I’m a little tardy, but here’s my Flickr Follies for the week. IMG_5929 hails from rbowden’s flickr stream. Raised among humans, Don Guillermo has identity issues. I’ll let him speak for himself.

Closer, my succubus, and with my claw I will take the strap of your bikini top and tease it from your succulent frame. Then I shall lap at your breasts as if they were the finest imported mangos, teasing the nipples to raisin-like firmness. I’ll teach you the meaning of savage lizard love.
Oooh, slimy? No, not really. If you stroke my flesh — yes, there, lower still, aaaah. Do you feel? I’m rough as a cat’s tongue and three times as fast. With a strike of my tail I can kill flies midair or, if you prefer discipline to displays of agility, I might lash your soft thighs until they are banded pink and you beg for mercy.
Watch me shake my head. Watch! I daresay you have never seen such an impressive head-shake, no? It means I respect you, my love, and crave your attention. Come closer. Put your lips near mine so that I may sneeze salt upon them, that we might share our essences.
What? You doubt that I can satisfy you? I have but few words for you: two penises. When one tires, the other takes over. I can last all night. Can your human lovers say as much?
And when at last we have pampered one another into a state of bliss and beyond; when, afterwards, you smoke your Virginia Slim and I scratch your back where you crave it most; when we promise everything to one another, and nothing; then, at long last, you will agree: once green, never back.
No, it does not rhyme. But with our perfect love, what will it matter?
D.
From the start, the reader knows he’s in competent hands, or at least the hands of a competent publisher. We get a slick cover featuring shapely calves and stiletto heels, with oodles of diamonds on the floor to suggest the promise of intrigue. On the back, a hot-lookin’ Christina Dodd beams with confidence.
So what if the premise sounds hokey: new to Chicago, novice lawyer Brandi Michaels gets dumped by her husband, has a night of passion with a tall, dark, and mysterious Italian count, then finds out she’s being stalked, requiring her to depend upon the Count for protection. Everything else seems to bode well, including a competent opening scene. Eleven-year-old Brandi watches as her dad dumps her mom. We soon learn that Brandi has insecurities about being perceived as stupid (despite being “one of the smartest people in the country”) and hangups vis a vis her absent daddy. Nice — strong character development right from the get-go.
But I think you would all agree that a contract exists between the author and the reader. I’ll buy your book, and you’ll deliver the goods. In this case, “delivering the goods” means convincing me of the passion between these two and making me care enough about them to cheer when they hook up in the end. At a minimum, I should believe (A) we’re in Chicago, (B) the hero is Italian (aside from an ability to speak the language and execute, oh God, not another “typically Italian hand gesture”), (C) the author knows something about jewel thieves and the mob.
Sadly, Trouble in High Heels is unconvincing on all counts. Since Dodd’s main characters never spring to life, neither does my interest. Brandi is a stereotype, a statuesque beauty (and smart, too! Not dumb, really!) as is Mr. Dark-Mysterious-Sexy, Roberto. Their passionate weekend happens largely off-screen, yet we’re asked to believe that their desire for one another is damned near irresistible. In such a situation, skimping on the sex is a capital show-don’t-tell offense.
The supporting cast seems unoriginal, cribbed from the movies. Roberto’s father is a knock-off of William Hickey’s character in Prizzi’s Honor, right down to the “Have a cookie, dear?” line, and the chief baddy is a stock Robert Loggia-style thug.
The worst failure-to-deliver is Brandi herself. Trouble in High Heels packs a mystery (is Roberto a notorious jewel thief? What is he up to, anyway?) which befuddles our heroine right up to the novel’s climax. One of the smartest people in the country? Uh-uh, honey, not when I can figure things out 150 pages before you. Talk about obtuse.
Christina Dodd’s wordsmithing lacks little polish on a technical level. She strings the words together perfectly well, knows how to construct a scene, doesn’t fumble the dialog. Yet there’s no heart here, no sense of caring.
Okay, Beth, is that bitchy enough for you?
D.
They’re sisters, supposedly, but not in temperament. Here’s Mist, a cool cat who likes to hide in black plastic garbage bags:

Ash, on the other hand, hasn’t quite come to terms with being a kept kitty.

Jake calls her Vashj (a World of Warcraft character), but we’re calling her Ash, short for Ashtaroth, and also the name of Bruce Campbell’s character in the Evil Dead/Army of Darkness movies. Ashtaroth is essentially Ishtar, without the connotation of “movie that bombed.” Look at the claws on this cat:

She has clawed Jake once. I picked her up and she extended her stilettos, drawing blood. An impressive show of force, I must admit.
I know, I know: how dare we rename Le Ogress’s precioussssses. Tough.
D.
We went to the local humane society on the assumptions (A) they would have lots of cats in need of a good home, and (B) they would be willing to adopt them out to us. (A) was true beyond a doubt. I saw few cats I wouldn’t want as pets — the long-hairs, since I’m not willing to put my allergy to that stringent a test. As for (B), therein lies a tale.
“We’d like to adopt three cats,” I said upon arrival. “Ours went feral.”
You would think a volunteer would be delighted to adopt out three cats, wouldn’t you? But I had made a cardinal error: I’d said too much. “Ours went feral” seemed to push all her hostility buttons.
I grew up in sibling rivalry with a dog, went through puberty around dogs, always figured dogs would be a part of my life. My high school GF longed for a kitty. I never thought she would end up with dogs, I with cats, but there you go. I’m a writer/cat person, a living stereotype.
But in the last month, all three of our cats abandoned us.
Clicking around tonight, feeling lonely cuz I’m on the chat and no one’s around*, feeling doubly lonely cuz my wife and son are playing World of Warcraft, which means I’m all alone except for these people YAPPING ABOUT MANA, yapping so loudly I can’t work on the WiP, so . . .
Go check out Jim Donahue’s Italian travelogue. Great pictures — seriously.
D.
*Edited to add: had LOTS of fun with Dean and SxKitten and Tam. Thanks, guys. Now I have nothing to whine about.
Erin O’Brien has a short list which keeps getting longer all the time:
“If Rally Caparas comes here and wants to have sex, it’s pretty much a done deal,” I say to the television, from whence the Weather Channel is broadcasting the Travel Update.
“Ol’ Rally made it to the short list, did he?” says my husband from behind the newspaper. “What if there’s a logistical miscalculation and he comes here when I’m home?”
“You can go for a nice walk,” I say.
One of my older patients likes to call me Dr. Phil just to irritate me. Thus, I get to be Dr. Phil on occasion. (Don’t see the logic in that? Tough noogies, as my sis would say.) When I read Erin’s short list, I thought, “This is a healthy relationship. We should all have short lists. Spouses having lots of imaginary sex with celebrities is good for a marriage.”
With that in mind, here’s my short list.
Listen. Like a spiritual biorhythm, I get a yen every few years to be more Jewish. It’s an odd urge which my family tolerates and I accede to with little resistance. With what’s happening in the Middle East, however, I don’t think my inner Jew will dare make an appearance . . . not for some time, anyway.
Some background is in order. My parents raised me to be a bacon-wrapped shrimp lovin’ kid. I come from long lines of apostates on both sides of the tree. My father’s dad relished pissing off the rabbi by keeping his grocery store (across the street from the synagogue) open on the Sabbath, and my father’s philosophy, as best I can tell, requires only a belief in predestination. On my mom’s side, being Jewish meant (A) hosting a riotous Seder every year and (B) nurturing an abiding hatred for the Catholics. (My grandmother kept bringing up the Inquisition. Can you believe that?) No one talked much about God.
Being a Jewish kid in California in the 60s and 70s meant
So . . . forgive me if I step on your spiritual toes, but at least you know I’ve been a partial heathen for many years now.
I’ve kvetched about this in the past, but it has been a while. Blue Gal’s post today reopened the wound. A quote from Gershom Gorenberg, via Blue Gal, via Right Web’s Culture, Religion, Apocalypse, and Middle East Foreign Policy:
Gershom Gorenberg points out that for Christian Zionists, Jews are actors in a play where the final curtain forces them to either convert to Christianity or die in a blaze of fire sent by God.
Enough all ready. ENOUGH. I’m tired of the Jews and the Christians and the Muslims. I’m tired of apocalyptic thinking, and in fact I think we need to recognize it for what it is: lunatic thinking, the waking fever dreams of psychopaths. Jewish Manifest Destiny is bullshit. The Book of Revelations is bullshit. ENOUGH.
I’m not saying all religion is crap. Not by a long shot. Where all religions shine is in their ethical teachings, and in that, there are riches to be found in all of the old religions. I know that a lot of you, like Blue Gal and Shelbi, consider yourselves religious Christians, but I think you try to follow the ethical teachings of Jesus and have shunned the 21st Century abomination that is American Marketplace Christianity. Similarly, I think I can be ethically Jewish without embracing an Old Testament God who wants to see his Chosen People blast the hell out of their Muslim neighbors.
Here’s a story for you. I may have told it before, and if so, I’m sorry to repeat myself.
During my last Jewish phase, my son’s stubborn atheism disturbed me. He was six at the time, and I couldn’t understand how a six-year-old could be certain of God’s nonexistence while at the same time believe in the reality of the Harry Potter universe. I mean, if you’re going to accept one form of magic, why not believe in all of them?
I kvetched to my rabbi. “My six-year-old is an atheist,” I said, and he replied, “And this is a problem?”
His point: what really matters in religion is not a set of empty beliefs but a collection of ethical teachings. You don’t have to embrace God to absorb the ethics. Ultimately, all that really matters is that we try to be the best people we can be, to ourselves and to each other, and you don’t need God for that.
Indeed (me talking now, not my rabbi), isn’t it more mature to practice the Golden Rule if you do it because you know in your heart it’s the right way to live, rather than for fear of God’s wrath? And if we could do that, take the ethics to heart and toss out the mythology, wouldn’t the world be a better place?
As I mentioned over at Blue Gal’s blog today, AKA The Panty Place, I used to think of myself as an agnostic Jew, but lately I think of myself as a cowardly atheist. Somehow, I have to reconcile this new atheism with a stubborn belief in God.
Here’s my question. If what God wants, REALLY wants, is for us to be good to one another and love one another (and if that isn’t what he wants, then WTF?), wouldn’t he also want us to jettison a mythology responsible for so much suffering, waste, and death? Wouldn’t he want us to be ethical atheists?
D.
Edited to add: Here’s an interesting diary at Kos which addresses much the same issue: Moralities. Good stuff.
Tonight, Ned Lamont bested Stephen Colbert’s favorite Republican, Connecticut Democratic Senator Joe Lieberman. Sadly, Lieberman refuses to listen to the will of the voters and has announced he will run as an Independent.
We here in the Balls et Walnuts household delight in doing our Snoopy dance (yes, we contributed to Lamont’s campaign), but the battle has only just begun. Lieberman’s going down like a crack whore turning tricks for smokes — reluctantly and desperately. Kos has the attack plan:
Here’s what we all need to do the next few days:
1. Push Harry Reid to strip Lieberman of all committee assignments.
2. Let people know what a sore loser Lieberman is.
3. Get all Democrats — including Bill Clinton — to publicly back Ned Lamont.
4. Get the Democratic interest groups who backed Lieberman to switch allegiances in the general.
For starters, send Joe Lieberman a note telling him to respect the will of Connecticut’s Democratic voters. Keep your eyes on Daily Kos for the latest updates.
Edited to add:
Kos on Countdown. Crooks and Liars has video.
Edited to add:
Ah, Markos. You choked me up this morning with this post:
What tonight showed is that democracy can work. That even the most powerful, entrenched forces can be dislodged by people-power. That the combined mights of the Democratic and Conservative establishments couldn’t hold the gates against the barbarian intruders.
Amen.
D.