Tuesday, March 28, 2023

Whither Music and Media?


Several years ago, I participated in Brian Fatah Steele’s 7Q interview. You can read the entire interview on his website.

Question #4 was “How does music and media factor into your writing? Do you feel it plays as much an inspirational role as literature?”


Time has moved on a fair bit since I answered the question for Brian. So, I thought I’d revisit and see if anything has changed.


Music


There’s no doubt about it. I love music. One of my major disappointments is that my parents did not encourage my interest in music. Nothing I can do about that now. That’s 60+ years in the past.


I’m too old to become a good amateur instrumentalist. My hands are against me. I can still learn composition, however, and I might pursue that. I certainly enjoyed dabbling in composition 40+ years ago.


When I was a high school and college lad, I listened to music while I did my homework. I listened to a lot of music. Classical music. I love classical music. Something I have my grandmother to thank. My parents weren’t too happy with her for that.


Now, though, in my old age, I am finding that I much prefer silence to sound. It’s not that I dislike music. It’s just that I value silence more. Sound is becoming increasingly grating on my ears. Kind of like that old Simon & Garfunkel song: “Sounds of Silence”.


My last few years at work I often use earplugs because the office was just too noisy.


Today, I very rarely listen to music while writing. And without a doubt I can say music does not provide any inspiration for my stories.


I do, though, find that fiction has increased my enjoyment of music. I’m more and more listening to the structure of the music I listen to. Something I never did in my youth.


But music does feature in my fiction. It’s ubiquitous in fact. My characters like music. They listen to it. They perform it. They quote lyrics. Music is all over my fiction. It just doesn’t inspire any story ideas.


Visual Media


Visual media covers a multitude of platforms.


There is film, both large and small screen. There is digital content: YouTube, TikTok, and the like. There are video games. And let us not forget plain old static pictures.


Visual Media occupies a huge part of our lives. It is all around us. Every day and every waking hour of every day. The influence is undoubtedly profound.


While I am not into video, I do very much enjoy fine art. Paintings. Photographs. Pottery. Art glass. Architecture. 


Fine art floats my boat. Even things such as a well-designed tea pot, cup, or mug will catch my eye. Or the shape of a fine pen, or mechanical pencil. Or the color pattern.


Gazing on beauty lifts the spirits and the soul.


Art features fairly consistently in my fiction. I suppose, because like music, fine art is an expression of the human potential. A glimpse of what we can become.


My fiction, which is my art, is ultimately a voice crying in the wilderness that there is something better for us — both individually and collectively — than what we have now. And we should pursue that which is better. Never be satisfied with what we have. Because what we have is mostly not worth having. There is something better for us.


Inspiration


All in all, literature provides a large portion of my inspiration. About equal with observation of the world around me, and those gifts that come from the Muse.


Music doesn’t inspire any ideas. Nor does fine art. On rare occasions a storyline or scene from a movie or TV episode will trigger an idea.


As noted above, video is not my thing. I’d rather read a good book. Especially since political correctness and wokeness have taken over the big and small screens in such a blatant manner. Watching movies and TV just isn’t enjoyable anymore. I want to watch a good story — not propaganda.


A true artist can get his point across much more affectively with a stiletto then with a club.


The movie Little Big Man is a powerful statement regarding the collision of Native and Euro-American cultures, as well as an indictment of Euro-American culture. It is an effective use of the stiletto to get its point across.


The Graduate does the same thing with regards to societal and familial expectations, pressures, and hypocrisy. Once again, the stiletto is deadly — and for more effective than a club would’ve been.


The old DCI Tom Barnaby episodes of Midsomer Murders did the same. Tom is ordinary. Husband. Father. A good employee. Normal home life. He himself is normal. It’s the rich, the high society folk, who are sick and what’s wrong with the world. The series also took a stab at the notion of the idyllic country life versus the corrupt city. In Midsomer it’s reversed.


The stiletto is always more effective than the club. 


But today’s writers, especially those for the screen, use the club almost exclusively and are the worse for it.


I don’t know about you, but I respond better to the stiletto.


So until screenwriters and producers go back to good story writing instead of pushing propaganda, I’m reaching for a good book.


What about you? How would you answer Mr. Steele’s question? Drop your answer in the comments below.


Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!



CW Hawes is a playwright; award-winning poet; and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.



If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes 







Justinia Wright Private Investigator Mysteries on Amazon!


Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles on Amazon!

Tuesday, March 21, 2023

Interview with the Reverend Ember Cole


 


Today, I have the honor of talking with the Reverend Ember Cole, pastor of Saint Luke’s Methodist Church in beautiful Magnolia Bluff, Texas. The home base for the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles.


CW: Welcome, Ember. Glad you can be with me here today on the blog.


EC: My pleasure, CW. Thanks for inviting me.


CW: So to start, why do you wear a Catholic hat?


EC: (laughs) It’s easily recognized as religious, and with the clerical collar immediately marks me as a person of the cloth. And because women ministers are still something of a rare breed, that helps me in my ministry.


CW: Makes sense. To go one further, why did you choose the ministry for a career?


EC: I don’t think of the ministry as a career. I see it as a life of service to my fellow human beings.


CW: What kind of service?


EC: To help them with both their physical and spiritual needs. Especially the spiritual. To borrow a turn of phrase from my evangelical colleagues, we all have a God-size hole in us. And we too often fill it with everything but God. But only God really fits. It’s the square peg, round hole thing.


CW: Gotcha. So you don’t consider yourself an evangelical?


EC: Not in the sense they mean by it. I believe we should tell people about Jesus and encourage them to believe, so I’m evangelical in that sense of the word. But I don’t accept the other things they believe.


CW: Such as?


EC: The verbal and plenary inspiration of the scriptures. The virgin birth. And very recently, I’ve started to doubt if there even was an actual physical Jesus.


CW: Whoa, Reverend! No Jesus?


EC: (laughs) Yeah, that’s a bit of a shocker, isn’t it?


CW: I mean, like, how did everything get started if there wasn’t a Jesus to kick things off?


EC: Oh, there was somebody. It was Peter. Paul quite clearly says Jesus first appeared to Peter. Then after Peter, Jesus went on to appear to many others.


CW: Wait a minute. Are we talking about a spiritual Jesus here?


EC: In a sense, yes. You see, the idea is that God created Jesus, you know, the Word, and through the Word all things came into being. 


Then Satan rebelled and God kicked him out of heaven, which the ancients thought was the most distant sphere from us. We’d think of their spheres surrounding the earth as dimensions or parallel universes. So Satan came to our dimension. 


Then God sent Jesus to our dimension, but not physically to earth. He appeared in Satan’s realm, which the ancients thought was up by the moon. Today, it makes more sense to think of it as another dimension, or a parallel universe.


CW: Okay, so Jesus moves from God’s dimension to Satan’s dimension.


EC: Right. At least something like that. Using our contemporary understanding.


CW: Okay. So Jesus is now hanging out with Satan.


EC: (laughs) Something like that. Then Jesus lets Satan kill Him. After which, Jesus rose from the dead, and first appeared to Peter. In a dream, maybe. Or a vision. Lastly, He appeared to Paul in a vision.


CW: That’s… That’s… Wow, that’s different. And all this happened not on earth, but in another dimension.


EC: Right.


CW: Mind boggling.


EC: But it is what Paul wrote and taught. And Paul’s genuine letters are the first Christian writings that we have. Paul never mentions talking to an eyewitness, nor does he ever mention Jesus’s birth or His family. What Paul does write is that all, and I repeat, all of the information he got was by visions or through the scriptures. Never an eyewitness to an earthly Jesus. And if we think about it, why wouldn’t he if such a witness existed? But Paul never does. Only visions and scripture. And those make sense only if Jesus was never here on earth in the first place.


CW: Huh. That isn’t what I learned in seminary. And the Methodist Church is okay with you believing this view?


EC: You went to seminary? Well, that’s interesting. I wonder…


CW: That was a lifetime ago. But what about your bishop? What does he think?


EC: Well, the church probably isn’t okay with it. And my bishop doesn’t know. You’re the first person I’ve told about this. But then you…


CW: Nope. I’m just an amanuensis. So this is news to me.


EC: But aren’t you the writer?


CW: Amanuensis. I receive and write down. Like Paul.


EC: (giggles) That’s funny. Because I do believe in visions and dreams. In a sense, you might say I’m something of a charismatic Methodist. Part of the Third Wave.


CW: And your bishop is okay with that?


EC: Probably not. But what he doesn’t know won’t hurt him. Or me.


CW: Oh, clever you!


EC: In spite of what Harry thinks, I’m not completely naïve when it comes to politics. (smiles)


CW: And everything is politics.


EC: That it is.


CW: And speaking of politics, is Mary Lou Fight still after you?


EC: Yes. She’d like to come back to Saint Luke’s, but won’t as long as I’m there. So she’s still exploring ways to get me out.


CW: Does that bother you?


EC: Not really. I mean, yes, it’s frustrating. And it annoys the hell out of me at times.


CW: Wait. Did you just say hell?


EC: I did. You’ve never heard a minister ever say hell before?


CW: I was Baptist, so yes I have. Sorry. You were saying?


EC: Mary Lou is my cross to bear, so to speak.


CW: Even though you don’t believe there was a literal cross.


EC: (smiles) Yeah. Funny how the historicist and literalist views have influenced out language.


CW: Yes, it is.


EC: I very much feel sorry for Mary Lou. She is a miserable person at heart. If any one needs the love of Jesus, it is that woman. And I hope she finds it.


CW: Do you have a motto or mantra that keeps you going throughout the day?


EC: I do. Paul’s words in Romans chapter eight, verse twenty-eight: “…all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are the called according to His purpose.”


CW: That’s a very good verse. Very positive. Optimistic.


EC: It is.


CW: I know this last question might sound morbid, but I always tell myself momento mori, remember you will die. It’s a great guiding principle to help keep things in perspective.


EC: It is.


CW: So, how would you like to die?


EC: Oh, that’s easy. In the arms of my lover.


CW: Harry?


EC: Well, that would be nice. But I was actually referring to Jesus.


CW: Oh, wow. Yeah, okay. I can see that.


EC: (singing)


Jesus, lover of my soul,

Let me to thy bosom fly

While the nearer waters roll,

While the tempest still is high.

Hide me, O my Saviour, hide,

Till the storm of life is past;

Safe into the haven guide,

O receive my soul at last.


CW: That’s a great hymn.


EC: It is. I also love the lines in the third stanza: “Thou, O Christ, art all I want; more than all in Thee I find.”


CW: Yeah. You, Ember Cole, are a woman of tremendous faith. Magnolia Bluff is fortunate to have you. Thanks for being on the blog.


EC: Thanks for having me. And may Christ be with you.


CW: And also with you. And if you have any questions for Rev Em, drop them in the comments below.



Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!



CW Hawes is a playwright; award-winning poet; and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.



If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes







Justinia Wright Private Investigator Mysteries on Amazon!


Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles on Amazon!

Tuesday, March 14, 2023

When Bad Things Happen to Good Mice

 



The Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles keep rolling along.


This month, on March 18th, as a matter of fact, Book 11 launches


When Bad Things Happen to Good Mice


And you can pick the book up on pre-order now.


Cindy Davis gives us another fun cozy mystery, filled with great humor, plenty of suspense, and a touch of the paranormal. After all, who doesn’t like ghosts? And the pizza shop owner knowing what kind of pizza you want?


Bliss seems to be the recipient of bad mojo. Here she is camping under the stars, minding her own business, when Chief Jager hauls her back to town on a charge of murder.


Murder of her boyfriend. Well, ex-boyfriend.


Why?


Because a body, presumed to be Bliss’s ex-boyfriend, was found in the ashes of the Annual Celtic Faire bonfire. 


Of course, Bliss was miles away when he died. But not so, according to a witness, someone Bliss considered a friend. 


The witness claims she saw Bliss in town the day of the bonfire. And no one can prove otherwise.


Chief Jager is getting pressure from all sides to solve the murder. And to catch the petty thief who’s been all over town breaking and entering and stealing cash.


With the help of her ability to see people’s auras, get clues from Tom Chapin songs that pop into her head, and the clues her toucan Diablo drops on her, Bliss thinks the murder and the thefts are related.


Chief Jager, though, doesn’t buy it. Well, not until it’s discovered that the body in the bonfire wasn’t Bliss’s ex-boyfriend after all.


So who was he? And why was he killed? And why have the thefts suddenly stopped?


Bliss, with charges dropped, is on a mission to find out.


It’s not every day that a mystery is filled with suspense and thrills, and is great fun. But that’s what Cindy Davis delivers in this latest installment of the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles.


So if you’re looking to have a good time while taking a break from spring cleaning, or relaxing in the comfy coziness of your favorite chair or sofa on a lazy afternoon, or while sitting in bed before you hit the hay — then pick up a copy of 


When Bad Things Happen to Good Mice


You won’t regret it!


And if you’re new to the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles series, you can start your adventure with



Death Wears a Crimson Hat


And you can find all of the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles on Amazon.



Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!



CW Hawes is a playwright; award-winning poet; and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.




If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes


Tuesday, March 7, 2023

10 Favorite Private Detective Novels

 



People often ask me for book recommendations; especially PI mysteries, as they can be difficult to find.


A recent look at the Amazon Top 25 in the Private Investigator category had me dumping most of them because there wasn’t a shamus in sight.


When the category is Private Investigator I don’t know why Amazon allows FBI agents, amateur sleuths, DCIs, vampire hunters, and who knows what else to take over the category. ‘Tain’t right. ‘Tain’t fair.


So without further ado, I give you 10 bona fide Private Detective novels for your reading pleasure.


  1. This Doesn’t Happen in the Movies by Renee Pawlish. This the first book in the Reed Ferguson series, and it is a goody. A bit hardboiled, a bit noir, and a bit cozy.
  2. The Italian Affair by John Tallon Jones. The Penny Detective is fast becoming one of my favorite PI series. Moggs and Shoddy are super characters. You will love these guys. And this book is especially fun.
  3. Deadly Passion by Joe Congel. Tony Razzolito, aka The Razzman, is a great character. This is a fab series. I keep praying Joe will write faster.
  4. Turn on the Heat by Erle Stanley Gardner (as AA Fair) is one of the novels in the Bertha Cool and Donald Lam series. Not as well known as Perry Mason, the series, though, is quite good. Although, I think Gardner missed a bet by not giving Bertha a bigger role. She is a stupendous character.
  5. China Trade by SJ Rozan. I love Rozan’s Lydia Chin. A very refreshing character. Bill Smith, on the other hand, I’m not so taken with. Lydia and Bill aren’t partners. But they help each other out. Friends without benefits, one might say. Although Bill would love for their relationship to get to the benefits stage. The odd numbered books are in Lydia’s POV; the even, in Bill’s. Super series.
  6. The Golden Spiders by Rex Stout. I love the Nero Wolfe mysteries. Put me on a desert island with the Tom Barnaby Midsomer Murders and the Nero Wolfe mysteries and plenty of tea and I’m in heaven. Nero Wolfe is the yardstick by which I judge a mystery’s quality.
  7. The Long Goodbye by Raymond Chandler. I just finished reading the Marlowe mysteries. They are fab. Especially the later ones. This novel is probably my fav. I’ll be re-reading these in the near future. No one can beat Chandler for uniquely engaging descriptions. Do read the Marlowe books. They are amongst the best books you’ll ever read.
  8. Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie. Poirot is, IMO, rather one dimensional. He’s peculiar, and noticeable, but not in a way that makes him a fan favorite like, say, Sherlock Holmes. Christie’s strong suit, IMO, is her complex storylines. Not her characters.
  9. The Case is Closed by Patricia Wentworth. The Miss Silver mysteries are good reading. Wentworth is on par with Christie, and deserves to be more widely known.
  10. The Shoulders of Giants by Jim Cliff. Excellent mystery. My great sadness is that Mr. Cliff didn’t write more than 2.


The above are 10 gumshoe novels I very much enjoyed and I think you will too.


I’m even going to throw in an eleventh:


But Jesus Never Wept




Tina and Harry quickly find themselves immersed in a bloody murder, an online sex empire, church politics, art forgeries, and the Yakuza.


And when the bullets start flying, will they survive long enough to pin the murder on the culprit?


Head on over to Amazon and find out!


That’s all for now.


Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!



CW Hawes is a playwright; award-winning poet; and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.



If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes







Justinia Wright Private Investigator Mysteries on Amazon!


Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles on Amazon!