Wednesday, March 9, 2022

NO SOLICITING

  

By Kelvin Wade

            He started with thick sourdough bread with plenty of nooks to hold the sweet hot mustard he lathered on. Next came mounds of deli-sliced ham, oven roasted turkey and sharp cheddar, Swiss and Provolone cheeses lovingly laid upon each other like a master bricklayer plying his craft. He laid three pieces of hickory smoked bacon atop the cheese and covered it with green leaf lettuce, two scarlet slices of beefsteak tomato and ringlets of red onion. Sprinkles of kosher salt, fresh ground pepper and a splash of vinegar came next. Then he spread mayo on the top piece of bread before gently setting it atop his culinary creation. He slowly and solemnly moved the whole 5" high sandwich to a plate like a rocket moving from the assembly building to the launchpad. He laid a crisp glistening green Vlasic pickle next to it.

He carried the plate in one hand, two bottles of ice cold Miller Genuine Draft in the other and a bag of Cool Ranch Doritos in his teeth. He walked into the living room and set his food down on a side table next to an overstuffed recliner. On a tray on the other side of the chair sat a bowl of popcorn, small plate of buffalo wings, pretzels and a remote control. He plopped down, reclined and turned on the 55" LED TV on the wall.

The sports pundits onscreen sat behind a long desk talking about the individual match ups, game plans and who was favored. 

He tore open the bag of chips and ate a handful. Then he popped the top on one of his brews and drank some, the cold sparkling beer chasing the salty chips down. He reclined his seat further during the kickoff and reached for his massive sandwich.

That's when the doorbell rang. 

He cursed and stood, walking backwards, not taking his eyes off the TV screen. He opened the door to a teenaged boy holding a stack of newspapers.

"Hi, sir. Do you currently subscribe to the Daily Beacon?" the kid asked.

"What? No...no...I don't want the paper," he said, annoyed.

"If you act now, it's 70% off the newsstand price. Plus, we give you a complimentary-"

"No. No, kid, I don't want the paper!" he said and closed the door.

He sat back down in the recliner and picked up the sandwich. He took a bite and chased it with chips. Then he cursed when his team fumbled on the next play. He sipped some beer and his cell phone rang with Sir Mix-a-Lot's 'I Like Big Butts' ringtone. He knew it was his wife.

"Yeah?" he answered.

"What kind of way is that to answer the phone, Gordon?"

"Babe, the game is on."

"I'm at Linens and Things. Do you think maroon curtains for the living room slider would be better than crimson?"

"I don't know. Just get what you like. STOP HIM!" he said, his eyes fastened to the TV.

"Stop who?"

"Peterson. He's running all over us. We need some D," he said, pointing at the screen.

"Are you more interested in a game than our living room remodel?"

He didn't dare answer that honestly.

"Honey, I just trust your tastes. I'm sure you'll pick out the best stuff for our remodel."

"Uh huh," she said, scornfully. "Okay, I'll let you get back to your game."

He hung up and finished a bottle of beer. He cracked the top on the second beer when his team intercepted the ball and returned it for a touchdown. He leapt from his seat screaming and dancing and thrusting both fists in the air. He sat back down, bit his sandwich and stuffed some Doritos in his mouth. 

"Now this is a friggin' game!" he bellowed to no one in particular. 

His cell phone rang and he glanced at the screen. Blocked number. It was probably one of his buddies calling to celebrate the pick six. His pal Eddie had to work and was probably listening to the game on the radio and was calling from a blocked work number. He answered.

A feminine robot voice said, “Hello, it's your lucky day! This is Victory Vacations International and you've won an all expense paid two weeknight stay at the Luxor Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas! All you have to do is---”

“Awww, shut up!”

He clicked the phone off and drained his second beer. 

At the end of the first quarter, as soon as he rose to go to the bathroom, the doorbell rang. 

"Dammit!" he yelled, walking to the front door and opening it to two young girls holding a big white box.

"Hello. We're selling Girl Scout Cookies and wanted to know if you'd like to buy some?" the taller of the two girls asked. 

He wanted to slam the door in their faces for interrupting the game and interrupting his need to urinate. Still, he loved Thin Mint Cookies, especially frozen and dipped in his morning coffee. He fished his wallet out of his back pocket. 

"Lemme get three boxes of the Thin Mints," he said, pulling out a twenty dollar bill.

"Oh sorry...we're sold out of Thin Mints. We have Peanut Butter Patties, Shortbreads-"

He slammed the door and jogged to the bathroom where he peed like a pressure washer. He flushed the toilet and strolled past the sink and out to the kitchen to get two more beers from the fridge. He sat down in his recliner and opened one of the beers. 

His cell phone rang and he yelled the F word like a gunshot.

It was from a blocked number and at first he wasn't going to answer it but curiosity got the better of him. He answered and an automated voice asked him who he planned to vote for in the upcoming election. He clicked END CALL and for a moment wished it had been a person who'd called and he'd answered on a home phone so he could have the satisfaction of shouting something profane and slamming the receiver down.

He finished his sandwich and started working on the chicken wings and beer while his team struggled to maintain a 10-9 lead in the second quarter. His team was going for it on 4th and goal on the 1 yard line when the doorbell rang. He shouted his frustration and rose, still looking at the TV. 

The running back was stopped short of the goal and Gordon cursed a blue streak. He stomped to the front door and opened it to two young men in black slacks, white shirts and black ties. Behind them were two 10 speed bicycles. One appeared to be holding a book while the other held pamphlets.

"Hello, sir. I'm Bart and this is Eugene and we're with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and we were wondering if we could talk with you for a moment about matters of faith."

"Are you guys crazy?" he asked.

"No, sir," Eugene answered.

"The game's on. Don't you guys watch football?"

"No, sir," Bart answered politely.

"I'm not a religious guy but I think I want to get religion just so I can lose my religion and cuss you guys the hell out! I don't mean to be rude but get off my porch. If I had a dog I'd sic him on you. I'm tempted to grab the garden hose. Go bug my neighbors! I'm watchin' the damn game!!!" he said and slammed the door closed. 

On his way back to his seat his cell phone rang. He fired it at the wall and it shattered into five pieces. Then he stomped down the hall to where the plastic speaker was that chimed whenever someone rang the doorbell. He ripped off the cover and snatched the 9 volt battery out of the socket. 

He went back to his recliner and sat down to finish watching the game in peace. 

 

Shortly after halftime ended the front door opened and Gordon's wife stood in the foyer holding two bulging shopping bags.

“Oh, you're home,” Gordon said, through a mouthful of popcorn and without looking over his shoulder at his wife.

“Gordon, I've been calling and texting you! I didn't know whether you wanted the mauve beanbag chair or the fuchsia one. You might not think we could pull off fuchsia in here but there are accents in the flower pattern on the sofa that would pick it up nicely. And these were gorgeously overstuffed chairs. You didn't answer so I had to put it off. ”

“That's holding! These refs are blind!!” Gordon shouted, throwing a fistful of popcorn at the screen.

“Are you even listening to me?” his wife said, walking into the living room, around the recliner and positioning herself in front of the television.

Gordon sat up, leaning over to see the TV.

“Of course, honey. I'm listening and watching.”

“Can you pause your game and get the stuff out of the car for me? And clean up this popcorn. And why didn't you answer my texts?”

“I dropped my phone and broke it.”

Gordon rose, grabbed the remote and paused the game.

 

 

During the third quarter there were repeated knocks on the front door. He ignored them thinking that the next day he was going to stop by Lowe's on the way home from work and get a big No Trespassing and No Soliciting sign and put them up next to the front door. He would end these intrusions once and for all. And if that didn't work he thought about getting a German Shepherd. Some angry barks from a guard dog should send any trespassers down the road. Or maybe he'd buy one of those fancy video doorbells so he could see the dipshit on his porch interrupting him. It was too bad he couldn't build a trapdoor on the porch. Anyway, he pushed the thoughts from his mind and focused on his team, which was now trailing by three points. 

Outside his front door, a cameraman, soundman, a woman holding a bunch of multicolored balloons and a man in a gold blazer holding an oversized check for a million dollars began walking down the walkway. They climbed into a yellow van parked at the foot of the driveway. 

"Well, " the man in the gold blazer started, "The rules say the person has to be home to win or they forfeit, so we go on to the second place winner and see if they're home. It's a shame."

The van moved off down the street. 

Gordon's team lost 23-20.

 

 

Saturday, June 16, 2012

READ THE FIRST BOOK FREE!

READ "MORSELS 1" ABSOLUTELY FREE!

That's right. FREE. So why am I giving away my first book free exclusively through Smashwords? I want everyone to read it. I've been selling the book online for months and while it's nice receiving those royalties, what's even more important to me is getting my work in front of more eyeballs. I've taken all the risk out of it. All you have to do is go to Smashwords and sign up for free and download my first book. It's available in every format: Nook, Kindle, iPad, iPhone, and Android. You don't even have to own an ereader! You can download it in PDF or TXT format and read it right on your computer screen. FREE!


I'm betting that you'll like it. I'm gambling that you'll want to read the second book. And after that, I think you'll want to read the third, which I'm hard at work on right now. But what if you read the first book and you discover that Morsels isn't for you? You're under no obligation to pay for it or buy anything. But if you like it, then let someone know. Tell someone else. Help me get my work out in front of more eyeballs. I thank you for you time and your support.


CLICK ME TO READ MORSELS NOW.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Only in my Dreams

I'm not the type to sit and brainstorm story ideas. If I force it, I'm not going to like the finished product. My brother Tony comes up with a lot of his ideas when he's out walking in the morning. Doing routine, monotonous tasks always helps me come up with stuff. There are so many stories that are born in my morning shower. 

I'm one of those people who believes that the stories come from somewhere. I don't mean there's a cosmic reservoir of short story ideas but often they come from dreams. Literally.


This past week I awoke with a name on my mind. It was a strange name that I don't believe I've ever heard before. All day long I thought of this name and wondered what it meant. The next night I had a dream that fleshed it out for me. Gave me a whole backstory on the name. The dream showed me that this was a black teenaged boy living in Fulton County, Georgia in 1920 with his mother and siblings. (Having dreams that pick up night after night isn't unusual for me. Ask me about my lucid dreaming sometime.) There were snippets and flashes of what happened to this boy in the dream. I was a mere observer.


I awoke and knew that this was a story and I had to write it down. Now the creative part of the storytelling is all part of my conscious effort but the story itself sprang from within. And I feel compelled to write it. To birth it. It's a story that definitely fits with the stories in my two books and it will probably end up in the third volume.

Last week I had another dream about a complex story idea. The dream was difficult to put into words and I've been thinking about how I'm going to be able to write this story. It's an entirely different concept for me, bordering on science fiction. I'm excited by it because if I can figure out how to tell the story that I saw in my dream, I think it will blow people away. 

That's my process.

"Morsels" for Kindles or Kindle apps: click HERE 
"Morsels" for Nooks or Nook apps: click HERE.
"Morsels" print versions, click HERE.

Friday, April 6, 2012

Kurt Vonnegut on Short Story Writing



1. Use the time of a total stranger in such a way that he or she will not feel the time was wasted. 
This is definitely essential. To not do this would be the kiss of death.

2. Give the reader at least one character he or she can root for.
If there's no one to root for then the reader is not going to care about the story. I can think of one of my stories where there is no one to root for. But I think what holds the reader's interest is the curiosity to see what is going to happen to the character. The story is "Victuals." The protagonist, Rooster Fallow, isn't a terribly likable guy. And I think the reader can tell something, probably bad, is going to happen to him after he does what he does in the beginning of the story. 

3. Every character should want something, even if it is only a glass of water.
Motivation is so important. In my story "No Good Deed" Buck McDonald is a highly paid professional athlete but he's searching for a reason to live. His success holds no satisfaction for him. He's a man who seemingly has it all. By contrast, the narrator of the story wants what he has. And she's appalled that he's not grateful for what he has while she's struggling. 
 
4. Every sentence must do one of two things—reveal character or advance the action.
This is why I love short stories. The economy of words. I don't believe in writing a lot of detail for detail's sake. I want to tell the tale in the most judicious way possible. 
 
5. Start as close to the end as possible.
I love this advice. I may take it in the future. Some stories I come up with the ending first. Like "Greenlight," "Sewer Rat," "Dignity Tickets" or "Urad 238." I knew exactly where those stories were going. Others, I just started the story and let it unfold for me. "Godshot," "American Roulette" and "Fire-Roasted" are stories that I started and followed to their conclusion. I can't say which method is better because "Dignity Tickets" and "Godshot" are my two favorite tales and they were written completely differently.
 
6. Be a Sadist. No matter how sweet and innocent your leading characters, make awful things happen to them—in order that the reader may see what they are made of.
Definitely. I recall always saying that what I like to do in a story is take a regular person and see how much misfortune I can heap on their shoulders. Stories like "Gravity" come to mind. I'm definitely sadistic in that I like to make my characters squirm. Make 'em sweat. I think it makes the reader squirm.
7. Write to please just one person. If you open a window and make love to the world, so to speak, your story will get pneumonia.
I'll be honest with you. I think Vonnegut was drinking when he said it. I don't really understand what he meaas by this.
 
8. Give your readers as much information as possible as soon as possible. To hell with suspense. Readers should have such complete understanding of what is going on, where and why, that they could finish the story themselves, should cockroaches eat the last few pages.
This would be true if you're writing a conventional short story. A lot of my stories have twist endings so I don't necessarily want the reader to know exactly where I'm going. But if a twist ending is done well all of the clues are right there to determine the ending if you look for them. 

MORSELS VOL 1. available at Amazon, Barnes and Noble and iTunes.

MORSELS VOL 2. available at Amazon, Barnes and Noble and iTunes

Monday, April 2, 2012

"Godshot" is my favorite

Artists usually don't like choosing which of their creations they like most. It's like asking a patent who their favorite child is. But of the fifteen short stories in MORSELS Vol. 1 I can honestly say that "Godshot" is my favorite. For me, it's a deeply spiritual tale but I constructed it in such a way that it's a matter of faith for the reader.

The story centers around a young L.A. Crip who, after a harrowing incident with two of his homies, finds himself on a bus locked into what may be a religious discussion or a con or hustle by another young guy drinking beer. I wanted to do a story that was emotionally engaging with a spiritual theme.

The story was inspired by the old Joan Osborne song, "One of us." That song really spoke to me when it first came out and maybe this story has rattled around inside my head ever since then. All I know is that when I started writing it, it just flowed naturally from there. The characters were patterned after people that I've known. When I first wrote it, I read it to my girlfriend Cathi, who loved it. For me, it encapsulates the kind of tales I like telling.It's not scary or heavy handed. I could've made the story more overt and really pushed the supernatural in it but I think that would've been to the detriment of the main character, Beanie D. It had to go the way it went.

Two people can read it and walk away with differing conclusions of what exactly transpired.

It has coarse language in it, one of the few of the fifteen stories that does. It's necessary given who the characters are. This is how they would speak. I actually lessened some of the harsh language from the first version because I thought it may have been a bit much. My stories might shock but I don't shock for shock's sake.

Of course your favorite may differ. I love all of the tales of course but I'm biased. You can read 'Godshot' for yourself and let me know what you think of it. Got a buck? Pick up the Morsels Vol 1 ebook at Amazon, BarnesandNoble.com and iTunes. You can buy a physical copy too. Info to do that is on this blog.

Pick up Morsels to read on your computer in TXT or PDF format or read it ONLINE right now by clicking HERE.

Friday, March 30, 2012

It all started with INIQUITY

In about 1995, I put together two two-page newsletters of short stories. It was called "Iniquity." I just did it for fun for friends. The stories were either scary or disturbing or both. They were quite short stories. Well several of those stories have found their way into my books MORSELS: Twisted Tales of Life and Death Vol. 1 and 2. "Red Delicious" was a vampire story I wrote way back then. I expanded it and fleshed it out for my books. The story is pretty much the same but has more depth. "In The Simian Hands of God" was another short story in Iniquity about the perils of animal testing in laboratories. The original short story focused on the climactic moment of the new version. The new version is beefier, more descriptive and I think it makes the payoff much more satisfying.

There are a few stories in Iniquity that I didn't update and include in Morsels. One is a two parter called "Perp." The reason I didn't include it as well as some others was just the graphic nature of the stories. "Iniquity" was meant to be a scary, horrifying compilation while MORSELS is disturbing, quirky with twist endings. Some elements of stories in MORSELS are scary but I wasn't going for the gross out. So while "Perp" may end up in future volumes of MORSELS, it will undergo some changes to make it less objectionable.

"Iniquity" really represented my desire to put together a short story book. Over the years I've written many short stories and a good number of those stories ended up in the MORSELS books. There are a good deal more stories waiting for a home in future editions. But it all started with Iniquity.

Friday, March 23, 2012

READ THE FIRST BOOK FOR 99 CENTS


That's right. It's not a typo. You can read the entire ebook MORSELS: Twisted Tales of Life and Death Vol. 1 for less than a buck. Why? Because I believe in getting my work out in front of as many eyeballs as I can without cost being an issue. There's not many things you can buy for a dollar these days. Can't even get a cup of coffee. But you can be entertained with fifteen all original tales.

I'd love to sell this book for $9.99 but I realize times are tight. So I want to almost give this book away because I think people will enjoy it. Folks who have read both books have loved them. So get it now for the price of an MP3 song or mobile phone app. What have you got to lose?

If you have a Nook, Kindle or iPad, Morsels should be part of your ebook collection. If you have an ereader app on your cell phone, then you need to have Morsels on there to read when you're waiting to pick up your kids from school, you're in the doctor's office, you're in the bathroom processing a big meal or you're in bed late at night.

These cooks can be read on the PC, too. No special software necessary. Smashwords offers text versions and PDF versions to read at your desktop or on your laptop at your leisure. You can use the Smashwords link to purchase the book for Nook, Kindle or iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch.

And for those still addicted to old fashioned books, I've got that covered too. You can buy Volume 1 or 2 at the Book Patch for $7.99 each by clicking right HERE.

And you can find them on Amazon.com, BarnesandNoble.com and iTunes.

Don't keep it to yourself. Tell your friends. Please take the time to write a short review on Barnes and Noble. or Amazon. Give me the good, the bad and the ugly. Tell the readers in your life. For me, this is about entertaining people and living my dream. Thank you for help making this possible.