The Best for the Money
Last Sunday our family spent quite a bit of the day watching Wimbledon’s Gentlemen’s Championship. It was one of the most exciting athletic events I’ve seen in some time. Both Federer and Nadal are amazing athletes and tennis players, and the fact that it was the longest match ever played at Wimbledon spoke to the power, talent, and sheer mental energy they both embody. I was probably more exhausted by the end than either of them.
This got my family talking about athletes and how much they get paid when they are the best in the world. It’s an insane amount of money, no matter what sport you play — tennis, soccer, baseball, football, golf… And it also made me think of different careers, and how there are a minimal number of people judged to be “the best” who get paid fortunes to do what they do: develop computers, manage large corporations, practice law. The list goes on.
But what about the arts? There are a very few people in the entertainment industry who make the same kind of money as top tier athletes. We can all name some of them. But I have to ask myself…when it comes to writing books, are those authors who are getting paid millions really “the best?”
In sports, there are effective ways to judge who is the best. Statistics, namely, but also by simply observing them. Who could watch Tiger a few weeks ago and not think he is one of the best golfers ever? Who could watch tennis this last Sunday and think that these two men are not at the top of the game? The men and women competing in the Olympic trials continue to match and beat U.S. and World records.
So I’m wondering…how can books be judged in this way? There aren’t statistics when it comes to writing, unless you count grammar or typos, and those generally get edited out. There are, of course, sales numbers, but we all know how that can be taken care of pretty much by the publisher’s marketing scheme. But there are no hard core facts to say, “Yes, this is one of the best writers ever.”
We all have our favorite writers. There are those who really can tell a story better than most, or come up with amazing characters and plots, or write with a prose so beautiful it makes you cry. It’s such a subjective enterprise. But are those the people who really sell? Who get the numbers?
What if, when it comes down to it, it really is what the consumer wants that counts? Do we all write a thriller if that’s what they call for? Perhaps that will get us the sales, but does that make what we write “the best?”
Yes, I’m sure some of the writers who make the millions (yes, there really are people out there like that), are great writers, and not many of us will ever be able to do what they do. But there are a lot of others out there who can write just as well, who haven’t been able to break into the business because of any number of reasons.
I’m really not being cynical. I know the world and business are complex and weird. But the whole thing has just gotten me thinking.
Any words of wisdom from the rest of you?
The (Boring) Writing Life
We talked about it just a couple weeks ago, and it happened to me this week–I had to turn down a speaking engagement because of the distance (Cincinnati) and gas prices. Too bad, I would have loved to meet with this book discussion group. They are big Pepper Martin fans and believe me, there’s nothing I like (or need!) more. But it’s impossible to duck reality, and gas prices are as real as they get. I promised them, when prices go down . . .
Let’s hope we see that happen one of these days!
In other news . . . well, there really isn’t any other news. I commented to a fellow writer recently that when we’re working, we’re actually pretty boring people. I am currently working on Pepper Martin mystery #5 (tentatively titled “Dead Man Talking”) and I’ve got my nose to the grindstone every day. Not much time for anything else, and since the book is due mid-October, it looks like it will be a work-not-play summer.
I am anxiously waiting to see the cover of Pepper Martin mystery #4 (“Night of the Loving Dead”). The book will be on store shelves January 6, 2009. That was sounding like a long way off when I first heard it. Now it’s right around the corner! When I finally get a look at the cover, I’ll post it here.
In the meantime, I don’t think I had a chance last week to thank the nice folks over at Loganberry Books in Cleveland’s Larchmere neighborhood for inviting me to be part of the Larchmere Festival a couple weekends ago. I sat next to CR and we had a nice time chatting. It’s always good to connect with readers, too, and I met a number of them who are Pepper fans. Even the fact that Zorro lost the car keys (yes, that part of CR’s reportage of the events was true) didn’t dampen the day!
Chicago!
Chicago is still that todlin’ town. I don’t know exactly what that means,(to walk with short, tottering steps???) but it seems to fit. The windy city is still full of energy and vibrance. A blustery, bluesy sense of urgency that you don’t find even in New York, with it’s trendy 5th Avenue style and it’s faux Eastern culture.
Chicago is where you get a real pizza or bratwurst and savor it like a good steak. It’s a city where the legend of a goat has kept the Cubs from winning a national championship for decades. It’s a town where Billy Sunday crusaded against the bars and Al Capone and Frank Nitty ran the lawless side of Chicago during prohibition. It’s a city of contradiction, and that may be what keeps it alive. Excitement crackles at every streetcorner and it’s my favorite city in the country. My kind of town, Chicago is…
We saw Jersey Boys this week, and the cast was as good or better than Broadway. We ate at the Italian Village, although we could have found about 10,000 great restaurants all over the city. We finished off one evening drinking champagne at Pops, a bar dedicated to champagne…and sinful desserts.
Then we drove up to Lake Geneva, Wisconsin where our friends have a cottage. It’s a lake where the rich Chicago folks go for the weekend. Oprah, The Wrigleys, and hundreds of people who have huge bucks to toss around have built mansions on the shores of this storied lake. Ten thousand square foot palaces are common. Unfortunately our friends don’t have one of those.
Fireworks over the water while drinking wine on a boat in the middle of the lake capped off a perfect Friday. Hope you all had a great holiday!
Where’s Don?
Sorry to say, Don’s blog will be late today — if it appears at all.
It seems he was splashing around in an inner tube and was washed out to sea.
It’s good enough for us
My mother is one of those Depression-era women dedicated to living a no-frills life. Her motto is, “It’s good enough for us.”
If our house wasn’t as fancy as some other people’s, well, “It’s good enough for us.”
Or if our car wasn’t as expensive, or our clothes as nice, or our furniture as new, or our food as fancy, whatever it was, it was good enough for us.
Which brings me to the lunch I fixed for my mother on Saturday.
You see, my brother is a farmer with a day job. He has very little time to get away. This past week he told me he was thinking of going up to Kelley’s Island for the day on Saturday. Take his grandsons. Leave early and get home late. Which meant that my mother, who lives with him at the farm, would be home alone all day long.
Now you ask, why didn’t he just take my mother to Kelley’s Island with him?
There’s is no way in hell she’s going to Kelley’s Island, or anywhere else fancy folks go. The long ride, the ferry, all the hoo-hah and folderol. “I’ll stay right here in my chair,” she says when you try to get her to venture out of the house these days.
So my brother wanted me to go to the farm and keep an eye on her. Instead I decided to bring her to my house. Feed her lunch, let her nap. She didn‘t want to come, of course, but after three days of pleading I somehow persuaded her.
It had rained all week and the lawn needed moving and the patio was a mess and the flower beds a disaster. So even though it was the July 4th weekend, lunch would be inside. But then the forecast improved and I figured, what the heck, a little picnic on the patio for mumsy.
And I might as well invite some other people.
My oldest daughter, Jen, is in South Carolina on vacation with her fiancé and their assorted children (there’s a rumor they’re going to get married while they’re down there) so I couldn’t invite her. But my other daughter, Kary, was available. So I invited her, and asked her to bring along her husband and a bag of charcoal.
Friday morning Carol and I went out early and bagged all the branches I had piled up in the backyard from a recent tree-trimming fit I’d had. Then I went inside and painted the French doors and molding in the sunroom while Carol went to the Humane Society to help out. Then I went grocery shopping and did some house cleaning. A dirty house would have been good enough for my mother and me, but not for Carol.
The lawn had dried out, so I went out and mowed. Then I washed the mold off the lawn chairs and picnic table with hot water and Clorox and cleaned off the back of the house with a hose. Then I got down on my hands and knees and pulled out all the weeds that had grown up between the stone slabs on the patio. Then I swept and hosed. Because we’d had such a rainy June, we hadn’t cleaned out the flower beds yet. So racing against the setting sun, I cleaned out the beds and put down fresh mulch. Oh, yeah. I also put out the flag.
When Carol got home, she went to work cleaning the house better than I had. We talked about me picking up some Chinese for a late supper, but we were both pooped and settled for peanut butter and jelly.
Saturday morning we got up early and took the dogs out for their walk. I’d gotten up with a horrible back ache from all that crawling and mulch-lugging the day before. Halfway into the walk I got horrible back spasms and had to lay down in the street and scream until they went away. I hobbled home with Dudley while Carol went on with Nellie. Right in front of our house I had another bout of spasms. Laid in the driveway and screamed some more.
Now I had to make macaroni salad and deviled eggs and bake a shortcake. And I had to get out the charcoal grill and clean it. And get out all the picnic ware. All while bent over like Groucho Marks.
Carol picked up my mother. Kary arrived with Brian and the charcoal. And we had a grand 4th of July feast: hamburgers and veggie burgers and Hungarian sausages, macaroni salad, deviled eggs, iced tea and root beer and lemonade, shortcake and watermelon. And the yard looked great and it was sunny but not too hot.
And then two hours after it started it was over. Carol had to work an evening editing shift at the paper and Kary and Brian had somewhere to go. So I took my mother back to the farm and spend the evening with her. We both had a nice nap and then she offered me dinner. We had cinnamon toast and milk.
Which was good enough for me.
Happy 4th
All of us at Little Blog wish you a very happy 4th of July!
An Oldie but…Goodie?
My husband came home from the library yesterday with some “guy” movies. (his term, not mine) Among the stack was the movie 48 Hours. Remember that one? Nick Nolte? Eddie Murphy? It was pretty popular at the time.
Now, for some reason, our library got it in DVD. Hubby brought it home. We tried watching it tonight, and all I can say is…what? The acting is horrible, the writing even worse, and the language? Can we say lots and lots of unnecessary bad language?
Were standards really that bad twenty years ago, or did this one just slip by somehow?
(Oh, and sorry to any of you who are fans. This is, of course, my very personal opinion.)
But that brings me to the subject of bad language in books.
When I first began the Stella Crown series, I peppered it with bad language. Lots of the “s” word (Stella is, after all, a farmer), some of the other words, and even the f-bomb. Not many people have said things about it, but I have gotten some scolding e-mails (”I thought you were Mennonite!”) and it’s made me a bit uncomfortable at times when recommending my book to people.
With each book in the series I have used profanity less and less. Why, you ask? For a few reasons.
First, Stella herself is mellowing. While she has certainly not become what anyone might call sweet, she has become slightly less abrasive.
Spinning Out of Control
All the crazy stories that have been flung around this blog lately (not yours yesterday, Don, that one sounded 100% authentic, down to the riot gear and the dogs) have coalesced inside my head along with the other thing I’ve been thinking a lot about these past days–fiber.
No, no. Not Grape Nuts, or celery, or whole wheat bread. Not the fiber you eat. The fiber you knit, crochet and weave with.
You see, last Friday, I attended an all-day spinning workshop. I had a fabulous time, the instructor was great, and I came home with a skein of pretty good looking yarn that I made myself. It was a great sense of accomplishment!
All that got me to thinking how closely working with fiber and writing are related. After all, we writers
Spin yarns
Weave stories from whole cloth (especially on this blog!)
Knit together plots
We embellish, and sometimes we pull apart and start our spinning and our weaving and our knitting all over again.
Maybe that’s why fiber appeals to me so. When I weave or knit or spin, I get a break from writing, but there are still connections, as well as the essential down time all our brains need to re-energize, re-charge and just let themselves go to be creative. All the while my fingers work over the fiber, my brain is spinning, too
Have a happy–and safe–Fourth of July!
The Safest Place To Be
New York was great. With gas prices being what they are, with costs going up, that city hasn’t lost a step. The shops and restaurants seem to be as busy as ever. Broadway plays are sold out, and the city is bustling.
We did have dinner at 21, Lunch with the number one selling author in the country last week, Lee Child, visited the MOMA and saw Jersey Boys, the story of Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons. I’d seen it before and it just gets better. Jersey Boys is playing in L.A., Chicago, Vegas and coming to other cities in the next year. Look for it. It’s a very uplifting show.
I interviewed with a freelance writer for an article in SKY Magazine, Delta’s in-house mag. The article should come out in the spring, the same time Bahama Burnout releases. We met in Bryant Park, behind the New York Public Library, sitting in the sun listening to the traffic and construction noise that almost drowns out conversation. After about an hour and a half we said our goodbys and I started to leave the park. Standing on two sets of steps that lead down to the sidewalk were four policemen. They wore Helmets, bulletproof vests, heavy boots, and they all had machine guns cradled in their arms. Two of the men had dogs on strong leashes.
I stopped, debating if I wanted to leave or stay. If something was going down, I wanted to know what. And, I wanted to get out of Dodge if it looked dangerous. After a moment, I decided to take the bull by the horns. I walked up to one of the cops with the machine gun and dog and simply said..”What’s going on?”
He replied. “We show up two or three times a week, all over the city. You never know where we’ll be. It’s a part of our anti-terrorism campaign.”
I nodded. “So it’s safe to be here, in Bryant Park?”
He smiled. “Sir, right now, this is the safest place to be in New York City.”
For every season, turn, turn turn . . .
Two life-altering events dovetailed this week. Events so emotional and personal that I really shouldn’t be telling you about them. But, what the hey! This is a mystery blog and what is life but the mystery of all mysteries?
Life-Altering event No. 1:
This is my final week of painting. Oh yes, I suppose I’ll paint again. Someday. A little here. A little there. But the real painting – the ten-year juggernaut of applied pigmentation that coincides with the decade that I’ve been with Carol—is coming to an end.
Let’s go back ten years.
Within three months of our hooking-up, as the youngsters say, I agreed to paint her screened-in back porch while she went to Cape Cod with her sister. I painted the ceiling and all those 2×4s between the screen panels and then tackled the concrete floor. I painted half of it then tried to figure out how I was going to move the big picnic table from the other half all by myself, Carol being in Cape Cod and all. I couldn’t just drag it. That would scuff up the half I’d already painted. So, I crawled under the table and lifted the table up on my back, like the shell of a Galapagos turtle, and then slowly, in great agony, duck-walked the table to the other side. It was while in this position that I realized how much in love I must be.
Over the next three years a non-stop succession of painting projects followed. I painted the outside of her house. Both the brick parts and the siding parts. Then I started painting inside. Bedroom one. Bedroom two. The hall. The bathroom. The living room. The kitchen. The stairwell to the basement. All the windows and doors.
Then we got married and Carol decided that we needed a bigger house for all the garage sale furniture I was refinishing for her. And so we bought the house we now have. But before we could move, I had to re-plaster and paint the inside of the garage in order to make the place sellable. I also painted the front porch floor and both gable ends of the house, which had acquired a bit of ugly black mold. This was in January.
Then we moved to the new place. I stripped off all the horrible ‘70s wallpaper and then start painting: Bedroom hallway. Two bathrooms. Two bedrooms. The office. Dining room. Living room. Kitchen. Foyer. Every inch of baseboard and door moldings and crown moldings and wainscoting. I’ve painted the kitchen cabinets, too. Three coats! And now here I am. Down to the last room. The sunroom. I have two more coats to go on one remaining wall and then, after painting the French doors and the molding, I will be done. And no, Carol, the basement does not need painting.
Life-altering event No. 2: I’ve finally met Zorro.
Saturday was the Larchmere Street Festival & Flea Market in Cleveland. Since Casey and I were both going to participate in the accompanying authors’ event sponsored by Loganberry Books, we decided to bring our spouses. Afterwards the four of us would have dinner at The Balaton, a great Hungarian restaurant just one block away on Shaker Square. And I’d finally get to meet the mysterious Zorro.
He and I had been teasing each other for a year on this website, but we’d never actually met. Three or four times during the past year we’d made plans that fell through. So Saturday would be the big day!
When Carol and I arrived, Casey was already set up in the alley next to the bookstore with the 15 or 20 other local authors who had come to sell their wares. Alas, Zorro was nowhere in sight. Casey said he’d gone down the street to get a haircut and would be back soon. Carol quickly disappeared, too. Not to get a haircut. To shop. So, there I was, lawnchair to lawnchair with the famous Casey Daniels, soaking in her wisdom.
Man, can that woman complain. It was too hot. It was too windy. She wasn’t selling enough books. She was hungry. Only when her favorite mystery author in the whole world showed up — Cleveland’s own Les Roberts — did her frown turn upside down.
But alas, Casey soon disappeared, too. And I was left alone to be cooked alive in that hot-air corn-popper of an alley.
Finally, late in the afternoon, Casey and Carol returned. Then, lo and behold, who should appear but Zorro. He’d not only gotten a haircut, he’d had a burger and beer at the Academy Tavern. We shook hands. Gave each other the once over.
Actually, Zorro is not as funny looking as you’d imagine. Yes, the mask was a bit disconcerting at first, as were the colorful bells hanging from the brim of his black hat, and the pink fringe from his cape, but after a while my fears were gone and we had a fine chat.
Then it was time for us to go to dinner.
Zorro immediately announced that he could not find his car keys. So off he went in the pouring rain to find them. They weren’t at the Academy Tavern. They weren’t locked in the car. They weren’t anywhere on the sidewalk. Perhaps they were at the barbershop – the barbershop that had already closed.
I was impressed at how calm Casey and Zorro were about losing their car keys. I got the feeling it had happened once or twice before.
(I should add that their car is not some dippy little red station wagon that no one would look twice at. It’s a shiny black BMW. A 2008. No way could they leave that on the street overnight in Cleveland where it might get towed, or vandalized or stolen.)
No reason to change our plans, said I. We’d go to dinner. Carol and I would drive them home. They could get their other set of keys and then drive back to Cleveland in their other Beemer. All before dark.
So, we piled in our tiny VW and drove down to The Balaton. We had a fine dinner. Zorro did not let the lost keys affect his appetite. He ordered the Magyar Tál, which is Hungarian for “enough stuffed cabbage, veal paprikash, and wiener schnitzel for five Olympic weightlifters.” He finished this off with an enormous wedge of Dobosh Torte – “eight layers of rich cake, with seven layers of smooth creamy chocolate, covered with hard-caramel.” Casey managed one teeny-weenie forkful.
(To be fair, I had the Dobosh torte, too. But I let my wife have two forkfuls.)
The real embarrassment came when Zorro tried to pay with Spanish dabloons. The waitress wouldn’t take them. They only accepted dollars, Hungarian forints and Visa. Zorro, who’d obviously had way too much schnitzel, was just about to throw the violin player into the fish tank when Casey came to the rescue. She wiggled her nose and changed the waitress into an apple strudel. We ran for it.
On the way to the Daniels’ mansion in hoity-toity Brecksville, Zorro had us stop at Dairy Queen. We watched while he ate a large M&Ms Blizzard. Then we dropped them off at the front gate to their estate and Carol and I headed home to humble Akron.
Did Casey and Zorro find their other set of keys? And go back to Cleveland for their BMW? Did Zorro explode during the night? Will their bedroom need repainting? Can’t say. We’ll see if either of them check in this morning.
By the way, somebody left two great PBS umbrellas in our trunk Saturday. Let’s start the bid at $6 each (US dollars or forints only).











