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derbstyron Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-24-04 09:29 PM
Original message
How many have been able to meet your favorite authors?
were they what you expected?

As a writer, my two biggest influences have been Harlan Ellison and William Styron. I have been able to meet both and relay to them my appreciation and how they had guided me in my own endeavors.

Both were wonderful and supportive. Especially Ellison, who signed ALL my books, about 30!

Both let me take pictures standing next to them. They now hang over my writing desk.

:pals:

Anyone else?
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MissBrooks Donating Member (614 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-24-04 09:31 PM
Response to Original message
1. I met a few -
and had them sign my book.

One author (who I find very sexy) signed my book, "To Miss Brooks, I wrote this book just for you!"

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OldLeftieLawyer Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-24-04 09:39 PM
Response to Original message
2. I'm an author (or, as I prefer, an "arthur")
This has always perplexed me.

Why do readers want to meet the person who wrote the words? I think the reason I turned to writing was to avoid people (in part) after too many of them took over too much of my life. But, that's not relevant here, actually.

I never, until my first novel was published, had been to a reading or a booksigning, so my first one really was my first. And, after a number of years of writing books, I'm still amazed that readers care about the author and want to connect.

Understand, I'm grateful to the good folk who take the time to read what I write, and who voluntarily plunk down their hard-earned bread to buy my books, but I honest-to-god still don't understand what they expect when they meet me.
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derbstyron Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-24-04 09:47 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. For me it was about their inspiration to me
Edited on Fri Dec-24-04 09:49 PM by derbstyron
I don't know about anybody else but getting to meet the two authors who actually *made* me want to write, was quite special.

Meeting other authors hasn't really meant anything to me.
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flordehinojos Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Apr-04-06 06:11 AM
Response to Reply #2
36. maybe they are wanting to learn something from you ... maybe they are
looking for, "the one stone that fits their hands", or words that will enlighten them or bring them closer to the torch of truth and light. why else would the teaching of writing need to be done in groups. why would the writing have to be read out loud? listened to and then criticized (most hopefully constructively so, but sometimes not so constructively so) in creative writing groups and poetry workshops? maybe they are just wanting to be confirmed by you--THE WRITER--as writers too in their own right.

just maybe ... all of the above.
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Webster Green Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-24-04 09:44 PM
Response to Original message
3. I met Ken Kesey, who is one of my favorites....
It was a trip!

Really!
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puddycat Donating Member (884 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-24-04 09:47 PM
Response to Original message
5. No, but I've been able to meet all my friend's fav authors & actors
I had a friend who years ago had a great yearning to gather all the autographs of her favorite authors and actors. To that effect, I was pulled along as moral support and "space occupier" at stage doors, book signings etc. Since I was there anyway, I too obtained autographs of HER favorites. LOL I'lll never forget one cold as hell night running around a full city block frantically looking for Christopher Plummer (finally spotted and a pen and paper thrust in front of him!). I became convinced that autograph collectors are just a little touched.
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robbedvoter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-24-04 11:41 PM
Response to Original message
6. Met Isaac Asimov and was impressed and delighted.
Edited on Fri Dec-24-04 11:42 PM by robbedvoter
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DemBones DemBones Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Dec-25-04 01:00 AM
Response to Original message
7. I've met Pat Conroy, Stephen Jay Gould, E.O. Wilson, and
Edited on Sat Dec-25-04 01:07 AM by DemBones DemBones
Peter Loewer.

Everyone knows Pat Conroy's work, I think. I met him at a book signing for "Beach Music," was able to talk to him briefly about the things we have in common that have made his books special to me. I recently got his new cookbook, which is great, full of good stories and good recipes, and thought I might get to go hear him speak in Atlanta, but that didn't work out. I'd like to hear him speak, see if he tells stories as well as he writes them.

Not everyone will be familiar with the others. Gould was a well-known biologist/Harvard prof who wrote many books that were best-sellers and at least one important scientific book. Wilson is a well-known biologist/ Harvard prof who has written several books that were best sellers plus several very important scientific books. Loewer is a writer of gardening books, all very good. I heard all three of them lecture and got their autographs, too. All three were good speakers. I've heard Wilson speak twice, first on the same night I heard the Righteous Brothers at a small club, but I only met him on the second occasion.

P.S. E.O. Wilson's "Naturalist" is a great biography that tells the story of a little boy growing up in Florida and Alabama, collecting native fauna, and eventually becoming a distinguished professor at Harvard, the world authority on ants and their behavior, and originator of sociobiology. If you were ever a kid who really loved nature, you'd enjoy this book.
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Oddly Stevenson Donating Member (109 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Dec-25-04 01:01 AM
Response to Original message
8. Derbystyron, I also met Ellison
I saw him lecture at the University of North Carolina-Greensboro on Halloween about 18 years ago. He was exactly as you would expect Ellison to be.....funny, smart-as-hell, and as Stephen King once said "some people do not suffer fools gladly....Harlan does not suffer them at all." I remember there was a kid in the audience who was semi-heckling, and Ellison stopped and said "Son, don't make me come out there and rip your lungs out through your nose." He also read "Paladin of the Lost Hour," and he was very good.

I was younger then, and pretty shy, so I just got him to sign my copy of Strange Wine and told him that I enjoyed the reading, and he thanked me and I moved on. But I came in a fan, and I left the same way.
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Lady Sonelle Donating Member (115 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-26-04 06:09 PM
Response to Reply #8
15. Oh, you've never seen Harlan when he's PISSED OFF!

One day back around 1982 or so, he roared into the LASFS meeting (Los Angeles Science Fantasy Society)) and offered to buy a copy of one of his first works... he also offered to buy all the library copies of it...

It seems there is one early work (I have honestly forgotten which one) of his that he is really no longer proud of and he wants to buy and destroy copies of it...

Well, the LASFS library had two or three copies of the work in question and he offered $100 each for them (paperbacks at that) and the librarian refused him.

Oooohhhhh..... To say Harlan was not pleased would have been an understatement... I won't go into detail, save to say that Bruce Pelz and Milt Stevens had to nearly throw him out.

Ellison is very bright. Incredibly bright. But brilliance does *not* equate with social graces. Frankly, I love his non-fiction (The Glass Teat, The Other Glass Teat, among others of his work) but his FICTION reads like the ravings of an utter lunatic! I've spoken to him in meetings, on the radio, at conventions and elsewhere and frankly, I do *not* see what the flap is all about.

BTW, you've never lived until you have seen Jerry Pournelle, in his cups, shout "Oh Harlan, God Damn it, shut the Hell UP!!" and tower over him (Dr. P is a good six feet! And so are all his sons!) at a convention. Ellison clammed up immediately and put a fair amount of distance between himself and Jerry. The only person Jerry suffers to tell *him* off is Roberta, his wife!

God I miss those guys.

Lady Sonelle
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puddycat Donating Member (884 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-27-04 12:32 AM
Response to Reply #15
18. lol Great story! n/t
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lazarus Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Dec-25-04 03:16 AM
Response to Original message
9. I have
Steve Brust. Great guy. Plays poker, drinks single malt, plays drums in the hotel bar at a con. Really great guy to hang with.

I wish I could meet Ellison.
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Pithy Cherub Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Dec-25-04 05:19 AM
Response to Original message
10. Alaways delighted to meet authors!
My experience have led me to meet a wide range of authors. In California in April, The LA Festival of Books provides prime author meeting opportunities as well as panel discussions which are shown on C-SPAN. My fave so far has been Maya Angelou.
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Killarney Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Dec-25-04 07:30 AM
Response to Original message
11. I haven't met my favorite, but I've met some that I enjoy
including Peter Straub and Christopher Golden. Both were really nice and signed my books.
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charlyvi Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Dec-25-04 08:05 PM
Response to Original message
12. My favorite authors are dead.
Shakespeare, John Donne, Jane Austen. I would love to meet John Le Carre, but he's not one of my favorite favorites.
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derbstyron Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-27-04 12:59 AM
Response to Reply #12
19. I understand
It would be difficult to meet the authors of my two favorite books:

Don Quixote (Miguel Cervantes)
An American Tragedy (Theodore Dreiser)
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Lydia Leftcoast Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-26-04 05:20 PM
Response to Original message
13. I used to live four blocks from a mystery book store, so I met
Aaron Elkins, J.A. Jance, Kate Wilhelm, Anne Perry, Earl Emerson, James Lee Burke, Ruth Rendell, Faye Kellerman, Barbara Neely--more than I can remember. The only one who wasn't particularly nice in person was Ruth Rendell.

Since moving to Minneapolis, I've met William Kent Krueger and Erin Hart, two local mystery writers.
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Patiod Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-27-04 11:28 AM
Response to Reply #13
20. Wow! A lot of authors I like on that list
Based on her books, I'm not surprised Rendell wasn't pleasant - her books have a nasty edge.

I got to meet Walter Mosley in person, and he was delightful. I also got to speak to Richard Russo and Anna Deavere Smith on our local NPR call-in show ("Twilight Los Angeles" was an amazing evening of theater, and "Straight Man" is one of the funniest things I've ever read).

I don't know if it counts, but I also was a "contestant" on "Wait Wait Don't Tell Me" with Roy Blount Jr, whose work I enjoy.
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Lady Sonelle Donating Member (115 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-26-04 05:55 PM
Response to Original message
14. I've met Ellison as Well

So far, I've met:
Harlan Ellison (many times as part of LAcon's Convention committee)
Larry (and Fuzzy) Niven (We won't discuss the hot tub OR his sauna)
Jerry (and Roberta) Pournelle
Robert (and Mrs.) Heinlein (he was on the USS Lexington in the Navy)
Quinn Yarbro (She puts up with Me)
Ray Bradbury
Gordon R. Dickson (spent an evening under the table with him)
Douglas Adams (We won't discuss the Xmas party)
J. Michael Straczynski (The less said........)
David McDaniel (Little known but the spirit of U.N.C.L.E.)
Marian Zimmer Bradley (And her brother, Paul E. Zimmer)

among many others. These are the onew who stand out in My mind.

Harlan Ellison was very rude to Me as a young neo-fan. I was quite new to Science Fiction fandom and here came this self-important fellow with a bodyguard and a briefcase. As he swept past I asked the bodyguard trailing him "Who was that?" since he was not wearing (and never has worn) a name tag! This, of course, was at a WorldCon (forgotten which but could have been in Chicago 1976).

The bodyguard hesitated and Harlan, hearing My remark replied acidly "I'm H.G.Wells!" Yeah, right! Neo that I was, I still knew that Wells was dead! I tried again, thinking to be polite about it all...

"Sir," I said to Harlan "I really do not see that well, you are not wearing a name tag and I would like to know who you are!"

"I'm H.G. Wells!" he snapped in irritation and began to sweep off with that 'get out of my way, peons!' attitude and I buttonholed his security man yet again (not too receptive to brush-offs, I) "Look! Even if H.G. Wells were still alive he'd be more polite than that idiot! Who the Hell IS he?"

At this, Harlan, downright pissed, halted and glared at his security guy and at Me. The security guy gave up and sighed "He's Harlan Ellison!"

In My complete newness and naievete, I looked mystified and said "Who?"

We've had a rocky relationship ever since. I haven't spoken to him in over 20 years and I think he's a trifle relieved.

Sonelle
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LWolf Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-26-04 06:59 PM
Response to Original message
16. I've met many authors.
Edited on Sun Dec-26-04 07:01 PM by LWolf
Almost all were authors of children's literature. And some of those rank among my overall favorites, as well.

Just a few of those I've met and spent time talking to:

Ray Bradbury
Bird Baylor
Ted Taylor
Patricia Polacco
Deborah Lattimore
Alma Flor Ada
Aliki
Eve Bunting

I enjoyed meeting all of them. The two that top my all-time list
of enjoyable conversation are Patricial Polacco and Bird Baylor.
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Khephra Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-26-04 08:01 PM
Response to Original message
17. I met Stephen King and Timothy Leary
I had to sneak into a bar when I was underage to see Leary, but the band who was playing that night helped me and my friend out since he'd done roadie work for them before. Leary served drinks from the bar for a bit, and I managed to get him to sign several of his books. He just beamed happiness. He really wasn't one of us. I'm pretty sure of that.
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Tracer Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-28-04 10:06 AM
Response to Original message
21. Not that he's my favorite author ...
... but I met Robert Parker at a party a few years back.
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ruthg Donating Member (352 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-28-04 08:16 PM
Response to Original message
22. Neat! I would love to have met either of those!
I have "met" and chatted with via email with two of my current favorite SF writers...other than that, no one . :( ( unless you count my husband who did actually write and publish one book).
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MountainMama Donating Member (60 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-16-05 01:36 PM
Response to Reply #22
23. I did get to meet.....
Dave Barry! He was giving a talk at GWU and I was second in line to have a book signed. I told him how much I enjoyed his stuff and how funny everything was and he said, "Even my grocery lists?"

I thought it was great being in Washington and having him sign my "Dave Barry Hits Below the Beltway" book.

I swear one day I am going to catch him between wives.
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Uncle Roy Donating Member (283 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Dec-17-05 01:54 PM
Response to Original message
24. I don't get it.
These authors, whose books we love so much, could be at home working on their next books, instead of touring the country for weeks on end, making happy-chat with fans like us. Which would we prefer? Where do we think the authors would rather be?

If we adore author X's books, and always look forward to the next one, and then we meet author X in person, and he's a real stinker, how does this knowledge help us? Do we still buy the next book? If we do, and we read it, are we going to enjoy it as much as we enjoyed the earlier ones, or will we be somewhat distracted because now we know that X belches loudly and is annoyed by children and small animals and shows up at book-signings half in the bag?

We are the same way with our politicians, and we do not benefit from this approach.

"Would I like to have a beer with this guy?" is a very reasonable question to ask before we decide to go have a beer with a guy. But it's a pretty odd question to ask in most other situations...
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LWolf Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Dec-17-05 02:41 PM
Response to Original message
25. I've met a bunch of my favorite kids' and young adult authors.
Iused to be a school librarian; I had several opportunities a year.

A sampling of favorites that I got to meet:

Byrd Baylor: I had lunch with her.

Eve Bunting: numerous occasions; I've got pics around here somewhere

Patricia Polacco: several meetings, and a pic I no longer have; my supervisor had it in her office, and it went a couple of states away with her when she retired.

Ray Bradbury (Yes, he's a republican, but I love his writing)

Gary Paulsen
Ted Taylor

and more, including a DUer.

My sons got personally dedicated and autographed books every year for Christmas until they were grown.
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mzteris Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-18-05 11:26 AM
Response to Original message
26. Meeting him made me hate him
Orson Scott Card.....

I LOVED his books. I heard he was going to be speaking at a luncheon, I finagled an invitation. After I got there I found out it was the JOHN LOCKE SOCIETY. Card was a nutcase.

The man is seriously deranged.

I used to think his books were entertaining until I realized what his underlying messages were.

Sick. Sick. Sick man.

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pitohui Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-28-05 04:21 PM
Response to Reply #26
31. yes, card's a horrible human excuse for a human being
i wish more of his fans would get to know him, tee hee

how healthy do people really expect a guy to be who wrote about naked eleven year olds killing each other in space...as a training exercise?
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bikebloke Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-21-05 11:49 AM
Response to Original message
27. Nearly went to see John Fowles
But then it was pissing down rain, so I skipped out. This was not long before a long illness led to his recent passing.
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The-Cynic Donating Member (49 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-22-05 05:20 PM
Response to Original message
28. Met Brian and Frank Herbert
The week before Frank died, it was a tragedy, but he's as good of a speaker in real life as he writes in Dune.
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darkmaestro019 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-20-06 01:40 AM
Response to Reply #28
32. i am SO JEALOUS OF YOU. (sigh) Lucky lucky. Herbert is a deity. nt
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Davros Donating Member (113 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-27-05 11:25 AM
Response to Original message
29. I wrote to William Burroughs once and got a reply
Back in 1993 I wrote to William Burroughs after obtaining his home address from the library. I wrote a short letter to him and within 2 weeks i got a hand-written reply. To this day I have the letter he wrote to me framed.
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pitohui Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-28-05 04:15 PM
Response to Original message
30. i've met a few
Edited on Wed Dec-28-05 04:16 PM by pitohui
on the whole i'm sorry i did

the kind of person who makes a good writer is not the same kind of person who makes a good meet-up

altho-- yes, timothy leary, what a fun exuberant person, but since i think of him as more a teacher than a writer that makes sense to me
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aaronbees Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-20-06 04:50 AM
Response to Original message
33. allen ginsberg
He was a complete hoot. He came to my English class when I was an undergraduate first getting really turned on to poetry seriously, so stylistically if not thematically he was a big influence at the time. In class he was pretty raunchy, if I recall correctly, and said something to the effect of words should roll off the tongue like "cocksucking." I think that got the professor's dander up a bit, but I loved it. One night, Ginsberg performed some of Blake's "Song of Innocence and of Experience" on stage, beating a drum and wailing for lots of young do-gooder liberal arts school kids like me .... it was electric and spine-tingling!

So, I suppose he pretty much met my expectations ;)

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jonnyt Donating Member (7 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-20-06 01:16 PM
Response to Original message
34. New book by 24 year old British Democrat going off the hook
I want everyone to know about this hillarious new novel by a young English kid. It's an awesome story and is all about what goes wrong when we turn off from democracy. They say that none of the young people in London care about democracy but this book is going off the charts. It all started from an email about it as it is only published by a small publisher. I got sent the email and am trying to get everyone in the States interested. I wanted to post this in but I don't have the permissions. The email is below this and there is a sample from the book, which is hillarious. Copy and paste this in to an email and posts and get people in the States interested.

>"Anybody who has ever been to Liverpool Uni must buy this book. No, anybody who has been to any Uni must buy this book. No, that's not right either; everybody must buy this book. It's brilliant. An incredibly fresh voice." (Freddie Harper)
>
>Me and My Shadow by twenty four year old Stephen Morris was released in the UK this week and the pre-orders and early sales have been nothing short of incredible.
>
>The media zeitgeist is all about the first time, up and coming, hard-working, young writers and artists connecting directly with their readers and listeners and offering something fresh and different, and in doing it bucking the trends of the big boys. We, and Stephen in particular, thought that the best way to get out there and get 'Me And My Shadow' known to the general public was with guerilla marketing and taking the extraordinary step of releasing various parts of the novel totally free to the public. Excerpts of the novel have popped up all over the place allowing the novel to develop an audience before it was even released (and a free sample of the novel is attached to this email). It was a case of if you can't beat the big boys, do something completely different to them anyway!
>
>The release of free samples of the novel and huge interest and orders prior to publication have led to Stephen being dubbed the Arctic Monkeys of the publishing industry. Surely there is no bigger compliment in 2006!
>
>Also, attached for you is the front cover including blurb (which is also below this email), and About the Author giving you more information on the freshest voice in the publishing industry.
>
>Me and My Shadow is now available from all good bookshops and online outlets, including Amazon and Play (links below):
>
>Amazon: http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/1425908071/qid%3D1141952920/203-5446207-7779164
>
>Play: http://www.play.com/play247.asp?page=title&r=BOOK&title=915019&p=91&g=148&pa=sr
>
>We want everybody to hear about this fantastic first novel so please forward this email on to your friends, or anybody at all you think may be interested. They, and you, will not be disappointed.
>
>Happy reading!
>
>Brett
>
>Brett Della Bonna
>Account Handler
>
>
>BLURB
>
>Democracy has been read its last rites and the political machine has run wildly and dangerously off course. Not that anybody raises an eyebrow on the sun, beer and condom drenched beaches of Magaluf - nobody aside from the mysterious, older than your average holiday rep, Sam, who has chosen the island as the base to kick off his terrifying, apocalyptic plot. As the action moves from the island better titled Little England than Majorca to the campus of the University of Liverpool in England proper, only two students can stop him. But how? It's hard enough to save the world as it is, without being over your overdraft and armed with only a Young Person's Railcard that's three weeks past its expiry date.
>
>Me and My Shadow - a novel about democracy, debt, depression, and the devastation and destruction of the United Kingdom.

PROLOGUE

“Ashes to ashes, dust to dust…” declared the priest to the biggest television audience in British history.

The funeral of Sir John-Joseph Moriarty was held inside St Luke’s, Goodison Road, Liverpool. It was a supposed private affair. Only one hundred close friends and family were allowed in to the church to mourn the death of the greatest Prime Minister in British history.

Sir John had been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize on three separate occasions. His achievements were unprecedented: five consecutive terms in office, brokering peace in the Middle-East and completely transforming Africa. According to every opinion poll in every State around the world: John-Joseph was the most popular world leader of all time.

Outside the church, stretching miles into the distance, mourners lined the streets. Although the police operation had been one of the biggest ever seen, there was never going to be any disturbances. Quite literally, John-Joseph had no enemies.

A gargantuan television screen set up in neighbouring Stanley Park (the playground of his childhood) beamed a biography of the great man’s life.

“As a teenager, John-Joseph was offered professional forms by Everton F.C. Of course, he would never accept the offer, as he was an avid Liverpudlian.”

Mourners attempted weak smiles. Anything to fight back the tears.

“He decided instead, to take up a degree course at Liverpool University, to read Law. Graduating with a first class honours degree, Sir John moved into local politics. During his reign as the Mayor of Liverpool, he restored the sleeping giant of Liverpool to greatness and made it, once again, the finest city in Europe. Moving into national politics was an inevitable step. Once in Number Ten, his achievements are too extensive to list. Establishing Britain as the strongest economy in the world, making unemployment a word of the past, restoring British public services to greatness, the list is endless. This was all before he moved onto International affairs…”

At this point, Katherine Moriarty finally broke down, and wept. She had been trying to remain strong, but there was no point. The King was dead, and there was no King to live on in his place. Britain would never be the same again.

Unfortunately, this scene would never come to pass and his subsequent achievements never realised. John-Joseph was to be deprived of his destiny by two events coming six years apart. One of which, might seem quite minor, but in fact, was a major shaping force on British history. The other quite obviously is major: John Joseph’s murder at age eighteen.

ASPIRATIONS DASHED

The event that put paid to John-Joseph’s aspirations for greatness, occurred in a Year 8 classroom.

John-Joseph had always been a delight to his schoolteachers. He regularly returned home to his excited parents with exceptional school reports, leading his parents to garner high hopes that their son would be the first of their clan to reach university. Alas, it was not to be for a reason, which in truth looks insignificant. The single, most defining moment in world history, unfolded as follows:

“Okay class, settle down. Who would like to read their monologue to the class?” Ms Simmons asked an uninspired audience.

“Miss, I will,” John-Joseph stated with his hand raised aloft.

“He would. Wouldn’t he? The geek!” mocked the angelic looking blonde girl, sat at the desk behind John-Joseph.

And that was it. Now to the unknowing person this might seem rather minor. However, to any male who has experienced the five years of senior schooling demanded by British Local Education Authorities, they would recognise that the effect would be shattering. On hearing this rebuke, John-Joseph shrunk in his seat, and did not rise until the day he was permitted to leave school. Four years further down the line, he only managed to achieve average G.C.S.E. results and now answered to the cooler name of John-Jo. Of course, it wasn’t all bad news. John-Jo’s character transformation meant he was now far more eligible to the girls, than the bookworm he had been previously. As a result, at age sixteen he had on his arm the prettiest girl in school - Deborah. Of course, her beauty was based on the accepted idea of female beauty at his school: a tan that looked like it had been administered by the annual electrical output of the national grid.

This may seem an unlikely series of events to affect British politics in such a colossal way. In fact, if one is to attempt to understand parallel universes, and the infinite amount of possibilities they throw up, it is unlikely that this exchange, between two twelve year olds of the opposite sex, would be pointed to (even by Nostradamus, having the prediction day of his life) as anything other than harmless, childish goading. Unfortunately, John-Joseph was just one in a long line of adolescents to realise that excelling in education, and gaining the admiration of teenage members of the opposite sex, just don’t go hand in hand.

Of course, had this exchange not taken place, Britain would have been no better off, as an even bigger fence was to be placed in John-Joseph’s political way; one which Tony McCoy would find impossible to clear, mounted on Red-Rum, with a rocket pack strapped to his back. After all, who is going to elect a corpse?

















SEX, BUT NOT AS YOU KNOW IT

Sam knew he had a problem. Unfortunately, that was his problem. He was trapped in an impossible Catch 22. Were he blissfully unaware of his problem, there would be no problem at all. Now at four-forty in the morning, in a single bed on the island of Majorca, his familiar foe was about to strike again. It was an impossible paradox, whereby being aware of oncoming danger, only strengthens the cause of one’s adversary. He was consigned to the fact that he would be locked in this bitter struggle for the rest of his life.

Sam had no illusions; his nemesis was not going away. How could it, when his nemesis was his own subconscious? He had two options: fight the good fight, or blow his head off with the nearest sawn off shotgun, taking his tireless demons with it. But given that he had grown quite attached to his head over the years, he was well aware that the demons would be present for some time to come.

“Oh, fuck. Come on, Sam. I need you inside me,” the girl called out in ecstasy, oblivious to the family sleeping in the room next door.

But Sam wasn’t enjoying himself nearly as much as the girl. How can one enjoy an activity that strikes fear to one’s very core? Sam concentrated hard. He was fighting so hard to keep the thoughts that would start the downfall, from creeping into his mind. The mountain had started to shake and small balls of snow began to congregate. The avalanche, in Sam’s crotch, grew stronger by the second. Unfortunately, the more he tried not to think about it, the more he could not forget it.

“Come on, Sam. What are you waiting for? I’m ready for you.”

He felt he’d done okay, so far. In fact, Sam passed the early stages with flying colours. That no doubt added to the girl’s desperation for him to complete the task. Don’t be fooled into thinking that this was an unusual scene for Sam. In fact, this snapshot was Sam’s sex life, in a nutshell. With one minor omission (and that is minor with a capital M). The main event had never lasted longer than half a minute in the entirety of Sam’s sexual career. He suffered from premature ejaculation. Of course, he wouldn’t admit to it, even to himself. Sam tried everything he read about in medical textbooks, on the Internet, or heard about on impossibly expensive phone lines, listed in the back of Sunday newspapers. It was all to no avail.

Before one date, with a lady who had made it clear in no uncertain terms that it was to be his lucky night (if you can call an hour of abject misery, luck), he tried the trick of excessive masturbation. He was assured by a friend that it would definitely keep the wolf from the door. In the six hours preceding the date, Sam ejaculated six times. Surely, this would mean that even Cleopatra, complete with Lindsey Dawn McKenzie’s bosom, could not bring him to orgasm. Unfortunately, when it came to entering, he found to his horror, it was a feeling akin to inserting his phallus, slowly, inch by inch, into the sharpest cheese grater ever concocted in the flaming bowels of Hades.

On this unusually thunderous Majorcan evening, he avoided any consumption of alcohol, as that tactic was exhausted some five years earlier. On that occasion, armed with the knowledge that alcohol reduces the chance of early ejaculation, he had spent the full day in the pub consuming amounts of alcohol, the like of which, Oliver Reed couldn’t even dream of. Unfortunately, when push came to shove, his penis wouldn’t have stayed erect, even if tied tightly to Nelson’s column.

“Now, Sam. I need you,” whispered the girl, in a voice that she no doubt presumed was sexy. However, given that she had a broad, Boycott-esque, Yorkshire accent, it came out more Queen’s speech sexy, than Marilyn Monroe wishing happy birthday to JFK sexy. If this girl’s masculine tones could not assist Sam in his lifetime pursuit of the national average seven-minute shag, nothing would.

Sam gripped his pulsing member (so called by romance novelists when attempting to eroticise, what is in fact, a particularly grotesque construction) firmly. It’s unlikely that God consulted the pre-creation equivalent of Di Vinci or Michelangelo before sending the penis off for production. Sam clasped his penis tightly, and aimed it at its target. The war analogies can continue, since Sam could feel that his weapon was certainly locked and loaded. Literally millimetres from Nirvana, Sam could feel an eruption forming in his penis. Instinctively (well, it is instinct when it has happened to a person as often as to Sam), he went for the tip of his penis to squeeze it to safety, as the medical pamphlets suggest.

It was all in vain though. It was as useless as trying to stop the River Nile from overflowing, by using a single, garden fence.

“Nooooo.” Sam groaned, as his recurring nightmare struck again. The girl was showered a little earlier than she might have hoped. If you’re struggling to appreciate Sam’s partner’s anti-climax, imagine Schumacher being showered in Magnum’s of Verve Clique, whilst still sat on the starting grid.

THE TIDE TURNS

“As predicted, the turnout in tonight’s local elections has indeed been alarming,” reported the BBC News correspondent.

The press had been reporting all week on their predictions of an all time low percentage of the population bothering to turn out to vote. But not even the most cynical Fleet Street hack could have predicted that night’s results.

The result should have sent shock waves through the British political machine, but Westminster barely batted an eyelid. The times, they were indeed a changing. If only someone would have bothered to notice. One thing is certain, it went unnoticed among the throngs and thongs of holidaymakers, staggering about the island of Majorca.
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im10ashus Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-20-06 06:55 PM
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35. I waited tables and was honored to serve lunch to Kurt Vonnegut.
:-) I was elated. But respectful of his space and privacy.
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