Halloween is Never Over

HALLOWEEN IS NEVER OVER

Listen to Jim’s podcast:

http://jimreedbooks.com/mp3/scariest_stories1.mp3

or read his story below:

Once you’ve read the scariest books ever written, Halloween is never over, and you are never the same.

Now that the silly and frolicsome Day of the Living (the commercial free-for-all that Halloween has become) is done and gone, let’s contemplate some really scary stuff…the stuff that nightmares are made of.

The scariest book I ever read: CASTAWAY by James Gould Cozzens, published in 1934.

I don’t know why every teacher of literature, every writing instructor, isn’t assigning this book to students who are interested in really writing scary, writing well. This book leaves a lifetime impression and may even defy categorization. It could be called a horror story, though nothing really supernatural occurs. It could be called a dark fantasy, but there are no levitations or spells or exploding heads. It could be termed a remarkable work of avant-garde fiction, but nothing about it is pretentious. It might be a mystery, but it’s even hard to define what’s mysterious about it.

I won’t reveal more, because I want you to read it for yourself. Let’s just say it’s the story of a man trapped in a department store. Let’s just say it might be a re-telling of ROBINSON CRUSOE. Let’s just say it’s a survivalist tale, a morality tale.

Let’s just say it will stick with you.

The amazement of books such as this is that one short line can make you jump, can make your neck-hairs stand on end, can bring chills…

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So…here’s my list of the scariest books/stories ever written…and a tiny excerpt designed to make you cringe and read on…

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CASTAWAY by James Gould Cozzens

(“What he would do if he heard it, Mr. Lecky did not know. In despairing anticipation he feared to hear as much as he feared not hearing anything. To be pursued and know it was hardly better than to be pursued and not know it…”)

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DRACULA by Bram Stoker

(“As the Count leaned over me and his hands touched me, I could not

repress a shudder…”)

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IT’S A GOOD LIFE by Jerome Bixby

(“Next day it snowed, and killed off half the crops–but it was a good

day.”)

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ROBINSON CRUSOE by Daniel Defoe

(“…my only way to go about an attempt for an escape was,

if possible, to get a savage into my possession…”)

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THE WAR OF THE WORLDS by H.G. Wells

(“And strangest of all is it to hold my wife’s hand again,

and to think that I have counted her, and that she has counted me, among the dead.”)

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I AM LEGEND by Richard Matheson

(“A coughing chuckle filled his throat.

He turned and leaned against the wall while he swallowed the pills.

Full circle, he thought while the final lethargy crept into his limbs.”)

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NIGHTMARE ALLEY by William Lindsay Gresham

(“How do you get to be a geek? I can’t understand how anybody can

get so low.”)

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OCTOBER GAME by Ray Bradbury

(“Then…some idiot turned on the lights.”)

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THE THIRTEEN CLOCKS by James Thurber

(“Even if you were the mighty Zorn of Zorna, you couldnot escape the fury of the Duke. He’ll slit you from your guggle to your zatch…”)

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–Jim Reed © 2009 A.D.

CORPUS DELECTABLE

I am a hugger.

Not a mugger, not a lugger, not a slugger…but a hugger.

 

I generally keep my emotional and/or physical distance from strangers, but when I really like somebody, and when it’s safe to do so, I tend to greet them with a hug—or at least a handshake.

 

Over the decades, I’ve evolved. One of the few advantages of aging is that I now see patterns in things, cause-and-effect phenomena in things…so that my behavior has subtly shifted.

 

Some things I’ve learned about hugging:

 

1.  Some people respond readily to a quick hug and seem flushed with pleasure at this nice surprise.

 

2.  Some people respond but quickly back away, as if they don’t know what to do after a hug.

 

3.  Some people stiffen and don’t respond to the hug. These are folks I won’t hug again, unless they initiate.

 

4.  Some people back away and will do anything to avoid a hug in the first place.

 

5.  Some people hug a little too long and make me want to back away.

 

6.  Some people, at first reluctant at each hug, now approach me as if they will actually miss the hug if I don’t provide it.

 

7.  Some guys are huggable, but others try to avoid it because, well, they don’t think it’s guyish. These are often older or elderly guys, whose generation doesn’t cater to this kind of behavior.

 

8.  Some people exude a kind of sensuousness when I hug them, so I tend not to try to hug them again, lest something happens. This used to occur a lot more when I was young…with sometimes pleasant results. No more—I’ve been happily monogamous for more than three decades.

 

Even after studying hugging for sixty years, I still don’t know why most huggers pat each other on the back.  Maybe it’s a kind of sign language that says, “Just hugging! Nothing more is meant!”

 

Anyhow, there’s lots of horror and sorrow and grief in the world that’s beyond my control. Maybe hugging is something I can do that reminds me that people can be pleasant to one another, even when they can’t think of anything comforting to say aloud

 

© Jim Reed 2009 A.D.

www.jimreedbooks.com

THOUGHTS WORTH HAVING

THOUGHTS WORTH HAVING

 

Question: Does the Universe comprise a series of acts by an absentee god?

Question: When we congratulate a winner, are we glad the winner is glad but at the

                 same time jealous and resentful?

Question: Is the product Harris Famous Roach Tablets marketed solely to famous

                  roaches? Archie was one famous roach, but I don’t recall any others. Or

                  are the tablets themselves famous, and marketed to people who want to

                  kill unknown roaches?

Question: Is a trash can actually a time capsule? A receptacle of memories?

Question: How do graduates of the DUI School celebrate?

Question: In the film The Sky’s the Limit, Fred Astaire gets to dance on a bar and

                  angrily kick glasses to pieces. The song is One More for the Road. How

                  come I can’t get away with doing that?

Question: I think I’d like to be a medium fish in an insignificant pond. Wait! Isn’t               

                  that what I  am?

Question: An optimist sees the glass as half full. What is a person who sees the glass and wants to know who drank half the water?

Question: Is it true that deceased Veterans didn’t die for me, they just died instead of me

–Jim Reed © 2009 A.D.

 

 

 

WE LOOK BEFORE AND AFTER, AND PINE FOR WHAT IS NOT

WE LOOK BEFORE AND AFTER, AND PINE FOR WHAT IS NOT

 

Just behind me, hanging from the 103-year-old mantel of our 103-year-old home, is a passel of eyeglasses.

These eyeglasses are gathered there for the temporary distraction or pleasure or horror of anyone who cares to try them on or watch somebody try them on.

Come into our dining room/writing room/art room and take a look at the world through these eyeglasses…or let the world marvel at the new and altered you in the act of wearing these eyeglasses.  Let’s see…what glasses can I spot at this moment?

There are the Backwards Shades, a double-whammy of a young person’s dream—when you don these, nobody can see your eyes, so they don’t know what you’re looking at. But, more interesting than that is the bonus fact that the inside edges of the dark lenses are mirrored. That means you can see whatever is behind you, too! There are things you will enjoy spying when nobody knows you can see them, such as a quick smooch. There are things you are sorry you saw, such as somebody snickering or rolling their eyes at you.  It’s almost as good as that adolescent fantasy of turning invisible and being able to see people who can’t see you, or entering forbidden places undetected. These are cool glasses! And no batteries needed!

How nice to not only watch where you are going, but where you have been, all at the same moment.

Then, there are pairs of 3-D eyeglasses, both the polarized gray ones and the red-and-green ones. In my adulthood, I’ve spent much time viewing the Mars Rovers’ 3-D images direct from Mars…and in my early youth, I gazed in wonder at Wonder Woman’s bosom and Superman’s fists in 3-D comic books.

How nice to see a flat world suddenly have depth and perspective!

I wish somebody would invent 2-D glasses so that I could view people who get in my face as non-threatening and paper-thin.

Of course, I never know when to stop. I also own X-Ray Vision glasses (better wear your lead underwear when you visit!), nerd glasses, psychedelic glasses, rose-colored glasses, telescopic glasses, and even the dilated-pupil-protector glasses you get at the eye doctor’s.

Why is all this stuff around?

Maybe because reality is repetitive and sometimes needs a pick-me-up view.

Maybe because the limited world presented to me out of habit has many angles and details that can only be viewed by changing the spectrum a bit.

Maybe because it’s fun to see somebody giggle when they wear these things or see somebody else wear them.

Maybe just because I’m the one who needs to giggle once in a while, just to get outside my pink, wrinkled body bag and take an oblique look at an all-too-real world

© Jim Reed 2009 A.D.

 

MAKE ‘EM LAUGH

 

JUST GIVE ME A GOOD LAUGH NOW AND THEN

  

One of the funniest sight gags I ever saw was in a Bob Hope-Bing Crosby movie back in the 1940’s. 

 As a tad, it probably didn’t take much to make me laugh, because the aging process had not yet presented life’s back-stories to me.

Anyhow, in this Hope-Crosby Road movie, Hope has pulled off his shoes and is ready to go to bed. Note that Hope and Crosby always slept together, as did Laurel and Hardy, Abbott and Costello, and a lot of other comic teams. Anyhow, Bob Hope’s toes are showing through the ends of his socks, when Bing says something like, “Better get some shoe polish to cover that up.”

May not sound like much to you, but this was exactly the kind of humor a six-year-old could grasp, and it opened the door to many more sight gags that other comedians would make me laugh out loud over: Abbott and Costello enter a restaurant when the headwaiter says, “Walk this way!” meaning “follow me to your table.” Of course, Costello walks with the same snooty sway as the headwaiter. Now, that was easy to understand and very funny to me and my friends.

Back then, before a theatrical movie began , we’d be entertained by a cartoon, a serial chapter, some previews, and–wonder of wonders–what we called a “Pete Smith Short.” Now, you can subscribe to the Best IPTV Services and watch movies on-demand using mobile devices.

 In one of those brief Pete Smith movies, a bus stops, a woman gets off and walks through a shallow mud puddle, then the man behind her disembarks and sinks into the same puddle over his head. Again, how could life get any funnier than that?

The most beautiful sight gag I ever saw was Red Skelton, at the practice bar with several ballerinas, getting ready to place one unbent leg straight out to rest on the bar, which he does. Then, in an astounding act that looked as logical as any six-year-old’s idea of logic can become, Skelton raises the OTHER unbent leg to place it on the bar at the same time. Now, it happened so fast, in those days before slow-mo’ photography, that you just knew for a split second that it would work. Of course, it didn’t, which makes it funny to this day, in my mind. Even later, when Ed Wynn did the same thing, it again seemed logical.

Now, there are worse things than being brought up watching Bob Hope and his contemporaries do silly things on the silver screen. I needed those funny folks to get me through the tough times, and I grew to expect them to be there when I needed them.

And they always were.

Before you send me to the nursing home to languish away my final days, put a stack of old movies in my lap in the wheelchair, and let me watch them. Bring on all the Benny Hill, Mr. Bean, Jerry Lewis, Johnny Carson, Bob & Ray, Laurel and Hardy, Trevor Noah, Red Skelton, Steve Allen, Chris Rock, Soupy Sales, Mort Sahl, Henny Youngman, Phyllis Diller, Jon Stewart, Samantha Bee, Groucho Marx, Clevon Little, Jacques Tati, Stan Freberg and company stuff you can afford and let me sit there chuckling at the guys and gals who got me through to this age.

If I’m lucky, I’ll take the chuckles and the sight gags with me.

Thanks for the memories 

(c) 2013 A.D. by Jim Reed

jim@jimreedbooks.com

http://www.jimreedbooks.com

Twitter and Facebook

 

 

 

Percy Taught Me About Forgiveness and Tolerance

After a fifty-year search, Percy the Catface Dog has been found.

This tiny 78rpm vinyl recording stuck with me through the years, and

it taught me early lessons about the horrors of intolerance, bullying and

bigotry. It also showed me how to spot the Good People…the people who

actually are sorry for their mistakes and apologize (sincerely) when they make

them.

 

Listen carefully to this story (you may have to cut and paste this as a website, since Facebook seems to have such limited access to audio software):

http://jimreedbooks.com/audio/Percy.mp3

  

 

 

Happy Birthday to Me

Thanks for all your happy birthday wishes.

Liz and I spent the day with my brother, Tim, his wife, Jeanie, and my sisters, Rosi and Barbara…at Tim & Jeanie’s home on Missionary Ridge in Chattanooga.

We laughed hard enough to split a stitch! Received a wind-up toy whale that actually spurts water in your face whilst swimming in the tub…a genuine Creachter Sculpture from Tim…a pumpkin with my name on it…an IQ game we all lost…ice cream cake…an old clip-art book…and mucho other goodies.

Mainly, we enjoyed each others’ company. Wish you could have been there but glad you weren’t–might have split another stitch

(c) 2013 A.D. by Jim Reed

jim@jimreedbooks.com

http://www.jimreedbooks.com

Twitter and Facebook

 

Where’s Everybody Gone

WHIZ BOOM POOF! WHERE ARE THEY NOW?

 

THINGS THAT DISAPPEARED FROM BIRMINGHAM OVERNIGHT:

 

GONE: Power Rangers for Christ Child Center on the Bessemer Superhighway

 

              Honest! It was there for years, each time I drove from Arkadelphia to the

              Fairgrounds for the monthly flea market. Where is it now?

              I loved it for its name.

 

GONE: Hawthorn Gallery on Third Avenue North

 

               Then you saw it, then you didn’t. Keith disappeared in a cloud of remorse.

                Did he ever look back?

 

GONE: Five-dollar overtime parking citations.

 

              Poof! Suddenly, it’s a $30 fine if you spend money Downtown for more than

              two hours. Doesn’t the City need that extra shopping dough?

              Do the folks who passed the ordinance even know what it’s like to park and shop

              Downtown?

 

GONE: Safari Cup on Richard Arrington Boulevard/21st Street North

 

              What th–?  Overnight, Dave pulls up stakes, says no good-byes, and heads Up

              Yonder to Neverland. Whazzup?

               Did we Downtown loyalists mean anything to him?

 

     GONE: Tony’s Terrific Hot Dogs on Second Avenue North. Tony’s was real,

                   simple,direct, efficient and plain-dealing. What more could you ask of a

                   diner? No pretentions, just good quickie lunch fixes.

                   Does Tony still mix the sauce in his dreams?

 

GONE: Birmingham Magazine. Joe O’Donnell was Birmingham Magazine.

             Do the Chamber folks realize this or even care?

 

      GONE:  Saturday afternoon live music from the Metropolitan Opera in New York.

 

             WBHM lost a lot of supporters, who subsequently started donating their money 

             to the live theatre broadcasts. No-one was polled or asked–WBHM just dropped

             the broadcasts, ignoring their base and dismissing their first-years promises to

             those who campaigned to establish the station in the first place.

             Years of support and goodwill gone for good.

 

GONE: The guys at Catch-Out Corner 

             Where are they now?

              Is their disappearance good for us but bad for them?

STILL BOOKING AFTER ALL THESE YEARS: Reed Books Antiques/The Museum of Fond Memories is still going strong 29 years later. Come cherish us now, just in case we are suddenly teleported away one day. www.jimreedbooks.com

Christmas 1988

CHRISTMAS 1988

 

What was that that just whizzed by and left us breathless, heavier, broker…and did we get anything out of it?

What it was, was Christmas.

Thought we had gotten the latest Christmas out of the way, but its vestiges are everywhere apparent, still.

On the road back from Fort Payne, Alabama, this weekend, a plastic mailbox wreath blew tattered in the warm wind. On the baby grand piano in our foyer at home, a few wind-up toys and an electric train remain partially dismantled, and soon the small ceramic houses and latex Santas will take their long winter’s naps in tissue-padded gift boxes.

The toys and trains and holly plastics are little jabs into the past, small probes I issue each year in an attempt to regain an old feeling or two that I can safely identify as the Christmas Feeling. I no longer feel self-conscious about it.

The word has gone out: don’t get Daddy (me) anything but toys for Christmas.

I don’t care for clothes, don’t need a screwdriver, don’t want a gift certificate, have all the books in the world. Just get me toys, toys that are simple and whimsical and inexpensive.

After years of proclaiming this, the extended family has gotten the hint, and toys R me!

The toys do help, and each one opened is one played with by adults around me who haven’t gotten a toy in years. I went around asking each adult I ran across before and after Christmas: are you getting toys for Christmas? Did you get a toy for Christmas? Each time, the same response: a defensive twitch followed by something nameless crossing the face, and then an almost forlorn, “Well, no, I guess I didn’t get a toy.”

And I watch visitors to our home at Christmastime. They are first taken a bit aback by the toys I pull out and put on display each year. And within minutes they’re fiddling with them self-consciously, then, later, they sneak back to the piano, and we’ll find them winding and switching and playing by themselves with little grins of private satisfaction they probably haven’t had for a long time.

Allow me $15.00 to spend on a gift for you and I’ll find a toy that meets all the requirements of a Christmas toy: it’ll puzzle you, delight you, make you chuckle out loud, and if all is according to schedule, it’ll break before the day is through. But that’s OK. Part of the joy is taping and pasting it back together and making it work again—gives you an excuse to take it apart to see what makes it tick.

Of course, I can’t diddle like this all year, or folks will start thinking up reasons to put me away safely.

So, I’ll store those Christmas toys away some time this week, just minutes before my wife is finally exasperated beyond all patience, and I’ll give her a hug she may not have time for and assure her that her foyer and her piano are all hers again for another eleven months.

And I’ll gleefully think of the day next December when I’ll casually say to her, “Why don’t we get the toys out this year for the kids to enjoy?” knowing full well that kids will pay little attention to them—after all, kids are used to having toys around all year.

It’s the kids abed within us who want so badly to have their toys back and around them just one more time

 

–Jim Reed (c) 2009 A.D.

jim@jimreedbooks.com

www.jimreedbooks.com

Misreprehensible Pronounciations

Kay Ivey, speaking at her good-ol’-boy deliberative mushmouth best in a broadcast interview this week, talked straight-faced about how heart rendering the situation was. I don’t remember now what the “situation” was because I was giggling too loud to hear the rest of the story. Her rendering of heart rending was one of those dozens of misunderestimations of the English language I hear daily.

These grating but funny language misuses and mispronunciations give me hope.

NOO-(rhymes with boo!)-kuh-ler physics

NOO-kuh-ler FIZZ-ist

REEL-uh-ter (actually pronounced that way by two realtors I know)

REEL-uh-tee

PATH-us (it’s PAY-thoss, dadgummit!)

A-(rhymes with say!)-rab, Alabama (actually, this one is correct)

HEE-nee-uss crime (HAY-nuss, I tell you!) That’s a heinous way to pronounce this!

“The data is overwhelming.” No, the data are overwhelming!

“The media is biased.” No, the media are biased. Or not.

“It’s color is bright.” No, its color is bright. Please!

“Its high time.” No, it’s high time. Pleeze!

Ann-R-tic (no, it’s ant-ARK-tic)

FIZZ-uh-cull year (FISS-cull year!)

Miss-CHEEV-ee-us (It’s MISS-chev-vous)

And so on…

Why do these gaffs give me hope? Well, they distract me from the truly disturbing rants I hear from people who inject themselves with Type A LimbaughBeckPalin serum before leaving the house. I don’t mind their addictions, I just wish they’d button their lips when I’m trying to hold a normal conversation.

Our neighbor-across-the-alley’s car was vandalized overnight, and all he could say to Liz was, “One of your Obama voters broke into my vehicle last night.”

My customer searching for the book The Nazi Doctors urged me to read it, “because that’s where Obama got his plan for health care…they’re gonna get us all, you know.”

Another customer wants to purchase the Anarchist Cookbook because he’s preparing for the big revolution.

And one customer wants books on witchcraft so he can get rid of all those (fill in the blank) who are ruining this nation.

And so on, again…

Actually, I know that most folks have a box marked “crazy” under their beds (to paraphrase Jon Stewart), which they bring out on special occasions. But a little restraint would be appreciated by those of us who just want to laugh at a few mispronounced words. We’d rather not hear the misguided ideas that seem designed as code language for racism, bigotry, intolerance, hatred and mean-spiritedness.

Just bring a mispronunciation into the shop and make me laugh!

Or not

Jim Reed (c) 2009 A.D.

www.jimreedbooks.com