What if?

•February 14, 2012 • Leave a Comment

Yesterday a friend suggested a movie to me, The Texas Killing Fields, starring Sam Worthington and Jeffrey Dean Morgan.  It sounded familiar to me and when I looked it up online I discovered why, because I had watched a CBS 48 Hours news story about the real life unsolved murders in the stretch between Houston and Galveston known as ‘the killing fields’.   Over the last few decades a sickening number of young women have been brutally victimized then dumped in the old oil fields.  A few of the cases have been solved but the majority have not.  While watching it again yesterday I remembered something I mentioned in an earlier post about the Black Dahlia murder, how if I could go back in time it would be to find out who committed that horrendous crime.

Here’s where the what ifs comes in. What if we could somehow travel back to the hour each one of these girls was last seen and follow her, see who takes her?  Write down tag numbers, descriptions, rush it to the proper authorities…but wait.  If that much was possible why wouldn’t we simply warn the girl not to get in the car with the man or tell her not to leave home that day?  Because if we do warn her we’ll never see who picks her up and he’ll simply go and pick up some other girl.  So many stories have been written about going back in time to alter history, but because of all the variables I suspect that like mythology’s Cassandra we would find ourselves unable to change a thing.

And if we had to satisfy ourselves with simply seeing the truth of the moment, discovering who did it (who and how many shot JFK, who was Jack the Ripper, etc.) and could not alter any part of it, would we still do it?  I’m no longer sure I would. Something tells me it would feel a lot like the last day of the O.J.Simpson trial, and that day sucked.  Are the answers to such mysteries worth having simply for the sake of knowing?

Link to the 48 Hours story on CBS: http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=7385610n

Trailer for The Texas Killing Fields, starring Sam Worthington and Jeffrey Dean Morgan

Valentine Poem

•February 13, 2012 • Leave a Comment

 

 

One Perfect Rose
A single flow’r he sent me, since we met,
All tenderly his messenger he chose;
Deep-hearted pure, with scented dew still wet – –
One perfect rose.

I know the language of the floweret.
My fragile leaves, it said, his heart enclose.
Love long has taken for his amulet
One perfect rose.

Why is it no one ever sent yet
One perfect limousine, do you suppose?
Ah no, it’s always just my luck to get
One perfect rose.
– Dorothy Parker

The Slaughters of the Race

•February 8, 2012 • Leave a Comment

http://www.amazon.com/Slaughters-Race-ebook/dp/B0073T41TM/

While doing a stint for bank fraud the unlucky Joe Riggins meets kindly Chung Zhang whom he learns murdered nine women in a bizarre trafficking scheme for old money back in China. In prison the elderly man is his mentor, but Zhang befriended Joe for a reason, he realizes after women start dying again upon Joe’s release. As he begins to suspect the plan for his downfall is bigger than anyone can imagine, involving perhaps his own government, unexpected help comes in the form of cool, inhibited and very British restaurant owner Hester Haley and the unlikeliest ally of all, a cop who believes him.

 

With Affection, Jack the Ripper

•February 7, 2012 • Leave a Comment

What a delight to find a childhood favorite, a series that whet my appetite for all things paranormal.  If Rod Serling’s The Twilight Zone opened that door for the generations then The Sixth Sense wedged it firmly open for my young mind. 

 

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The Texas Moonlight Murders

•February 3, 2012 • 2 Comments

Catie did a great job here. Be sure to watch the film and the video link she recommends at the end.

LiveLeak.com – Dandelion Root coffee wilderness survival Native American coffee

•January 26, 2012 • 1 Comment

LiveLeak.com – Dandelion Root coffee wilderness survival Native American coffee.

Too good not to share.  And if you like this one, check out LiveLeak for the fish trap video.

Why I Love the Internet

•January 19, 2012 • 4 Comments

I found this on GhostTheory, submitted by Scott McMan.  My January blahs instantly lifted.  Thanks, Scott.  Thanks GhostTheory.  Thanks to all the  commenters, who wouldn’t believe dirt is brown if you showed them with a shovel.  They’ll call it bullshit instead, every time.

I don’t care. I love it. It gives me the willies.  It fascinates me.  It makes me want to know more.  It makes me want to learn French.

 

 

Quote of the Day: Bennett Cerf

•January 12, 2012 • 1 Comment

This about says it all…don’t you think?

Angela's avatarLA Screenwriter

Coleridge was a drug addict. Poe was an alcoholic. Marlowe was killed by a man whom he was treacherously trying to stab. Pope took money to keep a woman’s name out of a satire then wrote a piece so that she could still be recognized anyhow. Chatterton killed himself. Byron was accused of incest. Do you still want to be a writer – and if so, why?

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The Crypt Thieves

•December 31, 2011 • Leave a Comment

http://www.amazon.com/The-Crypt-Thieves-ebook/dp/B006PKSA06

A man hired to guard a crypt is betrayed by his ex-soldier sister who knows only part of what’s inside and doesn’t count on there being something else hidden in the gypsy crypt that not only the relatives, but every warring nation on the planet would kill to get their hands on.

If you enjoy this title look for others in my novella series: Betsy Klausmeyer’s Cellar, The Bear, and A Deep Red Gold.

The Bear

•December 31, 2011 • Leave a Comment

http://www.amazon.com/The-Bear-ebook/dp/B006OSEFQC

A man steps out of a building and into another time, where a fort is under siege from a plague and his task is to destroy the future from 1918 forward, if he can muster the will…

Another in my series of novellas. If you enjoyed Betsy Klausmeyer’s Cellar, look for A Deep Red Gold or The Crypt Thieves.