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#31ZombieAuthors – Day 9 Interview – Devan Sagliani – Bringing Zombies to the Big Screen And Your E-Reader

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By: Special Guest Interviewer Video Game Rack Fighter 

Zombie movie buffs rejoice because today’s guest is none other than Devan Sagliani, author of the original screenplay for the movie HVZ: Humans Versus Zombies, a satirical thriller flick based on the live action role playing game of the same name. As if that weren’t enough, he also penned the Zombie Attack! series, The Undead L.A. series, The Rising Dead, A Thirst for Fire, and most recently Saint Death. Don’t forget to check out Escapist Magazine for his bimonthly horror column, Dark Dreams.

NOTE:  BOLD=VGRF; ITALICS=Devan

Thanks for taking my call, Devan. Bookshelf Q. Battler would have called but he’s too busy arguing with his ex-girlfriend, which leads me to my first question:

Q.   Is it possible for a group of zombie apocalypse survivors to make it when they’re at each others’ throats? I think we’ll work it out so don’t worry about us, but generally speaking, if you had to give a pep talk to a bunch of survivors to convince them to drop their petty differences and focus on staying alive, what would you say?

A.   I’m more of a loner than a leader these days, but if it the role were forced on me I’d probably remind them that no one makes it in this world on their own, that we all work better as a team, and that if we stick together we can not only survive this nightmare but also create a better future for all of us in the process.

Q.  You wrote a screenplay for a zombie movie. What was that experience like? Can you describe it for BQB’s 3.5 readers?

A.   The movie was based off of the live action role playing game Humans Vs. Zombies, or HVZ. I’d had an idea for a zombie movie in mind when I got the call from a director I’d worked with before and the timing was just right. There is a downside to working in Hollywood, which is ultimately the lack of creative control you get as a writer. That’s why I decided to make the jump to writing novels, so I could make all the decisions and know they wouldn’t get changed at the last minute without my knowledge or consent. After all, when your name is on something you want to be able to be proud of how it turned out and not feel like anything was compromised.

Q.   In Undead L.A., one might argue that the City of Los Angeles is almost a character itself. From a pilot hijacking a plane from LAX in order to flee the insanity to a detective on the trail of a case that begins in West Hollywood, you provide a great deal of detail about the city. How were you able to make L.A. leap off the page?

A.   I think the best answer is simply that I love this city with all of my heart. I was born and raised here in Los Angeles and at this point I don’t want to live anywhere else. Los Angeles will always be my home. I feel like sometimes the city gets a bad rap from all the people who come here looking to create a better life for themselves in the entertainment industry or make it in Hollywood. I wanted to show off just how amazing and diverse this sprawling metropolis really is. I think too that people who have visited L.A. or lived here for a while before returning to where they are from can enjoy reading about the characters moving through the same streets they remember, seeing all the landmarks, and eating at places they ate at while they were here. I know I always enjoy that when I read Michael Connelly’s books.

Q.   In Book Two of the Zombie Attack! series, your protagonist, Xander, is put in charge of a survivor colony. With the help of his wife, Felicity Jane, the couple deals with reconstruction efforts, constant zombie attacks, and a bloodthirsty group of cannibals. That last part brings a question to my mind – who’s more dangerous in a zombie apocalypse? Zombies, or the humans who take advantage of the chaos that zombies create?

A.   In the Zombie Attack series the zombies themselves mostly just move the action along as Xander does his best to deal with a host of perilous issues that now exist in the post Z-Day world. Zombies are absolutely dangerous, no question about it, but many humans are far worse than the biters because of the deliberate evil they act on in the absence of established law and order. I feel confident that this is how things would devolve in the event of any major crisis or apocalypse. One group of people would work to uphold the common good while the rest would fight over what they could get and set up their own territories like warlords. Let’s just hope we never have to find out!

Q.   At least 2 of BQB’s 3.5 readers are wannabe writers. What advice do you have for someone getting started in the writing game?

A.   First I’d recommend that they read ON WRITING by Stephen King. That book changed my life and got me writing novels. Then I’d suggest that they give themselves time to grow and don’t be impatient to get stuff out there before it is ready. Take your time to learn your craft and develop your own voice. Last but not least I would tell them not to sign any publishing deals until they know exactly what they are getting themselves into. These days there are a lot of small press publishers who will promise the sun, the moon, and the stars to get new talent but can’t offer much more than the writer could do on their own with a Facebook and Twitter account.

Q.   Thanks for your help, Devan. Before I hang up, do you have any last words of wisdom to help my friends and I survive the East Randomtown Zombie Apocalypse?

A.   Make sure you can lock down one area for you and your loved ones, that it is secure from the living and the dead, and then stock it up with as much clean water as you can get your hands on. That’s going to be a huge issue during the zombie apocalypse. Then go for the canned goods next and nonperishables. Then it’s all about medicine, fuel, and weapons after that. Aim for the head and don’t stop until they are dead! Good luck!

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Pop Culture Mysteries: Informant Zero (Part 2)

PREVIOUSLY ON POP CULTURE MYSTERIES…

Part 1

AND NOW THE POP CULTURE MYSTERIES CONTINUE…

The Anything Goes Club.  Armand wasn’t kidding.

I’d never seen such a disgusting display in all my life.

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“How is it possible that I’ve been scraping the fungus off of LA’s seedy underbelly for years and this is the first I’ve heard of this place?”

“We hide ourselves well, sir,”  Armand said.  “We cater to all manner of, interests, and our more famous clients appreciate our…discretion.”

Indeed, there were a number of celebrities in our midst.  Lucky for them, I was new to this time period and while I recognized many of them from seeing them in passing on Ms. Tsang’s television, I didn’t know any of them by name.

I was fairly certain one of the gals slathering herself up in the jello fighting pit was the same skirt who pointed to prizes and smiled on Ms. Tsang’s favorite game show.

And that guy who was tripping out and dancing on the pool table? He looked a lot like the actor who plays the father on that sitcom Ms. Tsang always watches.

You know.  The one where the wife and kids do everything right and never make a mistake and they all have to suffer through the constant incompetence of the family’s idiotic paternal figure?

Yeah.  I know.  That describes every sitcom so it’s hard to narrow it down.

Ms. Donnelly was a bit more hip than I was.

“Is that NAME REDACTED playing the banjo in his underwear?”

“Sure is,”  the bartender said.  “That son of a bitch sure can wail.”.

“Ms. Donnelly, I wonder if we might move this along?”

“Of course,”  she said as she turned to Armand.  “I was told it would be possible to meet with Informant Zero?”

Armand’s beady eyes lit up.

“Informant Zero?”  the butler asked.

“Yes, Informant Zero,”  Delilah repeated.

Armand looked at the bar keep.

“Informant Zero.”

The barkeep nodded and rang a loud dinner bell.

He then shouted, “INFORMANT ZERO!”

Across the room, there was a DJ wearing a furry gorilla costume, though he didn’t wear the mask.

Abruptly, he shut his turntables down, cutting off the music entirely.

“INFORMANT ZERO!” the DJ announced through his microphone.

All of a sudden, in a room full of sickos, Delilah and I were the ones being stared at.

A man with a ripped six-pac road over on one of those two wheeled Segways.  He wore a cowboy hat and a pair of leather pants.

Segway.  What an interesting machine.  I wanted one myself.

“Who seeks Informant Zero?”  the cowboy asked.

“These two seek Informant Zero,”  Armand answered.

I recognized the cowboy from somewhere else, but couldn’t put a finger on it.  In a room full of twisted behavior, a man who was just pretending to be a Southerner didn’t seem so bad.

The cowboy chewed on a toothpick for a bit, giving us the once over.  Then he had a question.

“What is the slope of the rope?”

It was a test.  I was stumped, but when Ms. Donnelly reached for her cheat sheet, I realized her contact must have prepared her for this.

She raised a finger in the air and read from the paper ever so triumphantly:

“It is equally proportionate to the angle of the dangle!”

I love it when Delilah gets tricked into talking dirty.

The cowboy looked at Armand.  Our butler nodded.  The cowboy wheeled away toward the back of the room.

“This way.”

We followed but he was going fast on that thing.  It was hard to keep up.

Suddenly, I noticed the cowboy was weirder than I had originally surmised.  From behind, I noticed he wasn’t wearing leather pants at all.

He was wearing assless chaps.

“What have I seen you in, buster?”  I asked.

“Nothing,”  the cowpoke said, keeping his face forward, refusing to look at me.

“You in show biz?”

“That’s none of your biz.”

“I do believe he’s NAME REDACTED,”  Ms. Donnelly whispered to me.

“THE GUY THAT PLAYS ROLE IN SUPERHERO MOVIE REDACTED?!”

Oops.  I was less than discrete.

The cowpoke wheeled around and leered at us.

“You know,” he said.  “You non-famous people have no idea what kind of pressure I’m under.”

“I’m sorry pal,”  I said.  “Forget it.”

“No,” the cowboy said as he scooted his scooter so he could get in my face.  He leaned over the handlebars and I found myself leaning backward just to give him some room.

“Sure.  You all look at me on the big screen in my costume and think, ‘Now there’s a guy with a great life.  But you don’t know what’s involved to keep my career going.”

He leaned back and got out of my personal space.

“Everyday I wake up at 5 am.  I run for miles, do sit ups, crunches, squats, pecs, lats, delts.  I work out until dusk and ALL I ever get to eat is a bag of baby spinach and three almonds.”

Delilah hanged back, realizing we were in for it for awhile.  I’d unleashed a monster and was now doubling as his impromptu therapist.

“That’s actually in my contract!  My lawyer and the studio banged out a deal that specifically states I can only eat three almonds a day or risk losing everything.”

Delilah couldn’t resist.

“You should have hired me, Mr. REDACTED.  I’d of gotten you five.”

“Whatever,” the cowboy replied.  “All I’m saying is when I work as hard as I do and provide as much joy to the world as I do, I don’t think it’s too much to ask for me to be allowed to hang out in a private club during my free time and dress up like a cowboy while a pair Czechoslovakian dwarves slather me with cottage cheese and read me the collective works of Ayn Rand.”

I repeated the phrase that I found myself saying a lot in response to this new world.

“What the?!”

“Oh,”  the cowboy said as his face turned red.  “What are you, one of those uptight right wing jerk-holes who thinks that everyone who suffers from Curdoslovakiandwarvishrandism should be swept under the rug and denied their basic civil rights?!”

I had no idea how to respond to that.

“Well guess what, pal?!  I’m here!  I love it when small people from Eastern Europe smear me with spoiled dairy products while they read me tales of an alternative dystopian future, SO GET USED TO IT!”

“OK buster, take it easy.”

“You have no idea how I’ve suffered because of an affliction I can’t control!  It’s not my fault, you know!”

Delilah’s intervention was welcome.

“Pardon us,”  Delilah said to NAME REDACTED.  

She pulled me away and confronted me.

“Mr. Hatcher, you’ve committed a very serious social faux pas.”

“I have?”

“Yes.  You mocked his condition.”

“Condition?”  I asked.  “That’s a real thing?”

“Every thing is considered a real thing now,”  Delilah said.  “No matter what bizarre fetish a person has, society expects you to listen politely and nod as the individual explains to you why this nontraditional interest is the cause of all problems in his or her life.”

“So I can’t just tell him to man up and knock that shit off?”

“Certainly not,”  Delilah said.  “Especially not if you don’t want Mr. Battler to have an anti-Bookshelf Battle campaign launched against him on Twitter demanding that he fire you.”

“This is going to be hard for me,”  I said.  “My generation was too busy fighting a global onslaught of evil to worry about being slathered up with, by, Jesus, I lost track of what this guy has.”

We returned to our guide.

“Sorry fella,”  I said.  “I didn’t know you had it so bad.”

The cowboy nodded and extended his hand.

“That’s big of you to admit you were wrong.”

I looked at his hand, then at Ms. Donnelly.  Her look convinced me I had no choice but to shake it.

The cowboy did a 180 degree turn and led on.  I wiped my hand on my trench coat.  Was that rude?  Sorry.  I didn’t know where his hand had been.

Probably on a Czechoslovakian dwarf.

For legal purposes, Delilah tells me I have to say there’s nothing wrong with that.

Copyright (c) 2015.  All Rights Reserved.

Image courtesy of a shutterstock.com license.

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Pop Culture Mysteries – Case File #004 – Snubbed – (Part 6)

PREVIOUSLY ON POP CULTURE MYSTERIES…

Part 1     Part 2     Part 3    Part 4    Part 5

AND NOW THE POP CULTURE MYSTERIES CONTINUE…

Hettie and I found a seat.  I flipped through her mother’s bible and read the various excerpts the Good Reverend Jedediah Blodgett had marked for me, each one promising me a variety of punishments and torments in exchange for touching his daughter in an inappropriate manner before marriage.

Now concerning the matters about which you wrote: ‘It is good for a man not to have sexual relations with a woman.’ But because of the temptation to sexual immorality, each man should have his own wife and each woman her own husband.

1 Corinthians 7:1-5

JEB’S NOTE IN THE MARGIN: “Hell, Jake Hatcher!  You got no idea how hot the fires of hell are.  You best think about that before you lay a hand on my baby girl.  Hettie can do a whole heap better than you, boy, but you’d better put a ring on that finger if you can’t control yourself.”

“Put a ring on that finger.”

3.5 readers, before you complain about how unfair things are in modern times, consider this fact:

In 1938, it was illegal for me to put a ring on Hettie’s finger.

I was white.  Hettie was black.  And somehow, the government decided that two differently colored people couldn’t possibly be allowed to live together as man and wife.

The world knows her as Peaches LeMay, but Hatcher knew her when she was just Hettie Blodgett

The world knows her as Peaches LeMay, but Hatcher knew her when she was just Hettie Blodgett

Jeb knew that.  He wasn’t talking about a legally registered and recognized marriage.  He meant I should find a minister who’d of at least bound us together in the eyes of the God he loved so much.

Finding a minister who’d agree to marry an interracial couple was a near impossibility in those days.  We’d of asked Jeb to do it but, you know, set three Kings and a Sultan in front of Jeb and he’d of gladly explained why every last one of them wasn’t fit for Hettie, so I never stood a chance in his eyes.

That we weren’t able to get hitched bothered us but we wanted to be together, so we were together.  We didn’t need anyone’s approval, which was good, seeing as how people weren’t exactly standing in line to give it to us.

Ma Hatcher’s point would soon be proven.  Up until then, our world had been spending time together in the Hatcher family backyard, or on Jeb’s spread across town.  Sure, we turned a head or two when we walked down the street together but, we truly had no idea what we were in for.

“BACK OF THE TRAIN!”  the conductor barked.

Hettie and I just sat there, confused.

“BACK OF THE TRAIN,” the conductor repeated.

“Huh?”  I asked.

“No colored folk allowed up here,”  the conductor said to Hettie.  “Get to the back.”

It was the first of many times I’d get more ornery than a mule at a kicking contest over this subject.

“Now wait just a cotton pickin’ minute, buster,”  I said.  “We paid for two tickets on this rattle trap, that was LATE by the way, and we aim to sit wherever we damn well please!”

Yeah.  I know you 3.5 readers would of cheered for me, but the other passengers looked as steamed as a plate of broccoli and were hankering for a good old fashioned lynching.

“Sir,”  the conductor said.  “Is she your servant?  I suppose I could look the other way until this car fills up, but then she’ll need to head to the back.  Rules are rules.”

“My servant?!”  I shouted.  “She’s my girl!”

A collective “GASP” wooshed over the car like a high wind blowing in over the sea.

“Jake,”  Hettie said as she stood up, embarrassed.  “Stop it.  I’ll go.”

Like a bump on a log, I stood there, with no clue what to do next.

“Wait!”  I shouted as I grabbed Hettie’s hand.

I turned back to the conductor.

“I suppose next you’re going to tell me there’s a rule against white people sitting in the blacks only car?”

He thought about it, then said, “No sir.  No, I think you’re more suited for the filth back there.”

I had half a mind to knock that bastard out but the whole car was applauding him like he was the hero and leering at me like I was the villain.  I’d of been drawn and quartered had  I made a move on him.

Hettie and I walked, and walked, and walked some more.  So many eyes stared us down along the way as if we’d done something wrong just for being together.

We finally found the car reserved for black passengers.  To our surprise, there was a celebration afoot.

There was a fiddler strumming his strings like his fingers were on fire, a trombone player tooting on his horn with so much gusto that he looked like he’d pass out, and a drum player being his set like it owed him money.

The singer was a dapper gent in his late twenties.  Real smooth type.  Spiffy vest.  Gold ring on the finger.  He was holding a saxaphone, but was belting out a tune at the top of his lungs:

Honey!

Oh, I say, ‘Honey!’

That must be your name ‘cuz there ‘aint nothin’ sweeter than you!

Oh Honey!

Like a flock of baby ducks, the singer had the crowd eating out of the palm of his hand.  They shouted back, “Oh, he said, ‘Honey!”

And then the fella continued:

That must be your name ‘cuz ‘aint nothin’ sweeter than you!

Finger snapping.  Toe tapping.  Hand clapping.  The whole crowd was into it as the singer puckered his lips up to his sax and blew it to Kingdom come.

I was impressed and overcome with the nagging feeling that I should have spent less time reading comic books and more time practicing the piano like Ma Hatcher wanted me to.

A minute or two later, the diddy came to an end.  The passengers went about their business and the attention was on me, who was more out of place than a third wheel on a bicycle.

Would they accept me or hate me as much as the people in the car I just walked out on?

There was silence for a moment then the makeshift emcee poured a brown jug marked “X” into a cup and handed it to me.

“Welcome friend!  This here will grow some hair on your chest!”

I sniffed it.  Paint thinner had more appeal, but not wanting to look like a teetotaler, I chugged it, and instantly felt ready to keel over.

“Whoa, nelly!”  the man said as he whacked me hard on the back.  “That’s something you got to sip on!”

Everyone laughed at me as I choked and sputtered, but it was a good kind of laugh, not a making-fun kind of laugh.  At least that’s how it felt.

“Come on in,” the singer said.  “Plenty of room.”

We found a seat and weren’t shooed away this time.  An older couple in the seats in front of us took an interest.  The man offered me a hunk of chewing tobacco but I passed, still reeling from what I assumed was high octane moonshine.  The lady offered me a mint, which I gladly accepted to get rid of the bad taste in my mouth.

The band packed up their instruments and found their seats.  The train chugged out of the station and we were off.

“Think they’ll hate us forever?”  Hettie asked as she rested her head on my shoulder.

“Who?  Our folks?  Nah.  They took it a lot better than I thought they would.”

“Almost wish they hadn’t,”  Hettie said.  “Might of made it easier.”

“It’s easier to run away when you’ve got something worth running from?”

“Maybe,”  she said to me, looking at me with those pretty brown eyes.  “But I know we’ll make them proud.”

I didn’t know that at all, at least about me, but I nodded anyway.

“Hoo-wee!”

The singer interrupted us, dabbing beads of sweat off his forehead with a handkerchief.

“It was way too hot in here for that spectacle, let me tell you!”

He stretched out his hand.  I shook it.  He took Hettie’s.  To my chagrin, he kissed it.  That was something fellas used to do. Act like they were all polite by kissing your girl’s hand when really all they wanted to do was put their lips on any part of your girl that they could.

“Clyde Montgomery,”  the man said.

Clyde snapped his fingers and grooved out to an impromptu dance number, jitterbugging a few steps then completing the routine with a twirl.

Hettie laughed.  Yours truly was unimpressed.  I knew what this palooka was up to.

“But people call me ‘Step-Aside Clyde,’ on account of my fancy footwork.  Who are you nice people?”

I plugged up, not wanting to encourage him.  Realizing my rudeness, Hettie stepped in.

“Oh,”  she said.  “I’m Henrietta and this is Jake.”

“Henrietta and Jake,”  Clyde said.  He waved his hand and his band members walked over.  One by one, Clyde introduced them.

“That cat on the strings was my main man Ray ‘Too Late’ Turner.  People call him that because if you’re girl’s missing, it’s too late because old Ray’s run off with her already.”

Jealousy.  The green eyed monster.  Call it what you will, but this guy was oozing with personality and confidence, two qualities in a man that broads will eat up with a knife and fork.

I was more worried about Clyde running off with my girl than Ray.

“That man on the horn was Bo ‘Hurricane’ Harris, ‘cuz ‘aint no one blow harder than he does I assure you.”

Clyde put his drummer in a playful headlock, rubbed his head, then released him. “And of course we got Russell ‘Rat-a-Tat’ Walker.  There’s nothin’ this boy can’t beat on to make a beat.”

“It’s nice to meet you all,”  Hettie said.

And then you know what happened next?  Each one of those fellas smooched Hettie’s hand “out of politeness” too.

What a world.  I was barely in it for five minutes and people either hated me or wanted to abscond with my girlfriend.

“Step-Aside” Clyde Montgomery, Band Leader/Hatcher’s Rival for Hettie’s affections

“Together, we’re ‘Step-Aside Clyde and the Tennessee Trio,'”  Clyde said.  “Perhaps you’ve heard of us?  We’re on the radio now and then.”

Crap in a hat and pull it over my head.  I had heard of them.  Pa had let me drive around in his studebaker and I’d definitely heard the announcer introduce their songs once in awhile.

But I wasn’t about to give Clyde the satisfaction.

“No,”  Hettie said, naively.  “My Daddy never let me listen to the radio.  He thought music was the devil’s work and such.”

That comment elicited hooting, hollering, knee-slapping laughter from the band.

“Oh darlin,’ your Daddy don’t know what he’s missin’!”

I tried to move things along.

“So fellas, it was real swell to meet you and all but…”

“We’re on a cross-country tour,” Clyde continued, completely ignoring me like I wasn’t there.  “We got those prim and proper Yankees up in Boston, Providence, and Hartford stepping to the beat, had a big to-do in Atlantic City, and next up is the Big Apple.”

I didn’t know what to make of Hettie.  She smiled and was polite but she wasn’t rolling over for the fella either.

“Where are you two headed?”

Like I dummy, I was half-way through blurting out, “Las” when Hettie patted my knee and answered, “Oh, we’re just sightseeing.”

Clyde looked at me.  “Brotha, why are you sightseeing when the prettiest sight is sitting right next to you?”

I shrugged my shoulders.

Clyde handed Hettie a flyer.

“If you happen to stop by any of these cities while your sightseeing, I hope you’ll stop by.  Drinks are on me.”

Clyde wrapped it up with one last dance shuffle, another twirl, concluded by pointing both fingers at Hettie (thumbs up style, like his hands were guns).

“A pleasure to meet you Henrietta.  Enjoy your travels.”

Clyde and the Tennessee Trip disbursed.

“You lied to him,”  I said.  “We’re not sightseeing.”

“Jake, that man was like a fox that just spotted a hen,”  Hettie replied in a tone all too reminiscent of her father.  “He only had one thing on his mind and if I kept him talking he’d of never walked away.”

The Good Reverend Blodgett had trained his daughter well.  That was the only time I was happy for his teachings.

I took the flyer and read it.  After New York City, Clyde and his pals were going to play in Chicago, Omaha, and Phoenix.

The bottom of the notice stood out to me:

Miss the tour?  Step Aside Clyde and the Tennessee Trio play nightly at the Clyde Side in Los Angeles, CA.

There are moments in your life when they don’t seem like a big deal at the time, but years later, when you look back at them through the benefit of hindsight, you’re able to pin point them as the exact instant when your life took a turn.

For me, it was for the worse.  For Hettie’s career, it was certainly for the better.  Whether or not it was better for her personally is a question only Hettie could answer, and like so many people from my past, she was one more person I wish was still around.

Given the chance to do it over again, I’d of just shut my mouth and enjoyed the train ride.

But I didn’t.

“You know Hettie, it probably wouldn’t be a bad idea for you to know a guy who owns a club in LA,” I said.

Hottie looked to the bottom of the flyer I was pointing to.

“You think?”  Hettie asked.  “I don’t know. He seems just a little too slick if you ask me.”

An aversion to slickness.  We should have hopped off the train right there and walked back to Bayonne, because God knows that’s all there is to Hollywood.

“So?”  I asked.  “If he gets fresh, just sock him one,” I said while I made a fist.

I didn’t trust Clyde but I trusted Hettie.

“I don’t know,”  Hettie said.  “I already told him we’re tourists…”

“So?  Just go tell him you were nervous because you’re daddy told you never to talk to strangers.  Then tell him you’re a singer on your way out to LA and maybe you could sing at his club sometime.”

Hettie took a deep breathe.  She needed to get over those nerves if she was going to make it big.

“OK,” Hettie said.  “Let’s go.”

“Nah doll.  You go.  I don’t want to hold you back.”

“You sure?”

“Yeah,”  I said.  “Baby, we’re off to Tinseltown.  You’re going to have to talk to all sorts of big shots and celebrities on your own without dragging me around.  Just give it a go.  I’ll be right here.”

“OK.”

Hettie strolled down the aisle, took a seat with the band and got to talking.  I couldn’t hear or see much but five minutes went by.  Ten.  Fifteen.  At some point I actually heard Hettie sing and the band clap.

When we hit the New York stop, it was time for Clyde and his Trio to go.

“Girl, you better call me as soon as I get back in town,”  Clyde said to Hettie as the whole group shuffled past my seat on their way out.

“I will.”

“You can’t be hidin’ that talent from the world.”

My girl returned and I was anxious for the news.

“How’d it go?”

Must have went well.  She was smiling to the point she was going to burst.

“He said I could sing there whenever I want!” Hettie screeched as she wrapped her arms around my neck, practically choking me with excitement.

“And he says he knows people at the record studios and he’s going to set up some meetings for me, oh my God, Jake, oh my God!”

Oh my God.  I was such a dope.

“Guess it went well then, huh?”

“Jake this was the best idea you’ve ever had!  We’re not even in LA yet and I’m already getting started!”

Sigh.

“He said I have to change my name though.  No one’s going to line up to see, ‘Henrietta Blodgett.'”

“I’d line up to see Henrietta Blodgett.”

“What’s a name that sounds good?”  Hettie asked.  “Something that, you know, will drive the fellas wild?”

I’d created a monster.  The Good Reverend’s instructions were quickly wearing off.

“Candy?  No.  No.  Sapphire.  Jake, what do you think of, ‘Sapphire?'”

“I don’t know,”  I said.

I lifted the lid off the cardboard box.

“All I know is I skipped breakfast and now I’m ready to chew my arm off.  I’m going to eat your old man’s pie.

And a star was born.

“Peaches,”  Hettie said.

“Peaches,”  I replied.

“Peaches Blodgett?”

Hettie frowned.  Putting a name on your budding fame wasn’t easy.

“Drop the Blodgett and just use your middle name,”  I said.

“Peaches May?”  Hettie asked.  “‘Peaches may, what?’  That sounds like a question, not a name.”

“Add a Le to it,”  I said as I stuffed a piece of the crummy, fruity goodness into my aptly named pie hole.  “People will think you’re French.”

“Peaches LeMay,”  Hettie said, her mind obviously wandering off into dreams of big checks she’d cash and songs she’d sing in front of admiring spectators.

I continued to stuff my face, absolutely none the wiser than I’d just launched the next celebrity sensation as well as orchestrated my own heart being ripped to shreds.

But for more on that, you’ll have to wait for the novel Bookshelf Q. Battler is helping me put together, 3.5 readers.

Copyright Bookshelf Q. Battler 2015.  All Rights Reserved.

Images courtesy of a shutterstock.com license

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Pop Culture Mysteries: The Wrong Guy – Part 9

Previously on Pop Culture Mysteries…

And now the Pop Culture Mysteries continue…

Myron and I were buried in a divot of crunched steal.  When I hit the roof of a parked tax cab with my back, the whole enchilada just wrapped around us like blanket.

The jump was a risky move, but one that paid off.shutterstock_229113658

My new sidekick was hugging me tighter than a high school senior trying to cop a feel off his prom date on the dance floor.

“Get off me, pervert!”

We jumped out of the wreckage and a number of looky-lous watched us with our tongues hanging out.  I’m not sure what attracted their attention more, the fact that I was walking away from a twelve story fall or the fact that I was waltzing down the street, a shotgun in one hand, a captive’s arm in the other, while a pair of gangsters took pot shots at us from the window.

“We’ve gotta move,”  I said.

“My car,”  Myron said as he pointed to the tiniest piece of crap I’d ever seen.  An electronic automobile.  Little, beige, and looked like it could fit a thousand clowns.

But that day, it only had two.

“This is a car?”  I asked as I forced myself into the passenger seat.

“Excellent gas mileage,”  Myron said.  “Great for the environment.  Barely leaves an eco-footprint.”

Sometimes I wondered why I bothered speaking to anyone.  I only understood half of what anyone had to say to me.

“Where’s Henneman?”  I asked.

“Why do you want to know?”  Myron asked as he sped down the street.  “Why’d you lie to Fernando?  I never cheated anyone named Frank.”

“Your buddy pumped my buddy full of lead.  I want to know why.”

Myron’s face turned grim.

“I’m sorry,”  he said.  “Diego called Craig.  Told him he was going to give have us disemboweled and beaten with our own entrails.”

“Serves you right.”

“Craig flipped out but we’d already spent the money, you know?  So he comes up with this idea, that he’s going to start knocking over stores until he comes up with the money to pay Diego back.”

“Sounds like a real rocket scientist.”

“I told him there was no way you could rob enough stores to come up with ten grand in time Diego would probably just take the money and kill us anyway.”

A barrage of bullets streaked across the compact car’s backside.

I looked in the rear view mirror.  Fernando and Brujo were gaining on us in a pick-up truck.

“Get the lead out junior.”

I tapped on the window in the roof.

“This thing open?”

Myron hit a switch and the glass retracted.  I popped out of the roof, pointed Wanda at the truck, and filled it full of buckshot.

The truck swerved and sideswiped a whole line of parked cars.

I reloaded Wanda, popped out of the roof hatch, and gave the gangsters another helping, this time directing it at one of their front tires.

The truck swerved out and flipped over.  It was a magnificent wreck.

We drove a little longer then I told Myron to stop the car.  He pulled over in front of a donut shop.

“Aw man,”  Myron said.  “That was awesome, the way you wasted those guys.  We’re a good team.”

I pulled out a pair of cuffs, slapping one bracelet around Myron’s wrist and the other around the steering wheel.

Then I grabbed the keys out of the ignition and threw them out the window.

“MAN, WHAT THE EXPLETIVE DELETED?”

BQB EDITORIAL NOTE:  Myron invoked a derogatory word used for a sexual act.

“Tell me where Craig is.”

Expletive deleted you.”

BQB EDITORIAL NOTE:  You get the picture.

“I’ll get the keys for you if you tell me.”

“Fine,”  Myron said.  “Sometimes he holes up with his girl, Karen.  She’s a stripper at the Cotton Candy Alligator.   That’s all I know.”

“You got a phone?”

“Yeah.”

I reached into Myron’s pants pocket, grabbed it, and dialed 9-1-1.  Who says you can’t teach an old dog new tricks?

“9-1-1.”

“Uh, yes, hello doll face?  Are you the gal I talked to before?”

“To what call are you referring sir?”

“What are you doing?”  Myron asked.

“Never mind,”  I said to the operator.  “Listen, sweetheart, I need you to report to the coppers that there’s a fella by the name of Myron locked up nice and tight in a real shit box of a car outside Delroy’s Donuts just off of Hollywood Boulevard.”

“I’m sure the officers can find it.”

“Well it’s a donut shop, darling, I’m sure they can, oh and hey listen hon, tell them this twerp’s running some kind of scam out of his apartment.  Bagging up baby powder and selling it to criminals and so forth.”

“I’ll make note of that sir.  What is your name?”

I thought about it.

“Sinatra,”  I said.  “Frank Sinatra.  If you’ll excuse me ma’am, Dino and I have to talk to a couple of showgirls.”

I hanged up and tossed Myron’s phone out the window.

“Real funny, man,”  Myron said.  “OK you got me, haha.  Let me go.”

“Fernando was right,”  I said.  “You are a dumb ass.  You may not have conned One-eyed Frank but I saw your operation back there.  How many scumbags were you going to try to pass off baby powder to?”

“So what?”  Myron said.  “Who cares if a bunch of gang bangers get robbed?”

“Normally I wouldn’t,”  I said.  “But since an innocent man was caught in the crossfire, now I do.  See you on the flip side, Myron.”

“Hey!”

I got out of the car and strolled down the street.

“Hey!  HEY!  YOU CAN’T DO THIS!”

It was time to head on over to the strip club.  Oh, the things I do in the name of justice.

Copyright (c) Bookshelf Q. Battler 2015

All Rights Reserved.

Image courtesy of a shutterstock.com license.

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Pop Culture Mysteries – The Wrong Guy (Part 2)

PREVIOUSLY ON POP CULTURE MYSTERIES…

Part 1 – Hatcher stops by the Pack N’ Sack Liquor Mart, where even the owner thinks our resident gumshoe has a problem.

AND NOW THE POP CULTURE MYSTERIES CONTINUE….

The kid was packing a semi-automatic pistol.  He turned his attention away from me and pointed his weapon at Lou.

“Empty it!”  the punk commanded as he pointed to the register.

Beads of sweat dripped off of Lou’s barren cranium, but he stayed cool.  He nodded and without making a fuss, took every last bill out of the register and shoved them into a paper bag.

Booze - it always gets Hatcher into trouble one way or the other.

Booze – it always gets Hatcher into trouble one way or the other.

“Son,”  I said.

The youngun ignored me.

“Son, I think you need to take a long hard look at what you’re doing here.”

The gun was back in my face again.  The kid’s hand was shaking like a leaf being blown around in a swift breeze.  He was more nervous than a hen at a fox convention. 

Clearly, he was not a pro.

“SHUT UP!”

“Why don’t you put that thing away before someone gets hurt?”

The kid’s eyes were filled to the brim with fear. 

“This is your first rodeo, isn’t it Jack?”

“Hatcher,”  Lou said as he slid the bag of money across the counter.  “Will you shut the hell up before you get us both killed?”

The gun was in Lou’s face again.

“DID ANYONE ASK YOU?!”

“Whoa,”  Lou said as he shot his hands up into the air.  “Easy.  No problem.  That’s all yours.  Anything you want.”

“I think if he was going to use that thing he’d of clipped us both by now,”  I said.

And once again, I was staring down a barrel.

“GIMMIE YOUR WALLET!”

I laughed.  “Oh if it’s a payday you’re looking for fella, you’re barking up the wrong tree with yours truly.”

Lou went ballistic.

“HATCHER WILL YOU STOP SCREWING AROUND WITH THIS GUY AND DO WHAT HE SAYS?!”

Spooked by Lou’s fat cake hole, the kid spun around again, but this time I grabbed his forearm and slammed it down on the counter’s hard edge.  He fired a shot that shattered one of the bottles on the shelf behind the counter, spraying a good year scotch all over the place.  What a waste.

The pain forced the perpetrator to loosen his grip on his heater, which allowed me to take it from him.

I hauled back and smashed the scumbag’s nose with the butt of the gun, causing the him to hit the floor like a sack of potatoes.  I brought my wingtip down on the guy’s ribs a few times for good measure, only stopping when I heard one of them crack.

Keeping my foot on the crook’s chest, I used my right hand to hold the kid’s own gun on him and my left hand to search around inside his jacket pocket.

“Now then,”  I said as I pulled out the yahoo’s wallet.  “Let’s see who you are.”

My captive spit a mouthful of blood all over Lou’s nice, clean linoleum floor.  I flipped the wallet open and found myself staring at the suspect in custody’s driver’s license.

“Hello there, Craig Henneman,”  I said.  “Whaddya know, whaddya say?”

“I think you chipped my tooth.”

“Least of your problems,” I said.  “The first one being you’re the only criminal I’ve ever met dumb enough to bring his identification along on a heist.  Get on our feet.”

Like a fish in the bottom of a canoe, the kid flopped around on the floor until Lou finally came around and hoisted him up.

“Craig, I want to tell you a story.  It’s called, ‘The Wrong Guy.’”

“Hatch,”  Lou interrupted.  “Let’s just call the cops, huh?”

I ignored my alcohol selling friend and carried on.  The kid didn’t look like he was all that interested, but he didn’t have much of a choice but to listen since I was the one with the gun.

“You see my friend here,”  I said as I pointed to Lou.  “He did what most people would do.  He gave you what you wanted.  Most guys will do just that.  Most guys aren’t looking for trouble.  As much as most guys like to  complain about how exhausting they find life, when faced with the possibility of taking the long dirt nap, they quickly discover they aren’t as tired as they thought.”

Lou returned back behind the counter.  The kid clutched his aching chest and leered at me like he wanted to tear me apart.

“But then there’s the wrong guy,”  I said.  “The wrong guy is usually a real piece of work.  He’s a guy who’s taken a wrecking ball to his existence.  He’s given up on ever being loved by a woman after a lifetime of heartache.  This guy has tossed his dreams into the trashcan where they belong and frankly, he’s taken so many lives that one more won’t matter a hill of beans to him.”

I pressed the cold steel right between the degenerate’s eyes.  He closed them.

“You see son, the wrong guy doesn’t have anything to lose.  You might think you’ll be able to spend your whole life pushing people around and taking what doesn’t belong to you but one of these days you’re going to meet the wrong guy and mark my words, when you meet this miserable excuse for a human being and get between him and his bottle, the last thing he truly gives a flying rat’s ass about in his cold, depressing life, he will not hesitate to take your gun away from you like the sissy mary that you truly are, beat you to a bloody pulp with it then blow your brains out all over the place.”

“Get it over with,”  the kid muttered.

“Oh,”  I said as I stepped back.  “We’ve got a miscommunication here.  Sorry to scare you my boy, but I’m not the wrong guy. I’m pretty close to being the wrong guy, but I’m not quite there yet. You see, I’m haunted by the face of every man I’ve put in the ground, even though every last one of them deserved it.  It’s a helluva thing taking a life.  It causes a torment to brew in your gut that I wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy.  You’d of felt it one day had you greased me or my friend over there.  Sadly, you’re probably too stupid to realize that you should thank me for sparing you from the misery that comes with taking a life.”

“If I thank you will you let me go?”

“I don’t give the Pope’s pointy hat about it,”  I said.  “I just don’t need to be kept up at night with your butt ugly mug dancing around in my brain when there’s already a bunch of slimeballs taking up that valuable real estate.”

The three of us just stood around staring at each other like a trio of idiots.

“What now?”  the kid asked.

“Take a walk,”  I said as I put the gun in my coat pocket, not far from where Betsy was resting her in holster.

The failed stick-up man didn’t waste any time in making a beeline for the door.

“Kid,”  I said.  He stopped but didn’t turn around.

“This is a second chance,”  I said.  “They’re few and far between in life, if at all.  Use it.  Pull yourself out of the gutter before you do meet the wrong guy.”

The door bell dinged and the hood was gone.  Lou bolted for the door and locked it, then returned to the counter.

“What the hell is wrong with you?  You could have gotten us both killed ya’ moron!”

“By who?”  I asked.  “That wimp?  Please.  Rule number one of being a criminal is don’t pull a piece unless you’re ready to use it.  One look at that kid’s eyes told me he wasn’t ready.”

“Yeah well, maybe not all of us want to take that risk,”  Lou said as he pulled out his little beep boop phone machine.

“What’re you doing?”  I asked.

“Ordering a pizza. What do you think jackass?  I’m calling the cops!”

I took Lou’s phone out of his hand, hanged it up, and set it on the counter.

“Last thing the world needs is one more life lost to the clink,”  I said.  “Probably just some loser down on his luck who never had an adult in his life willing to teach him right from wrong and thought this would be a good way to make a quick buck.  Don’t worry about it.  I scared that kid straight.”

“You scared a skidmark into my undies is what you did.”

Lou opened up the biggest paper bag he had, put the tequila I’d purchased earlier into it, then added a couple extra selections.

“A reward for the conquering hero,”  Lou said as he handed me the hooch.  “Go home and celebrate.”

“Will do,”  I said as I headed for the door.

“But Hatcher?”

“Yeah.”

“I still want to see you in that meeting Saturday night, mi amigo.  Now I’m convinced there’s something worth saving in you more than ever.”

“Go wash your undies, Lou.”

Copyright Bookshelf Q. Battler 2015.  All Rights Reserved.

Image courtesy of a shutterstock.com license.

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Project X – A Sneak Peak

Coming to the Bookshelf Battle Blog June 1, a serial so cool that Bookshelf Q. Battler is holding back on the title for now…

Hatcher and Betsy

Hatcher and Betsy

Meet Jake Hatcher.  He’s a 1950’s era hardboiled private detective in the tradition of Sam Spade or Phillip Marlowe.  Film noir fans rejoice.

He isn’t just any old gumshoe.  With the help of his trusty service revolver Betsy, he dispatched numerous Nazis during World War II and was even involved in a mission so secret that it can’t be discussed just yet, even on a blog that only has 3.5 readers.

After the fall of the Third Reich, Hatcher became a bur in the britches of LA’s criminal underworld, feeding Betsy a steady diet of wiseguys to replace the agents of Der Fuhrer that she’d grown accustomed to.

The twist?  One night in 1955, Hatcher fell asleep in his office desk chair.  When he woke up, it was 2014.  For the past year, he’s been aimlessly wandering the streets of the City of Angels, desperately trying to figure out how he lost 59 years and if there’s a way to get back to his own time.

Mysterious Blonde Dame

Mysterious Blonde Dame

This summer, a mysterious blonde dame will walk into Hatcher’s life on the finest pair of getaway sticks this side of the Rio Grande.  This femme fatale claims she can help our hero figure out how he lost 59 years.  She even says she can help him return to his own era.

But he’s going to have to jump through a lot of hoops first.

Mysteries are afoot in modern times and Hatcher needs to dust off his sleuthing skills and get to work.

What kind of mysteries?  BQB will get back to you on that one.

Is this dame on the level or is Hatcher being played like a harpsichord?

Only time will tell…and the catch?

You’ll have to help him.

Yes, there will be some reader interactivity and of course, Bookshelf Q. Battler’s unique brand of humor will be present throughout.  Even so, this new feature will be an interesting diversion from BQB’s usual schtick.

For now, the owner of the magic bookshelf is keeping a lot under his hat.  He’s pretty proud of this one and hopes you will be too.

Your loyal blog host has been working his behind off for the past few months, getting “The Summer of Bookshelf” serial extravaganza together.

Bookshelf Q. Battler and the Meaning of Life begins on May 15.  The “Named to Be Announced Later” Project X starts June 1. Throughout the summer, these two serials will run up against one another.  You’ll have BQB and the Meaning of Life for a week or so, then Project X for a while, then they’ll switch back in forth that way until the end of the summer.

For your reading pleasure, these stories have been serialized into daily chunks, easily consumed without taking too much time from your busy schedules.

So take BQB’s hand 3.5 readers and get ready for what will prove to be an awesome summer to say the least.

Copyright Bookshelf Q. Battler 2015.  All Rights Reserved.

Detective and blonde woman photos courtesy of a shutterstock.com license.

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