The doors on this train are about to close

The clock’s winding down on my offer of a free ride on my novel, Subway Visions. Who knows when, if ever, you’ll have another opportunity on such a deal.

The surrealistic story presents an adventurous ride in its flashes through underground culture. Some of it even erupts into verbal graffiti.

It’s one of five novels I’m making to you for free during Smashword’s annual end-of-the-year sale, which ends just a few hours from now on January First. Remember, the ebook comes in the digital platform of your choice.

Step aboard promptly, then, before the door closes. There are good reasons I see these mass transit rails as an urban amusement park. Check out the ebook and you’ll discover why.

For details, go to the book at Smashwords.com.

Along the tubes to nirvana

 

There’s even a Summer of Love

The places I lived in the settings covered in my novel Pit-a-Pat High Jinks long ago fell to the wrecking ball, yet the memories live on. The fictionalized story covers friends and lovers, along with near-misses and poverty-line entry-level work life in an out-of-the-way town and surrounding countryside while venturing out on one’s own after college. It had its downs and ups, including a Summer of Love that included a remote mountain lake.

Believe me, you can’t make up details like these, though you can amplify or reshape others.

It’s one of five novels I’m making available for FREE during Smashword’s annual end-of-the-year sale, which ends January First. The ebook comes in the digital platform of your choice. Do note that it includes adult content, so you may have to adjust your filters when ordering.

Think of this as part of my after-Christmas sale, except that these items are FREE! Remember, you risk nothing in acting now.

For details, go to the book at Smashwords.com.

Of housemates, lovers, and friends

 

Making it legal

Eastport’s growing community’s land claims needed to be clarified.

As Jonathan D. Weston notes in Kilby’s history, the Massachusetts legislature on June 17, 1791, authorized the survey of Moose Island, or Eastport, “the inhabitants prior to that time being simply ‘squatters,’ without titles to the land they occupied. The effects of this shiftless, temporary condition of affairs lingered for some time afterward.” Solomon Cushing then assigned lots to the occupants in 1791, according to Kilby. At the time, Eastport and Lubec, as Plantation 8 or Township 8, had a population of 244 people.

The deed John Shackford received from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts opens with the date June 18, 1791, and describes the committee appointed to “survey and lay out the [plan] of the settlers within said township one hundred acres of land to each settler to include his improvements,” as well as additional public lands to support a church and a school. Each settler who arrived before January 7, 1784, would pay the state five dollars for their property, while those who came later would be charged ten dollars. The purchasers would be exempt from any state taxes for five years.

Fitting “a plan of that part of said township called Moose Island with the several lots delineated thereon that Captain John Shackford a settler,” received lot No. 3, one hundred acres. The agreement was dated August 14, 1793, and recorded in Boston September 20.

His brother-in-law, Caleb Boynton senior, received lot No. 4, also one hundred acres. While his document was also dated June 18, 1791, it was not recorded until August 30, 1804.

Lot No. 17, 50 acres, went to Caleb Boynton junior in 1804.

The Shackford property would stretch along the waterfront from the middle of Shackford Cove to what would become Key Street and then back to County Road. Boynton’s stretched from Key Street to Washington Street. Together, their holdings would encompass about half of the business and residential lots of the eventual village.

The 1790 Census had a single Shackford household, John’s, with one free white male over 16, four under 16, and one free white female. This was recorded next to Caleb Boynton, with two white males over 16 and four females. Further down the list, Caleb junior had one white male over age 16, one under, and two females.

Curiously, in 1800, it was only one Boynton, Caleb senior.

You will find holes in the Census data.

Among non-family dwelling with Shackford around then was an unmarried Englishman, James Carter, in 1789. Quarters must have been tight.

With the deeds, the occupants became landowners rather than remaining squatters. Five dollars, do note, was a substantial amount at the time. Whether it was “reasonable” can be left to debate.

Thus, in 1793 Shackford gained clear ownership of one hundred acres at Shackford Cove, being lot No. 3 — and within that, the plot that includes our house. How much earlier he had built here becomes the question. By 1783, as his fee would indicate? Not all of this land went to farming, and he obviously augmented his holdings over time. If he was building ships, he definitely needed timber, which might explain the Shackford Head connection.

While I’ve been unable to find the deed of Shackford Head, it’s clear that Captain John acquired a hundred acres there, too. There are tales of the box of unsorted early documents at the courthouse.

The transactions I’ve found do undermine a story about a sheriff arriving from Massachusetts in 1797 with an armed party to seek payment for the lands. Remember, Maine was a district of Massachusetts until 1820. After being roughed up, and with what may have been a revised approach, the sheriff offered deeds from the state at a reasonable cost plus a five-year tax exemption.

Of Captain John and Esther’s children who survived to maturity, all four sons became ship captains, and two of their three daughters married likewise. Many of the grandsons continued that legacy.

Can you imagine the life in this house at the time?

Back to the last big Turning Point

The four years covered in my novel Daffodil Uprising brought about tremendous change in the nation and around the globe. In the light of recent events, a fresh overview of the period may provide some essential perspective on current events. For some readers, it may even be a stroll down a Memory Lane of an activists’ protest march. Maybe you remember or maybe you’ve just heard of it as ancient history. In my story, the Revolution of Peace & Love unfolds at the crossroads of the America, where it never got the attention it deserves.

This week, you can still get the ebook for FREE during Smashword’s annual end-of-the-year sale, which ends January First.

Act now, before the deal ends, and you’ll have Daffodil Uprising to read in the digital platform of your choice for as long as you like.

For details, go to the book at Smashwords.com.

The making of a hippie

Not that it’s led to fame or fortune

All those hours away from family and friends or at least video viewing or home repairs or whatever writing I intended weren’t like sitting there simply yet pleasurably reading. No fault to other authors, by the way.

As for riches, I would have been better off financially by investing those savings I had back in Baltimore and later by working an overtime shift once every week or two, back when they were still available, an option that had vanished by my last five years in the newsroom, a time when I had instead thought I might indulge in fattening the nest egg for retirement now that the kids were off on their own.

Back to that urban studies certificate. I loved big cities, at least the ones I had visited. Museums and classical music, especially, were the big draw for me, along with the kinetic buzz of a place. I might not be able to afford all the fashion and bling, but I could admire. Binghamton afforded repeated opportunities to hit Manhattan and its other boroughs.

What New York City had new for me was the subway, an initially terrifying underground that turned into a kind of amusement park, once I acquired a few ins and outs for navigating it. So much for a prompt.

How ironic, then, to think that I’m now living in a very small city where the entire year-‘round population would fit aboard a single NYC subway train.

By the time Hitchhikers appeared in print, I was living in New Hampshire and had added the subways of Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, and Washington plus the Seattle monorail to my rail mass-transit rail checklist.

I had even lived in Iowa, not far from where I had placed Kenzie’s childhood.

For the most part, my creative writing focused on poetry, which fit around my paying and crazy work schedule better.

An intense round of editing reshaped the book to its original scope and produced a lacy air, something that reminded me of the Robert Rauschenberg pop art collages of the period. But it also left me with many pages of outtakes. Could I salvage them? I believe I did and then some.

For half of my life now, I’ve felt the time for literary success was running out, both on the project at hand and my own life. I could start with one apartment’s neighbors and a fire and the new owners in bankruptcy. After that, just as I was moving across town, I got a nibble. But no sharp editing help.

In terms of writing fiction, I’ve been solo. Believe me, I would have loved to have had an editor, someone to guide me through the ropes and help me see what I was really hoping to develop. Instead, I worked on a manuscript, put it aside to season, and came back to it months or years later, usually on a vacation week dedicated to the project.

Curiously, working in that role that guide for a friend who has a truly amazing concept, I recently got a look at an evaluation of his manuscript by a literary agent and her two associates. While they were passing on the book, their reactions fit in that old-fashioned close combing of the manuscript and pointing us toward a right pathway for the next steps on transforming the opus. I’d be envious if I weren’t so impressed and grateful.

~*~

Much of this series of posts has reflected the role of deep revisions.

An insight I haven’t yet mentioned is what I’ll call “finding the zipper,” a perspective that pulls everything into place – a new, better place. A big book might have several.

In What’s Left, the zipper appeared when Cassia’s childhood black clothing of mourning evolved into goth during her adolescence and then Eileen Fisher when she starred as a young adult high-finance exec. That move also spurred some crucial scenes in her teen years and helped bring her oldest cousin to the fore as a character. Another zipper came in peppering the dialogue between Cassia and her best friend with texting slang. WTF, but I feel it works.

Another helpful approach is the use of photo prompts, especially when a stretch of dialogue falls flat. Online searches are helpful in building look books, which in turn can provide sharp details I would otherwise overlook in real life. Just how does a particular character look in contrast to another? It definitely stretches my thinking.

Satellite photos have also helped me reconstruct physical locations and also revealed how many of my residences in my moves across the country have been razed. Health hazards? Fires? Condemned? Mine really has been a tenuous journey.

One other technique I’ll mention is editing from the last chapter forward, especially in a later revision. We tend to put most of our effort into the opening chapters and then peter out toward the ending. Reversing that provides some extra sharpness and also encourages foreshadowing in the earlier parts of the work.

~*~

In the old days, when I began, newspapers had copy desks, which was where I wound up working. They were usually U-shaped, with a chief editor, called a slot man slash copy-desk chief, sitting in the middle surrounded by the rest of us. A lot of serious editing and rewriting still took place, especially at the first paper I interned at, but already I was hearing the laments of how standards were declining. I can’t help picturing Harry Perrigo, sucking on his pipe while evaluating a headline and story before sending them up the pneumatic tube to the composing room or casting them back to the rim editor for another try. Once computers replaced typewriters, that physical configuration generally faded from the newsroom. Still, I now see that as my introduction to intense revision. A story had to go through a series of hands and eyes to make it into print, even on tight deadlines.

In contrast, in my literary efforts, I was working solo. As I’ve said, the best I could do was work intensely on a piece, put it aside for a while to season, and sometime later to return to it afresh.

Much of my work fell under the label “experimental,” along with the accusation that I’m more of a poet than a novelist, as I heard from one of the best novelists.

Whatever the case, having something of my own in hand still feels good.

And do I have a deal for you!

Today, for many Americans, is defined as After-Christmas Sales rife with “big savings.”

The one I’m opening to you is even free.

Smashword’s annual Year-End ebook bonanza is into its second – and final – week, and I’m offering you five of my novels at no cost. Pick one or all or something in-between. They’re all different.

It’s your chance to pick up these ebooks at no risk. If you like the stories, perhaps you’ll leave a brief review and five stars at the website, just to encourage other readers who come along in the future.

The titles are Daffodil Uprising, when youth across the country went freaky; Pit-a-Pat High Jinks, with lovers and friends setting forth in premature adulthood; Subway Visions, with wild rides through the Underground; What’s Left, as a bereft daughter tries to make sense of her bohemian parents and close-knit Greek family; and Yoga Bootcamp, where Asian spirituality sizzles in a back-to-the-earth funky farm not far from the Big Apple.

It’s still a good time to give yourself a present. This one carries my blessing. For details, go to Smashwords.com.