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Sunday, December 22, 2013

YOURS TRULY, MARK TWAIN, AH, I MEAN SANTA CLAUS



{Actual letter Samuel Clemens wrote his tiny daughter, Susie}

Palace of St. Nicholas
In the Moon
Christmas Morning


MY DEAR SUSIE CLEMENS:

I have received and read all the letters which you and your little sister have written me by the hand of your mother and your nurses; 

I have also read those which you little people have written me with your own hands—for although you did not use any characters that are in grown people’s alphabet, 

you used the characters that all children in all lands on earth and in the twinkling stars use; 

and as all my subjects in the moon are children and use no characters but that, you will easily understand that I can read your and your baby sister’s jagged and fantastic marks without trouble at all. 

But I had trouble with those letters which you dictated through your mother and the nurses, for I am a foreigner and cannot read English writing well. 

You will find that I made no mistakes about the things which you and the baby ordered in your own letters—I went down your chimney at midnight when you were asleep and delivered them all myself—and kissed both of you, too,

 because you are good children, well-trained, nice-mannered, and about the most obedient little people I ever saw. 

But in the letter which you dictated there are some words that I could not make out for certain, and one or two small orders which I could not fill because we ran out of stock.

 Our last lot of Kitchen-furniture for dolls has just gone to a poor little child in the North Star away up in the cold country about the Big Dipper. 

Your mama can show you that star and you will say: “Little Snow Flake” (for that is the child’s name) “I’m glad you got that furniture, for you need it more than I.” 

That is, you must write that, with your own hand, and Snow Flake will write you an answer. 

If you only spoke it she wouldn’t hear you. Make your letter light and thin, for the distance is great and the postage heavy.

There was a word or two in your mama’s letter which I couldn’t be certain of. I took it to be “a trunk full of doll’s clothes.”

Is that it? I will call at your kitchen door just about nine o’clock this morning to inquire. But I must not see anybody and I must not speak to anybody but you. 

When the kitchen doorbell rings George must be blindfolded and sent to open the door. Then he must go back to the dining-room or the china closet and take the cook with him. 

You must tell George that he must walk on tiptoe and not speak—otherwise he will die someday.

 Then you must go up to the nursery and stand on a chair or the nurse’s bed and put your ear to the speaking tube that leads down to the kitchen 

and when I whistle through it you must speak in the tube and say, “Welcome, Santa Claus!” Then I will ask whether it was a trunk you ordered or not. 

If you say it was, I shall ask you what color you want the trunk to be. 

Your mama will help you to name a nice color and then you must tell me every single thing in detail which you may want the trunk to contain. 

Then when I say “Good-bye and a Merry Christmas to my little Susie Clemens,” 

you must say “Good-bye, good old Santa Claus, I thank you very much 

and please tell Snow Flake I will look at her star tonight and she must look down here—I will be right in the West bay-window; 

and every fine night I will look at her star and say, ‘I know somebody up there and like her, too.’” 

Then you must go down into the library and make George close all the doors that open into the main hall, and everybody must keep still for a little while. 

I will go to the moon and get those things and in a few minutes I will come down the chimney that belongs to the fireplace that is in the hall—if it is a trunk you want—because I couldn’t get such a thing as a trunk down the nursery chimney, you know.

People may talk if they want, until they hear my footsteps in the hall. Then you tell them to keep quiet a little while till I go back up the chimney. 

Maybe you will not hear my footsteps at all—so you may go now and then and peep through the dining-room doors, 

and by and by you will see that thing which you want, right under the piano in the drawing room—for I shall put it there. 

If I should leave any snow in the hall, you must tell George to sweep it into the fireplace, for I haven’t time to do such things.

 George must not use a broom, but a rag—else he will die someday. You must watch George and not let him run into danger. 

If my boot should leave a stain on the marble, George must not holystone it away. 

Leave it there always in memory of my visit; and whenever you look at it or show it to anybody you must let it remind you to be a good little girl. 

Whenever you are naughty and somebody points to that mark which your good old Santa Claus’s boot made on the marble, what will you say, little Sweetheart?

Good-bye for a few minutes, till I come down to the world and ring the kitchen door-bell.

Your loving
SANTA CLAUS

Whom people sometimes call the Man in the Moon



CHRISTMAS WITH MARK TWAIN

Photo courtesy of Frank C. Grace -- any of his prints may be purchased at

Sammy Clemens looked at me and sighed, 

"Captain Sam, if you live long enough, the approach of the holiday season can stir up sad memories as well as happy ones."

His blue/grey eyes sparkled, "So I aim to make the happy ones sizzling!"

He was dressed as the most fur-layered Santa Claus I had ever seen.  

He held up the telephone in his right fur-gloved hand and glared at Nikola Tesla at my side.

"I might as well make use of this danged instrument you forced me to invest in, Nikola.  

Why I declare I would have made twice as much money if you had let me invest in that Paige typesetter."

Nikola huffed, "Oh, go suck on your false beard! What do you know of science?  I, the humble genius that I am ---"

Sammy snorted, "And humble, too!"

Nikola happily ignored him and continued,

 "I saw the design flaws in that machine and saw the potential in Mr. Bell's invention -- since he stole it from me!  

Besides, it was Captain McCord who forced you to invest in the telephone.  Why berate me?"

"Because you can't turn me into a turnip, you jack nape, that's why."

He turned to me.  "Can you do your Apache hoodoo and set me at the foot of Susy's and Clara's bed?"

"Yes, Sammy, but it's the middle of Christmas Eve night."

"That's the whole dang point!  I put this fancy telephone gadget on their night stand to wake 'em up on this very night."

I smiled sadly.  On the outside, Sammy was all humbug.  But there was nothing he would not do to hear the happy squeals of delight from his daughters.

He dialed the telephone number of his daughters' phone.  It was 7.  Sammy had one of the first telephones to be installed in a home.

He literally danced in place, waiting for one of his daughters to pick up and answer.  "Dang, little heathens sleep as heavy as damp logs!"

His eyes lit up, "Hello, Susy!  This is the Man in the Moon. (That was Sammy's nickname for Santa.)"

I heard the girl's sleepy voice, "Aw, Papa, I know your voice!"

"You accuse Santa of swearing false?"

He pulled out a chuck of coal from his pocket and winked at me.  "For that, I will hand-deliver a lump of coal!"

I sucked in a breath I didn't need and folded the fabric of distance as I wanted.  Sammy disappeared with a yelp and a rush of air going with him to his daughters' room.

Nikola shook his head as we heard distant screams of shock and delight from the girls' room.  I counted to three.  I re-folded distance again.  

Sammy reeled to the wall, laughing so hard he held his pillow-fattened stomach.

"Oh, Captain Sam!  You should have seen their faces!  No Santa-naying for them gals from this day on!"

Nikola turned to me with one raised eyebrow.  "Thankfully for his daughters, I hear good things of a Dr. Freud in Vienna."

{And that's the way it was at Christmas in Hartford, 1876 -- give or take a lie or two.}
For more of Mark Twain, Nikola Tesla,
and Sam McCord 

- This time in 1895 Egypt -

Look for DEATH IN THE HOUSE OF LIFE
coming soon.

Saturday, December 21, 2013

WHY CHRISTMAS?

WHY CHRISTMAS?

In a world that treats God or Jesus with all the relevancy

of the Tooth Fairy or The Big Pumpkin,

WHY CHRISTMAS?

No guru am I. Still, I have some reflections ...

1.) We want to believe.

Like Fox Mulder, we want to believe ...

that SomeOne is, not just watching from Up Above, but that He is invisibly walking beside us, having once walked in the flesh beside a ragtag group of common men.

We want to believe Magic and Miracles are still possible.

Ask any mother holding her first-born in her arms for the first time, marveling that this tiny, cooing life had come from within her,

if Magic and Miracles are possible.

You know what answer you will get.

Most sneer about the possibility of Miracles in our modern age. But Christmas gives us permission to be be children and believe for a season again.

Which leads me to speculate ...

2.) WE WANT TO BE AS CHILDREN AGAIN.

CHRISTMAS allows us to redeem our childhood innocence for an all too-short season.

As VR Barkowski wrote in a comment not too long ago, the best stories have redemption at their heart. And the tales of Christmas passed down through the centuries is a great story.

And why not? It affords us a chance to look at each moment of life with a child-like sense of wonder, awe, and surprise.

Children haven't yet grown jaded. They meet no ordinary people in their lives.

All is new and fresh. And seeing their wonder at such things as elaborate Christmas lights, festive ornamented pine trees, and carols sung to neighbors for the first time --

we live our childhood and theirs at the same time.

We look out the window and just for a moment under the moonlight, we are a child again, and we see Sugar Plum Faeries skating across the frozen bird bath.

3.) GIFTS.

Business men the world over want to keep Christmas,

even though some of them replace Christ with an X to save precious space on store front windows and not to offend other religions.

But I am talking about us giving gifts. Some have made it a burden by trying to play Santa to too many people.

Still Christmas is not type specific like birthdays, anniversaries, Mother's and Father's Days. The whole world gets in on the act.

We can give to anyone -- and anyone can give to us.

C. S. Lewis said, “Nothing you have not given away will ever really be yours.”

Like love.

Which leads to the greatest gift of all :

4.) PEACE ON EARTH. GOOD WILL TO MAN.

What you see and what you hear depends a great deal on where you are standing. It also depends on what sort of person you are.”

And at Christmas time, most of us try to become a little better than we have been.

As World War I's Christmas Truce proved :

Christmas truce was a series of widespread unofficial ceasefires that took place along the Western Front around Christmas of 1914, during the First World War.

Through the week leading up to Christmas, parties of German and British soldiers began to exchange seasonal greetings and songs between their trenches;

on occasion, the tension was reduced to the point that individuals would walk across to talk to their opposite numbers bearing gifts.

On Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, many soldiers from both sides – as well as, to a lesser degree, from French units – independently ventured into "No man's land",

where they mingled, exchanging food and souvenirs. As well as joint burial ceremonies, several meetings ended in carol-singing.

Troops from both sides had also been so friendly as to play games of football with one another.

Though there was no official truce, about 100,000 British and German troops were involved in unofficial cessations of fighting along the length of the Western Front.

The first truce started on Christmas Eve, 24 December 1914, when German troops began decorating the area around their trenches in the region of Ypres, Belgium.

The Germans began by placing candles on their trenches and on Christmas trees, then continued the celebration by singing Christmas carols.

The British responded by singing carols of their own. The two sides continued by shouting Christmas greetings to each other. Soon thereafter, there were excursions across No Man's Land,

where small gifts were exchanged, such as food, tobacco and alcohol, and souvenirs such as buttons and hats.

The artillery in the region fell silent that night.

The truce also allowed a breathing spell where recently fallen soldiers could be brought back behind their lines by burial parties. Joint services were held.

The truce is seen as a symbolic moment of peace and humanity amidst one of the most violent events of modern history.

So WHY CHRISTMAS?

Farmers give a section of land rest to go fallow and revitalize. Sleep puts healing brackets between even the harshest of days. Somehow the cut of a terrible day is blunted by a night's sleep.

So The Father gave this yearly holiday to heal and become the loving, kinder soul we could be year round.

Let the cynics say what they will. A man can no more diminish the truth by saying it does not exist than a lunatic can put out the sun by scribbling the word 'darkness' on the walls of his cell.

MERRY CHRISTMAS, MY FRIENDS! 


ROLAND, 
sometimes called DreamSinger.
***

Friday, December 20, 2013

THE COLOR OF LOVE

Winds sing soft at night,
Stars blink in listening sky,
Christmas magic lives.



Have you noticed ...

Love?

Christmas is the season of compassionate love.

It is an endangered emotion. The world preys on the compassionate.

Yet, it endures.

What is the color of love?

On the streets of New Orleans, I saw that one of the colors of love was ... blood.

A man stood in front of his wife as she was suddenly attacked. She survived. He did not.

Calvary showed us the same color of love, and its seed was planted in a manger in Bethleham.

In the post-Katrina chaos in front of the Convention Center, I saw the color of love was ... tears.

In the early days of Katrina, medical assistance for the homeless was almost non-existent.

Lost in the midst of mass suffering, a mother held her dead baby, rocking back and forth.

Everyone was consumed by their own griefs. She sat alone on the concrete, ignored in the back of the crowd of survivors, each caught up in their own personal hells.

With no cell phone that worked, no words that would mean anything, I sat down beside her. After some minutes, I gently squeezed her arm, then her shoulders.

After a half hour of rocking in silent tears, she looked at me and husked, "Why?"

I said, "I asked the same question by the bedsides of my mother and my fiancee when they both died."

"No. I meant 'Why you stop and try to help a crying stranger?' Now, I know."

She went back to her rocking, and I was pulled away by the needs of my blood center, blinking back the tears and feeling so useless.

Love.

We need it. We need to receive it. We need to give it. The difference between the Red Sea and the Dead Sea is one both takes and gives. The other only takes.

Psychologist Robert Sternberg proposed a triangular theory of love

that suggests that there are three components of love:

intimacy, passion, and commitment.

Different combinations of these three components result in different types of love.

For example, a combination of intimacy and commitment results in compassionate love,

while a combination of passion and intimacy leads to passionate love.

According to Sternberg, relationships built on two or more elements are more enduring that those based upon a single component.

Sternberg uses the term consummate love to describe a combination of intimacy, passion, and commitment.

While this type of love is the strongest and most enduring, Sternberg suggests that this type of love is rare.

That is why Christmas is important: its message is that love came down to us so that we could share it.

And each year we watch movies, sing carols, and send cards, reinforcing the images of friendship, giving, joy, and the magic of selfless love.

No matter your faith, Christmas teaches us that it is possible for one day to look at one another with the thought of building up and not tearing down or taking advantage.

And if we can do that for one day, then why not try doing it each day for as long as we can?


What is your Christmas Star that guides you?

 “My idea of Christmas, whether old-fashioned or modern, is very simple: loving others. 

Come to think of it, why do we have to wait for Christmas to do that?”
Bob Hope


Ghost Writers In The Sky:
#9 in Kindle Store > Kindle eBooks > Education & Reference > Writing, Research & Publishing Guides > Writing Skills

THE SOUL FLIES FREE:
#97 in Kindle Store > Kindle eBooks > Science Fiction & Fantasy > Fantasy > Arthurian
   
***

WHAT MAKES AN eBOOK GO VIRAL? 'Tis More Blessed


FREE doesn't hurt.
 


Milo James Fowler at In Medias Res has created a great idea for a giveaway every Friday in December.
 
There are more authors giving books away than
the population of some 3rd World Nations!

And free doesn't mean bad prose.
These are all great books.

Ah, maybe not mine ... but it's worth every
penny you'll pay for it!

Friday through this weekend I am giving away
GHOST WRITERS IN THE SKY!
 
A ghostly writing manual!
The ghosts of the greats of literature tell you how it is done.
 
 
Which leads me into another Friday BLOGFEST:
 
What Works – Online Marketing Symposium






The first ever "Online Marketing Symposium" Monday, January 20, 2014. A blogfest with information you can use!

Hosted by
Arlee Bird, Yolanda Renee, Jeremy Hawkins, and Alex J. Cavanaugh.

Do you ever wonder why some books become bestsellers while others can barely be given away?
 
Why some businesses succeed and others fail?
 
How does a blog post or a YouTube video manage to go viral?
 
 Is it a matter of luck or is there some magic formula for success?


As a preview of what to expect:
 
SO HOW DO YOU GET YOUR eBOOK TO GO VIRAL?
 

It is beyond social media.

You can’t tweet or Facebook yourself into viral status. Your publisher can’t even make it happen.

It rarely happens to the common A-list author names –

they became A-listers after their viral debut – it’s usually something fresh, from a fresh face.

The criteria for putting your book into a position to go viral is almost exactly that associated with getting published in the first place.

The book has to work. Really, really well.
That said, viral books tend to do a couple of specific things really well:

1.) They are often “high concept” (rather than character-driven, even though they introduce great characters),

with exceptional execution across all the story basics.

2.) They also deliver something else, almost without exception:
 
 they seize the inherent compelling power of underlying story physics in way that exceeds the competition.

These two realms of story –
 
compelling concept,
 
with exceptionally strong underlying essences, is what gets you into the viral game.

YAWN! Right? 
 
Isn't that what everyone does?


Not really.
 

They don’t address these as goals.

Some authors just write their story, write it well, let it evolve organically, and hope somebody out there gets it.

This may get them published, but it doesn’t usually get them on Oprah Winfrey.

The viral book is driven by hero empathy,
while delivering a vicarious ride.

It isn’t the plot, and it isn’t character.

 
No, this is about the reader.



It’s about the reader transporting themselves into this world… going on this ride… feeling it… wanting to be the hero…
wishing it was them…

the reader completely engaging in this journey
on a personal level.

More of this a month from today ...

REMEMBER:
You can get it

FREE:



GHOST WRITERS IN THE SKY
 

Thursday, December 19, 2013

WHAT REMAINS?

 
What remains of Christmas?

Cynics would say 5 shopping days.

But I think what remains of Christmas is what remains of innocence

and the willingness to believe that love can transcend hate ...

and the strength of will to live that belief:

It’s part Christmas miracle, part holiday mystery.

A decorated evergreen tree beside the Bonneville Shoreline Trail in the foothills above Ogden, Utah, gets decorated about this time every year. But nobody knows who does it.
MARK SAAL/Standard-Examiner
 
A decorated evergreen tree beside the Bonneville Shoreline Trail in the foothills above Ogden, Utah, gets decorated about this time every year. But nobody knows who does it.
 
About this time every year, for at least the last half-dozen or so, someone has been decorating a small evergreen tree in the foothills above Ogden – carefully placing ornaments on the branches, draping it in garland and, this year, topping it with a large red snowflake.
 
The miracle part is that this tradition has survived year-to-year, and that the tree has remained largely unmolested out there in the open. The mystery part is that no one seems to know who does it, or why.
 
 
Mystery and Miracle ...

that is what makes up the best of Christmas ... the slipping away back into childhood innocence and belief in miracles.
 
Of the 92 percent of Americans who say they celebrate Christmas, just 51 percent say that Christmas remains more of a religious holiday than a cultural holiday for them.
 
But how much leaven does it take to a loaf of bread rise?  Not much.
 
Perhaps those of us who keep Christmas alive in our hearts this month and try to keep its embers glowing all year help preserve the tiny bit of the world around us?
 
Gathering with extended family or friends on Christmas Eve or Day is sliding from a remembered 91 percent to a current 86 percent,

but still remains the part of the season that people look forward to more than any other.
 
In fact, 51 percent of those who say they don’t celebrate Christmas in their own homes say

they will be part of a family or friends’ gathering at Christmas.
 
To me, Christmas is not a religious holiday. 

Like my Sam McCord, "I don't do religion.  Religion sucks the very marrow from the bones of living a life of love.  Hard-hearted folks seem to rise to the top of religious structures."
 
More from Samuel:
 
"I think Christmas is a built-in pause button in the increasingly busy lives of families.  It creates an opportunity for relationships to be celebrated.

It connects children with a broader sense of purpose. It also reinforces ideas about sharing.

The magic of Christmas, particularly for children, transcends all religious differences.

No matter what religion or culture you come from, watching the lighting of the tree in New York's Rockefeller Center is an awesome experience.
 
And giving an unexpected helping hand is as much a gift to the person helping as to to the persons being helped."
 
May what remains of Christmas cling to you now and all through the New Year.
 

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

I NOW PRONOUNCE YOU ... AUTHOR AND READER
























I NOW PRONOUNCE YOU ...

AUTHOR AND READER.

What am I going on about now?

Exactly.

See? I've engaged your mind by my title.

I.) Just like you have to engage the mind of your reader.



A.) If you don't ...

1.) Readers will have nothing to do with their imaginations ...

2.) They become passive, restless.

3.) Finally, they grow bored, leading to ...

4.) Becoming non-readers!

B.) When you think Author/Reader think of a partnership like marriage ...

C.) Your imagination married to that of your reader's.

II.) Take characterization -

A.) If you want to really know someone :

1.) Watch what they do.

2.) Listen to what they say.

3.) Look to see if the Talk matches the Walk.

4.) If it does, that tells you something important about that person.

5.) If it doesn't, that tells you something even more important.

B.) Don't say Jill is a back-stabbing tramp, rather ...

1.) Show her best friend going to the hospital for an extended stay.

2.) Show Jill inviting her friend's husband over for a nice home-cooked meal for a change.

3.) Have Jill get the husband ...

a.) first, drunk.

b.) then in her bed.

C.) Draw the reader into making her own conclusions about your characters ...

1.) By showing the world through your character's eyes.

2.) By revealing what makes your character laugh or cry or swear.

EXAMPLE:

Maija looked down wistfully upon the unconscious teenager bound on her gold throne and smiled.

Where to maim first?

His eyes?
No, she wanted the boy to fully take in his surroundings: the human heads mounted on the marble walls of her throne room, the steel chains snug around his body, the hopelessness of his situation.

His impish tongue?

No, Maija wanted to hear his screams of agony and his cries for mercy.

His eyelids flickered. He was finally awakening. Good. Maija squirmed in esctasy. His torture would be such a marvelous birthday present to herself.

Victor Standish awoke, consciousness returning almost instantly. His eyes widened at the mounted human heads as he looked up at the smiling Maija. Victor drew in a breath, something dark flickering in his narrowing eyes.  His lips curled into a smirk that stole her joy.

"Who's your interior decorator," he laughed, "Stephen King?"

FOUR PARAGRAPHS:

But by their end, you know quite a lot about Maija. Her station in life. Her mindset. Her mental health. You even know a bit about Victor Standish.

Yet, I've said nothing directly about either Maija or Victor.

III.) When you present your readers with already-arrived at conclusions --

A.) You've left them with nothing to do with their minds.

B.) When you make them come to their own conclusions by DIALOGUE and ACTION

C.) You've made partners of them and the images of your characters crystalize firmly in their imaginations, taking on a life of their own.

IV.) Bore your readers and soon they'll divorce you for a more exciting, engaging partner.

A.) A few bold and subtle brushstrokes of prose on the canvas of your page ...

1.) leads your reader to fill in the rest of the scene
2.) making her a partner in your story.

B.) And it removes limitations to the depth of the characters about whom you write.

C.) Write intuitively as you go along ...

And your novel will go places that will astound both you and your happy partner in prose, the reader.
***