture he painted in his head was, nonetheless, not for the everyday person.
The window of the car opened about three inches, enough to let the breeze in.
The man extended the palm of his hand and placed the picture upon it. 
Blew it toward her, gently.
He felt no pleasure in the act. She wasn't his usual type, not at all. He preferred muscular, athletic women, Native looking, chestnut eyes, skin toasted in the desert sun. The psychic thing he did to the classy looking urban chick was just something he did to pass the time.

The projected image hit her.
He watched her flinch. If a bystander were watching from a certain angle, it would look as if she'd been accidentally bumped into by a shopping cart.
Temporarily unsteady on her feet, she threw her bags of shopping into the back of her mini-van and jumped awkwardly into the driver’s seat. For a good five minutes she stared out of the windscreen. Remained totally still, perhaps to steady herself.
Tonight, he knew, she will experience unusual and unsettling dreams. 
Dreams about things she didn't even know she knew. Things that would make her feel uncomfortable; make her look at people around her differently, with anxiety, for at least a fortnight
Eventually, she got a grip. 
With a shake of her head, she drove off without looking back.
He adjusted his sunglasses.
(Sweet dreams, honey)
He leaned forward between the head rests of the two front seats. “I'll go after the woman,” he said. “It’s time.” A mid-west accent, sleepy and slow.
“Say that again?” Bishop said, not really understanding his rural drawl, the sentence taking twice as long as he was used to.
“The mark. I'll go after her.”
The big man shook his head. Took a sip of his soda. “No dice. We need to wait”
“Let's go now. Stay here and park the car. I'll bring her in.”
Ramirez, who did not like the man in the back seat one little bit, felt uncomfortable around him, a distant alarm bell ringing in his head every time he heard his voice, turned round over the seat and spoke assertively. “We'll do this later. That's the deal. “
He shook his head, knowing full well the Mexican didn’t like him and knowing also, that he didn’t like him much either. “I ain't talking to you, brother. Who asked you anyway?”
Ramirez bristled but didn't let it show. “The boss doesn't want a repeat of Denver. You heard what he said. You were there. You were Denver, man. And I’m not your brother.”
The man stretched his arms on the full length of the back seat rest. Ramirez had hit his weak point full on.
Up till Denver, he would have probably been asked to carry out this job alone. It was an easy payday. Bringing rogues back to base was what he did. 
Now, because of certain unfortunate events in Colorado, a pair of assholes had to come along for the ride and it felt like babysitting. “Denver went bad. It happens. I apologised, what more could I do.”
“Sure, real bad.” said Bishop, wryly. He was no fan of the man in the back seat either but there was a job to do and he was a professional. You couldn’t always choose your partners in a disparate organization like Saxon’s and the man in the back was a specialist. “You're lucky to be allowed back on the team. Let’s sit chilly for a little while. It’s busy in there and the man wants this to be done nice and clean, squeaky clean. Besides, what else have you got to do today? There's no rush....”
He sat back and crossed one leg over another. A pair of expensive rattlesnake skin cowboy boots under a pair of Levi jeans. Whereas Bishop and Ramirez wore business suits, he took a more casual approach to his work. He hated suits and, by and large, the people who wore them.
He hated Bishop and Ramirez too.
One day he was going to sort them right out.
Ace them.
Oh yes. Ace them. 
Besides, he'd been there when Saxon told them all to blend in and stay inconspicuous. Guess what happens. These two assholes turn up at his hotel looking like, er, gangsters while tailing the mark in a black Audi with tinted windows typically driven by, er, gangsters. Maybe they had misunderstood the word inconspicuous. 
Or they didn't know quite what the word meant...
By his side, a black cowboy hat rested on the seat. He didn't really like being stuck in the back of a car, even one as comfortable as this. In the end, there was no choice, so he shut up, picked up his cowboy hat and rested it over his eyes.
“I can think of a hundred places I'd rather be than in this car right now, Mister Bishop, sir. But it’s your party. Wake me when you want the huntin’ to begin.”

Lunchtime was beginning to blend into the middle of the afternoon and Monique was desperate for a drink.
Cravings crept up on her unawares and they bit her hard. The force nearly knocked her down and she began to feel faint. Luckily, before they overwhelmed her, she found a spare seat near the fountain at the centre of the mall. Lucky in itself – the mall was even more crowded now than it was when she'd arrived. Hundreds and hundreds of shoppers wandered the Pineapple Grove. Sitting down, she felt at peace, a momentary sense of relief.
Up until that point, she had been a busy girl.
She'd done herself proud. The professional shoppers of Beverley Hills would have been proud of her. Alone, she'd faced the daunting shopping Everest ahead of her and she'd climbed it with a rare vigour, using the shopping equivalent of ice pick, mountain boots and shiny axes. Raced up the mountainside and there she stood, atop the peak.
Monique sat with her back to the fountain alongside an impressive collection of upmarket shopping bags. In a quite memorable spree of see it and buy it shopping, she'd spent nearly a thousand bucks on clothes, shoes, make-up, accessories and lingerie in around two and a half hours and there was still plenty left in her purse.
Just under a thousand bucks. 
If she spotted a cream maxi dress, a zebra skin printed top, a pair of pink strappy sandals, a mauve purse with gold clasps, a pair of fifties style horned sunglasses, a lemon camisole set, or a pair of pristine, rare, American-made Levi jeans, she'd be all over the item like the sun’s rays.
If she liked the look of it, she brought it without trying it on.
Second thoughts? She cast it aside, not bothering to put it back on the hanger.
Well, she thought: This lil Oklahoma girl would most definitely enjoy being one of the idle rich. 

In the last ten minutes before the cravings hit her, she had been having a pressing internal dialogue with her inner self about purchasing a leopard skin mini-dress that hugged her figure like a Latin lover, but was one of those dresses which caused more problems than it solved, especially when combined with a pair of black shoes with eight inch spikes for heels.
The dress and shoes were some real bad girl combination.
Had her mother seen what she was planning to wear at her age, she would have had a cardiac the size of the 1905 earthquake. She really wanted those clothes- really, really wanted them and the combined spend would be close to five hundred bucks – her mother would have definitely keeled over at that price - but the downside nagged at her.
The downside? The married woman’s downside.
What would her boyfriend say?
What would anyone say? She was just past forty and this kind of outfit gave a gal a real bad name and these were not clothes for a woman with a boyfriend.
 These were prowlin’ clothes.
Well, she'd already gotten herself a bad name! She'd heard the whispers. Seen the impact she had on men who only ever respond like that when in the presence of a girl with a bad name.
She'd never been unfaithful to Buddy, though she'd pushed it farther than she was supposed to at times, pushed those boundaries until they bent, strained and cracked, (smooched with a few guys, sipped bourbon, smoked a little draw in a car with Sylvia and a couple of hot young guys from outta town when the bars had shut, watching the lights flicker down in the Valley; hung out at the occasional impromptu house party with guys Buddy wouldn’t be all that happy to know about, danced a little and such), but she had never actually hid a dick apart from that of her boyfriend since they’d been together. It was hard not to. She got plenty of attention from guys and she was a free spirit.
Yet, since Buddy, she had been playing it straight.
(Ish.)
So, putting it all together, she wanted that dress badly.
She desired it. The dress niggled at her. She'd put it back on the rack and left the shop but that wasn't enough. The desire for the dress ate away at her. The more she thought and prevaricated, the more she felt she'd have to leave the State to avoid buying it. She could just imagine Buddy's face when he saw her wearing that dress. Hell, he'd rip it off there and then (she'd have to watch that, if she decided to buy it), but he wouldn't be too happy at all is she wore it down Jodie's or the Hangman. It would upset him, the sight of her walking out with that dress, those shoes and her new clasp purse. She knew men well enough to know that a whore in the bedroom is a whole different thing to a whore in the local street corner Lounge.
And she loved him. She really did
That was the God's honest truth.
Yet, this dress was just too damned special to wear just for Buddy in the bedroom.
It was too cool not to show off.
And those shoes...she had NEVER seen a pair of shoes like that in her life! She spotted them in the shop window of a Luigi Facchino franchise. 
Stared at the window almost hypnotised.
Time slowed to nothing when she saw them.
Instinctively, sensibly, she knew that nothing good could come from buying these shoes.
She'd already brought shoes.  
Nice ones too, real sexy shoes.
These were different though. They seemed to call to her. It was like they had spotted her walking past the window of the boutique, spotted her essence – the woman inside, her soul, her being - and latched on to it like a tractor beam. It was like those shoes had hunted her down, predators: imprisoned her there in front of the shop window.
Mounted on a plinth, framed by two spotlights orbiting the shoes like the twin moons of Saturn, each shoe buffed to a glistening shine, they had an ethereal, otherworldly quality. 
Powerless to resist, she entered the shop. When she'd tried them on they fitted her perfectly too, the caress of the inner shoe like a silken embrace, the insole a bed of a million feathers. The shoes had a transcendental impact upon her that stretched from her temples to the tips of her toes and centred like a hurricane between her legs.
She had to have them - three hundred and forty bucks was a small price to pay for such sheer emotional range and she wasn't going to get this chance again anytime soon.
Then she embraced the downside. Those heels would attract men like flies round shit and send Buddy into a deep depression if she wore them out, say, to go shopping with one of her pals. She needed the attention of men, but she needed Buddy more.
Badass shoes.
Pals would love those shoes. Sylvia. Katy. Christina. The Sunday night gals at the Magpie Bar. Even Gay Nate.
They would ENVY those shoes and by extension, they would envy Monique.
Little Monique of Annardarko, Oklahoma.
Decisions, decisions.
(Shoes.)
To buy or not to buy.
The sensible half of her knew that buying those shoes was attracting heaps of trouble into her life on just about every single dimension she could think of. 
The mad side of her didn't give a crap about that – she wanted them so bad she could taste the need at the back of her throat.
The battle raging inside her went on. Every time she tried to reach a resolution about the clothes, the idea of a cool drink in her hand came to her. First the mind, then the body. The craving began to take hold at the back of her throat. Though the mall was homeostatically controlled by powerful air conditioners, she began to perspire. After five or six minutes of sitting in the rest area, her entire body was covered in a sheen of moisture. 
This was her psyche solving the problem for her.
Can't make up your mind? Decisions too much for you? Too much pain and thinking? Have yourself an ice cool Margherita, Monique. You KNOW it makes sense...
Unable to resist the craving, she got up and went in search of a lunchtime drink.
 

History Trivia - Roma founded by Romulus and Remus

April 21

753 BC – Romulus and Remus founded Rome (traditional date).

43 BC Battle of Mutina: Mark Antony was again defeated in battle by Aulus Hirtius, who was killed. Antony failed to capture Mutina and Decimus Brutus was murdered shortly after.

1509 Henry VIII ascended the throne of England on the death of his father, Henry VII.

Saturday, April 20, 2013

The Briton and the Dane: Concordia by Mary Ann Bernal - Kindle edition $0.99 for a limited time



Travel back in time to late Ninth Century Anglo-Saxon Britain where Alfred the Great rules with a benevolent hand while the Danish King rules peacefully within the boundaries of the Danelaw. Trade flourishes, and scholars from throughout the civilized world flock to Britannia’s shores to study at the King’s Court School at Winchester.


Enter Concordia, a beautiful noble woman whose family is favored by the king. Vain, willful, and admired, but ambitious and cunning, Concordia is not willing to accept her fate. She is betrothed to the valiant warrior, Brantson, but sees herself as far too young to lay in the bedchamber of an older suitor. She wants to see the wonders of the world, embracing everything in it; preferably, but dangerously, at the side of Thayer, the exotic Saracen who charms King Alfred’s court and ignites her yearning passions.

Concordia manipulates her besotted husband into taking her to Rome, but her ship is captured by bloodthirsty pirates, and the seafarers protecting her are ruthlessly slain to a man. As she awaits her fate in the Moorish captain’s bed, by sheer chance, she discovers that salvation is at hand in the gilded court of a Saracen nobleman.

While awaiting rescue, Concordia finds herself at the center of intrigue, plots, blackmail, betrayal and the vain desires of two egotistical brothers, each willing to die for her favor. Using only feminine cunning, Concordia must defend her honor while plotting her escape as she awaits deliverance, somewhere inside steamy, unconquered Muslim Hispania.

 

This Week in Tennis 4-20-2013 Getting Dirty in Monte Carlo

http://thisweekintennispodcast.wordpress.com/2013/04/20/this-week-in-tennis-4-20-2013-getting-dirty-in-monte-carlo/
 
 
Host Phil Naessens pays tribute to legendary play by play announcer Pat Summerall, answers listeners questions about Phil’s seeming lack of love for the game of tennis, how someone can be a guest on the show and looks at all the highs and lows of this weeks Monte Carlo Rolex Masters on this edition of This Week in Tennis.

Green Wizard Publishing - Reality Bites - Amazon Review

 

4.0 out of 5 stars Stories of hurt and healing., April 17, 2013

Amazon Verified Purchase

This review is from: Reality Bites (Kindle Edition)
A collection of fictional and non-fiction books by authors of many countries. These are stories of hurt and healing and looking at the pains in life and forging ahead. A must read for anyone. This book crosses the genre boundaries. I gave it four stars leaning toward five for it's diversity of tales and great writing.

History Trivia - last naval battle in Byzantine history

April 20

295 - 8th recorded perihelion passage of Halley's Comet.

1303 The University of Rome La Sapienza was instituted by Pope Boniface VIII.

1314 Clement V died. Clement, who owed his election largely to King Philip IV of France, chose to move the Papacy to Avignon, where it remained for more than 60 years. He also had a hand in the trial of the Templars.

1442 Edward IV, King of England, 1461-83, was born.

1453 The last naval battle in Byzantine history occurred, as three Genoese galleys escorting a Byzantine transport fought their way through the huge Ottoman blockade fleet.

Friday, April 19, 2013

The Phil Naessens Show 4-19-2013 Week Three 2013 Los Angeles Dodgers, Oakland Athletics and New York Mets Report

http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/2013/04/19/the-phil-naessens-show-4-19-2013-week-three-2013-los-angeles-dodgers-oakland-athletics-and-new-york-mets-report/
 
 
Week three of the 2013 MLB season has brought many surprises, disappointments and setbacks for the Oakland Athletics, Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Mets. Joining Phil to talk about these three great baseball franchises is True Blue LA managing editor Eric Stephen, Athletics Nation lead writer Alex Hall and Blogging Mets owner Mark Berman on the Friday edition of The Phil Naessens Show.

Ngaire Elder: History Buff and Scribbler, Mary Ann Bernal

Ngaire Elder: History Buff and Scribbler, Mary Ann Bernal: Mary Ann Bernal, author of The Briton and the Dane novels, is an avid history buff whose area of interest focuses on Ninth Century Anglo-Sax...

History Trivia - Viking raiders kill Alphege, Archbishop of Canterbury

April 19

607 - Comet Halley approached within 0.0898 AUs of Earth.

1012 Viking raiders killed Alphege, Archbishop of Canterbury before being bought off with a huge bribe.

1054 Pope Leo IX died.  He was able to transform the papacy from a local power in Rome to a major influence in Europe.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Carla by Mark Barry - An excerpt




Chapter 9:
Carla, grateful to John for helping with her assignment, and impressed with his intelligence, arranges to meet him for a tour around a well hidden flower garden.
 
Overcast weather that morning with spots of rain about. 
Now and again, the sun tried to peek through gaps but even when it succeeded in doing so, other, near-inky black nebulae overwhelmed the upstart rays.
The council gardener drove his lawnmower back and forth across the top football pitch and a pungent smell of freshly cut grass filled the morning air. Somehow it made me more nervous. 
Already she was fifteen minutes late. I wore my Barbour hunting coat, blue jeans and some non descript boots and I leaned on the memorial arch waiting for her at the entrance to the park.
With each minute that went past, I began to be more despondent. It doesn’t take a lot, but a girl I’m in love with not turning up for a date is up there with the best of the reasons.
It wasn’t really a surprise. I didn’t really expect her to turn up, but just once in my life, I hoped against hope to beat the odds. I began to pace between one half of the arch and the other, the gravel noisy underneath my boot heels. I could sense the contents of my stomach beginning to liquefy.  
Inevitably, the typical thought processes circulated.
She’s twenty, you’re over forty. What would her friends think?
Her friends probably had hold of her last night and they probably had ripped her ambitions to shreds. They probably laughed at her. Called her names and called ME names, probably said I was a pervert or something and warned her and told her she could do a lot better than me. 
I’d once met one of her friends in the pub, a very pretty girl named Charlotte, and I saw her look at me with utter contempt. I imagined, as I paced, that she would also be quick to lay the boot in.
*
When I had finished facing that first wave of self-hatred, I was ready to return home and I cursed my optimism, my vainglorious plan.
I stopped pacing up and down for a moment as a couple walked past me on the way to the bowls club, an older couple, and they wished me good morning and I did the same, the nice old lady wearing a thick aquamarine coloured coat and a floppy crimson hat which made her look a tiny bit like Princess Margaret used to look and I wished them good morning in return. When they passed, I soon went back in to my fugue, the second wave of self-hatred coming in on a black and portentous tide.
Over and over and over again I went into the reasons why it would be madness for her to turn up, that it shouldn’t be seen as a reflection on me in any way, that it was all just a silly thing, a silly, spontaneous thing, which was never going to work. I leaned against the arch and bit my nail. My nails have been eviscerated over the years to the point where they hardly exist. Neither do the tips of my fingers because I am a biter, an anxious biter, and sometimes, I get so worried,  I chew the fingerprints off my fingers when there is no nail protrusion left to bite on. Thus, my thumbs get whitlows and blains from where I get nails regrowing into the skin and most of the time, my thumbs are swollen and blistered.
Again and again, I checked my watch.
Ten twenty. That’s it, I thought.
She definitely isn’t coming. That’s the end for me down the Saddlers. I’ll never be able to see her again. The aftermath of her rejection will be too much for me. The embarrassment. The sheer, coruscating red faced embarrassment.
I’ll never be able to go in there again even if she isn’t working.
Churned stomach, flushed cheeks, burning eyes and beating temples, I pictured going home, turning the heating on, undressing, naked, sitting down on the sofa, listening to music, some David Bowie, some Lou Reed, something like that, and while I rest, I’ll slice chunks out of my armpit, pick the stitches out of the previous lattice, make it bleed and bleed and bleed and then maybe start on my legs and the thought of cutting made me feel calmer and even before I was aware of this happening, I found myself walking backwards up past some of the oldest oak trees in Wheatley Fields, halfway between despair and anticipation.
*
I heard a shout from near the Prebend opposite the arches. ‘John!’
It was her. 
Carla. 
Quilted jacket, red scarf, jeans and wellington boots. Even though it wasn’t all that cold, she was wearing a royal blue woolly hat, two floppy dog-ears dangling to her shoulders from either side,
I stopped where I was, waved, watch her skip over toward me. She carried on her natter, that incredible, creamy soft, middle class, burnished accent that I remembered from my time in Cambridge. ‘I am so sorry I’m late, John. My tutor called me and he just would not get off the phone! I feel a bit guilty because I told him I’d run out of charge.’
‘Was it important?’ I asked, relieved.
‘He thinks it’s always important,’ she laughed. ‘But it usually never is. What he said could have waited until tomorrow,’
I calmed down, slowly, and as I did so, I felt a different kind of nervousness, a polar opposite emotion, a wild swing from despair to elation, some kind of buzzing, and I immediately clamped down on it. Taking hidden breaths, I engaged my positive, sensible, well trained self-talk, much of it to stop me from proposing marriage or something.
(You might laugh. I’ve done it before. My record for this romantic gesture is three and a half hours into a first date. She looked at me as if I was crackers and I never saw her again outside the office).
 
I listened to her natter about her tutor and her course and constructed a gentle smile, hoping I didn’t look like a psycho of my inner self-portrait. The simian dribbler, the fecund drooler. The tilted head, the heavy lidded eyes of the lizard. The missing tooth. The giant ears, almost detached, a Lombroso measured head twice the average, football sized. I watched her talk, never leaving her eyes once, her cavernous, enormous brown eyes. 
If she was wearing any make up, it was so tastefully applied I couldn’t tell. Her lashes long and perfectly balanced. Her plain, symmetrical face, devoid of marks, clear and fresh, as if she had woken this morning, walked down into her garden and splashed her face in a crystal clear pool while mounted on a water lily. . When she spoke – and I have to confess, dear reader, that I wasn’t listening to every little bit she said about college – her pink lips caressed each syllable perfectly. As she spoke about some Open Day she had to help organise, I distinctly remember thinking that I could spend the rest of my life just staring at her face, occasionally reaching over to cup her cheek, stroking her.
 
That voice. 
Oh man, I could listen to Carla talk. She could recite a Hovermower instruction manual from cover to cover and I wouldn’t interrupt once. 
 
Then, she seemed to dry up and she grabbed my arm. ‘Let’s go and have a walk down to the flower garden. I’ve been told the cherry blossom trees bloomed last night and we won’t have much of a window to see them,’ she said and I nodded and the two of us, hands in pockets, walked down past the changing rooms toward the destination. ‘Did you know that eight years ago, a developer put in an application to build three hundred houses on all this, John?’ She asked, sweeping her right arm around the park imperiously as we walked down.
‘Really?’
‘Can you believe that? The council threw it out straight away, but for one reason or another, they allowed the same developer to build on a wood up near the garden centre. Lots of protests at the time, but they weren’t enough to stop him. It’s a tragedy, don’t you think?’
‘I would imagine they would argue that people have to live somewhere?’ I replied.
‘My tutor said that four out of five people who purchased the houses on the wood that died were from outside of town. That can’t be right, can it? It really upsets me. Can you imagine if they ever built on this?’
We walked through a small graveyard at the bottom of the memorial park. No more than thirty gravestones in various states of repair. I looked at the dates. They were old graves, in some cases very old. 
‘Are they allowed to build on cemeteries like this?’ I asked.
She stopped and crouched over one. ‘I don’t know. I’ll ask my tutor. Look at this one,’ she said, gesturing me over. I crouched down next to her and felt my knee crack. She seemed to do the crouching thing a lot easier than I did. I read the weather beaten, faded writing on the granite stone. 
Amy Cooper. 1843 – 1869. She Was Much Loved.
‘I wonder what her life must have been like? She was a real person once. She must have gone to school, worked, loved, had children. Look at how young she was when she died. Just twenty six. Oh My God, that’s just six years older than me.’
‘You’ll live to be a hundred, Carla.’ I said, grinning.
She tapped me on the arm playfully. ‘No way am I going to be a hundred. That’s so old.
‘On average, women live about eight years longer than men, all other things being equal.’ I replied.
She stood up. ‘That makes sense,’ she said. ‘Both my grandmothers are alive and both my grandfathers are dead. Still don’t want to be a hundred though. All that wee…’she laughed. ‘What do you think Amy did?’ She said referring to the gravestone once more.
Truth be told, I wasn’t interested in the slightest, but I could sit and listen to her forever[1], and I wasn’t bothered what she spoke about.
I remember that time well. If she wanted to talk about it, I wanted to listen. It was as simple as that and that never varied, never altered. If we’d have married, I am absolutely, incontrovertibly convinced that that pattern would have continued. I sometimes wonder whether I was in love with her voice. ‘Don’t know,’ I said, with that desire in mind. ‘You tell me.’
With that, Carla playfully recounted her story of Amy Cooper.
‘Oh definitely the daughter of a Merchant, I think. Definitely pretty…’ and as we walked down to the flower garden behind the cemetery, I made sure each step was like walking on the moon, slow and measured, almost floating, as if I was a very old man indeed, while she knitted her elegant story of young Amy Cooper. Her life, her loves, her ambitions, her personality, all the way to her passing. She described her clothes, her hair, her smile, like a born writer and I knew there and then that she was studying the wrong subject; a girl with an imagination like this should study English Literature somewhere grand, write great sweeping stories, historical romances, historical transpositions, what-if histories, all that stuff people buy in their lorry loads nowadays.
I made each step to the flower garden last ten seconds by some contrivance or another. Each time Carla faltered in her narrative, I prompted her to go in another direction and each time she responded, earnestly, vivacious, in that sublime, balmy, measured, unutterably hypnotic voice of hers, with its occasional redundant, trans-atlantic inter-connectives, it’s likes, and stuffs, and oh my gods, and I feasted on it, each word exploding in fountains of gold. 
Cleopatra never luxuriated in her marble bathtubs full of asses milk as joyously as I relished listening to Carla.[2]
Eventually, we reached a high hedge which hadn’t been trimmed in an age, it’s tendrils and tiny branches pulling the whole over. ‘I’ve run out of things to say about Amy,’ she said, somewhat flat and awkward.
‘Let’s go and look at some flowers, then. I’m looking forward to this.’ I replied.
‘Oh, I am too. I’ve only been here once before. I’ve brought my camera. I was thinking of doing a project. Will you help me write it?’
‘How?’ I asked.
‘You’re really clever, I can tell,’ she blushed. ‘You know things.’
‘I don’t know much about flowers. I’m a physicist.’
‘Oh no,’ she said shaking her head. ‘I can tell. You’re much more than that. Will you help me? I have to write a project on wild environments under pressure in Wheatley Fields. That’s how I know about the development application and stuff. We can visit the Cherry Wood and cycle up the Heritage Trail near the college.’ She suddenly did that thing young girls do, that eye thing, that cat’s eye thing, the one where their eyes expand to the size of the twin moons of Saturn. She put her hand on my Barboured forearm. ‘Please, John. I’d love it if you could help me.’
What could a love struck man say in this situation but ‘Of course I will. I’ll be glad to help.’
‘Fantastic! Thank you. Between us…’ she said, struggling with the door to the gardens, I, too stupefied to help her open it, too dull witted, too stunned at the amazing turn of events, all of it, ‘…I think we’ll create the very best project.’
The two of us might have entered the secret flower garden at that point but I’d entered somewhere else entirely.
 
We walked around the garden, with it’s early spring riches, it’s Snow Blossom, it’s nascent Crocus, its carpet of Bluebells, it’s Pink Belladonna bushes, it’s sweeping banks of Snowdrops, its freshly planted Daffodils. The Holly bushes to the north side, the fledgling mauve and lemon Primroses, the Azeleas and the Apple Blossoms. We stood for ages underneath a row of Cherry Blossom trees, not quite in full bloom, a few days off or so, but we could smell them and the fragrance of those trees allied to Carla’s presence will stay with me forever, I think.
 
That ten minutes, that nexus, in that flower garden, with the cherry blossom just beginning to bloom, Carla talking animatedly about the beauty of nature and the sanctity of wild flowers, was without doubt the finest ten minutes of my entire life.
Nothing had gone before.
Nothing would ever happen again. If there is a God watching over us (and I doubt that very much), he would have stopped time, or at least suspended Carla and I in a perpetual Groundhog Ten Minutes because I was in heaven and whatever had assailed me previously had gone.
All the pain, the misery, the anger, the pathology, the flawed, disturbed psychology, the tortured impulses, the desire to cut, the desire to end it, the memories (oh, those horror memories), had gone.
I was at one.
 And do you know what?
I never told Carla.
I simply carried on listening to her talk and when it came to my turn, I talked about the cycle of the four winds or something silly like that and we walked up toward the Three Steeples and finally, all I can remember her saying for the rest of that day is how much she enjoyed our walk and how much she was looking forward to working on the project with me and I could have cried, I really could have cried.
I can still see her now, walking into the town, waving at me - her floppy hat, her swinging scarf - then skipping happily toward the shops where she’d arranged to meet some friends...



[1] I am aware that this is the third time I’ve mentioned my feelings about Carla’s voice. I’m trusting you now to remember how I feel about it. Okay? Sorry to bore you.

[2] If you want to learn to be a listener, rather than be one of those people who wait for their turn to speak (those silly narcissists!), then find someone with a voice like Carla’s. You’ll be a Melanie Klein quality listener in weeks.

Millwall fans fighting at Wembley VIDEO (13/4/2013) - hooligans continue to plague sporting events

 
Ultra Violence by Mark Barry
 
Football hooliganism as seen through the eyes of a diehard fan

Purchase Links:
Amazon UK
http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B007WTW19A
Amazon US
http://www.amazon.com/Ultra-Violence-Volume-Anthony-Barry/dp/1478139595/ref=la_B008479RWI_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1343693124&sr=1-1

The Phil Naessens Show 4-18-2013 The Boston Marathon Tragedy and Jay-Z the Mogul


http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/2013/04/18/the-phil-naessens-show-4-18-2013-the-boston-marathon-tragedy-and-jay-z-the-mogul/