Tag Archives: writing

Pop Culture Mysteries – Enter the Blonde – Parts 1-6

By:  Jake Hatcher, Official Bookshelf Battle Private Eye

Jake Hatcher, Official Bookshelf Battle Private Eye

Jake Hatcher, Official Bookshelf Battle Private Eye

Dames.  They’re a dime a dozen until one day one passes by and makes your jaw drop faster than a 1929 stock ticker.

Delilah K. Donnelly. Now that’s one attorney I wouldn’t mind handling my pro bono.

Get your mind out of the gutter, degenerates.  All I’m saying is when it comes to dinero I’m broker than a piñata full of candy at a kids’ birthday party, and I could use the gal’s advice on all the mysteries coming my way.

After all, she’s the one bringing them to me.

My new employer, one Bookshelf Q. Battler, is some kind of whacko who spends all his time thinking about popular culture.  Movies, television, music, books, entertainment – he can’t get enough of it.

But his obsession means he’s full of questions.

Delilah serves as a go-between, an intermediary, if you will.  The nerd thinks up the mysteries, the dame delivers them and who solves them?

Yours truly.

Want to know how this whole arrangement began?  You’re going to have to pop on your spectacles and do some reading, Jack.

Delilah K. Donnelly, In-House Counsel for the Bookshelf Battle Blog

Delilah K. Donnelly, In-House Counsel for the Bookshelf Battle Blog

Part 1 – I return to my office on a dark and stormy night only to find a blonde dame sitting in my deskchair.  She knows so much about me that it makes me uncomfortable.  Hell, the broad even knows everything about my ex-wives.

Part 2 – The gal reads me my whole life’s story. Odd, since I knew it already. It’s almost like she was doing it for the benefit of 3.5 readers. Also, I dish details about a top secret mission I was involved in during World War II.

Part 3 – The blonde introduces herself as Delilah K. Donnelly.  She’s a lawyer, which is too bad, because I’ve never met a member of the bar that didn’t make me clutch my wallet tighter.  Come to think of it, this lawyer makes me want to clutch something else…

Part 4 – Delilah provides me a letter from an odd fella who wants me to work for him.

Part 5 – Cunning counselor that she is, Delilah presents an iron clad contract to me.

Part 6 – Do I sign it?  Feast your peepers and find out.

No blondes were entered during the production of this story.  One did enter a room though, hence the title.  

Do you have a Pop Culture Mystery?  Put Hatcher on the case!  Tweet your questions about movies, television, music, books and entertainment to @bookshelfbattle or leave them in the comments on the Bookshelf Battle Blog.

Copyright (C) Bookshelf Q. Battler 2015.  All Rights Reserved.

Images courtesy of a shutterstock.com license.

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And Now a Message from Uncle Hardass…

By:  Uncle Hardassimo “Hardass” J. Scrambler, Bookshelf Q. Battler’s Extremely Cranky and Deceased Uncle

Uncle Hardass

Uncle Hardass J. Scrambler

Mother of God.  You people actually read this nonsense?  “Oh look at me!  I’m friends with an alien!”  “Oh look at me!  I have a blog!”  “Oh look at me!  I have 3.5 readers!”

Well la dee freakin’ da.  Everyone wants to be a writer anymore.  No one can be bothered to roll up their sleeves and put a good honest day’s work in at the Salt Mines.  You all want your salt but you want some other guy to get it.

Here’s a newsflash ya’ bunch of unwashed hippy good-fer-nothins!  While you’re all tappity tapping on your electro-thingy-ma-whosits, people are busting their asses just to bring salt to your table.

Think my good for nothing nephew cares?  Nah.  He’s too busy “blogging.”  Jesus.  I’m glad I’m dead so I don’t have to be reminded of the fact that all the work I put into raising that kid amounted to him writing a “blog” for the benefit of 3.5 readers.

In fact, here’s how it all went down on my death-bed:

BQB:  Uncle Hardass!  Don’t die!  I’ll do anything!  I’ll even get a job at the Salt Mines!

UNCLE HARDASS:  Aack!  Too late!  Thank God I’m dying.  If I live long enough, you’ll probably disappoint me by taking all the effort I put into raising you and starting a blog for the benefit of 3.5 readers!

BQB:  That actually sounds like a good idea…

UNCLE HARDASS:  Aack!  Oh God!  This is it!  I hope there’s no hippies in the afterlife!  Aaack!

First, I called it.  That buffoon went and started a blog for 3.5 readers.  I’d kick myself in the ass for giving him the idea but I’m a ghost and my foot would just go through my ass.

Second, there’s nothing but hippies here.  I’m not sure if I’m in Heaven or Hell.  I might be in my own personal Hell where I’m surrounded by hippies who just babble on about all the art they want to create while I bust my ass everyday until the end of time at the Afterlife Salt Mines.

Then again, this is probably Heaven, because I like working at the Salt Mines and bitching about useless hippies.

Anyway, what was my point?  Oh yeah.

My nephew’s story, “Bookshelf Q. Battler and the Meaning of Life” starts again tomorrow and I’m here to ask you to not read it. The more people read it, the bigger his ego will get and then he’ll never face facts and accept the solid employment that only the Salt Mines can offer.

He thinks he’s being real avant garde with this stuff.  You’ll learn his real name though I don’t know why you’d want to because I just refer to him as “the moocher.”

TRANSLATION OF A CONVERSATION BETWEEN A YOUNG BQB AND UNCLE HARDASS:

YOUNG BQB:  Uncle Hardass!  Will you read me a story?

UNCLE HARDASS:  A story?!  How the expletive deleted do you have time for a story?  Why don’t you have a job at the Salt Mines yet, ya moocher?

YOUNG BQB:  I’m three.

UNCLE HARDASS:  And?!  So what?  Are you going to use that excuse forever?  You sound just like your Aunt!  “He’s only three, Hardassimo!”  “Stop trying to make him get a job, Hardassimo!”  “Stop gluing a beard to his face in an attempt to pass him off at the Salt Mines as a little person day laborer, Hardassimo!”

YOUNG BQB:  Read this book to me!  It’s called “The Three Billy Goats Gruff.”

UNCLE HARDASS:  Oh alright.  Jesus H. Christ.  Shit like this is why the Japanes are beating us hands down.  You think those kids are reading stories right now?  No.  They’re too busy making transistors and practicing karate and shit.  All you kids who want to read and write will be crying your eyes out when your lack of hard work leads to the Good Ole U S of A being overtaken by the land of the rising sun but alright, here we go.  “Once upon a time…blah blah blah….there were some goats….”

YOUNG BQB:  You’re not reading it right!

UNCLE HARDASS:  I’m making improvements!  Alright, so there were three hard working goats who worked eighty hours a week at the Salt Mines and were happy to do it.  And once upon a time, they were walking across a bridge when an incredibly lazy troll popped out of nowhere and harassed the shit out of the hard working goats.

YOUNG BQB:  I don’t think that’s how it goes…

UNCLE HARDASS:  “Boo!”  said the hideous, lazy troll.  “I’m a writer!  I sit around and make up stories all day while hardworking goats like you slave away in the salt mines!  La dee da I’m so special!”

YOUNG BQB:  I’m going to bed.

UNCLE HARDASS:  Good!  And put your beard on tomorrow!  One of these days I’ll convince the foreman that you’re a little person day laborer and not my lazy moocher of a nephew!  I had three jobs when I was your age, you know.

And then I also hear that at some point in this lousy series, BQB is going to find himself a woman!

I don’t know whether I should be happy for him or sad for the gal.  I mean, hell, it’s about time my nephew settled down and started a family of his own but on the other hand, I have no idea how this clown will ever support a woman without a job at the Salt Mines.

I suppose I shouldn’t be surprised.  I was quite the ladies’ man myself in my day.  How else do you think I scored a fox like Gertie?  Well, she used to be quite the looker anyway.  Now she just kind of looks like a wrinkly basset hound with a wig on it.

Don’t tell her I said that.  She’ll find a way to nag me even though I’m deader than disco.  Nobody reads this thing anyway right?

Read BQB’s story.  Don’t read BQB’s story.  I don’t care.  I know everything but young people never want to listen to my advice.  Make your own mistakes I guess.  God knows my lousy excuse for a nephew has.

If you’ll excuse me now, I have to go haunt my old house.  It’s the one I told Gertie that she is under no circumstances to give to BQB when she goes to the old folks home, but she’s another one that never listened to me.

Oh, right, I’m supposed to refer to it as the “Bookshelf Battle Compound.”  More of BQB’s delusions of grandeur.

Kids these days.  I tell ya.

Get a job, ya bums.

Uncle Hardass croaked years ago after a steady diet of pastrami finally caught up to him.  Even so, BQB is certain he can hear him haunting the Bookshelf Battle Compound.  Occasionally, he even manages to post on BQB’s blog from the afterlife.

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POP CULTURE MYSTERIES!

Pop Culture Mysteries is a new feature on the Bookshelf Battle Blog, hosted by a storytelling nerd of world renown, the one and only Bookshelf Q. Battler!

Jake Hatcher, a hardboiled 1950’s film noir detective in the tradition of Sam Spade and Phillip Marlowe, has agreed to solve one hundred pop culture mysteries and file his reports right here on bookshelfbattle.com

LADY: Oh Detective, can you solve the Mystery of Why BQB Only Has 3.5 Readers? HATCHER:  Because he stinks worse than a swamp on low tide day, ma'am.  Now that'll be five bucks.

LADY: Oh Detective, can you solve the Mystery of Why BQB Only Has 3.5 Readers?
HATCHER: Because he stinks worse than a swamp at low tide, ma’am. Now that’ll be five bucks.

SOME CASES CURRENTLY ON HATCHER’S TO-DO LIST:

1)  How the hell did Doc and Marty from Back to the Future know each other?

2)  Why didn’t Rose take a seat in one of the life boats so Jack could keep that lousy piece of driftwood in Titanic?

3)  Who shot first?  Han or Greedo?

All these and more coming soon…but first up tomorrow…What happened to the original Brady Bunch spouses?

Do you have a pop culture mystery you want to put Detective Hatcher on?

Tweet it to @bookshelfbattle or leave it in #popculturemysteries (Because BQB totally owns that shit now)

Tell him on his Google Plus page

Drop it in the comments of bookshelfbattle.com

Together, we can help Jake solve 100 mysteries, earn 500 bucks and go back to 1955 where he will live like the King of Siam with his bag of green Abe Lincoln portraits.

Film noir detective and client photo courtesy of a shutterstock.com license.

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Pop Culture Mysteries – Enter the Blond – Part 2

PREVIOUSLY ON POP CULTURE MYSTERIES – ENTER THE BLONDE:

PART 1 – Detective Jake Hatcher returns to his office to find a mysterious blonde dame sitting behind his desk.

That dame was all class, but a bit snooty – like an exceptionally attractive school marm.

Detective Hatcher prefers old school typing.

Detective Hatcher prefers old school typing.

She read from the file of poop she’d scooped on me with all the enthusiasm of a professor giving a lecture on transcendental metaphysics.

“In 1920, you were born one Jacob Ronald Hatcher in Bayonne, New Jersey,” the dame said. “Parents Gus and Mitsy, a barber and a housewife, both solid citizens who never did you wrong, unlike your conniving brother Roscoe who…”

“Yeah do us all a favor a skip over Roscoe, lady,” I said.

“In 1938, you turned eighteen and moved to Hollywood, deluded by the misguided hope that your handsome face and macho physique would be more than enough to provide you with a career as a movie star…”

“People have done more with less,” I interrupted.

“Alas, like most newcomers to Tinseltown, you were turned away by every producer and found yourself on the streets,” the dame continued. “You made your living as a prize fighter, taking on all comers and throwing matches for a fee under the names of ‘Punchy McGee,’ ‘Take a Dive Dan,’ and ‘The Down for the Count Kid.’”

“Yeah,” I said. “Well, it’s not my fault that was a rigged racket.”

“War broke out three years later and in your early twenties, you found yourself in Europe, fighting on the front lines,” the dame said, studying the file like it was the Old Testament. “I see you fought in D-Day and marched with Allied Forces all the way to Berlin.”

“You ‘aint just whistlin’ Dixie, ma’am.”

“There’s a notation here that you were involved in a special mission?” the dame asked.

I gulped my drink and poured another.

“That’s right.”

“Care to share?” she asked.

“Hitler,” I said. “I punched him in the face.”

The dame’s big blue eyes widened with shock. “Excuse me?”

Adolf Hitler - historians agree that the last words he heard before Detective Hatcher's fist collided with his face were,

Adolf Hitler – historians agree that the last words he heard before Detective Hatcher’s fist collided with his face were, “Sprachen zie punch?”

“I infiltrated a secret Nazi bunker and punched Adolf Hitler square in his stupid face,” I said. “Knocked the son of a bitch out colder than your demeanor.”

I could tell by the look on the dame’s face that she was impressed.

“You punched Adolf Hitler in the face?”
“Yes ma’am.”

“Adolf Hitler…Der Fuhrer of the Third Reich?”

“That’s the one.”

“I thought he committed suicide,” the dame said.

“That’s what the powers that be want you to believe, ma’am,” I said. “Truth be told I delivered Hitler to General Eisenhower, who had Old Adolf hauled off by a bunch of G-Men to a secret government lab. They did all kinds of experiments on him. They wanted to see what made an evil lug like that tick in the hopes they could prevent another monstrous dictator from popping up ever again. Given the headlines these days, it doesn’t seem to me like they were very successful.”

“And you’re telling me this…why?”

“You asked,” I said. “I’m not a liar, ma’am. A lady asks me a question, I give her an honest answer. Mitsy Hatcher raised a gentleman, I’ll have you know.”

“But the dishonorable discharge?”

“The brass didn’t want the public to know about Operation Fuhrerpunschen and I was a loose end,” I said. “They booted me out on a bunch of trumped up charges that weren’t worth the paper that they were printed on. Ordered me to keep quiet but hell, all of those bums are long dead now so it’s not like there’s anything they can do to me.”

“I see,” the dame said, turning her attention back to the file. “You returned to LA in 1945 and joined the Los Angeles Police Department.”

“Seemed like a shot at a steady paycheck,” I said. “Didn’t realize it was an invite to every two-bit thug to declare war on me…and honest cops? They didn’t last long back then.”

“I’m not sure they last long now either, Mr. Hatcher,” the dame said as her sad lips curled up into a rare smile. “Now, after the incident vis a vis your wife’s infidelity with your partner, you quit the force and went out on your own as a detective for hire, is that right?”

“That’s the long and short of it, ma’am,’ I said. “But what gives with the twenty questions anyway? You writing a book or something?”

“No,” the dame replied. “I just like to make sure I know everything there is to know about a man before I hire him.”

“Speaking of,” I said as I looked at my watch. “It’s been longer than five minutes and you’ve yet to explain to me why you’re here.”

Why is this dame here?  Find out in the next part of Pop Culture Mysteries: Enter the Blonde!

(Yeah, I know, we really need to fire the guy who writes these post titles).

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Pop Culture Mysteries – Enter the Blonde – Part 1

By: Jake Hatcher, Official Bookshelf Battle Blog Private Eye

Jake Hatcher, Official Bookshelf Battle Blog Private Eye

Jake Hatcher, Official Bookshelf Battle Blog Private Eye

It was a dark and stormy night.

The kind of night where it doesn’t just rain cats and dogs. It pours flabby tabbies and labrador retrievers.

The H20 pumped down from the skies, dancing on the pavement like so many Swan Lake ballerinas. It sloshed all over my wingtips as I buttoned up my trench coat, tilted my fedora downward, and began wondering if an ark wouldn’t be a bad investment.

Luckily, I reached my office before I was swept away to Timbuktu.

Times were tough and money was harder to come by than integrity on network television. All I could afford was a one room hovel above a Chinese restaurant. It worked out well. I was a sucker for moo goo gai pan and my landlady, good ole Ms. Tsang, never failed to have a hot plate full of it waiting for me whenever I came home from a long night of sleuthing.  Gratis.  Free of charge.  I didn’t even have to pay for it.

Ms. Tsang was truly a sweet old gal.

I ate a forkful of my free dinner and headed upstairs to my digs, the door of which was prominently marked:

Detective Jake Hatcher

Private Investigator

Reasonable Rates/No Refunds

I popped open the door and relieved my worn out carcass from my sopping wet coat. The fedora? It stayed on. Many a ne’er-do-well has tried separate this gumshoe from his favorite hat and not lived to tell the tale. I wasn’t about to do the job for them.

My mind was swimming for shore and I was ready to drown it before it started doing the backstroke. I had an appointment with one Mr. Jack Daniels. He was an old friend I knew all too well. Some might say too well, my third ex-wife among them.

I poured myself a shot and there it sat before me, staring me straight in the puss like an uninvited house guest that refused to leave. An angel on my left shoulder told me to pour it out the window and sober up. The devil on my right shoulder told me to guzzle it down and keep ‘em comin.’

The devil won. He always does.

I tilted the glass against my lips and Mr. Daniels’ special prescription for what ailed me trickled through my lips, across my tongue, and down my gullet, where it immediately went to work on making all the bad memories go away.

Liquor – my best friend and my worst enemy.

Mysterious Blond Dame

Mysterious Blond Dame

“A bit rude not to offer a lady a drink, isn’t it detective?”

My heart beat faster than a conga drum in the hands of Matthew McConaughey during one of his special transcendental experiences. I turned around and there she was – a beautiful buxom blonde behind my desk, her shapely keister parked directly in my very own swivel chair.

“If we’re talking about manners ma’am, I assume it’s frowned upon to break into a man’s place of business and act like you own the place.”

She wasn’t your average broad. This dame had a face that could make the angels cry and a body that could convince Satan to turn the heat down in Hell. Lush red lips, flawless china doll skin and although she was sitting on it, I assumed she was packing the kind of caboose that could convince a man to ride the rails all the way to Albuquerque.

“Oh, I assure you there was no break in, Mr. Hatcher,” the dame said. “Your landlady let me in.”

“Oh she did, see?” I asked. “Now why in Sam Hill would she go and do a fool thing like that?”

“I told her we were old friends.”

“Friends?” I asked. “No offense ma’am, but I don’t know you from a hole in the wall.”

My visitor puffed away on a long filtered cigarette. She held it in a hand covered by a black glove that went all the way up to her elbow. Around her neck dangled a strand of pearls, the cost of which could have fed a small country.

She dressed like she had an account at every boutique on Rodeo Drive and spoke with the perfect and precise diction of a finishing school graduate.

“All friendships must begin somewhere, Mr. Hatcher,” the dame said. “What’s holding up that drink?”

I had half a mind to show her the way out, but my inquisitive side drew me in. I poured a shot of the sweet brown goodness and handed it to her, then suffered the indignity of having to sit down in the rickey chair on the opposite side of my desk, the one I reserved for clients in need of my services.

I checked my watch.

“I’m bushed after a long day of giving the criminal element of Los Angeles the old what for, ma’am,” I said. “So you’ve got five minutes to state your business before I give you the old heave-ho.  No pun intended.”

“My, my, my,” the dame replied. Her lips pursed as they blew out a smokey circle that rose into the moonlight creeping in through my one and only window. “I must say, Mr. Hatcher, you’re the first man I’ve ever met who was in a rush to be free of my company.”

“Now see here, ma’am,” I said, matter-of-factly, “This old gumshoe’s heart has been pierced by more stiletto heels than I care to count. I’m sure you’ve convinced many a sailor to crash his ship on the rocks with your siren’s song, but this fish is wise to the hook in your worm, see? I’m immune to your feminine wiles.”

“Aww,” the dame said as she mocked me with an insincere pouty face. “Poor Mr. Hatcher. Still reeling over the loss of your ex-wives I take it?”

“All three of ‘em,” I said. “But I fail to see how that’s any of your business, doll face.”

“Your first wife, Trixie Bordeaux, she cheated on you with your old partner back in the day when you were a detective for the LA police department, didn’t she?”

“Walked in on them while they were dancing the horizontal mattress mambo in my own house,” I replied. “That’s a sight that can never be unseen.”

“Your second wife, Muffy Sinclair,” the dame continued. “She shot you six times and left you for dead, then ran off to Tahiti with your boorish brother Roscoe.”

“She was a crack shot and yet she managed to miss every vital organ,” I said. “Somewhere deep down that bird was still crazy for me.”

“Your third wife, Constance Connors,” the dame said. “She was the best wife you ever had and yet you fouled that one up on your own.”

“Sad but true,” I said. “I hit the giggle juice hard to dull the pain my first two wives caused me, never realizing I was pushing away the only dame that’d ever been loyal to me until it was too late. She ran away from me faster than a long distance marathon runner on uppity pills.”

“I certainly hope you’ve cured your addiction since then?” the dame asked.

“I can handle my hooch, sister,” I said as I poured myself another shot. “Say, how in the bloody blue blazes do you know so much about me anyway?”

On my desk was a big black briefcase. It wasn’t mine so I knew it belonged to my guest. She popped it open and pulled out a manilla file folder, stuffed to the brim with paperwork.

“I know everything there is to know about you, Mr. Hatcher.”

What’s in store for our fearless detective? Find out tomorrow on Pop Culture Mysteries, an exclusive new feature on the Bookshelf Battle Blog.

Copyright (c)  2015 Bookshelf Q. Battler.  All Rights Reserved.

Images courtesy of a shutterstock.com license.

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BQB and the Meaning of Life – Part 13 – Young Duffer

PREVIOUSLY ON BOOKSHELF Q. BATTLER AND THE MEANING OF LIFE…

BQB croaked and now he seeks the meaning of life.  What, you want me to spoon feed it to you?

READ Parts 1-5

BQB wakes up in the hospital, interacts with the characters from his shelf who drive him nuts, discovers that a Great Guru lives on top of a mountain deep within the war torn island nation of Pango Tango.  Bookshelf Q. Battledog, who momentarily learns how to speak, alerts him to a news story that convinces BQB to make the journey.

READ

PART 6      PART 8    PART 10     PART 12

PART 7     PART 9     PART 11

“YOU SHALL NOT TRAVERSE IN THIS GENERAL DIRECTION!”

Growing up, two of my favorite kids’ books were:

Esmeralda and the Ice Cream Rendering Plant: A crackpot ice cream rendering plant manager goes off his meds, invites a group of children to visit the plant, and then one by one the children are tortured for, you know, behaving like children, through various ice cream related punishments.  (i.e. the mean kid has maraschino cherries thrown at him, the spoiled kid gets doused with hot fudge, the kid that lies all the time gets buried in a vat of rainbow sprinkles.)  I mean, they make it out alive in the end, but as a grown up, I kind of wonder how this book ever got published in the first place.

The Master of the Bracelet:  A young lad travels across a mysterious land with a magic bracelet in his pocket.  His mission?  To pawn it – because it was ugly and no one wanted to wear it but it was solid gold so it was worth a couple months’ rent.

These were two books that kept me entertained as a boy and yet once on my shelf, the characters from these tomes fought like cats and dogs.

Droppings comes and goes as he pleases.

Dropinius comes and goes as he pleases.

There was Dropinius the Sorcerer. He always popped in and out of Master of the Bracelet.  He’d offer some casual advice to the young lad, warn him against trouble, give him some orders, then claim some business that had to take him elsewhere.  In short, he was always adept at finding stuff for someone else to do.

Between you and me, I always thought Dropinius was like that weird guy in your office.  No one has any idea what he does and you never see him accomplish anything, but he walks around acting important, so he keeps drawing a paycheck.

A tiny version of Dropinius slammed his magic wand down on the bookshelf, much to the great dismay of a group of pink lumpy wumpies, who were smaller than usual, thanks to the shelf.

You might remember that the lumpy wumpies were the goofy assistants to the off his rocker ice cream rendering plant manager.  They were so cheerful that they performed every task with a song and dance routine.

“Lumpy wumpy dumpitty duck doff,  somebody tell that sorcerer to fu…”

“ENOUGH!” I yelled as I walked into my home office.

“Dropinus!” I said. “How many times do I have to tell you to stop slamming your magic wand down on the bookshelf? You’re going to crack it and it’s not like I’m going to be able to find a magic bookshelf repair shop!”

“They started it!” the long bearded, pointy hat wearing sorcerer said in his exceptionally authoritative voice. “Look what they’ve done to Schmedley!”

If you’ve read, Master of the Bracelet, then you know Schmedley is the psychotic creature who is obsessed with the bracelet and wants it because he finds it extremely fashionable.

Schmedley sat on my shelf and sucked on a pixie stick that was taller than he was.  Between slurps of sugar, he argued with his multiple personalities in his signature creepy, screechy voice.

“Stinksy lumpsie wumpsies!” Schmedley said. “They gives us the bad sugarsies!”

Schmedley turned around to address his alter ego.

“No!” Schmedely said. “We wants it! We needs it! We needs the pixie stixie…it is our…our… pre!!!”

“Don’t finish that sentence unless you want to pay off Peter Jackson!”  I said as I grabbed the pixie stick and pulled.

Schmedley grabbed the other end. I found myself in a tug of war with the little beast.

“Why did you give this to him?” I asked the lumpy wumpies. “You know he has an addictive personality!”

“Lumpy wumpy dumpitty dask dor dit…the little jerk came right over and asked for it!”

“So?” I asked. “You wouldn’t give a beer to an alcoholic if he asked for it, would you?”

“Its ours! Its ours! We needs it!” Schmedley screeched. “Stinksy Booksie Q. Battlesy is stealing our PRE…”

Dropinius conked Schmedley on the head with his magic wand and not a moment too soon, for I could almost hear Peter Jackson’s secretary calling his lawyer.  Luckily, Dropinius’ quick thinking forced the monster to let go of the pixie stick. I grabbed it and tossed it into the trash can.

“Official Bookshelf Q. Battler decree,” I said. “No one is to give Schmedley candy ever again.”

“MY PRECIOUS!”

“Schmedley!”  I yelled.  “What have you done?!”

Schmedley scratched his head and looked up at me.  “My…um…copy of Precious: Based on the Novel “Push” by Sapphire?  We must watches it immediately for it is a grim reminder of the plight of inner city youth?”

“Good save,”  I said.

I opened up my copy of Master of the Bracelet and flicked the monster into the book with my thumb and forefinger.

“Alright,” I said. “Everyone else! Gather around!”

Several characters exited their respective books and took a seat on the shelf.  Others popped out of their various hiding places.

“I’m going on a trip,” I said. “And while I’m away, I expect you all to be on your best behavior.”

“Yes Papa,” D’Artagnan said mockingly.

“That means no battling on the bookshelf,” I said. “You know you all get carried away and if I’m not here to stop you, you’ll lose control and burn my headquarters down.”

I consulted a list of rules I’d written down on a yellow legal pad.

“While I’m gone, you may rent three and only three pay per view movies,” I said. “Nothing too risqué, keep it PG-13 or lower, and I swear if I come back and find you guys have run up my cable bill I’ll toss all of your books into the recycling bin!”

“What about sustenance?” Annie asked as she patted her pegasus on the head.

“The fridge is stocked,” I said. “And Antonio’s Pizza delivers. Against my better judgment, I’m leaving a credit card next to the phone. Again, use it only for emergencies. Do not abuse it. If you do…”

“The recycling bin?” Tessa asked.

Tessa's totally going to blow up BQB's compound while he's gone.

Tessa’s totally going to blow up BQB’s compound while he’s gone.

“I’m thinking wood chipper,” I replied.

I checked the list.

“My number is also next to the phone,” I said. “You guys can do that thing you do when you jump up and down on the buttons to call me, but again, only in an emergency.”

“You’re worse than Overlord Kwazlo and the corrupt dystopian regime I fight with little to no battlefield experience,” Tessa said.

“Lights out by 9,” I said. “And please do not do anything to make the neighbors suspicious or else…”

“We know, we know,” Dirk Lane said. “The government will confiscate us and cut us into pieces just to see what makes us tick.”

“Exactly,” I said. “Finally, remember that Bookshelf Q. Battle Dog, as Head of Security for Bookshelf Battle HQ, is in charge. I trust his judgment and I expect you to follow his orders.”

“He’s a dog,” Tessa said.

“Yes,” I replied. “Oh, and fun fact – he talks now. So, there’s that. Any questions?”

All the characters just looked around silently.

“Class dismissed.”

The characters dispersed back into their books. I removed my big dictionary to find a spot on the shelf where Monroe was throwing a wild and lavish party.

BQB and The Incorrigible Monroe have more in common than you'd think.

BQB and The Incorrigible Monroe have more in common than you’d think.

The notorious poser was in a dixie cup that doubled as a pool, snuggling with two beautiful flappers.

Behind him, at least twenty small, well-dressed 1920’s people were jitterbugging.

“Young duffer!” Monroe yelled as he removed a tiny cigar from his mouth. “The water’s fine! I’d invite you in, but I doubt you’d fit!”

“You missed my lecture,” I said.

“Did I?” Monroe asked. “A terrible shame!”

“Listen,” I said. “While I’m gone…

“I know, I know,” Monroe said. “No parties. I’ll be good, Young Duffer.”

“Actually,” I said. “I want you to throw one great big non-stop party the entire time I’m gone.”

“Come again?” Monroe asked.

“Invite all the characters,” I said. “If they’re too busy partying, then they’ll be too busy to fight and if they’re too busy to fight, they won’t burn down Bookshelf Battle HQ.”

“That idea is the bee’s knees, Young Duffer,” Monroe said as he jumped out of the dixie cup. He was covered by a pair of swim trunks and as he walked around, he dripped water all over the shelf.

“I’ll throw the wildest, out of sight shin dig your bookshelf has ever seen.”

“Good,” I replied. “But just keep the party to the bookshelf. No parties elsewhere in the house.”

“Understood,” Monroe said.

“I mean it,” I said. “I don’t want this to turn into that time I took a day trip to wine country and came back to find hundreds of tiny well-dressed 1920’s people puking and passing out all over my house.”

“You can count on me, Young Duffer,” Monroe said. “Why, I’ll get on the horn and invite Jenny right away!”

“Yeah,” I said. “Listen, about that.”

“What’s on your mind?” Monroe asked.

“You and I suffer from the same affliction,” I said.

“We’re both a couple of larger than life go-getters?” Monroe asked.

“We both pine for women who wouldn’t pee on us if we were on fire,” I replied. “It’s not healthy. I’ve decided to do what I can to put Blandie out of my mind and I suggest you do the same with Daisy.”

Monroe nodded.

“You know, Young Duffer,” Gatsby said. “You are all kinds of smart. You’re exactly right. If Jenny doesn’t want me, then there are plenty of other gals who will. Plenty of fish in the sea, right?”

“Right.” I said.

Gatsby pointed to my copy of Missing Woman.

You seriously haven’t read Missing Woman yet?  Oh what an amazing mysterious thrill ride.  First, the woman is missing, and the author sends you on all these twists and turns but…well, SPOILER ALERT – let’s just say the protagonist, Molly, is not exactly a bowl full of sunshine.

“You know, I think I might knock on this book and invite that Molly gal over to my big soiree,” Monroe said. “I hear she’s a real looker and between you and me, her husband’s a bit of a cad. Perhaps I’ll swoop in and be her shoulder to cry on if you know what I mean.”

“NOOO!” I yelled.

I slapped my forehead and pulled my copy of Missing Woman off the shelf.

“I can’t believe I left this here,”  I said.

I know  - I think a sequel called "BQB's Rogue Gallery" in which a bunch of tiny villains escape the safe and take over the magic bookshelf would be awesome too.

I know – I think a sequel called “BQB’s Rogues Gallery” in which a bunch of tiny villains escape the safe and take over the magic bookshelf would be awesome too.

Next to my desk, I kept a safe full of books that featured characters I didn’t exactly want to see small versions of running around my home. I opened the safe and placed Missing Woman inside, right next to my copies of books involving killers, wackos, monsters, and those guys who always take a penny out of the change tray at the convenience store but never give a penny even when they have one.

“Nah,” I said as I closed the safe. “Molly’s uh…she’s not right for you. And besides, you really need to stop hitting on married women.”

“You sure, Young Duffer?” Monroe asked. “I hear Molly’s a fiery redhead with legs from here to Yayaville.”

“I’m sure,” I said. “Find another woman, Monroe. Literally, find any other woman.”

 

Finally!  Bookshelf Q. Battler will leave BQB HQ and venture forth in the big bad world to seek out THE MEANING OF LIFE!

But you’re going to have to wait over a week or so to read it (wah wah).

Copyright (C) Bookshelf Q. Battler 2015.  All Rights Reserved.

Wizard, safe, and man in tux photos courtesy of a shutterstock.com license.

BQB’s Attorney advises “Any resemblance to other literary works or characters is purely coincidental and/or for parody purposes only.”

 

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BQB and the Meaning of Life – Part 12 – War in Pango Tango

PREVIOUSLY ON BOOKSHELF Q. BATTLER AND THE MEANING OF LIFE…

READ PARTS 1-5 – BQB died, returned and now seeks the meaning of life.

BQB wakes up in the hospital, returns home to recover, finds assistance from Holmes and Watson:

PART 6       PART 8      PART 10

PART 7       PART 9      PART 11

AND NOW BOOKSHELF Q. BATTLER AND THE MEANING OF LIFE…

I scooped Holmes and Watson into my right hand and carried them into the living room. Monroe had no interest, opting instead to remain in the kitchen, where he read the paper and consumed cornflakes as big as he was.

“What is it boy?” I asked.

“Tonight – WAR IN PANGO TANGO!

Bookshelf Q. Battle Dog was staring at the television, which was showing a news story about a war torn nation.

“The People’s Republic of Pango-Tango,” the anchorman said as images of lush tropical rainforests were shown. “Once a tropical paradise in the middle of the Pacific Ocean…”

The images switched to piles of dead bodies, tanks, and guerrilla fighters patrolling the jungle with AK-47’s.

“…now a battle zone of death and destruction. There are two sides to the island, Pango to the East, and Tango to the West. The inhabitants were friendly and peaceful toward one another until…”

Video appeared of a Tangonian guerrilla fighter in fatigues wearing a red headband. A translator relayed his words to the viewing audience.

“…the dirty Pangonian slimeballs dared to accuse the God of Tango of being violent when everyone knows our God is peaceful. We are left with no choice but to avenge this insult to our God by burning Pango to the ground and hacking the Pangonians to pieces with our mighty machetes of justice. Only then will the world understand that the God of Tango is peaceful.”

Video popped up of a similarly dressed guerilla fighter, except this one represented the Pango side of the island.

“The Tangonians are filthy pigs who want to live in the dark ages,” the Pangonian’s translator said. “That’s fine, but why do they insist that Pangonians must live in the past with them? Only when we blow the Tangonians to smithereens will they realize the error of their ways.”

“The war between the Pangonians and Tangonians has consumed the island of Pango Tango for twenty years, decimating its natural resources, leaving the populace in a constant state of disease ridden starvation,” the anchorman continued.

“Young Duffers, can we change the channel?” Monroe said as he finally walked into the living room. “I hear there’s a show about real housewives that’s supposed to be a real gas.”

I directed a “Shhh!” at Monroe and kept watching.

Video of an enormous mountain appeared.

“The island nation has suffered culturally as well,” the announcer explained. “Historical scholars claim that the peak of Mount. Morabuku is home to a wise, all-knowing being known simply as ‘The Great Guru.’”

A photo popped up of an old man with a bushy white beard.

The Great Guru - he digs flannel.

The Great Guru – he digs flannel.

“According to legend, The Great Guru became the wisest man in the entire world after he literally read every book ever written,” the announcer said. “Prior to the outbreak of the Pango-Tango conflict, adventurers from around the world would climb the treacherous mountain all the way to the peak just to pose questions to the Guru and peruse his voluminous library.”

“The game is afoot!” Holmes yelled.

“Get the hell outta’ here,” I said.

“Shakespeare told you that you would find the path to the meaning of life in a most annoying manner!” Holmes said. “Your pet lead you to this news report on your television by barking in an annoying manner!”

“Can’t beat that logic, Young Duffer,” Monroe said.

I walked over to the TV and plucked a bag of dog biscuits off the table it was sitting on.

“Battle Dog was begging for these!” I said as I pulled out a biscuit and tossed it at furry security chief, who caught it in his little jaws and devoured it.

“He doesn’t know anything about the meaning of life! He’s a dog.”

“This man,” Holmes said. “The Great Guru. He’s read every book ever written! Surely if you ask him about the meaning of life he will provide you with a valuable response.”

“You want me to travel to a war zone, climb a mountain, and find a Guru who has been cut off from society for twenty years and therefore might not even be alive?” I asked.

“The characters on your bookshelf do things like that everyday,” Holmes said. “What’s the problem?”

“Do I really need to explain the difference between the real and fantasy worlds again?” I asked.

“BARK!”

“I consider myself a man of science, Mr. Bookshelf,” Watson said. “But in this case, I’ll make an exception to note this all seems to be a message of a divine nature.”

“BARK! BARK!”

“You know they might have some native women with loose morals on that island, Young Duffer,” Monroe said.

“Still not worth it,” I replied.

“BARK!”

“What?” I yelled, turning to Bookshelf Battle Q. Dog. “What do you want, boy?”

Battle Dog raised a paw to his mouth, coughed to clear his throat, and then spoke in a deep baritone that would make James Earl Jones blush.

Bookshelf Q. Battledog - body of a Papillion, heart of a Doberman.

Bookshelf Q. Battledog – body of a Papillion, heart of a Doberman.

“Bookshelf Q. Battler,” Battle Dog said. “I find it necessary to inform you that while I enjoyed that biscuit very much, my desire for it had nothing to do with my decision to call you in here. Out of nowhere, I felt a strong, almost supernatural desire to call you in to watch the television. I jumped on the remote control and that news story came on, which I found odd, because the last time this television was on, it was tuned to the AWE network, because Monroe stayed up all night last night watching in Dying Drug Making Scientist marathon.”

My companions and I stared at the little mutt. We were all in shock.

“Am I hallucinating or did my dog just talk?” I asked.

“No, we definitely heard your pooch talk, Young Duffer.”

“Oh Good,” I said. “The tiny version of the Incorrigible Monroe who climbs out of my copy of a 1920’s masterpiece of a novel every once in awhile to eat my food and watch my television just confirmed my dog can talk. Now I know I’m not crazy.”

“You’re not crazy,” Holmes said, eyeballing Battle Dog through a magnifying glass. “Speak again, canine!”

“BARK!”

“No,” I said. “Don’t bark. Use your words.”

“BARK! BARK!”

“Most have been some kind of anomaly,” Watson said.

“I’m not sure what freaks me out more,” I said. “The fact that my dog just spoke to me or the fact that so many weird things happen in this house that a talking dog seems normal to me.”

“I’ve seen a television program in which a group of detectives with powers as keen as mine unveiled such a mystery,” Holmes said as he looked up at Battle Dog’s face. “Tell me, sir! Are you an actual dog or are you a small old man in dog costume attempting to frighten Mr. Bookshelf out of his home as part of an elaborate real estate swindle?”

“BARK! BARK!”

“Inconclusive answer I’m afraid, Holmes,” Watson said.

I turned and walked out of the room.

“Mr. Bookshelf!” Holmes called. “Where are you going?”

“To pack,” I said. “If a talking dog isn’t a sign that I need to visit the Great Guru, then I don’t know what is.”

A talking dog?  Now we’ve seen everything!  Another installment of BQB and the Meaning of Life to come!

Copyright (C) Bookshelf Q. Battler 2015. All Rights Reserved. 

And obviously, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is the man.

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Project X – June 1

Guns.  Dames.  Mysteries.

She's making a withdrawal.  Ha!  I'm hilarious.

She’s making a withdrawal. Ha! I’m hilarious.

Bank robbing babes.

The special (yet to be named) project Bookshelf Q. Battler is working on has it all.

Have you missed the promos?

Time to catch up:

Project X – Sneak Peak

Mickey Finn 

Hatcher’s Ex-Wives

Mr. Devil Man 

Capt. Thaddeus Talbot

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BQB and the Meaning of Life – Part 7 – The Butt Pillow

PREVIOUSLY ON BOOKSHELF Q. BATTLER AND THE MEANING OF LIFE…

PARTS 1-5 – In which BQB dies on the toilet, wakes up in God’s Waiting Room, and is told he must seek out the meaning of life in order to find one brief moment of contentment.

PART 6 – Dr. Goetleib loses one hundred bucks after betting his patient wouldn’t make it.  He explains that crapping lightning is a more common medical problem than one might think.

Tiny Tessa, no taller than a few inches, stood on my chest, sulking and pouting.

I was back home, resting in my own bed, recovering from my recent attempt to pass concentrated lightning out of a place that was definitely not designed to be a conduit for electricity.

“I’m sorry,” Tessa mumbled, refusing to make eye contact.

“For?” I asked.

The heroine of the Arrowblast book series looked straight at me.

“Fine!” Tessa said. “I am sorry for violating the cease fire agreement you negotiated between the Arrowblast books and Tales of the Lost French Children books on your bookshelf. You decreed that all characters from these books must stop fighting. I ignored your order. You got hurt.”

“And how did I get hurt?” I asked.

“I really have to say?” Tessa asked, kicking one of the buttons on my pajama shirt with her black boot.

“It’s the only way you’ll learn,” I said.

Like a teenage daughter caught taking the family car out for an unapproved joyride, Tessa folded her arms and expelled an exaggerated sigh.

“When I fired explosive arrows at your copy of The Journey of the Tedious Plotline, I woke you up at 3 a.m.,” Tessa said. “Had I not interrupted your sleepy time, you would have not gone to the kitchen, and your toaster pastry would not have been struck by lightning.”

“And?”  I asked.

“What?”  Tessa asked.  “You’re the one who actually ate a lightning infused toaster pastry!  That’s on you, pal!”

“Good point,”  I said.

Jean Paul Crossantier, the second son of the family who gets chronically lost in Tales of the Lost French Children, had been standing quietly next to Tessa the entire time.  Finally, he chimed in.

“Oui oui I’m also sorry for the role my siblings and I played in this mess, Mr. Bookshelf,”  Jean Paul said with a French accent.  “I told my sister Emmy not to hang that ‘Tessa Stinks!’ banner off the side of your bookshelf, but she refused to listen to reason.”

“Mistakes happen,”  I said.  “I just wish you all could get along.  I love you all and there’s enough room in my heart and on my shelf for all of you.  There’s no need to fight.”

Little tears welled up in the eyes of Tiny Tessa and Tiny Jean Paul.

“I’ll admit sometimes we do take your role as the caretaker of the bookshelf for granted,”  Tessa said.

“Yes,”  Jean Paul added.  “By the way, Mr. Bookshelf, how is it possible that all of the characters in the books on your cramped bookshelf come to life in miniature versions of themselves and then proceed to attack one another over the limited space on your shelf?”

“I don’t know, Jean Paul,” I said. “How does your family climb down a hatch underneath a laundry hamper and end up in a magical land that is being fought over by a hideous crone and a saintly aardvark?  Stuff just happens.  Stop asking dumb questions.”

“Yeah, Jean Paul!”  Tessa said.  “You’re totally the Benedict Arnold of your story anyway!”

Aunt Gertie, wearing an apron and a pair of yellow dish washing gloves, walked into my room. Tessa and Jean Paul seized up and remained completely still.

“BQB,” Aunt Gertie said. “I took out your trash, did your laundry, washed your dishes, baked you some cookies, and made you a big pot of soup.”

“Thanks Aunt Gertie,” I said. “You’re the best.”

“Do you need anything else before I shuffle off to the nursing home you dumped me in because you could care less about the Aunt who raised you?”

Good Ole’ Guilt Trip Gertie.

“That place is a palace!” I said. “They’ve got a swimming pool, jacuzzi, sauna, make your own sundae bar…Jeeze Gertie, I wish I lived at that nursing home!”

“Oh big fancy sundae bar!” Aunt Gertie said. “Patooie! They don’t even have rum raisin.”

“Yeah,” I said. “That really stinks, Gert. So uhhh…I guess you’d best mosey along now. You don’t want to miss the four p.m. dinner special…”

“Will you look at this?” Gertie said as she grabbed the still and silent Tessa. She lifted the tiny person up to her face and squinted at her.

Gertie's Husband/BQB's Uncle, the late and notoriously grumpy Hardass G. Scrambler.

Gertie’s Husband/BQB’s Uncle, the late and notoriously grumpy Hardass J. Scrambler. “Abandon all your dreams and take any job you can!” he once told BQB at his third birthday party, and literally every day after that until the day he died (and also he mentioned it from beyond the grave in his will).  Sometimes BQB is fairly certain he can hear Uncle Hardass’ ghost roaming the compound’s halls, but it could just be the wind.

“A grown man playing with dolls!” Aunt Gertie said. “Your Uncle Hardass would roll over in his grave if he could see this!”

“It’s not a doll!” I said. “She’s a…a…”

“What?” Aunt Gertie asked.

“A limited edition collector’s item!” I said. “Can I have that back? It’ll go down in value if you get finger prints on it.”

Aunt Gertie set Tessa down in my hand.

“Where’s your donut?” Aunt Gertie asked.

“My what?”

“Your donut!” Aunt Gertie said. “Your inflatable butt pillow! Dr. Goetleib specifically prescribed that to you to ease the pain your cheeks are in!”

“Only when you’re sitting,” I said. “I’m lying down.”

“I don’t think it makes a difference,” Aunt Gertie said. “Use your butt pillow!”

This episode of BQB and the Meaning of Life brought to you by the good folks of Acme Butt Pillows, Inc.  - Acme, we'll provide the donut, you provide the glaze!

This episode of BQB and the Meaning of Life brought to you by the good folks of Acme Butt Pillows, Inc. – Acme, we’ll provide the donut, you provide the glaze!

“There’s no pressure on my butt,” I said. “I’m not in a sitting position and therefore the weight of my body is not resting on my butt. I don’t need a butt pillow at the moment Gert, that’s just science!  You can’t argue with science!!!”

Aunt Gertie turned and walked away. I heard her voice trail off as she walked down the hallway.

“I’m going to call your doctor as soon as I get home and I’m going to get to the bottom of this…and another thing, why do you…blah blah blah….”

Tessa  and Jean Paul, who had been holding their breath the entire time, gasped for air. They choked and sputtered as they began moving around again.

“Your Aunt needs a breathe mint!” Tessa complained.

Here’s a fun fact about book characters who come to life in miniature form thanks to a magic bookshelf. They watch a lot of television. They are particularly interested in science-fiction.

What is one of the oldest sci-fi tropes? Hide the alien because if the government gets its hands on him, they’ll dissect him and study him in a lab. Assuming that practice would extend to tiny representations of literary characters, the beings from my bookshelf only trusted me.

I never told anyone about them, not even Aunt Gertie. Whenever another human was around, they stopped in their tracks and remained still. In fact, one might say that to the untrained eye, they just looked like a bunch of silly action figures.

Jean Paul laughed hysterically.

“What?” I asked.

“Butt…you…you have a butt pillow!”

Copyright (C) Bookshelf Q. Battler 2015.  All Rights Reserved.

Angry old man photo courtesy of a shutterstock.com license.

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The Funky Hunks Redux

Bookshelf Q. Battler.

BQB aka Read N. Plenty, one half of the highly sanitized rap duo,

BQB aka Read N. Plenty, one half of the highly sanitized rap duo, “The Funky Hunks.”

Today you know him as the host of a blog with 3.5 readers.

Surely more of you remember him from his days as one half of the late 90’s/early 2000’s rap duo, “The Funky Hunks.”

(Back then he rapped under the name Read N. Plenty).

Yes, BQB and his childhood friend Bernie Plotznick aka MC Plotz once briefly tasted fame and fortune with their album, “Non-Threatening White Boys.”

Universally ignored/panned by the youth of the day, they were beloved by stretch pants clad soccer moms the world over, who couldn’t get enough of their overly tame lyrics.  They devoured songs like:

BE NICE AND STUFF

By:  The Funky Hunks

Yo. 1999. It’s singin’ time!
Let’s kick it!

Funky Hunks are on the scene,
Always polite and never mean!
Brush your teeth and say your prayers,
Ladies at dinner? Pull out their chairs!

Funky Hunks, don’t disrespect!
Or a stern rebuke is what you can expect!
Carry an umbrella in case there’s sleet!
Look both ways before crossin’ the street!

Funky hunks! We’re on a mission.
Tellin’ you to turn off the television.
Go outside.
Read a book.
Grab a friend, a casserole you will cook!

Give that food to a homeless man!
Then sing a funky hunk jam!
‘Cuz you know deep down in your heart
Doin’ good is where to start!

Ugh…ugh…yeah….break it down…

The International War Criminal, Mythical Furry Monster and BQB arch nemesis known simply as “The Yeti” was actually in charge of writing this story (in an effort to embarrass BQB), but he dropped the ball during the whole war over control of BQB HQ earlier this year.  Hopefully he’ll get his furry hide in gear and finish it for your reading pleasure.

shutterstock_152431793

In the meantime, enjoy Bookshelf Q. Battler and the Meaning of Life and the yet to be titled Project X coming in June.

Rapper and Yeti images courtesy of a shutterstock.com license.

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