Weekly Wilson - Blog of Author Connie C. Wilson

Welcome to WeeklyWilson.com, where author/film critic Connie (Corcoran) Wilson avoids totally losing her marbles in semi-retirement by writing about film (see the Chicago Film Festival reviews and SXSW), politics and books----her own books and those of other people. You'll also find her diverging frequently to share humorous (or not-so-humorous) anecdotes and concerns. Try it! You'll like it!

Dolphins and Whale Watching off the Coast of Cabo San Lucas on January 14, 2014

P1020978We went out whale watching on a large boat and it was truly an amazing experience. Not only did we see many whales, but there were entire schools of dolphin(s) that ran right ahead of the boat.

Plus, it was an open bar and breakfast was served.

P1020977Beautiful weather here, but it ends day after tomorrow, sadly.

Cabo San Lucas, Sunset Beach Sky Bar, January 5, 2014.

Sky Bar Pool. Cabo San Lucas. Sunset Beach.

Sky Bar Pool. Cabo San Lucas. Sunset Beach.

I’m going to do my best to post some pictures, although the Internet is very slow here. First, some shots of the amazing Sky Bar Pool that overlooks the ocean and has a bird’s eye view of a gorgeous sunset.

Sunset in Cabo San Lucas.

Sunset in Cabo San Lucas.

The view from the hot tub at sunset is truly amazing!

View from our room.

View from our room.

I have so many beautiful shots, but the Internet here is as amazingly slow as that sunset is beautiful

Sunset Beach Resort, Cabo San Lucas, Sky Bar.

Sunset Beach Resort, Cabo San Lucas, Sky Bar.

Still, a picture IS worth 1,000 words. (Even if it takes a lot longer to load).

Cabo San Lucas on January 3rd and 4th, 2014: Hello Sunshine!

P1020721We flew out of O’Hare at 8 a.m. on January 3rd, just ahead of a blizzard that was moving in. The drive up was uneventful, although the I55N portion witnessed the hours of snowing that son Scott had described to us on the phone.
Since he will soon get to experience the weather from our corner of the world and our house, let’s hope that is as bad as it gets, because weathermen were predicting -17 back in the Quad Cities.

Our plane was to leave at 8 a.m. Surprisingly, the plane, itself, would have left on time, but the DOOR FROZE CLOSED! I’m not kidding! We were to leave from Gate H9, but there was a change to K5 when airport personnel could not open the door through which we were to board! We listened to a poor woman from San Francisco, who had traveled to Disneyworld in Florida, describe the night they had just spent on the floor at the airport, since Southwest Airlines told them the soonest they could get out of Florida to fly home to San Francisco was going to be Monday night! (This was Thursday morning!) She said, “It’s a good thing I’m a Chicago Bears fan, because I had to outfit my entire family in Bears hooded sweatshirts. We had no winter clothing with us at all and had to transfer to other airlines and fly through Chicago to get home.” She added that she was expecting to leave at 10 a.m. and arrive in San Francisco at 5 p.m.

We waited around an hour and then boarded, having survived the taxi ride out. Our driver never put on his seat belt, was weaving all over the road, and took a weird route. People were literally honking at him as he nearly sideswiped the wall at one point.

Now, it is Saturday and we have been poolside for 2 days. The weather is very much like Mazatlan’s, with cool nights, but warm enough to lay in the sun by day.

William F. Nolan, Author, Pens “Nolan on Bradbury” About his 60-Year Friendship with Ray Bradbury

William F. Nolan’s book “Nolan on Bradbury” (ISBN 978-1-61498-058-2), is one great writer’s tribute to another great writer and even greater friend. As the back cover says, “Sixty years of writing about the Master of Science Fiction.” It’s Bradbury, of course, who is described as “the Master,” but it would be more accurate to say, “One Master of Science Fiction describes his 60 years of friendship with another Master of Science Fiction.”

We learn such interesting things (unknown to me previously) as the fact that Bradbury initially tooled around Los Angeles on a bicycle. He never learned to drive; later, he was chauffeured everywhere. Or there’s the interesting irony that the man who saw space as the final frontier was, himself, afraid to fly for many years. (He did, eventually, get over his fear of flying.)

Nolan, known as a Living Legend in Dark Fantasy himself and perhaps most famous for co-authoring “Logan’s Run” with George Clayton Johnson, includes many wonderful stories of his own such as “And Miles to Go Before I Sleep,” which he wrote in 1957. This surprise-ending story evokes Bradbury’s typical tale.

In fact, “And Miles to Go Before I Sleep” was so much like Bradbury at his best that Norman Corwin (radio director/producer/writer) once told Bill Nolan that “And Miles to Go Before I Sleep” was his favorite Bradbury story. When Bill informed Corwin that HE, not Bradbury, was the true author of the piece, Nolan then acknowledges, “Without meaning to, I had written a new Bradbury story.”

And what a great story it is!

There is another story, “The Joy of Living” that summons echoes of “The Stepford Wives” or of my own story of a man who builds a robot wife in the attic to replace his own shrewish flesh-and-blood bride (“M.R.M.” for “Maude Replacement Machine” which appeared in “Hellfire & Damnation II,” my 2012 short story collection for which Jason V Brock wrote the Introduction and in Slices of Flesh.) I can relate to all of William F. Nolan’s work, long or short, and I hope he continues writing forever. I could say the same about Ray Bradbury’s body of work.

I can honestly say I had not read William F. Nolan’s short story “The Joy of Living” before writing my own serio-comic take on robots as mates, but I have received great encouragement from this prodigious writer, who has encouraged me even as others were hurling brickbats. In this way, Bill Nolan—whom I first met while interviewing him in 2008 for an online magazine—is also like his mentor Ray Bradbury.

Bradbury provided invaluable encouragement and assistance to Nolan when he was still a struggling but talented author, still trying to make up his mind whether he was meant to be an illustrator (Nolan worked for Hallmark) or a writer.

It is clear to me that Nolan made the right choice in choosing to write. I hope he continues to write books like this one for many more years to come.

There is a great section on Bradbury’s collaboration with John Huston on the script for “Moby Dick,” which Bradbury was hired to write. Written on location in Ireland, Huston could be a hard taskmaster, and Bradbury, who had not read the book before accepting the assignment, read it up to 9 times and rewrote the script up to 30 times, producing 1,500 pages to finally get 150 pages that were filmed with Gregory Peck as Captain Ahab. Twenty electronic whales were used, a process that took 2 and 1/2 years and cost $4,500,000.

Bradbury’s rise from the ranks of pulp fiction and his breaking into the slick magazine ranks of “Saturday Evening Post” and “Collier’s” is celebrated. His success acknowledged his talent and elevated science fiction (and, to a certain extent, writing horror), to a position of far greater acceptance.

Bradbury, the man, emerges as a mentor, much like Nolan himself has been to me and others. An established author, Ray Bradbury took the time to critique the ending of a story that Nolan had written, which became Nolan’s first sale. William F. Nolan took the time to critique my first novel “The Color of Evil” and suggested edits for the end (which I incorporated) making it the first (of 3) in the successful “The Color of Evil” series. (“Khaki = Killer” will come out in March and “Red Is for Rage,” Book #2, came out this year). The first book led Stoker recommendations in the YA (Young Adult) category with recommendations all year. It did not make the final cut for reasons that would provide enough plot for another novel, when we want to concentrate on Bradbury’s miraculous Martian stories here.

I will never forget William F. Nolan’s kindness to me when some others were anything but kind or fair. Bill’s association with rising young talents Jason V (and Sunni) Brock —(who also eulogizes Bradbury at book’s end)—demonstrates that he is an established writer who recognizes and nurtures talent whenever and wherever he encounters it. He doesn’t require the individual to be someone important in the field—someone who can somehow benefit him politically. William F. Nolan is about the work, as was Ray Bradbury. He gives of his own remarkable talent generously, in the Bradbury tradition, as he experienced it over nearly 60 years of friendship.

I was deeply touched by Bill’s story of his final meeting with his old friend, shortly before Ray Bradbury died at 91 on June 12, 2012. In poor health, weakened, slightly deaf, senses failing, Ray grasped William F. Nolan’s hand and said, “Thank you for being in my life.” I could say the same to William F. Nolan.

I just spent 9 hours at my 95-year-old mother-in-law’s side as Hospice came to counsel someone dying from congestive heart failure and pneumonia. In helping her to her feet (she can no longer walk, as both hip replacements have failed and one hip is entirely out of the socket), she grasped my hand and kissed it. Trying to honor her wishes to die at home, we have been present daily, caring for her and watching what I call “the long, slow, fade to black”–a final chapter that eventually comes for all of us. It is hard. I’ve buried both my parents and been through this twice before. It does not get easier, especially if, as with my father, there IS no hospice and you are caring for a man terminally ill with liver cancer in a very small town with very little help.

I could repeat that exact same sentence to Helen. (I will soon try, if I can keep from crying as I say it.) The steady parade of hospice workers asking uncomfortable questions about funeral homes (“Which funeral home do you want to go to, Helen?”), inquiring about “do not resuscitate” orders, bringing in oxygen machines—all this made this particular very small part of Bill’s book so touching that I actually broke down in tears.

I had to set the book aside for a while. I hope it was not too long a delay, because this is a truly enjoyable read and in no way somber for the average reader.

For example, Bill repeats a delightful story about how Bradbury used to wait outside the studio gates to get autographs of famous movie stars like Douglas Fairbanks, Gracie Allen and W.C. Fields. W.C. finally scrawled his name (Bradbury still had the autograph) and said, in W.C. Fields fashion, “There you go, you little SOB.”

For most of the pages of this wonderful tribute to a good friend, comrade and mentor, you will read new stories and old and learn things about Ray Bradbury’s interaction(s) with the world that you probably did not know. You will marvel, once again, at the output of BOTH of these creative geniuses; it will not sadden you at all.

The only part I would have liked to have seen omitted were these end comments by S. T. Joshi (p. 255): “It is a bit sad to note that the best of his (Bradbury’s) work had largely been written, with rare exceptions like Something Wicked This Way Comes by the late 1950’s. Bradbury, more than most authors, has written far too much and has also in some senses believed his own press and become a self-consciously literary author. Little that he has written since the 1960’s is of any account…”

THAT I could have lived without, S.T. Especially after you admit to never having met the man. Hard as it was for me to accept, even Richard Nixon was eulogized warmly after death.

With a talent this remarkable, a man who died shortly before publication of this book picking apart Bradbury’s later stories before he is cold in his grave just comes off as mean-spirited and petty, when the subject of this book and the author who wrote it are generous and giving.

The harsh criticism—even though it is just a few paragraphs at the very end of the Eulogies— could, perhaps, have waited for another day and another book.

William F. Nolan and Connie (Corcoran) Wilson in Austin, Texas, at the WHC writing conference.

William F. Nolan and Connie (Corcoran) Wilson in Austin, Texas, at the WHC writing conference.

Laura Caldwell Reviews “The Christmas Cats Chase Christmas Rats” (Dec. 20)

Friday, December 20, 2013

The Christmas Cats Chase Christmas Rats

by Constance Corcoran Wilson,
Art by Gary McCluskey

I am honored today to be a part of the Virtual Author Book Tours for the review of The Christmas Cats Chase Christmas Rats.

In The Christmas Cats Chase Christmas Rats
, the Christmas cats have been sent to an Environmental Lab to control the Christmas rat population. Once there, the cats discover that the Christmas rats are actually nice guys and that they do an important job.

I love Christmas books and my children do too. They look forward to each year after Thanksgiving when I put away their Thanksgiving books and get out their Christmas books. They have standard favorites (they love when their Daddy reads them The Grinch Who Stole Christmas), but they love just about every Christmas book they can get a hand on.

They were excited when The Christmas Cats Chase Christmas Rats by Constance Corcoran Wilson showed up in the mail. Not only do they love Christmas books, but they also have two cats, Mr. Rufus and Miss Baby. They were pleased to see that two of the Christmas Cats matched their cats, one grey and one orange.

My seven year old son, Kile, pronounced it a good book. He is in second grade and thought it was an easy read. He said his favorite part was that he loved the “festive” hats on the cats.

My five year old son, Daniel, loved this book and has had us read it to him many times. He is in Kindergarten and can’t read it for himself yet. He loves the story a lot, but his review is that he believes it is more of a lesson story than a Christmas story. He likes the lesson that we should be nice to everyone.

My three year old daughter, Penelope, also has enjoyed listening to this story several times. She really likes the cats and how they match her own cats. She likes the pictures a lot and likes the moral of the story.

I thought the story was an interesting and unique one. I liked how it was set in an environmental testing lab and explains the important job that the mice do. I also thought the moral of the story, to be nice to everyone, is an important one. I thought the illustrations were cute and clever.

Overall, The Christmas Cats Chase Christmas Rats is a unique and fun story to share with the family. You can enjoy it even after the holidays for its great lesson!

Book Source: Author Constance Corcoran Wilson for review as

Interview with Cyrus A Webb on “The Christmas Cats Chase Christmas Rats”

Check Out Entertainment Podcasts at Blog Talk Radio with Cyrus Webb Presents on BlogTalkRadio

New Book Trailer for “The Christmas Cats Chase Christmas Rats”

Virtual Tour Schedule for New Christmas Cats Book

Christmas Cats Chase Christmas Rats Web Tour Schedule

Daddy Blogger Dec 1 Live Video Interview
So Many Precious Books Dec 2 Review & Giveaway
Deal Sharing Aunt Dec 2 Review
Daddy Blogger Dec 3 Review
Mrs. Mommy Booknerds Dec 3 Review
Joy Story Dec 3 Review
Saving For Six Dec 4 Review
Rhodes Review Dec 5 Review & Giveaway
Sincerely Stacie Dec 6 Review
VW Stitcher Dec 9 Review
Dogs Rule Cats Drool Dec 9 Review
Books, Books & More Books Dec 10 Review
Jolly Blogger Dec 10 Review
Practical Frugality Dec 11 Review & Giveaway
The News in Books Dec 11 Review
The News in Books Dec 16 Interview
The Crypto-Capers Review Dec 12 Review
Stories from Unknown Authors Dec 12 Live Interview at 1 pm EST
Carole Rae Random Ramblings Dec 13 Review
Little Lovely Books Dec 13 Review
Bea’s Book Nook Dec 16 Review & Giveaway
Identity Discovery Dec 16 Review
Reviewing Novels on Line Dec 17 Review
Manic Mama of 2 Dec 17 Review
Hott Books Dec 18 Review
Laura’s Reviews Dec 18 Review
Sweeps for Bloggers Dec 19 Review & Giveaway
Allison’s Book Bag Dec 20 Review
Allison’s Book Bag Dec 19 Interview
Sweet Southern Home Dec 23 Review
Chaos Is a Friend of Mine Dec 24 Review & Giveaway

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“The Christmas Cats Chase Christmas Rats” Appearance Schedule, to Date

The_Christmas_Cats_C_Cover_for_Kindle
The website is now up for the Christmas Cats series of illustrated children’s Christmas books. See it at www.TheXmasCats.com. If you can’t make it out to any of the events listed below, you can order an autographed copy from the website using Paypal. The book is also available at Amazon, any of the independent bookstores in the Quad Cities, the Quad City Convention and Visitors’ bureau and at the following Christmas events.

Here is my Christmas schedule, as far as I currently know it, for appearances with my Christmas book (“The Christmas Cats Chase Christmas Rats”) AND the Cat-in-the-Hat, for a picture opportunity, as long as the Small Fry don’t run screaming from the room.
. The Cat-in-the-Hat is supportive of the Christmas Cats, but is not obligated to appear, nor in any way endorse the newer series. The Cat (in the Hat) is just a cool cat and likes to go where other cats might congregate, and would really like to see “Cocoa & Coffee with the Cats” become a reality.

1) Nov. 21, Thursday- Festival of Trees starts. Book will be on the shelves.

2) Nov. 24, Sunday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. – St. Augustine College in Chicago at Chicago Book Expo.

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3) Nov. 30, Saturday “Cocoa & Coffee with the Cats” at the Dead Poets’ Espresso House in Moline at 1:00 p.m., with the reading of each book, the potential presence of the girls for whom the book was written (Ava & Elise Wilson) and free cocoa or coffee for all. Caroling possible, as there is a piano at the Dead Poets’ Espresso, which seats 50 and closes at 2 p.m. The Cat-in-the-Hat will be present for photo opportunities. (Following the “Cocoa & Coffee with the Cats” event, the Cat-in-the-Hat and I plan to make a quick trip to the Moline BookRack store (where the book is also available), in support of independent bookstores everywhere. (National movement).

4) Dec. 1, Sunday – “Live” blogging at Google Hangout” with Daddy Blogger at 5 p.m. CDT/ 7 pm PST. Streams live to YouTube. Prior to this, radio interview on 1450 AM, Barbara Bruce General manager, KVSL, Lakeside, Arizona at 4 p.m.

5) Dec. 2, Monday, at 2:30 p.m.– radio interview with Laura@Queenbradio in Dubuque, Iowa. (Postponed due to Laura’s illness; hopefully, same time next Monday).

6) Conversations Book Club with Cyrus Webb at 5:30 p.m. CDT, streaming live at www.blogtalkradio.com/cyruswebbpresents.

7) Dec. 6, Friday, at 10 a.m., WDNG-AM with Charlotte in Alabama.

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8) Dec. 6, Friday, 5:30 to 8:00 p.m. at Razzleberries in LeClaire, Iowa
, with the Cat-in-the-Hat present for photo ops.

9) Dec. 7, Saturday, 6 to 9 p.m. at the Village of East Davenport’s Victorian Christmas Walk
. We’ll be inside Freddy’s Fritters Dog Bakery at 1111 Jersey Ridge Road, Suite 6.

10) Dec. 8,Sunday, 1 to 4 p.m. at the Book Rack in Moline, book signing.

11) Dec. 12, Noon, Radio interview with Renee

12) Dec. 13, Friday, HyVee Food Store in Silvis from 4 to 7 p.m. with the Cat-in-the-Hat. If you attended the Silvis Schools any time between 1969 and 2000, come on down. Many of your former teachers may drift through, hopefully. If copies of Book One remain, a “Buy Book #2, Get Book #1 FREE” special I’ve used before will be in force. The original book was illustrated by East Moline native Andrew Weinert and Venezuelan national Emily Marquez.

13) Dec. 14, Saturday, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. in the window of the Four Seasons Dress Shop at the Geneseo (IL) Christmas Walk. The Cat-in-the-Hat will also be present for photo opportunities.

14) December 15, Sunday, from 1 to 4 p.m. at BookWorld inside Soouthpark Mall with the Cat-in-the-Hat.

The book has expanded distribution from Ingram and should show up (for ordering) in B&N catalogue. Meanwhile, all independent bookstores in the area have the book, as well as both Visitors’ Centers and the Teachers’ Aide store in Kimberly Village. You can order the book, autographed, from its dedicated website using PayPal, www.TheXmasCats.com.

New Review from “True Review” of RED IS FOR RAGE, (Book #2 in THE COLOR OF EVIL Series)

Red Is for Rage, Book #2 in The Color of Evil series.

Red Is for Rage, Book #2 in The Color of Evil series.


RED IS FOR RAGE:

RED IS FOR RAGE, by Connie Corcoran Wilson (www.redisforrage.com), 256 pp., $10.95. ISBN 978-0-98244-481-8 (click to purchase).

In RED IS FOR RAGE, Pogo the Clown, also known as serial killer Michael Clay, vows revenge on the kid who can “see the future” and who got Clay into a load of trouble in the previous book of the series, THE COLOR OF EVIL.

Pogo is in pursuit of Tad McGreevy, who has a special gift that allows him to see into the future and identify killers – this talent has something to do with a latent sense, “tetrachromatic super vision,” a genetic mutation that allows the 2 percent of those who possess it to see not a million variety of colors (typical with most humans) but 100 million.

From page 201: “Tad was the first male with this special sight. But researchers had not yet discovered that facet of Ted’s super powers, though they eventually would. They were still whispering about ‘the boy who sees the future,’ even though, so far, that was just an untrue attention-grabbing tabloid-style misnomer.”

From page 202: “In Tad’s case, his tetrachromacy had rendered him especially sensitive to colored auras around others and had granted him a certain uncontrolled precognitive ability. In addition to experiencing colors so intensely that it almost hurt, he ‘saw’ the actions of people who possessed one particular aura: gray-green. The evil-doers. They were the only ones.”

Meanwhile, Stevie Scranton, newly rescued from his abuser, doesn’t get along with his dad, Earl. Earl, however, discovers Stevie’s journal, and the abuse he’s received from a Scoutmaster, the school principal, and a whole plethora of pedophiles in Cedar Falls. Earl vows to avenge his son.

Wilson brings to life – in ways unmatched – the quirky, ugly, bedeviled underbelly of suburbia like no other. All the warts, blisters, and physical (not to mention emotional) bruises of common folk and their often irrational behaviors. And Wilson brings to us the many ways in which they learn to love and care for each other, despite the rampant mental illnesses and festering pasts and broken homes. Wilson makes all this count and mixes the ugly and the good in ways that, for moments at least, can turn out to be rewarding for readers.

Though at times the narrative is hurried and sometimes feels like it is listed, almost like an outline, and some characters are simple cardboard cutouts, there are moments of a real gift here for the author. While having an idiot such as Earl Scranton advance the plot (his motivations just don’t feel true), there are deft touches here, especially between Stevie and his “rescued” girlfriend that are quite touching and even inspired.

So I remain happy to follow this series, as Pogo is still hell-bent on finding Tad . . . I am assuming this series will reach a conclusion and I cannot wait to see how Wilson writes it.

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