Friday, December 15, 2006

THE ORPHAN SCRIVENER ISSUE # FORTY-TWO - l5 DECEMBER 2006

Contemplating the winter weather advancing over the horizon reminds us of a question hotly debated in cold months: why don't more writers scribble paeans to sultry days to warm us up a bit during the forthcoming frigid season?

Not a bad idea you may say, unless you live in tropical climes, yet so often creative quills seem to dip into lower temperatures as well as ink pots. For example, James Thomson valiantly upheld the Scottish reputation for dourness when he wrote about sad, sullen, stormy winter and yet went on to welcome its gloom and hail its horrors -- although the latter was not perhaps meant in the meteorological sense.

Emily Dickinson declared winter afternoon light seen at a certain angle oppressed after the fashion of sacred tunes, a statement which many would hotly deny. William Wordsworth might not be among them, being of the opinion winter loved sounds akin to dirges, while Philip Larkin took up the theme of the death of the year by observing the winter season closes around us after the fashion of a shroud.

Still, it won't be too long now before the days again start to lengthen, and with that in mind, perhaps we may be so bold as to venture a paraphrase of William Shakespeare and whisper the current winter of discontent may briefly be made glorious summer by this latest issue of Orphan Scrivener -- or at least a bit warmer if you print out the text, roll the pages up, and utilise the result to weatherstrip around draughty doors and windows.


ERIC'S BIT or PILLARS OF THE COMMUNITY

Last week after I had spent a couple hours nailing down patches on the sun porch roof, I found myself writing about a sixth century stylite who will appear in our seventh Byzantine mystery.

Pillar saints were holy man who sought to mortify the flesh and commune with God by retiring from the world to dwell atop columns. The practice originated in the fifth century with Simeon who, according to Evagrius in his Ecclesiastical History, lived atop a 60 foot high pillar (40 cubits) for thirty years after having spent several years on shorter columns. Others soon followed Simeon's example. Saint Alypius reportedly stood upright on a column for 53 years until his legs gave out, and then spent the last 14 years of his life lying down.

Walking around a roof would seem like good preparation for imagining what it must have been like to perch on a pillar, and although I didn't stay up there for nearly as long as a stylite did, since I'm afraid of heights it seemed like forever. Writers are supposed to draw on their own experiences, after all, and this particular one seemed apt.

However, when I began to ponder what I might have learned on the roof that could be transferred to my fictional holy man I encountered difficulties. True, I felt rather more exposed to the breeze than normal and the ground certainly appeared to be a long way down. But I didn't have to actually get on the roof to realize things of that kind.

Then too, I'm not a hermit, let alone the particular example I was trying to imagine. In fact, a Byzantine holy man who disliked heights as much as I do would probably have chosen a less elevated form of self abnegation -- cave dwelling, for instance. On the hand, I could also see how he might decide to torture himself with fear for the glory of God.

But having to guess rendered the whole roof exercise worthless.

It may be I was not sufficiently observant while up there. I didn't pay enough attention to my emotional reaction or look hard enough for telling details. I was too busy keeping an eye on the location of the edge of the roof to do that. It would certainly have been a telling detail if I'd lost track, even if I may not have lived to tell about it, which certainly would've saddened me.

Maybe I could really get inside a stylite's head if I stood on my chair for a week. It would probably make the cat nervous, though. And if I stood on the roof for that long the neighbors might get nervous.

I once listened to a short woman who had written a fantasy novel about a tall hero explain how she had carted a stool around her house and kept standing on this stool while going about her business to see how it would feel to be taller.

That seems like overkill. I wonder if she actually had any revelations a few inches off the floor that she couldn't have reached by a simple thought experiment?

I guess I'm lazy. There are writers who won't set a book in a locale they haven't visited and if they have to vacation for weeks in exotic lands -- well, it's a tough job but someone's got to do it, even if only part of the expense comes off their taxes.

But since the sixth century Constantinople Mary and I write about has been obliterated by the passage of time and buried beneath yards of rubble and new construction, there isn't any question of traveling there. I have lived in New York City and so I imagine Constantinople circa 542 was somewhat like New York City circa 1979, but with horses rather than taxicabs, hot dog vendors rather than purveyors of grilled fish, and stylites rather than Hare Krishnas.

Come to think of it, I suppose the top of a stylite's column had the same olfactory character as the 42nd Street subway station.

There'd be no chance I'd ever find myself in the same kind of spots John does. The closest I've ever got to an imperial banquet was to have high tea at the Trump Tower. And John will insist on venturing down dark alleyways. Never mind authorial responsibility, I draw the line at dark alleyways.

Sometimes it's best just to use your imagination.


NECESSARY EVIL or THE BSP TICKER

A couple of snippets to ring out the old year....

CREATING A SCENE(RY) or GET READY, GET SET, GET WRITING

We were honoured to be interviewed a few weeks ago by The Motivated Writer, whose motto is Where Inspiration and Determination Meet. The topic was setting and its effects on story and you can read our thoughts on this subject in the November issue of TMW at http://www.themotivatedwriter.com/11november.html Our thanks to Su Kopil for extending her invitation to participate in the discussions.

DORJ RETURNS or MONGOLIAN MAYHEM

The Mammoth Book of Perfect Crimes and Impossible Mysteries, edited by Mike Ashley, has now appeared. Content includes such puzzles as how a man -- on his own while clearly visible in a glass phone box -- was killed and in what fashion a bullet fired *two centuries before* finds its mark in a man sitting in a room alone. As lovers of locked room mysteries we're particularly happy to have contributed a story to Mike's collection featuring our Mongolian protagonist Inspector Dorj faced with solving a locked circus caravan murder -- a crime with no lack of suspects and motives.


MARY'S BIT or ROOM AT THE BOTTOM

Some years ago I laboured as secretary to a fellow whose political views were, well, quite different from my own. Thus when I trotted into his office to take dictation, we'd often get into really lively discussions. On the other hand, he enjoyed J. R. R. Tolkien's fiction -- we talked more about that at my job interview than anything else -- and would occasionally go so far as to make the office coffee.

Indeed he's gone even further than that, for he is now an MP representing a certain UK constituency in the European Parliament.

Having received his latest newsletter this very week, I began thinking about politics (megaphone voice off: stand back, this could be dangerous!) and found myself remembering No Job For A Lady, the British sitcom about a new woman Labour MP played by the wonderful Penelope Keith, and from there meandered on to recall Yes, Minister and its natural successor Yes, Prime Minister.

The life religious has not been neglected either. A handful of older sitcoms poked kindly fun at the other sort of minister. All Gas And Gaiters featured several clerical gents connected with St Oggs Cathedral, including an archdeacon who was fond of a wee tipple. The misadventures of a hapless novice monk at Mountacres Abbey enlivened Oh Brother! and its titular character advanced in the church hierarchy to later star in Oh Father! Arthur Lowe also donned ecclesiastical garb, going from his role as Captain Mainwaring in Dad's Army, the much-loved WWII comedy series about a unit of the Local Defence Volunteers, to portray a Roman Catholic priest in Bless Me, Father, a sitcom set in London about five years after the war ended.

There've been a number of British sitcoms involving various professions, although most of the ones I mention are now in the vintage production category. There were several based upon the popular Doctor novels by Richard Gordon, in which medical students created havoc at St Swithin's Hospital. Then there was Don't Wait Up, in which father and son, both in the throes of divorce and both medical men, share a flat. May To December, a particular favourite of mine, was set in a solicitor's office. Its gentle humour arose from a romance between a middle-aged partner in the legal firm and a teacher in her 20s who consulted him for advice on her divorce.

Although not a situation comedy as such, I'd nominate All Creatures Great And Small, with its stories of vets working in the Yorkshire Dales in the late '30s and early '40s, as straddling the line between series dealing with professional lives and those concerned with working schmoes. In the latter category, one of the first was The Rag Trade. Its setting was the workshop of a fashionable attire company, and usually featured various run-ins between management and their unionised workers. This naturally resulted in constant summons to strike, announced by a blast of the shop stewardess' whistle and cry of "Everybody out!". Harried foreman Reg Varney subsequently reappeared as the driver of a double-decker in On The Buses, always at odds with the local bus inspector while casting a hopeful eye on the possibility of romance with one of the company's pretty clippies.

We must not overlook the scurrilous, grubby crew who were The Dustbinmen. Trevor Bannister, who portrayed a character who fancied himself a ladies' man and was therefore known by the unforgettable nickname of Heavy Breathing, rose in the world to become junior assistant selling gents' ready-made clothing in an old-fashioned department store in Are You Being Served? He and his fellow workers from that floor of Grace Brothers' store changed occupations again a few years afterwards when they took over a country house, Millstone Manor, in an attempt to run it as a hotel, having learnt their Grace Brothers pension fund had been used to purchase it so there was nothing left for them. Alas, Grace & Favour (broadcast in the US as Are You Being Served Again?) departed from the TV landscape before we saw the end of the story.

The lesser-known sitcom Room At The Bottom revolved around maintenance men working at a factory, episodes underlining the undoubted ability of such workers to cause a great deal of trouble within a company, while Brush Strokes painted a humorous portrait of the life of a painter and decorator, not least his various romantic entanglements.

Then there was penny-pinching Mr Arkwright, proprietor of a Yorkshire shop which was Open All Hours, or at least a fair number of them. Other representatives of the working class were rag and bone men Steptoe and Son, always quarreling yet bound together by familial ties, and two tailors of different faiths who worked together in Whitechapel, east London, in Never Mind The Quality, Feel The Width -- not to mention The Likely Lads (and its sequel Whatever Happened To The Likely Lads?), relating the adventures of a pair of friends working in a factory in my home area of northeastern England.

Service industries also provided comedic possibilities. Bootsie And Snudge were ex-servicemen who worked in London's Imperial Club. I should perhaps make it clear this was a club for gentlemen of the retired general and landed gentry type rather than...another type of club. A French cafe in occupied France was the centre of inept cloak and dagger operations in 'Allo 'Allo, which poked even-handed fun at various national stereotypes in such a broad fashion as to overcome an initial controversy over a comedy largely based on sending up Resistance work. And of course few will have forgotten John Cleese's classic hotel sitcom Fawlty Towers, with its lanky proprietor harassing guests and staff alike while himself living in fear of the tart tongue of his diminutive wife.

But, you may ask, haven't there been any TV comedies with writers as characters rather than, well, writing the episodes? Well, the only one springing to mind -- today at least -- appears as costar of As Time Goes By. Geoffrey Palmer plays a Briton who had run a coffee plantation in Kenya who,intending to write his biography, returns to the UK. Having arrived there, he engages a secretary from a temp agency to handle the typing of his manuscript. As it transpires, the secretary's mother is Judi Dench, the girlfriend with whom he had lost touch some thirty or more years before; the opening titles show this estrangement came about because a letter from one or the other went astray.

Hopefully that won't be the fate of this newsletter....


AND FINALLY

In about fortnight or so the old year will totter offstage into welcome retirement and we'll all be tooting our horns, throwing confetti and streamers about, singing the chorus at least of Auld Lang Syne, and generally mafficking about to welcome the arrival of another twelve-month of pristine leaves of life awaiting everyone's scribblings. However, the human condition being what it is, 2007 will doubtless have its bleaker moments, which for our subscribers will include contemplating the next Orphan Scrivener will arrive to peek out coyly from their in-box on l5th February.

But for now we'll close by wishing everyone a happy holiday, whatever they celebrate, and an even better year in 2007 than they had in 2006.

See you in February!
Mary R and Eric

who invite you to visit their home page, hanging out on the virtual washing line at http://home.epix.net/~maywrite/ There you'll discover the usual suspects, including more personal essays, lists of author freebies and mystery- related newsletters, Doom Cat (an interactive game written by Eric), and a jigsaw featuring the handsome cover of Five For Silver. There's also an Orphan Scrivener archive, so don't say you weren't warned! Intrepid subscribers may also wish to pop over to visit Eric's blog at http://www.journalscape.com/ericmayer/

Sunday, October 15, 2006

THE ORPHAN SCRIVENER ISSUE # FORTY-ONE l5 - OCTOBER 2006

Robert Browning wrote of autumnal decay mutely appealing for sympathy, but as we tap out this newsletter great swathes of lime and lemon, scarlet and ruby, russet and gold (not to mention one or two remaining pockets of green) are rioting loudly all over the landscape. Our recent chillier nights have certainly worked their paintbox magic on leaves.

Upstate NY had its first major, and unexpected, blizzard a day or so ago. We have had other reminders that winter is coming down the pike. The groundhog we've occasionally seen loitering in the back garden has put on an enormous amount of weight since our last issue and migrating birds have been stitching arrows across the sky this past week or three.

A couple of days ago we learnt that October l5th is National Grouch Day -- but can we really be surprised since it's the very day Orphan Scrivener routinely swoops crow-like to darken your email in-box? So read on and let the grouching commence!


MARY'S BIT or STAMPING OUT CRIME

When I was eleven I started to collect stamps, an endeavour accomplished by nabbing any envelopes which arrived as well as the wild spending of pocket money at a newsagent and tobacconist a couple of streets away. Its proprietor sold -- among numerous necessary items not falling into those particular categories, such a cough sweets, writing pads, and bootlaces -- little packets of foreign stamps.

On one occasion, staring into the shop window at a set of triangular stamps from the Pacific (I seem to recall they were Tongan) I suddenly forgot how to pronounce foreign. I could hardly go in, put down a couple of pennies, and ask for stamps from countries that were abroad. On the other hand, hanging about the emporium door for ages trying to remember would run the risk of suspicious looks from the chap behind the counter. So in the end I plucked up courage, went in, and -- as will happen when a familiar phone number is temporarily forgotten but returns to us when we start dialing -- as soon as I began to make the request, the word came out correctly pronounced, albeit with a broader Geordie accent than the one I now possess.

In those days I didn't collect stamps with a particular topic, but if I ever take up the hobby again, my focus will be on matters mysterious, for I have discovered a fascinating website devoted to Detective Fiction On Stamps.

Its content covers philatelic images from about two dozen countries with the themes of mystery authors and their characters as well as actors who have portrayed the latter.

There's evidence of conflicting decisions on who gets the nod as one of the best-known sleuths. Nicaragua issued a set in l972 celebrating the 50th anniversary of Interpol, illustrated with their choices for The 12 Most Famous Fictional Detectives. In l996 Guernsey celebrated l00 Years of Cinema with a set depicting Five Classic Screen Detectives whereas Dominica's homage to the same event featured Ten Fictional Detectives.

The small screen is not forgotten either. To my delight, a British set about classic TV series features not only Inspector Morse and his scarlet buggy but also a stamp honouring Rising Damp, one of my favourite sitcoms. Most of us have rented from landlords like Rigsby! Avengers fans may also like to check that page

Alas, it appears Tonga has not yet obliged with a stamp honouring mysterious literature. I'd complain about it, but that would be foreign to my nature.


NECESSARY EVIL or THE BSP TICKER

This time around the ticker tells subscribers about a fellow whose crimes were just not cricket as well as revealing hot news from Greece.

FILING A STORY or UNRAFFLING A MYSTERY

Mystery*File is home to a huge selection of articles about mysteries, reviews, author interviews, checklists, and more. Since the last Orphan Scrivener was issued, Mary's essay on A. J. Raffles, the gentleman burglar and amateur cricketer created by E. W. Hornung, has appeared on the M*F website. Want to read biographies of Raffles and his hapless friend and partner in crime Harry "Bunny" Manders? How was it Raffles was thought to have died twice? Is it possible Raffles finally redeemed himself after his life of crime? Bearing in mind there are extensive spoilers, if you wish to find the answers to these burning questions point your clicker at Raffles.

TWOFER RETURNS or A BLAZE OF GLORY

And speaking of burning, the Greek edition of Two For Joy has appeared under a title we recklessly -- and loosely -- translate as Byzantium Ablaze. Published by Govostis, its cover features drawings of three personages from the Ravenna mosaics. They are recognisable as the man we dubbed John, his arch enemy Empress Theodora, and a third person whose identity is uncertain though we have our suspicions, set against scarlet flames flowering in the background. If you'd like take a glance, pop over here to Govostis. Our thanks to Govostis for again bringing Ioannis back to his own country!


ERIC'S BIT or WORKING FOR TREATS

In a couple of weeks it will be Halloween. Nothing beats putting on a mask and prowling the streets at night.

Unfortunately I'm too old to do that without getting arrested.

I can only recall fondly the distant days when it was a thrill just to be out after dark. The crunch of desiccated leaves under my feet, the skeletal trees leaning out over the sidewalks, the way night transformed the familiar neighborhood into a eerie, alien landscape full of secrets.

Oh heck...I'd never have gone out in the cold except for the treats.

I hate the cold. That trick-or-treat bag used to get heavy and my hand would turn numb hanging onto it. But when I got back home, upended the bag over the table, and spilled out a mountain of chocolate and candy corn, that made the misery worthwhile.

Of course there were always apples. They fit in with the season. My friends and I hated people giving out apples. Apples were too heavy to cart around and anyway no one goes out in the cold for fruit. Our parents were always nagging us to eat fruit. Today fears about concealed razor blades have pretty much put an end to Halloween apples. I doubt kids are shedding any tears over that.

It was always the retired folks who had the bowl of apples in the hallway by the door and they were the ones who always insisted we come inside and perform for our treats. Back where I grew up the Puritans had got their oar in and so it was more like work-for-treats. We were required to sing a song or tell a joke or recite a poem. Somehow we never had the courage to explain things to these misguided adults. "I'm afraid we've got a little misunderstanding here. The way it works, see, is you hand over the treats or we come back and soap your windows, or smash a pumpkin on your porch."

We preferred householders who couldn't be bothered to get into the spirit of Halloween. The ones who opened the door a crack, tossed some money in our bags, and sent us on our way. Money was what we preferred. A quarter would buy more penny candy than most people would give out, not to mention being lighter to carry. We couldn't help noticing the bigger the house, the more likely we were to get money rather than candy. Some years my friends' parents drove us to a nearby upscale development. The people up on the hill put dollar bills in our bags.

Ever notice how tall kids are today? I wonder, if I put on a mask, and slouched...


AND FINALLY

This issue of Orphan Scrivener was written during an early cold snap. As he indicated above, Eric does not care for winter and vastly prefers the hot summer weather -- which Mary particularly dislikes -- so we both agree with Carol Bishop Hipps, who described October as the gap between the miseries of the two aforementioned seasons.

We're now at the end of this latest newsletter and so will be taking our leaves. However, after a gap of two months we'll be back to spread misery among subscribers again when our next Orphan Scrivener flaps in from the aether on December l5th.

See you in then!
Mary R and Eric

who invite you to visit their home page, hanging out on the virtual washing line at There you'll discover the usual suspects, including more personal essays, lists of author freebies and mystery- related newsletters, Doom Cat (an interactive game written by Eric), and a jigsaw featuring the handsome cover of Five For Silver. There's also an Orphan Scrivener archive, so don't say you weren't warned! Intrepid subscribers may also wish to pop over to visit Eric's blog.

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

THE ORPHAN SCRIVENER - ISSUE # FORTY - l5 AUGUST 2006

A common difficulty arising from the torrid heat wave much of this country and Europe have experienced in recent weeks is coping with exhaustion brought on by chronic lack of sleep.

One effect of such extreme tiredness was well described by Herman Melville, who characterised insomnia caused by sultry weather as binding and oppressing the brain. Doubtless many subscribers found, as we did, that as the mercury rises their attention span begins to drop and the little grey cells seem to work at a slower pace. Even beyond that, those in difficult situations lose the blessed relief of a temporary escape from the worries of waking life when, as Shakespeare observed, slumber refuses to shut sorrow's eyes or steep us in forgetfulness. Which leads us to wonder if he sometimes got up and scribbled away in the middle of the night because he couldn't sleep.

While at times life can certainly be a waking nightmare, we believe subscribers won't develop a bad case of galloping fantods after reading Orphan Scrivener, so we trust you'll pursue perusing this latest issue.


ERIC'S BIT or THE VASTY DEEPS OF NOTHINGNESS

Around the middle of every alternate month a plaintive cry echoes around the vast corporate offices of John the Eunuch, Ltd.

"What should I write for the newsletter?"

A visitor who had climbed the stairs to the penthouse of the edifice, where the writing of the Byzantine mystery series is carried out in great secrecy, would see that the pitiful sound emanates from a gaunt scrivener with white in his beard, badly in need of a haircut, slumped before a half empty cup of lukewarm coffee and a monitor displaying a blank word processing document.

The cat in the poor fellow's lap looks around, disgusted at being disturbed, leaps down and goes off, tail flicking, claws clickety-clicking across the floorboards.

"Don't think you're going to fill up your whole space with this drivel," Mary advises. "And stop putting words in my mouth. I don't even talk like that. And by the way, shouldn't that just be "said" rather than "advises"?"

I politely ignore what my co-author didn't actually say and push my eyeglasses up so I can see the monitor. One of these days I'll have to try using the bottom part of the bifocals like I'm supposed to, but I've only had the eyeglasses for seven years and today I need to write.

Unfortunately, the empty word processing document, for all its insubstantiality, is every bit as intimidating as the blank sheets of paper that used to glare at me from my typewriter, the main advantage being that I can't suffer a paper cut by yanking the electronic document off the screen.

Of course, I also can't experience the momentary relief I used to get by crumpling the unmarked paper up in a fit of rage and hurling it into the wastebasket. There! Mock me, will you? Hitting the delete key or clicking the word processor closed with the mouse simply doesn't provide the same visceral satisfaction as abusing a physical sheet of paper.

Besides, closing the word processor might reveal one of those Alma-Tadema paintings of Roman baths I use for wallpaper, and that would be distracting. Even if his marble did look more realistic than his women.

I take a sip of coffee. Not only is it not hot, it tastes weak. Maybe that's the problem. Lack of caffeine. I contemplate a pilgrimage into the depths of the building to where we keep the sacred percolator, font of all inspiration.

But no, I need to stick to the task at hand.

My problem is not lack of inspiration exactly. I love to write. I have endless ideas. But I don't like to write about writing. And since The Orphan Scrivener is supposed to be an authors' newsletter, I always feel what I do for it should have some connection to writing, even if the only connection to writing many of my essays end up having is that they're written.

What's there to say about writing when you get down to it? All the chat about techniques reminds me of how runners will go on about running and various training philosophies. However, as one famous runner explained, the way to practice running is to put your left foot in front of your right foot, then repeat. And when you get tired of doing that, do it the opposite way. It's the same with writing. The way to write is to sit down in front of your computer, open up a document, and start tapping at the keyboard.

But that doesn't make for much an article. You can't discuss that, argue over it, blog about it, or teach it. If it weren't for techniques, editors and agents would have to admit that they reject things merely because they don't like them. It sounds so much more professional to mention "wooden characters" even if one person's "cardboard cut-out" is another's "well rounded protagonist."

But we're a loquacious species. We need to find things to blab about. If we have nothing to talk about, that's what we'll talk about. It's not unlike writing.

I'm sure I could write about nothing if I could just get started.


NECESSARY EVIL or THE BSP TICKER

Just two news items on the ticker this time around, but to make up for it their scope is international!

IN THE HOT SEAT or GRILLING THE AUTHORS

Julia Buckley, http://www.juliabuckley.com, author of The Dark Backward, has been conducting interviews with a number of mystery writers for the past month or so. Ever intrepid, she grilled Eric and myself and the result -- touching upon how we met, interactive fiction, and the unexpected differences between Americans and Britons, among other topics -- can be viewed on her blog at http://juliabuckley.blogspot.com/2006/07/mary-reed-and-eric-mayer-mystery.html Our thanks for the honour, Julia!

A NEW WEBSITE or THE LONG ARM OF PPP

British subscribers will (we insist!) be interested to learn Poisoned Pen Press now has a UK arm, which has just opened a website at http://www.poisonedpenpressuk.com Being brand new, at present it hosts only basic information on how to contact the press for catalogues or with other queries, but it will eventually deal with British editions of PPP's back list as well as its new US publications.

MARY'S BIT or THE WILD SIDE OF LIFE

In childhood, the little wild life I saw, being raised in an industrial, decaying metropolis, consisted mostly of noisy squads of grimy-chested pigeons and swaggering, squawking seagulls, the horse pulling the rag and bone man's cart, half-starved feral cats and dogs, and crowds of quarrelsome patrons lurching out of corner pubs at chucking-out time.

At various urban addresses we were also blessed with house mice (one evening a mouselette fell down the attic chimney), a colony of red ants which nothing could eradicate, black beetles inhabiting the washing copper in our scullery, and the rat once spotted lurking in our back yard. Thankfully, however, a huge fungus growing out of the pipe in one outside loo remained stationary, despite childish nightmares in which the disgusting thing became mobile and came hopping upstairs looking for us kids.

The Swan of Avon pointed out we sometimes see clouds of various shapes, vapours perchance suggesting a citadel, a lion, or a bear. Some might have had a fit of the vapours if they'd looked out their window and seen an enormous black bear ambling past a couple of feet away, as I did on one memorable occasion -- yet my immediate reaction was one of awe at the beauty and power of the wild creature.

At the other end of the scale, we've been visited by more than one deer mouse, good-looking chaps with neat white pinafores, huge, shining eyes, and smooth grey backs, altogether a Disneyian delight in appearance. But the teeth under those pert whiskers! Long, sharp needles weren't in it!

A passing glimpse of a bobcat provided brief excitement before it disappeared. Unfortunately, the same must be said of the chipmunk seen frolicking on our scrubby patch of lawn one afternoon. Glancing out half an hour after spotting him, I had the misfortune of seeing him going head first down the maw of the cat next door. At least he was definitely dead before he got on the menu for a feline feast.

A year or so ago a family of groundhogs -- the mother and five or six spring-heeled youngsters -- browsed the salad bar that is our back garden, and a month back one of this year's litter took up residence there. I understand these portly creatures are nicknamed whistling pigs, but so far we haven't heard him perform so cannot say whether he uses a penny whistle or sticks his paw in his mouth and blows around it to produce the piercing sound humans use to call taxis or express loud appreciation for a passing pretty female.

Fortunately the murderous moggy hasn't caught any of the occasional cottontail rabbits hopping past, reminding me that while I stated we saw little wildlife in the city, I'd forgotten that rabbits sometimes appeared on our dinner plates, albeit in anonymous, gravy-covered disguise. They don't taste like chicken.

Another recent sighting was a red squirrel, the first I've observed although Eric recalls spotting one or two years ago. He reminds me that in his youth the Mayer household sometimes dined on squirrel. I understand it doesn't taste much like chicken either.

We've also had brief glimpses of garter snakes, beautifully marked, olive-green, sinuous layers-down of s-shaped-tracks; one currently lives under a large rock a yard or so from our front door. A fellow I know dined on snake in Ethiopia. It apparently did taste somewhat like chicken.

The herpetological lurker at our threshold brings to mind Anthony Trollope's opinion that the test of the art of a fiction writer lay in concealing a snake-in-the-grass, although he asserted readers could be certain there would always be one.

Ever contrary, however, in writing In Six For Gold we openly introduced a large shrine honouring Mehen, the Egyptian snake god. Not to mention characters playing a game shaped in his image, perhaps the ancestor of the snakes and ladders we played in our youth -- or at least when we weren't chasing mice around the kitchen or barring the door of our attic bedroom against the ambulatory fungus.


AND FINALLY

Speaking of fungus, we don't have mushroom left in this issue of Orphan Scrivener so we'll close by recalling James Thurber described the past as an armchair up in the attic, the present as an ominous ticking -- and the future as anyone's guess. Based upon our past newsletter schedule we can confidently aver that in eight weeks we'll again take up the pixel kalamos, so the next Orphan Scrivener should pop up in your email in-boxes on l5th October. Reading it in an attic armchair is not required of subscribers, and as for that regular ticking noise...take a look at Doom Cat on our website!

See you in two months!
Mary R and Eric

who invite you to visit their home page, hanging out on the virtual washing line at http://home.epix.net/~maywrite/ There you'll discover the usual suspects, including more personal essays, lists of author freebies and mystery-related newsletters, Doom Cat (an interactive game written by Eric), and a jigsaw featuring the handsome cover of Five For Silver. There's also an Orphan Scrivener archive, so don't say you weren't warned! Intrepid subscribers may also wish to pop over to visit Eric's blog at http://www.journalscape.com/ericmayer/


Thursday, June 15, 2006

THE ORPHAN SCRIVENER - ISSUE # THIRTY-NINE - l5 JUNE 2006

Since the l3th century those inclined to do so have now and then burst into song to melodiously announce that summer ys acumen yn. Unfortunately for subscribers, the loudly singing cuckoos mentioned in these lyrics masked the thwunk of the arrival of this latest issue of Orphan Scrivener, and so here we are again, lurking in your in-box.

And speaking of those naughty birds, in Henry IV Shakespeare characterised Richard II as a June cuckoo. This might have been a sly pun on Dicky Bird even though the Bard clarifies the comparison by stating Richard, like the bird of summer, was noticed but not regarded. We can only trust this newsletter won't suffer a similar fate.

M.F.K. Fisher once remarked on the ancient pairings of cheese and wine, moon and June, and aches and aspirin. Given mid-June brings another newsletter from Casa Maywrite, aspirin seems appropriate as its twin companion, although how much cooking sherry is imbibed by subscribers in order to keep up their spirits while perusing Orphan Scrivener is a matter best kept purely between readers and the managers of their local off-licences.

If you've read this far, a little birdy advises you to keep going!


MARY'S BIT or NOT EXACTLY AN OPEN-AND-SHUT CASE

Dr Johnson famously remarked that when two Englishmen meet, the first thing they talk about is the weather.

Is there any other country where a debate would gallop along in the pages of a popular scholarly publication concerning the identity of the person who first popularised the umbrella, that essential part of national dress in general and city gents and civil servants in particular (not to mention Steed of Avengers fame)?

Given the date of this newsletter it's appropriate I picked up the soggy trail in the 8th June l850 issue of Notes & Queries. In polite fisticuffs over the question at hand, Jonas Hanway, who died in the mid l780s, was the favourite, being generally credited with introducing these essential accessories for summer days to London, from which their use spread out into the provinces. His employment of an umbrella might have been connected with a wish to appear neat and unsplashed, for a correspondence signed J. F. cites a work published in l787, stating "a small parapluie" sheltered Hanway's face and wig from rain. A portrait of Hanway with his umbrella published about l753 is also mentioned in the jousting, and there is a charming note from G. C. Renouard of Swanscombe Rectory recallingg a green silk Chinese umbrella his father brought back from Holland between l770 and a decade later.

E. B. Price leaps into the lists to point out an earlier reference, citing Gay's Trivia or Art of Walking the Streets of London (l7l2) which speaks of housewives "underneath th' umbrella's oily shade". E. B. also mentions an umbrella listed as a "utensil" in a l656 work about John Tradescant's collection of rarities and curiosities.

Nor are Scottish bumbershoots overlooked, for contributor R.R. points out one Dr Jamieson introduced Glasgow to umbrellas in l782. It seems the physician's gamp was French and manufactured of strong wax cloth and cane ribs. Being described as "ponderous", I cannot help thinking it would have been an excellent makeshift weapon if Dr Jamieson were ever set upon down a dark Glaswegian alley.

Finally, W. J., writing from Havre, points out the ancients regarded umbrellas as denoting social distinction, citing reports by Pausanias and Hesychius of an Arcadian city where during festivals honouring Bacchus an umbrella shaded the statue of the god as it was carried about in procession.

But whatever the provenance of the humble yet useful umbrella, few would expect to see one figuring in a trial -- yet that's what happened in California in l983.

Unlike the item in question, the case wasn't exactly open-and-shut. The defendant was caught entering a bank with a stick-up note and an umbrella handle draped with a towel, thus giving it the appearance of a weapon. His defence was high wind had broken his umbrella and he intended to join the handle to a handle-less specimen he had at home. This seems reasonable as far as it goes, but what about the stick-up note and towel? Well, the fellow in the dock stated when apprehended he'd just attended a job interview, and while waiting for his appointment had read an article about bank robberies. Being at a loose end, he'd then penned a mock stick-up note. And the towel? He testified he carried it around because he suffered from excess perspiration.

A most ingenious explanation, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, but alas, it did no good. Ultimately an appeals court ruled an umbrella handle disguised in the fashion described was frightening enough to the average person to support the accused's conviction for attempted armed robbery.

In the fictional world, the only story involving an umbrella springing immediately to mind is Ed Hoch's One Bag of Coconuts, published in the November l997 issue of EQMM. If you haven't read it, it's well worth seeking out to enjoy when kept indoors by a rainy day.


NECESSARY EVIL or THE BSP TICKER

Steve Lewis notes on the front page of his Mystery File website that with Ed Gorman's permission he's taken over Ed's Pro-File interview series. We were honoured to be the first interviewed by Steve for his new venture, and a pot-pourri of our ponderings can be perused at http://www.mysteryfile.com/ProFile/Reed-Mayer.html

The Mystery File site is a wonderful assortment of (among other things) reviews, articles, biblios, news, and essays. Since they are a favourite type of mystery at Casa Maywrite, we particularly enjoyed the checklist of fiction dealing with locked rooms and other impossible crimes. There's a link to it and other themed checklists at http://www.mysteryfile.com/Improbable.html

Our thanks to Steve and the Mystery File!


ERIC'S BIT or PURPLE STAINS, PURPLE PROSE

If not for Robert Rosenwald and Barbara Peters, publisher and editor-in-chief respectively of Poisoned Pen Press, I doubt I would ever have seen my name on the cover of a novel. The more I learn about the publishing industry, the more convinced I am that a Byzantine eunuch is (and forever will be) as welcome at a big New York publishing house as a Nestorian heretic at the Great Church in Constantinople.

I'm grateful to have books in print. The fact that our books are published gives me an excuse to do my bit for them. I enjoy writing. Concocting stories and manipulating words is great fun, but to me the object of the game is to communicate with an audience. Without the audience PPP finds for us, composing books would be a pointless exercise, long since abandoned.

Oddly enough, years before Robert Rosenwald assisted my writing efforts, his great-grandfather Julius did the same.

It happened in 1978, while I was living in Brooklyn, New York. I was an impoverished law student, a frustrated writer whose goal of having a novel published by the time he was twenty-one (didn't we all have such goals?) hadn't quite worked out. The only writing I was doing was for fanzines and even that frustrated me. I desperately wanted to publish my own fanzine.

The fanzines I'm talking about were, and are, amateur publications, without professional pretense, produced merely for amusement. The sort I wanted to put out were typically filled with short essays and bits of personal trivia. They were distributed by mail for free. Readers, many of whom published their own 'zines, would send letters of comment which would be printed at the end of each issue.

Think "slow paper blogs."

Most fanzines of that era were printed by mimeograph, a device far beyond my limited means -- I drank Fox Head beer because it was 99 cents a six pack.

I spent considerable time riding subways and braving unfamiliar alleyways to search dimly lit second-hand shops for the means to further my writing ambitions. There must have been a functional, affordable, used mimeograph hiding somewhere in the five Boroughs, but I couldn't find it.

The scarcity of mimeos wasn't entirely surprising because that printing technology had already become obsolete. In a world with photocopy machines, who wanted to struggle with wax stencils and tubes of ink...aside from a student who was forever looking under the sofa cushions for a fourth quarter to buy Fox Head, never mind the rolls and rolls of quarters -- riches beyond imagining -- needed at a self-serve copy machine?

Thinking of obsolescence, I had the idea to consult the Sears catalog. Sears, I had been told, kept everything in stock forever. If you had purchased a pot-bellied stove from Sears in 1908, you could still order parts.

Sure enough, the office equipment section of the catalog contained a virtual museum display of printing processes through the ages. I couldn't afford the mimeographs, of course, or even the ditto machines, although I eventually scraped together enough change to buy the hand-cranked gravity-fed spirit duplicator -- the same model Gutenberg used while he was tinkering with his printing press.

What caught my eye was the hectograph kit.

The hectograph process antedates fossilization. A master copy, upon which one has drawn or written in a special ink (specially designed never to come off any flesh it encounters) is pressed onto a gelatin pad -- essentially very hard Jell-O. The ink is absorbed into the pad. When the master is removed and blank sheets are placed on the gelatin, one by one, the pad releases a bit of ink. A hectograph will only make about fifty copies of diminishing quality, not counting the purple stains on one's skin, which show up in the strangest places. Whoever named the hecto (hundred) graph was an optimist. Or maybe the hecto is actually short for "heck" which is short for "Hell, why I am using this damned thing!"

I wasn't concerned about the limited print run. I'd have to stay sober for weeks just to afford any postage at all. And the price of the kit was right. I don't recall exactly, but something under $15. Needless to say, I didn't have time for mail order. I caught the first subway out to a stop that was nothing more than a circle on the city transit map, some place in the wilds of Brooklyn where the nearest Sears was located.

It was only fitting that I should journey to a strange land to obtain such a marvel. When I got the kit back to the apartment I saw it came with a bag of gelatin, a flat tray for the gelatin, hecto pencils, and sheets covered with ink, resembling ditto masters. It wasn't a Golden Fleece, more like a Holy Grail. An instant publishing company!

I'll spare you a history of the purple prose I perpetrated by means of this device. A lot of what I wrote was rather like this essay. I've already wandered a long way from Poisoned Pen Press and the present and you're probably wondering what does this have to do with Julius Rosenwald?

The answer, as I only recently discovered, is that he was the man who turned Sears, Roebuck and Company into a retailing giant. When Julius joined the company in the l890s he began to diversify the product line of what had originally been a watch company and began selling everything a typical Midwestern farm household might need, from barbed wire to hectographs. (Well, I suppose he expanded the products even beyond what a typical household might need...)

If it weren't for Julius Rosenwald's business acumen, I would never have been able to buy the hectograph that enabled me to publish my fanzine, keeping my interest in writing alive, and so there would have been no Byzantine mysteries for Julius' great-grandson to publish. Or else they would have been solely written by Mary.

Julius Rosenwald was also one of the early 20th Century's most notable philanthropists. The Rosenwald Fund, established for the well-being of mankind, contributed to museums, black institutions, Jewish charities, and universities, colleges, and public schools. Its school building program aided in the construction of over 5,000 Rosenwald Schools and teachers' homes in the rural south.

All somewhat more important in the scheme of things than John the Eunuch.

(For more information check out this article at the Sears Archives:

http://www.searsarchives.com/people/juliusrosenwald.htm)


AND FINALLY

A couple of months from now many subscribers will be weathering the hottest part of the summer. It's said as temperatures rise tolerance falls, personal quirks that don't usually bother become extremely tiresome, and tempers fray more easily. It was not for nothing that in Portrait of a Lady T. S. Eliot compared someone talking in an irritating fashion to the insistent noise of an out-of-tune violin played on an August afternoon.

Is there a ghastlier thing to bear than a tuneless, scraping cacophony in the middle of a heatwave? Well, we can think of one -- the next issue of Orphan Scrivener, which will trundle into your email in-box on August 15th. This amount of notice of its arrival, however, gives readers ample time to stock up on ice and aspirin and, to aid the concentration of subscribers with student musician neighbours, ear plugs. We have no doubt those residents of Baker Street living next door to Sherlock Holmes' digs may well have occasionally resorted to the latter, so you'll be in good company.

See you in two months!
Mary R and Eric

who invite you to visit their home page, hanging out on the virtual washing line at http://home.epix.net/~maywrite/ There you'll discover the usual suspects, including more personal essays, lists of author freebies and mystery-related newsletters, Doom Cat (an interactive game written by Eric), and a jigsaw featuring the handsome cover of Five For Silver. There's also an Orphan Scrivener archive, so don't say you weren't warned! Intrepid subscribers may also wish to pop over to visit Eric's blog at http://www.journalscape.com/ericmayer/


Saturday, April 15, 2006

THE ORPHAN SCRIVENER - ISSUE # THIRTY-EIGHT - l5 APRIL 2006

Though the sunshine tends to be watery, mid April brings signs of approaching spring. Here at Casa Maywrite we await the annual invasion of ants, augury of the advancing change of season, having already grappled hand-to-mandible with a black and yellow advance scouting party of two nip-waisted wasps.

San Juan Capistrano is internationally famous for the return of thousands of swallows each March l9th, a few days before the vernal equinox, the birds thus being avian messengers of spring. Philip Massinger observed that ill news had swallow wings, whereas good tiding went about with crutches. Alas, it's too late for you to fly, since if you've got this far you're already perusing our latest newsletter. Reminding readers of Margaret Mitchell's comment that life has no obligation to provide what we expect, we invite you to swallow your natural reluctance, fling yourself into the tide, and read on.


ERIC'S BIT or THE HORROR BEHIND THE CURTAIN

From time to time people wonder what Mary and I look like. At least I suppose that's why they occasionally ask why our photographs aren't on our home page or the back covers of our books.

Actually, there are a couple of photos hidden deep in the recesses of our website. (No prize for finding them. If you find mine, you might wish you hadn't). They're the same snapshots which, reduced to postage stamp size, lurk on the inside flap of our book jackets. It's a good place for my mug shot, where it can't scare off potential buyers.

Before our first book appeared we were invited to send our publisher professional portraits for the back cover. Fortunately, we were able to talk them out of such folly. The idea of standing in front of a loaded camera strikes me as only marginally more enticing than facing a firing squad.

I'm not comfortable around cameras unless I can see the backs of them. I've always been that way. When I was a kid I dreaded the school picture day more than exams. Even now I get shaky when I remember standing in line, waiting to step behind the curtain where the monstrous machinery squatted in all its complexity and horror, designed for no other reason than to find, magnify, and expose to a mocking world my every imperfection.

As I sat on the wooden chair placed before the camera, the merciless glare from the floodlights made me feel I was ready to melt. Or maybe I was melting, like the Wicked Witch of the West, into a puddle which, mercifully, no one would want to photograph. No such luck. It was just the Brylcreem dripping down my temple. The smell of hair dressing in the super heated air was enough to make me choke.

But it was still not so stomach churning as the day the photographs arrived. There were various sizes. The tiny ones, which you were supposed to trade with your friends, were bad enough, and then there were the wallet sizes. Still, I could glance away from those without focussing on the details. The portrait size was another matter.

There was no escaping that. It smacked me right in the face with my face. My eyeglasses would be askew, one eye half shut, my attempt to "Say cheese" a paralytic rictus exposing a Jack-O-Lantern display of missing baby teeth and half emerged adult ones. And the hair, despite its weight of goo, had stuck out in all directions, resembling a hedgehog that had run afoul of a tractor trailer. Just a bad hair day? My whole life has been a series of bad hair decades. And that billboard was installed on the living room mantelpiece where it could humiliate me every day.

Mary points out our jacket photos bear some resemblance to the old glamour shots of 1930s Hollywood stars -- the resemblance being that they're in black and white.

She suggests we might start doing books with an Egyptian theme which would give us an excuse to cover ourselves with mummy wrappings for our jacket photos. Maybe we could loosen the bandages enough for just one eye to show. Kind of the Veronica Lake meets Boris Karloff look.

I'm still hoping to banish my photograph from our books entirely. It's not that I'm shy, really. I display my face to the world all the time. The face I want to display, that is -- my writing.


NECESSARY EVIL or THE BSP TICKER

The ticker is back at work again, so let's see what the little punch holes in its tape tell us this time around!

AN UNEXPECTED APPEARANCE or GETTING YOUR TEETH INTO A COLUMN

Speaking of saying cheese reminds us of teeth. Gnashers are mentioned more than once in Sixfor -- and we don't mean gold teeth, although a whale automaton's bronze chompers played a part in Three For A Letter. We were reminded of this when Lois Hirt, who writes a column devoted to matters dental in fiction for the Los Angeles Dental Hygienists' Society, wrote us about such references in Sixfer, not least a character's complaint about difficulty in finding tooth powder. When we looked over the book for other dental tidbits, we almost dropped our teeth at the number that had crept into the narrative!

Lois has kindly offered to email this column (published in the March/April issue of the LADHS newsletter) to interested parties, so feel free to let us know if you'd like to read it, and we'll pass your request along toot(h) sweet.

TWOFER IS HONOURED or A DIFFERENT KIND OF READING

We were delighted to learn only a few days ago that Two For Joy was one of the books recorded on cassette by the Washington Talking Book & Braille Library in 2005. Twofer's catalogue number is CBA 07606 and its narrator is Tim Clifford. Administered by the Seattle Public Library, this wonderful programme aids those who are legally blind, visually impaired, learning or physically disabled, or both deaf and blind. The Library offers a number of services to such patrons, including not only recorded books and the players needed to hear them but also access to large print and braille works.

We wish to thank the Talking Book & Braille Library for this honour, and meantime those who are interested in details of their fascinating history -- for example, Seattle Library was already circulating braille books in l907, and at one time material was recorded on flexible discs played at a speed of 8 l/3 rpm! -- may wish to point their clickers to http://www.historylink.org/_output.cfm?file_id=4155

RETURN TO MONGOLIA or DORJ STEPPES OUT AGAIN

After a lengthy absence, our Mongolian protagonist Inspector Dorj returns in Locked In Death, which will appear in The Mammoth Book of Perfect Crimes & Impossible Mysteries, edited by Mike Ashley. The collection offers 29 stories and although we do not yet have a firm date of publication, it's expected to appear from Constable Robinson towards the end of the year in the UK, followed by a US edition from Carrol & Graf. Contributors include Ed Hoch, William Le Queux, Bernard Knight, C. Daly King (of Obelists Fly High fame), Peter Tremayne, Bill Pronzini, and Gillian Linscott.

MARY'S BIT or A STUCK-UP FAMILY

Perhaps the most remarkable wallpaper pattern I've seen graced a bathroom. Its design featured a black background imprinted with scarlet, cauliflower-sized cabbage roses, lending a claustrophobic aspect to the small, windowless room.

Wallpaper is a lot easier nowadays than it was in the long ago, when the public's tendency was to regularly replace domestic wallpaper. The Reeds always purchased ours at the Crown Wallpaper Shop, where my mother worked, and which offered not only wallpaper but also decorative borders and all manner of related items. Customers could get advice about the task or browse through numerous two or three inch thick books of samples. Sometimes old books were brought home, much to our delight for they had numerous uses -- drawing on the wallpaper squares' backs, using individual sheets for wrapping paper, craft work, protective jackets for our books or school textbooks, lining chests of drawers, and so on.

Some patterns -- particularly popular plaids -- were eyewatering even in sample size, but our family decorators favoured discreet designs, often with a grey, cream, or white background and a small gold motif. The older Reeds were dab hands at the actual papering, while us younger fry contributed a fair bit to the preparation work. For example, unlike today when wallpaper can be removed simply by pulling it off in a strip or by utilising a steamer, layers of old paper had to be removed if the job was to be well done. It was the hardest part of the task. More often than not previous tenants had not bothered -- the father of a friend of mine claimed multiple layers of wallpaper acted as insulation -- and sometimes it was necessary to remove as many as four layers before we could get on to the actual hanging part of the business. This was accomplished by thoroughly soaking the wall (hoping not to short anything electric) and after giving it sufficient time to soften the paste, scraping off old wallpaper by hand, a task both tedious and accompanied by an overpowering smell of plaster.

Meantime, someone had to cut the narrow white edgings off the rolls of paper. My younger sister and I generally wielded the scissors for that part of the operation. Then the paste (which always reminded me of lumpy, thin rice pudding) was mixed up in a bucket after a long wallpaper-laying-out table was borrowed and the stepladder set up. The walls were measured between picture rail and skirting board and an appropriate length of paper cut and the paste slapped on with a T-shaped brush, followed by a quick dash up the ladder to gingerly place the looped strip of wallpaper -- and it had to be positioned right the first time, since it had none of modern wallpaper's capability of sliding back and forth into place -- and then, all going well, its gentle smoothing down with a soft-bristled brush.

Occasionally there were amusing incidents (to younger Reeds at least) when the person doing the job put their foot through a strip of paper while shinning up the stepladder or the entire piece started to fall on their heads because it was not sufficiently pasted to keep it adhered to the wall. Comedian Norman Wisdom had a routine based upon wallpapering a room, and as is often the way with comedy, the very familiarity of the job provoked hilarious affection for the sketch, which must surely have been the inspiration for some goings-on in The Club episode of Are You Being Served?

Nowadays when I think about wallpapering I find myself humming the chorus of Billy Williams' When Father Papered The Parlour, a music hall song picked up in childhood. Various disasters are mentioned as associated with this particular spot of redecorating (lyrics can be viewed at http://ingeb.org/songs/whenfath.html) but fortunately my sister's upright piano was safe since it lived in the scullery and the cat's ears remained on its head because as soon as we started trimming wallpaper edges it scarpered for the duration.

Williams' song speaks of the paperer's wife being stuck to the ceiling and his children to the floor, and while we've had our moments, we were never as stuck-up as the family involved. Nor are we likely to turn toffee-nosed at this late stage, given not an inch of wallpaper graces the walls, ceilings, or floors of Casa Maywrite.


FINALLY

Faces rendered pasty by the horror of reading this far will surely brighten as readers approach this closing section. G. K. Chesterton once optimistically remarked that belief there was something waiting round the corner gave radiance to the world. He might not have said so if he'd known for our readers part of what's lurking out of sight is the next issue of Orphan Scrivener, which will be emailed on l5th June. We will however cheer them by paraphrasing Helena's unhappy lament in All's Well That Ends Well to the effect that pitiful rumour's report of our imminent flight from in-boxes is correct, thus bringing consolation to subscribers' eyes. Or at least until two months hence, when we shall flap into view again.

See you then!
Mary R and Eric

who invite you to visit their home page, hanging out on the virtual washing line at http://home.epix.net/~maywrite/ There you'll discover the usual suspects, including more personal essays, lists of author freebies and mystery-related newsletters, Doom Cat (an interactive game written by Eric), and a jigsaw featuring the handsome cover of Five For Silver. There's also an Orphan Scrivener archive, so don't say you weren't warned! Intrepid subscribers may also wish to pop over to visit Eric's blog at http://www.journalscape.com/ericmayer/


Wednesday, February 15, 2006

THE ORPHAN SCRIVENER - ISSUE # THIRTY-SEVEN - l5 FEBRUARY 2006

As if there hadn't been misery enough on the east coast, now comes our latest newsletter on the heels of what for many has been a difficult time to say the least. The record snow totals being reported serve to remind us of a remark by Joseph Kutch, who reckoned February, not Puritanism, was the worst charge that could be leveled against New England. With this particular nor'easter, of course, other areas suffered as well, but let's try to see it as meteorological democracy in action: sharing the worst as well as the best.

And speaking of sharing the worst, although the prospect may chill your blood, we invite you to take the plunge and plough through this issue.


MARY'S BIT or SPECK-ULATING ABOUT THE FUTURE

As we till the lonely field of Byzantine mysteries, winds howling across its bare expanse occasionally ruffle the pages of out-of-the-way reference works consulted to find information used only for a passing comment and never again.

In Five For Silver, for example, a Holy Fool drops in on one of the imperial baths, and for this particular chapter we had to look up arcane methods of soothsaying. I shall not reveal more about what happened after the Fool's arrival, but in the course of the necessary investigations I stumbled over onychomancy.

Given the word might be loosely translated from the Greek as claw-method-of-divination, subscribers will not be surprised that it refers to fortune telling either by interpreting images made by sunlight reflections on suitably polished or oiled nails (sometimes specified as to be those a young boy) or alternatively by examination of the white marks and specks often found on our fingernails.

Naturally this discovery immediately dragged me through the hedge into another field of enquiry entirely, but my visit was certainly interesting and in the end it transpired that one of these methods actually has some truth behind it.

Alas, I haven't been able to find out when this method of divination came into vogue, although it's certainly a less intrusive way than inspecting entrails and no special equipment is needed to perform it. Could it be connected with the divination aspects of sun gods such as Apollo or Shamas because as solar deities they are all-seeing, all-knowing, and nothing can be hidden from their glare, not even the future?

Be that as it may, my theory concerning the fingernail form of onychomancy is that it utilises the unconscious mind's interpretation of presented shapes, after the fashion of Rorschach blots -- or for that matter oenomancy, divination by considering patterns caused by split wine, another method mentioned in Fivefer.

However, it might be difficult reading reflected images using the variant method mentioned in Frederick Elworthy's book on The Evil Eye, which refers to nails covered with oil and soot. It's much easier and a lot less messy to examine fingernail specks, especially given you can have a go at this method even on cloudy days.

Pseudodoxia Epidemica, Sir Thomas Browne's fascinating examination of numerous common but mistaken beliefs, mentions this particular practice in connection with cheiromancy (palmistry). While he admits prevalent humours, as he puts it, may be established by observing these marks, he refuses to endorse their use for telling fortunes. He does however provide useful information about the topic, including the logical progression that spots near the top of the nail refer the matters in the past, those in the middle to present events, and specks at the bottom indicate future happenings. Beyond that, his brief comments suggest such contemporary interpretations were based upon planetary influences, rather as today's palmists say the index finger is ruled by Jupiter or the ring finger Apollo. His particular examples are that thumb nail specks refer to one's honour and the forefinger nail relates to riches.

According to Sir Thomas, generally speaking white spots are good omens, blue the opposite. Scoff or not, as intimated above, this form of onychomancy contains some truth, for a glance at any medical dictionary reveals certain ailments or conditions colour, streak, or otherwise mark the nails. So perhaps onychomancy involves less romancing -- in the old sense of lack of veracity -- than it appears at first blush.


------------------------------------------------------------

NECESSARY EVIL or THE BSP TICKER

...tickety tick tick...no news on the ticker this month... tick tick tickety tick...however Six For Gold and the rest of our Byzantine mysteries are still out there hoping to make news...


ERIC'S BIT or HACKING NEEDED REVISIONS

Revisions. I hate them. I'm thin-skinned about my writing. It bothers me to have my decisions called into question, my taste impugned, my skills denigrated.

Don't tell me not to take it personally.

Nevertheless, after fuming for awhile -- sometimes quite a while -- I do what's necessary. As important as my words are to me, how they strike readers (and that they get the chance to strike readers at all) is more important.

Does that make me a hack?

When Mary and I have revised a manuscript entire chapters have hit the dust. Characters have vanished. We'd had perfectly good reasons for inventing those scenes and characters. The words had meant something to us, probably constituting an expression of ourselves and our outlook on the world and our philosophies of life.

Those scenes and characters had been torn from our inner beings. Our very souls.

Well, where else could writers' words come from, unless they're plagiarists? As it happened, we decided that those particular pieces of our souls slowed the story down. They had to be cut for the sake of the readers who will probably be more interested in the story than the state of our inner beings.

So maybe I'm a hack.

I've always written more to entertain than to express myself or impart a great message to the world.

When I was in the fifth grade my friends and I sat together in the back of the classroom and while everyone else was learning to divide fractions we'd draw cartoons in our tablets, show them to each other and crack up laughing until we caught the beady eye from our teacher.

My only goal was to get laughs. If it took explosions and large falling weights, than that's what I drew. I didn't care if those were cliches, that they weren't ripped bleeding from the deepest recesses of my psyche. (Although, who knows, maybe that's what's in there...)

I've never kept a journal. I've never tried to work through my problems by writing them out. Writing, to me, is performance. It's an action directed outward, meant for an audience, not a solitary exercise.

Something of myself sneaks into my writing, no doubt. That's probably true of even the most formulaic writers. In the end, the words need to be drawn from the writer's own, individual thought processes.

Writers are ranged along a spectrum. At one end labors the secret diarist who would be mortified if his or her words were ever glimpsed by other eyes. At the other end, the hack cobbles together bits and pieces of the latest bestsellers, with no object beyond how much the words might earn from eager readers.

Most of us fall somewhere in between.

Me, I fear I'm shifted toward the hack end of that spectrum. Or so I try to convince myself when I'm asked to change any of my precious words.


AND FINALLY

Speaking of change, not many of us will have much to spare after April l5th, the due date for US residents to submit those annual penances, their state, local, and/or federal income tax returns.

John Maynard Keynes was of the opinion that avoiding taxation was the only intellectual exercise that carried a reward. Some might add unlike, say, reading Orphan Scrivener. On the other hand, the fact our next issue will flap into email boxes the same day tax returns are due may be a baleful confluence, but it's also coincidental. At least you won't need a calculator to read it, although it might be a good plan to keep the bottle of tax return aspirin handy.

See you then.

Best wishes
Mary R and Eric

who invite you to visit their home page, hanging out on the virtual washing line at http://home.epix.net/~maywrite/ There you'll discover the usual suspects, including more personal essays, a list of author freebies, Doom Cat (an interactive game written by Eric), and a jigsaw featuring the handsome cover of Five For Silver. There's also an Orphan Scrivener archive, so don't say you weren't warned! Intrepid subscribers may also wish to pop over to visit Eric's blog at http://www.journalscape.com/ericmayer/


THE ORPHAN SCRIVENER - ISSUE # ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY SIX - 15 APRIL 2024

We understand Virginia Woolf described letter-writing as the child of the penny post. How then to describe the parentage of emails? Whatever...