I'm already a fan of Matt Taibbi's, and this book just cements what I already knew: The guy can write, and his words will make you think and make you angry. Injustice meets inequality... arghhhh! My jaw dropped several times. Meticulously researched, very detailed, and Matt's tone is tartly delicious. Anyone who paid any attention to the Occupy movement and anyone with even a passing interest in justice and human rights should run right out and get a copy of The Divide.
Blood and Groom, Dead Light District, The Lies Have It, and Frisky Business are available on Amazon Kindle!
Sunday, July 20, 2014
Saturday, July 19, 2014
Making a Big Grey Mess
One things I've always wanted to learn is pottery. The idea of moulding something while the wheel spins has long appealed to me. Finally, last night, I tried it for the first time ever, and it was a lot of fun!
I joined a drop in class at the Gardiner Museum (here's the link). The class is about two hours and costs only $15, which includes all materials (although firing your piece(s) is $5 extra).
I can't say I was a natural, but that hardly matters. The clay didn't seem to want to do what I wanted it to do, and I sometimes forgot about the speed of the wheel - my foot would lean down and suddenly the whole damn thing spun out of control and a few bits went flying - luckily not too far. The woman sitting next to me was very nice and very patient. My jeans were pretty much grey by the end of it, but who cares?
I made two pathetic little misshapen vases and paid to have them fired. I'll go back sometime next week to paint my sad little creations. I'm looking forward to the next class!
Update (photo) added July 26th: I returned the following week to paint the works of art I had created in the previous class. That, plus they let you paint "abandoned" pieces that people made once upon a time, but never picked up. So, I painted (glazed) four pieces (two that I had made, and two "abandoned" pieces). Plus, made one new creation. I'll go back again next Friday to make another mess.
My works-of-art from start to finish are the misshapen vase on the right, the paperclip holder (?) in the upper left and the unpainted dog food bowl for Chico. I had a lot of fun doing this and learned a lot. I'll definitely go back again for another drop-in class. It's a great way to relax and let your mind go.
I joined a drop in class at the Gardiner Museum (here's the link). The class is about two hours and costs only $15, which includes all materials (although firing your piece(s) is $5 extra).
I can't say I was a natural, but that hardly matters. The clay didn't seem to want to do what I wanted it to do, and I sometimes forgot about the speed of the wheel - my foot would lean down and suddenly the whole damn thing spun out of control and a few bits went flying - luckily not too far. The woman sitting next to me was very nice and very patient. My jeans were pretty much grey by the end of it, but who cares?
I made two pathetic little misshapen vases and paid to have them fired. I'll go back sometime next week to paint my sad little creations. I'm looking forward to the next class!
Update (photo) added July 26th: I returned the following week to paint the works of art I had created in the previous class. That, plus they let you paint "abandoned" pieces that people made once upon a time, but never picked up. So, I painted (glazed) four pieces (two that I had made, and two "abandoned" pieces). Plus, made one new creation. I'll go back again next Friday to make another mess.
UPDATE - August 22nd: I finally went back this week to pick up my fired and glazed pieces. Wow - you really have to put the paint on think (several coats). The yellow bowl and the orange flowerpot were not made by me; these were "abandoned" pieces that I just painted.
My works-of-art from start to finish are the misshapen vase on the right, the paperclip holder (?) in the upper left and the unpainted dog food bowl for Chico. I had a lot of fun doing this and learned a lot. I'll definitely go back again for another drop-in class. It's a great way to relax and let your mind go.
Sunday, July 13, 2014
Toronto Fringe Festival 2014
Every year, I try to see at least a couple of plays at Toronto's Fringe Festival, and every year it's a treat to see innovative, honest, creative, low-budget shows. As much as I love the overblown, million dollar Broadway productions, there's something special about seeing smaller scale (much smaller!) where the script and the acting really survive on their own merits.
The first play of the evening was a light family comedy called "If It's Not Too Much Trouble". I liked it well enough, but to me the acting was a bit uneven. The character Glen was my favourite and the actor playing him did a great job, but a couple of the others need a bit of polishing. In my opinion, the script also needs a bit of tweaking - it felt like too much was squeezed into a one act play. That, plus there was one blip in script continuity that irked me. Nevertheless, there were a few good lines and I generally liked the ways the characters were drawn.
Ha ha Ha! My friend and I didn't plan to see this one - the show we wanted to see was sold out, so we rolled our eyes and bought tickets to this one. It was terrific!!! It's about two men, who've know each other since they were kids, and the competitiveness that permeates their friendship. The approach (sort of like a boxing match, with a winner declared for each round) was original. The "referee" was a young girl the men knew when they were growing up. The actors had their timing down pat, the script was terrific, the execution was great. So glad to have stumbled onto this play!
Hmmm... This was okay, but quite different from what I'd thought it would be. It wasn't quite a musical, but it did have some songs in it (I'd expected more of a musical comedy). It was a bit of a tongue in cheek, old west story about frontier justice, and while it had some very funny moments, it definitely wasn't a comedy. However, I liked the characters and I think the acting was quite good, it's just that overall the story wasn't really my cup of tea.Saturday, July 12, 2014
Chico in Unusual Places
I have two little Maltese dogs that I absolutely adore! Bella (girl, above, on the right) is 13 years old and Chico (boy, above, on the left, with tongue hanging out) is about 10 years old (unsure of birth date).
Both dogs are toothless - yes, really, neither one has any teeth; this is why Chico's tongue is always hanging out. Bella usually holds her tongue in, but smacks her lips a lot as if she's looking for her missing teeth. Despite the lack of teeth, both dogs eat heartily.
Bella is somewhat camera shy, but Chico isn't, and he's very patient when I place him in unusual poses.
I love this picture - his tongue and the half closed eyes make him look drunk
(maybe from above picture???!!!!)
Chico has the orange life jacket; Bella is in pink. Chico would swim across the ocean if he had the chance; Bella is more of a landlubber.
Friday, July 11, 2014
Whackfuck! A good walk spoiled...
I know there are those who think of it as a good walk ruined, but golf has always appealed to me, even though I've only played 4 or 5 times in my whole life. (Several years ago, thinking that it would motivate me to learn, I bought my own set of clubs... they've been gathering dust in the back of a closet.)
So, since I'm really making a point this summer of trying new things, I finally bit the bullet and signed up for a few private golf lessons.
Lakeshore Links Indoor Golf is only about 20 minutes from where I live, and their prices are reasonable, so there was no reason not to give it a try.
My instructor is Roger Moores, a very patient man who has been teaching golf for over thirty years. Even though I've only just begun, I can see a difference. He's shown me how to hold a club properly, and he has emphasized posture and positioning. Just those two things have made a difference already! Instead of swinging and missing 99% of the time, my club is making contact with the ball more often than not, or as Roger says: the ball gets in the way of my club. Either way, for me it's HUGE progress!
I have a lot to learn, but I'm pumped about it. It will be interesting to see how much I can improve over the summer.
"Golf is popular simply because it is the
best game in the world at which to be bad."
~ A.A. Milne
Sunday, July 6, 2014
Queens Plate 2014

Today was event day for the 155th annual Queen's Plate Race at Woodbine Racetrack and I went! The Queen's Plate is the first of three races that make up the Canadian Triple Crown. (The other two races are the Prince of Wales Stakes and the Breeders' Stakes later this summer). Although I've seen lots of horse racing over the years, I haven't been to the track since about 1997.

Today was a real hoot! The events in and around the track were fun - live music, food booths, themed cocktails, and a lot of people watching! The people watching was almost better than the race itself. A lot of people really dressed for the event - almost like they were in wedding attire. I particularly got a kick out of the women's hats and fascinators, some were beautiful and others were just outrageous (meanwhile I was wearing my tired old cap that I wear everywhere).
As for the races, well, they were great overall. I placed small bets (generally $2 to show) on a few races. Won a couple, lost a couple. For the main event I had a triactor, and two of the three horses came in, but the other one I'd chosen came in fourth - damn it! In any case, it was a terrific day and once again it was great to do something different. I probably won't wait another 15+ years to go to the races again. And next time I go to a Triple Crown event, I'll be sure to get a helluva hat to complement my outfit!
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| Not surprisingly, I was NOT on the guest list for the FLARE garden party tent at the "Hats and Horseshoes" tent party. Must have been on account of my footwear... |
Thursday, July 3, 2014
Not sure what I was thinking...

Today's new activity was Stand Up Paddleboarding.
Wow! It was really cool, totally fun, much easier than I expected, and very relaxing!
I did an evening intro course at Harbourfront Canoe and Kayak Centre, which is the same place where I recently took a kayaking course (see previous post).
I am proud to say that I didn't do any unexpected flips and end up soaked! I'm lucky I stayed dry and stayed - however precariously perched - on the board (sometimes sitting, sometimes standing). Because of the broken foot and sprained ankle, my balance wasn't great. Not sure what I was thinking when I signed up for this!
Also, the way one must move to get on the board, or to raise one's self from sitting to standing was hard and quite painful on the foot/ankle. Again, not sure what I was thinking...
Perhaps I should have waited a couple more weeks before trying this, but... Oh well! I learned something new, and I really can't wait to do it again! And I can definitely see PI Sasha Jackson giving this a try... and getting soaked!
Note: For both the SUP and the kayaking, we paddled from the inner harbour to the areas between and behind Muggs Island and Centre Island Park.
Tuesday, July 1, 2014
New Thing: Kayaking
This weekend I did a two-day Intro to Kayaking course. What a hoot!
There were eight students in our group, plus two instructors. All-together, a cool bunch of people.
The pace of the course was leisurely and we spent most of our time on the water - Lake Ontario - rather than on land just listening to instructions. My paddling needs a lot of work - I can't seem to go even kind of straight yet, but so what? I'll just blame wind and waves. Saturday was actually a bit choppy and wavy (which to me made it even more fun!), and Sunday was calm but hotter than hell.
I could see myself writing in a kayak scene in a future PI Sasha Jackson mystery - and if I do, you can be sure she'll tip it over and get herself soaked!
Update (Photo) added July 24th:
Thursday, June 26, 2014
Thank You BBQ
Tonight I went to a BBQ/Thank You Party. Who was being thanked and why, you ask? Well, in the spirit of doing new and different things, for much of May and June, I was a campaign volunteer. This is the first time I've ever volunteered for or gotten involved in politics. It was a great experience and I met a lot of cool people!
The candidate for whom I volunteered is Arthur Potts (Liberal, Beaches-East York). It was Art's first time running in a provincial election, and it was a tough riding to run in. The incumbent Michael Prue had held the seat for many years (too many!)
I don't know Arthur all that well, but I have known him for many years (we first met in 1998). When I found out he was running, I immediately volunteered. I knew instinctively that he'd put up a heckuva fight for the riding. I also felt from the get-go that he'd do a fantastic job if (when) he won. Arthur has endless energy and his enthusiasm is infectious! He also has a knack for connecting with people.
The election was on June 12th, and waiting for the results was something of a nail-biter! It was a very tight race, but we all knew that Arthur and everyone involved in the campaign had given their all. The hard work paid off: Shortly after midnight, the ballots were tallied and Arthur won by 431 votes. I'm so glad I was a part of this process and I am truly happy for Arthur. And yes, I will definitely volunteer again in a future campaign (maybe municipal? maybe federal?). It was cool getting involved.
The candidate for whom I volunteered is Arthur Potts (Liberal, Beaches-East York). It was Art's first time running in a provincial election, and it was a tough riding to run in. The incumbent Michael Prue had held the seat for many years (too many!)
I don't know Arthur all that well, but I have known him for many years (we first met in 1998). When I found out he was running, I immediately volunteered. I knew instinctively that he'd put up a heckuva fight for the riding. I also felt from the get-go that he'd do a fantastic job if (when) he won. Arthur has endless energy and his enthusiasm is infectious! He also has a knack for connecting with people.
The election was on June 12th, and waiting for the results was something of a nail-biter! It was a very tight race, but we all knew that Arthur and everyone involved in the campaign had given their all. The hard work paid off: Shortly after midnight, the ballots were tallied and Arthur won by 431 votes. I'm so glad I was a part of this process and I am truly happy for Arthur. And yes, I will definitely volunteer again in a future campaign (maybe municipal? maybe federal?). It was cool getting involved.
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
Broadway Binge
I love seeing live shows, whether it's comedy, music or some other type of performance. I especially enjoy theatre (plays and musicals). I've been to New York five times in the last two years, and the reason for the trips is solely to indulge in Broadway shows (and some off Broadway, too). This time around, I saw four shows in two days (2 matinées and 2 evening shows).
I think I'm getting tired of formulaic, clichéd musicals. I can handle thin storylines, and I can live with predictability. But what I disliked about this (and other recent "must-see" musicals) is the music - particularly the lyrics. The lyrics were repetitive and seemed to be exclamation points for a theme or emotion. I kept thinking "Yeah, I get it, move on already..." The songs didn't seem to advance the narrative - or at least not enough to justify the length of a given number. There were some funny lines though, and the actor playing Lola was delightfully over the top.
Cranston was great, but the play itself was meh... Maybe it's hard to build suspense and to sustain tension when you already know the ending (will LBJ get elected???) I kept looking at my watch.
I really liked this one! I got a last minute rush ticket to see it. I've never seen the movie and had no expectations about the musical (I'd not read any reviews or anything...) Terrific! Zack Braff does a great job in the lead. The actress playing Olive was a hoot, and Cheech was wonderful. The story, music, set design, acting, costumes and the rest were really good. A lot of fun - go see it if you get a chance!!!!
Another last-minute ticket purchase, and again, I had no idea what to expect... "The music is Tupac, the story is now" - great slogan, but I don't know (didn't know) Tupac's music.
This was great!!!! I thoroughly enjoyed it! Holler If You Hear Me was edgy, angry, hopeful, honest... It's about inner-city gang bangers trying to turn their lives around. It's quite a departure from the usual Broadway offerings - definitely worth seeing if you're in NYC. An all-round talented cast.
I should also note that Holler doesn't rely on fancy-schmancy costumes and zillion dollar set designs. It's raw and simple, and that's part of what makes it so compelling. It's simply a talented cast telling an interesting story set to great music. Check it out.
Thursday, June 19, 2014
I'm Bored... So...
I'm not exactly bored with stories and ideas, but I do feel a bit of ennui with some of what comes as part and parcel of writing: being sedentary, being solitary, being silent.
Don't get me wrong: I do have several works-in-progress, and I will indeed finish them sooner or later, but for now I need a break. The break isn't just from writing, but also from the auxiliary tasks that writers must attend to, such as tweeting, promoting, etc. In short, I've been spending too much time chained to my desk/smartphone.
So, what I plan to do over the next while is try a whole bunch of stuff/do a number of things that are new to me, or that are different from my usual routines and milieux.
* Apropos the above: Two weeks ago, I broke my foot and sprained my ankle, so methinks Fencing is not in the cards for the time being.
Monday, June 16, 2014
Guest post from Lorne Oliver, author of THE CISTERN - Just Released!
When Chrys
asks her brother Spencer for help to clean a foreclosed house for the bank,
neither expects their lives to be on the line. It’s supposed to be a simple Sunday: take
pictures…clean out the house…collect the cash.
Chrys and Spencer are plunged into a fight for their lives when the
house reveals unspeakable horrors.
…Sometimes
things in the light are even more deadly.
One of the writers I have always looked
up to is Stephen King. I will first
admit that I am not a huge fan of his novels. I’m scared of the dark and scared
of the thoughts that build in my head when I’m in the dark, but I have read a
few and seen most of the movies based on his novels. One thing I really enjoy about them is
finding the little connections between the novels. For instance there is an organization called
The Shop which shows up in a few of his novels or is just mentioned as being
the reason for whatever freaky stuff happens.
A character from his novel THE SHINING appears in a flashback in the
novel IT. Then, also from IT, the
character Eddie Kaspbrak’s family used to live next door to Paul Sheldon’s
family who is the main character in MISERY.
The list goes on and on so much that people have made ever growing
flowcharts dedicated to it.
I accidentally started connecting my
novels together with tiny tidbits from the start. In RED ISLAND one character is reading a
novel I wrote 14 years ago and will be publishing later this year. In RED SERGE some characters listen to a CD
purchased from a singer at the Farmers’ Market.
On the CD is a song called RED ISLAND.
In THE CISTERN I took the connections a
little further. The female singer who sold
the CD’s in Serge is a full blown character this time around. She is found in a cinderblock room along with
the dead body of another woman. When
Spencer and Chrys find her they also find a case of her CD’s. Back in Serge, it is also mentioned about a
cook coming to work at The Alcrest Gastropub which is more than the central
setting in THE CISTERN. It is a
character in itself.
As time goes on there are going to be
more connections from one novel to the next.
The hardest part is making a connection to a novel that has not even
been written yet. Though I am working on
it. My thriller and mystery series will
be coming together when characters from the other show up at THE ALCREST.
There are a couple other connections in
THE CISTERN to my other novels, but you’ll have to check them out to find them.
Chapter Four
Maeve Campbell’s
head snapped up. The back of her cranium
bounced off one cinder block wall then another.
For one brief confused moment she didn’t know where she was. Then the smell hit her and her body shivered
with violence. Was the smell worse? Was the
water colder? Was that woman’s body
still out there in the dark?
She had been
dreaming. She actually fell asleep
sitting in the corner. And she
dreamed. There were daisies again, only
this time they were woven in and out of her long blond hair. Her mother always said Maeve belonged in the
sixties, a flower child reborn. She
stood on a beach and her bare feet dug into the sand as the ocean's waves came
over them. A strand of green seaweed
wrapped around her calf. She wore a shear red dress that flowed with
the wind and danced on the surface of the water. You could see the outline of her body when
the light was right. Her guitar hung
from one hand beside
her.
The rotting smell
was back. There were no flowers in her
hair, no seaweed around her leg.
She saw nothing in the darkness.
What made her
waken? There was no water dripping from
the pipe. She struggled to hear if there
were any sounds, but the hits to her head made it ring from inside her skull. Perhaps she just woke because it was
time. She longed to be back in her
dream.
What
was that? There was a sound. She knew the top of this room had a wood
ceiling and above that was another. Was it all the way up there? Was it all in her head? Was it Enid? Maybe she had come back to life and wanted
revenge for being eaten.
There was the sound
again. Footsteps? It was so faint she could barely hear it over
the ringing. Her heart pounded. It was him.
Maybe he was back to kill her. Maybe
he was back to finally do the things she feared the most. She
knew some of
what he had done to the other woman. Her
body ached from the games he had played already. She felt so week.
She pushed away
from the corner. Maeve didn’t want this
to go on.
More sounds came
from above, something along the floor.
Something scraped like it was dragged.
Another woman?
He’s
found another. If he had another girl to play with then this
might be
Maeve’s last chance. She was going
to be held under the water.
She rolled forward
onto her hands and knees and began crawling through the water. She couldn’t see, but knew where the trap
door was. She had to get under it,
behind it almost so that she would still be in the shadows when the door
opened. Her hand fell on the leg of the
dead woman. Enid.
Her hand flinched away. She gently
put her hand back on the body and followed
down the leg to her toes. At the far wall
she let her hands crawl upward until she was standing. Her weak legs wobbled beneath her. Her ankle was in violent pain.
Unless she was lucky,
she wasn’t going to win. Maeve knew her
only chance was to grab him when he looked in with his flashlight. All of the possibilities played through her
mind. Either way she was going to fight. She was going to claw and scratch and kick
and bite until either she killed him or he ended it. She widened her stance, arms out to keep
balance.
Where
was he?
She felt an almost
excitement growing inside her. She had
tried to be nice to everyone her entire life, but she was going to kill the
next person that came through that trap door.
For more on Lorne Oliver and his books, check out the following:
Facebook https://facebook.com/ oliverauthor
Twitter @LorneOliver
Saturday, June 14, 2014
Recent Reads: Magical Clear Ranch
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| Meh. I liked the voice, I just didn't find the content/topics consistently interesting. |
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| WOW!!! This was terrific! Stellar research, well documented. An in-depth look - worth reading! |
Saturday, May 17, 2014
Guest Post by Lisa De Nikolits
Me and My Nasty Characters
Guest post by Lisa De Nikolits
“Tell me, did you purposely try to come up with the nastiest, most
unlikeable characters ever, or did that just happen naturally?”
I had no idea how to reply, so I just stared at the woman who had
asked the question.
The woman had recently finished reading The Witchdoctor’s Bones and when we met up at a reading, she
followed me to the far side of the room and, with my back against the wall, she
wanted answers.
I tried to figure out whether she was wondering if the nasty bits
emanated from my own personality, in which case she probably thought I should
be on a therapist’s couch instead of standing there chatting to her.
But mostly I was wondering which characters she was referring to,
and why she had found them to be as obnoxious as she did; I mean sure, there
were some evil people in the book, that’s why it was a psychological thriller,
a murder mystery, but even the bad guys had one or two redemptive qualities
that created some empathy between them and the reader but perhaps this was an
erroneous assumption on my part.
I tried to recall what some early reviewers had said of the
characters:
“…they do remind you of characters you've encountered in a
late-night screening of Moulin Rouge.
You know, the kinds of people you don't naturally gravitate toward but whom
you're unable to ignore. You're drawn in. Illicit love, rejected love, misfired
love, machinations of all sorts, and all involving characters of dubious
integrity and (in some cases) of questionable sanity.” – Doug O’Neill, Canadian Living Magazine.
Rob Brunet (Stinking Rich)
called the characters “seemingly normal,” with the book “a lusty dusty romp,
with excursions to the nastier regions of human desire.”
Liz Bugg (Calli Barnow Series) called the characters intriguing and Terri
Favro (The Proxy Bride) dubbed them
sometimes twisted, but none of the reviewers appeared to find the characters as
deeply nasty as the reader who had me pinned with my back to the wall, a reader
who clearly wanted some explanation.
“Morality,” I finally offered and she looked even more confused. “My
books are all very different, right?”
She nodded.
“And if you’re looking for any common denominator among them, it’s
this; they all explore human morality. I like to take people and put them into
unusual situations and then see what unfolds. It’s like a pressure test, see
who breaks first, and how they break, and what the consequences might be. And
do I try to create nasty characters? No, I don’t. In fact, I don’t see them as
nasty at all but fully human. The truth is, a lot of people out there are absolutely
heinous, much worse, in fact than most of the ones written about, because if we
were to write about them, they would seem beyond the range of reality.
Characters always need to be believable, and sometimes, what people do in real
life isn’t believable at all. If you were to write it down, it would seem too
far-fetched.”
The reader looked doubtful.
“I agree that some of the characters in The Witchdoctor’s Bones are pretty nasty,” I conceded. “Take
Stepfan for example…”
“No! I really liked him!”
Again I was incredulous. “But he’s a selfish, chauvinistic,
misogynistic, arrogant, vain and rude man. How could you like him?”
“He didn’t know he was all those things. He didn’t know that nobody
liked him. He was just being himself.”
“I see.” I wasn’t really sure what to say next. “Well, I’m glad that
the book resonated with you, that makes me really happy.”
The reader eyed me warily and again, I wondered if she thought that
the author of such a book needed long-term counseling on a therapist’s couch.
Fortunately I saw a friend arrive and I ducked under the reader’s
arm and made a hasty escape.
“Chatting to a fan?” my friend asked and I laughed.
For more on Lisa and her books, check out: http://www.lisadenikolitswriter.com/
and follow her on Twitter @LisaDeNikolits
Tuesday, May 6, 2014
Recent Reads: Century Vengeance Debutante
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