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~ Feverish ravings of a middle-aged mind

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Monthly Archives: June 2013

Chapter 8 Up on Wattpad

28 Friday Jun 2013

Posted by dougom in Fiction, News

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Tags

mystery, novel, santa cruz

03 banana slug Prairie Ck 01

You might think that by Chapter 8, I would be running low on pictures of banana slugs. And that would almost certainly have been true in the pre-Web era, or even the Web 1.0 era, but it sure ain’t true now.

And so you know what it means when there’s a new banana slug picture up on my blog:  That’s right, there’s a new chapter of my mystery novel set in Santa Cruz, home of the Fightin’ Slugs, out on Wattpad.  You know what to do.  So do it.

A Study with Slugs, Chapter 7: “Aftermath of Apocalypse” Now Available

25 Tuesday Jun 2013

Posted by dougom in Fiction, News

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mystery, novel, santa cruz

capilano08040610
After all, why not?

The thunder of responses in my in-box has been precedented (i.e., no comments whatsoever) and, as such, I am compelled to let you all know that yet another chapter of my non-magnum opus 1980s Santa Cruz mystery novel is now ready for your reading pleasure on Wattpad.  Because I can, that’s why!

Do the Math, Creative People!

24 Monday Jun 2013

Posted by dougom in Opinion

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books, fiction, film, movies, television

hogwartsplates
Hogwarts dining hall: This look like 1000 kids to you, or closer to, oh, say, 300?
(Photo courtesy of BeyondHogwarts.com)

Reading and watching fiction always takes a certain amount of willing suspension of disbelief.  You have to believe (temporarily, to a certain extent) powered armor can work and alien/human hybrid clones can be created and controlled through wifi to watch “Avatar” without getting irritated; that Humbert Humbert can obsess over a barely-nubile girl; that Benedick and Claudio can swallow the transparent BS of Hero having a previously unremarked twin sister; etc.  Great or small, you have to go along with a certain amount of nonsense, scientific hand-waving, plot holes, and other problems to enjoy your fiction.  That’s the contract you make with the author/playwright/screenwriter.

Different people are thrown out of this state by different things, obviously.  There are some people who simply can’t watch science fiction at all, for example.  I can understand that.  For me, where I often trip up is on simple arithmetic.

For me, the most blatant example is the Harry Potter books.  J.K. Rowling, when asked, has stated that Hogwarts has “around 1000” students.

Hogwash.  Do the math, Jo!  It ain’t hard!

Each entering class is sorted into 4 houses.  Gryffindor in Harry’s year has 5 boys, 5 girls.  10 total students, then.  If the other houses are similar, that’s a class size of 40.  7 years at Hogwarts, 7×40, is 280 students.  Not 1000.  Not even close.  Rowling isn’t even close, because she didn’t do the math.

Think I’m being unfair to Rowling?  At Hogwarts, incoming students take Potions, Herbology, Defence Against the Dark Arts, Transfiguration, Charms, and Care of Magical Creatures.  It is clear that all these subjects only have a single teacher; you constantly read of Snape being frustrated at not being made “the Defence Against the Dark Arts professor”.  “The”.  i.e., one and only.  And if you have 7 years of students, and only one Defence Against the Dark Arts teacher, he or she can’t teach more than about 280 students, anyway.  Each class contains two Houses, which means about 20 students.  If you taught 7 times a day–which from the books it is clear they don’t–that’s only 140 students per day.  Even if you alternate them–Gryffindor & Slytherin on Monday and Wednesday, Hufflepuff and Ravenclaw on Tuesday and Thursday–you still can’t get anywhere near 1000 students, not with only a single teacher each for Potions, Herbology, and whatnot.  Mathematically impossible.

Hell, it’s probably not even as high as 280, since some kids bail after their fifth year.  Rowling didn’t do her math.

(By the way, I’ve read a number of Harry Potter readers’ defenses of Rowling’s count, and they all boil down to, “Well, she must have planned it out, so I’m sure she’s right, right?”  They’re not doing the math, either!)

Or take “The Hunger Games”.  I don’t have the book in front of me, but in the movie they take a train that is stated to go “200 miles an hour!  And we’ll be there in only 2 days!”  Seriously?  The only way a train going 200 miles an hour can take two days to arrive at The Capital from Appalachia (where District 12 is) would be if The Capital is in Sydney, and someone had dug a tunnel under the Pacific Ocean to get there.  200mph x 48 hours is 9800 miles.  From Miami Beach to Seattle–the longest straight-line distance in the continental U.S.–is only a smidge over 3100 miles; you can make that in less than 16 hours at 200mph.  Two days?  Someone didn’t do their math!

This is how I personally get tossed out of my warm zone of suspended disbelief; these simple, easily-corrected math errors made by people who were either too lazy or simply didn’t care to do simple arithmetic.  I know these are artists we’re talking about here, but jeez, this is multiplication.  I’m not talking about calculus or algebra or even long-friggin’-division here; just simple multiplication.  I know Creative Folks don’t enjoy math–if they did, they’d probably be engineers or something–but c’mon!  Balancing your checkbook is harder than this!

Anyway, that’s my excuse for staring at the page or screen and saying, “Oh, COME ON!”  What’s yours?

On Living in Austin

23 Sunday Jun 2013

Posted by dougom in Opinion

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austin, living, texas

texas aint so bad
WIth folks like this, Texas can’t be all bad, right? (Image courtesy of UT Arlington)

I was a Navy brat, so whenever someone asks where I’m from, I always hesitate.  I was born in Connecticut, but I have no memories of it save the times we visited my maternal grandmother there on Long Island Sound during the summers and at Christmas time.  I’ve lived in New Hampshire, on Long Island, in Northern Virginia for my Elementary School years, and the San Francisco East Bay for middle and high school.  I went to college in Santa Cruz and lived there another 7 years afterwards, and then in San Jose for 10 before my current 11 year sojourn in Austin.  So I usually just say, “Santa Cruz”, knowing that it doesn’t really cover it but also knowing very few people really want to know; they just want some data so they can start filing Doug Info in their memories.

Forgive the digression.  The thing is, when I tell people Not From Texas that I live in Austin, they have a certain set of assumptions about the place based on a complete lack of any real data.  As did I, because even though I’m from Nowhere in Particular, I thought of Texas as, ya know, Texas.  With gun racks and yahoos wearing bolo ties and cowboy boots and ten gallon hats, even with business suits.  Oil.  “Dallas”.  Twangy accents and Willie Nelson and Lone Star Republic successionist idiots.  Big trucks and big belt buckles and football–sorry, FOOTBALL.  You know:  Texas.

And there’s some truth to all these cliches.  But as you might expect, it’s so much more.

Lets get the obvious out of the way:  Texas is, indeed, stuffed to the brim with small-minded, right-wing, bigoted boneheads.  No question.  Of the top 10 best-selling cars in Texas, 8 of them are trucks.  There are plenty of gun racks; there are almost certainly more Texas state flags flying around the state than American flags; lots of people do indeed wear bolo ties and big hats and have big belt buckles.  Our governor is a grandstanding idiot, and a big percentage of our state government is run by backwards boneheads who want to do things like take away sex education and force teachers to teach students things that are demonstrably not true, like “creation science”.  The Christianity of the state is pervasive; if having Christmas carols sung in public schools outrages you, this is not the place for you.  Football is indeed a big deal.

But by contrast, those schools–despite difficulties and the kind of budgetary problems all states have nowadays–are well-funded, the teacher-to-student ratios are quite good, and we still have things like school nurses and drama programs and art classes that disappeared from (say) most California public schools 30 years ago or more.  Our governor may be a lunkhead, but he did sign a bill requiring the government to submit a warrant before they tap your phone.  People may drive trucks, but they are polite and respectful, waving you into traffic in places where in California they would cut you off (and in Boston attempt vehicular homicide).  Sure there are rude fucks, just like everywhere, but they’re fewer here.

You know what they say about people in the south, that they’re polite?  They are.  It’s true.  People here hold doors for you; they offer to help you with your bags, and in a way that makes it clear they’re really willing to help instead of simply making polite noises; they let parents juggling kids go first; they offer to give you directions if you look lost; they don’t glare at you if you make a boneheaded maneuver on the roads.  They’re polite here.  And you may not believe it, but it’s amazing how much more pleasant that makes life, even if you’re surrounded by people who don’t share your religious/political/economic/sexual/whatever beliefs.  After all, I don’t want to have sex with them; I just want to live peacefully with them, and politeness makes that infinitely easier.

The weather, yes, is indeed lousy.  But it is not, despite the assumptions of almost anyone I talk to who live Elsewhere, humid.  It is humid in Houston, or Corpus Christie; here in Austin it is simply hot, blisteringly, horribly, often unbearably hot, reliably getting above 100 for weeks (literally weeks) at a time.  Hell, a few summers ago it stayed above 100 for 84 consecutive days.  Which is basically the entire summer.  Yes, it’s a “dry heat”, but trust me:  Even a dry heat wears you out quickly when it’s over 100.

And Austin, of course, is anomalous for Texas (though with immigration, not for all that much longer).  Austin went for Kerry by about 60%-40% in 2004.  Austin’s representative in Congress is the awesome Lloyd Doggett.  The District Attorney for the county of Travis, of which Austin is a part, is the one who managed to put Tom Delay behind bars–not some federal guy, but a Texas state guy.  Willie Nelson lives here, driving his bio-diesel-fueled bus around town.  There is a large leather community; a large GLBT community; and a very large artistic–especially musical–community.

I’m not trying to get you to live in Austin.  If I had my druthers, I’d be back in Santa Cruz, enjoying the summertime evening fog and eating sushi at Mobos and slices from Pizza My Heart regularly.  (I used to order the same thing from them so often–half pesto, half Pizza Prima–that they took to calling it “The Doug Moran Special”.)  But it’s also not the humid, right-wing horror show so many folks seem to think it must be since it’s “in Texas”.  Yup, we’ve got problems, but truly, it’s a good place to be, and I genuinely like it.  And it wearies me whenever people get on the news and talk about Yet Another Boneheaded Rick Perry Utterance, and tar all of Texas with the “right-wing ignorant nuts” brush.  Cuz folks, we aren’t.  And there are less of them and more of us every year.

So don’t write us off.  And the next time you hear someone grousing about Texas, just remember the nutty things your state has done (Gov. Schwarzenegger, anyone?), and think how you’d feel if everyone judged you just by that.  And give us some consideration.  Austin and I thank you.

Chapter 6: “In Which a Party Is Held” Now Available

22 Saturday Jun 2013

Posted by dougom in Fiction, News

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Tags

book, mystery, novel, santa cruz

fiat slug
It’s amazing how many banana slug pictures you can find on the Internet these days, yeah?

Chapter 6, “In Which a Party Is Held, And Tosh Gleans Some Information” of my 1980s Santa Cruz mystery novel is now up for your reading pleasure on Wattpad.  So if you have Wattpad on your smartphone or table, why not take a look?  Or just surf over there and check it out?  But whatever you do with this information, know this:  I’ll keep putting out these chapters every couple of days or so until the story is done.  So there!

Study with Slugs Chapter 5: Canvassing the Crazies

20 Thursday Jun 2013

Posted by dougom in Fiction, News

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 bs
Image courtesy of Random Ruckus

Chapter 5 of my 1980s Santa Cruz-based mystery novel “A Study with Slugs”, “Canvassing the Crazies”–in which our intrepid investigators use Surf City’s population of ubiquitous, somewhat-unhinged homeless people to their advantage–is now available for your reading pleasure on WattPad.  Read it and weep.  Or laugh.  Or get pissed off.  Or be abjectly puzzled.  Whatever.  But read it, in any case!

Big Government vs. Big Business: Who Do You Trust?

18 Tuesday Jun 2013

Posted by dougom in Opinion

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jr bob dobbs
In a world of Big Business vs. Big Government, perhaps only the “slack” of J.R. “Bob” Dobbs is the answer

For me, whether you’re a “liberal” or a “conservative” boils down to this: Which do you trust more, Big Government, or Big Business?

Here’s the thing: In a capitalist system, the drive of business is profit, period. This is neither moral nor immoral (though it definitely is amoral, if I may get pedantic on your ass for a minute); it simply is.  That’s what capitalism is all about:  Making money.

Government, or at least the U.S. system, on the other hand, was specifically put in place to ensure an individual’s inalienable rights, “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness”.  Our founding document states right up front that it wants to create a government to “establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity”.  Note the lack of mention of money there.

So ask yourself this:  Who is going to have your best interests in mind?  An organization whose basic raison d’etre is profit?  Or one that’s trying to “promote the general Welfare”?

There’s no question that our government is messy, complicated, populated by a collection of fools, poltroons, crooks, shysters, and worse (in addition to some genuinely honest people trying to do their level best), and cranks out some pretty awful policy.  I wouldn’t argue with you on that.  But the fact is, at bottom, they’re there to do all those things promised in the Preamble.  Big business, by contrast, just wants to separate you from as much of your cash as possible.  Republicans like to complain that Democrats want to take your money via taxes.  Maybe some do, but only to Do Stuff, like fix roads, build bridges, maintain national parks, and build nuclear submarines and the like; they’re not after your money so that the government can turn a profit.  Big business is.  Big business wants your money, no ifs, ands, or buts.  That’s their whole point.

So given that, who do you trust more?  For me, the answer is obvious.

I admit to being reductionist–ignoring things like foreign policy, cultural issues, and the like.  I fully cop to that.  But the thing is, while “conservatives” in government–Republicans, generally–blatt on about cultural issues, when the rubber meets the road they vote with their pocketbooks.  In favor of big banks, big insurance companies, big oil companies, big manufacturing interests, what-have-you.  Take gun control; are the Republicans in congress really that concerned about the Second Amendment?  Or are they more concerned with the big gun makers who contribute to their campaigns?  I think the answer’s pretty clear.

Yes, there are some cultural issues that politicians actually seem to care about–abortion is a perfect example.  And that stuff is important.  But the driving force behind Republicanism is Big Business; behind Democrats is Big Government.  So who do you trust?

Now, the Republicans in politics are hoping you won’t boil it down like that.  Because if you do, you’ll chuck them out and they’ll have to find a real job, and they would really hate that.  They try to distract you.  But ask yourself who you trust more, Big Business, or Big Government, and then vote accordingly, eyes wide open.  Because otherwise, you’re just lying to yourself.

That’s what I think, anyway.  How about you?

Novel “Study with Slugs” Chapter 4 Now Available

17 Monday Jun 2013

Posted by dougom in Fiction, News

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banana slug_4c583cffe8122_hires
Image of banana slug invaders from space courtesy of Pxleyes.com

In keeping with my personal vow to publish a chapter of my 1980’s Santa Cruz Holmesesque mystery novel “A Study with Slugs” on Wattpad every day or two, I have posted Chapter 4, “What the Elves Had to Tell”.  Give it a read and, if you are so inclined, tell me your opinion about it below!

 

The Anti-Dad

16 Sunday Jun 2013

Posted by dougom in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

ward-cleaver
Note: Not the kind of dad Doug is

It’s Father’s Day, and that made me start thinking about Dads, and how I am similar and different two my two man Dad examples: My blood father, F.J. (“Joe”) Moran, and my father-in-law–who has all but adopted me, and who I love dearly–Carl Webb. And honestly, compared to them, I’m almost the Anti-Dad.

I grew up in a time when the whole Ward Cleaver, “Leave It To Beaver”, 50s suburban Dad-who-works-at-the-office and Mom-stays-home-wth-kids thing was still in firm control of national life. And indeed, my family was a lot like that until I hit about 13 or so. And in that context, Dad works at the office, he does chores around the home on the weekend, he plays golf with some buddies, he watches football, he carves the turkey at Thanksgiving. He fixes stuff when it breaks, like the car or the kitchen sink or that balky door to the upstairs bathroom. He mows the lawn. He paints the house. Etc. He is Dad, the 50s American Platonic Ideal of Dad.

I’m not like that guy at all.

I can’t fix dick; I’m a computer nerd, and despite my Pops’ best efforts, fixing anything more complicated than, say, a doorknob is really beyond me. Kitchen sink? Call the plumber. Car is busted? Off to the dealer!

But even more so, I’m not that guy. I don’t play golf. I mean, I learned, I know how, but ever since my Pops died in 2000, I haven’t played a single hole. I don’t get it, honestly. There’s so many other sports I’d rather do (if my body could take it), like soccer or ultimate or disc golf (which is like regular golf only in that involves walking around outdoors). I don’t get the fascination with the equipment, the shoes, the shirts, the clubs, the gizmos. I can’t imagine a more boring game to watch on TV; hell, curling is more exciting. I don’t get golf. In that component of Dad-dom, I’m a flop.

Then again, I don’t go into the office. I quit my job–not a leave absence, an actual resignation–so I could stay home and take care of Joseph for the first year after we adopted him. (Sami made more money than me at the time. In fact, in yet another nod to anti-Dad-dom, Sami has usually made more money than me.) I work from home. When the kids need to go to the dentist or the doctor or the therapist or their drama club or whatever, I usually am the one doing the lugging. I do the laundry. I grocery shop. When the house needs painting, I call a house painter.

And I refuse to mow the lawn. What is it with guys and riding mowers, anyway?

During our parenting, plenty of people have looked askance at how Sami and I have arranged things, divided up the work, the decisions we’ve made that are partly the reason I’m the anti-Dad. And yet somehow all the teachers at school tell us what a good job we’re doing, what great kids we have, what a delight they are. And even now at 18, Maggie doesn’t hate us and Joe is no more than usually surly for a 15 year old.

I may be the anti-Dad by “Leave It To Beaver” standards, but I wouldn’t have it any other way. Just a thought from one Dad on Father’s Day.

Now if you’ll excuse me, I think I’ll call my one remaining Pop and tell him I love him; he deserves it.

Novel Chapter 3 Now Available

14 Friday Jun 2013

Posted by dougom in Fiction, News

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

mystery, novel

banana_slug3
A banana slug in a tea-cozy? Heck if I know!

Despite the roaring lack of encouragement, I continue to plod on, publishing a chapter of my novel every other day or so.  The latest chapter is available at WattPad; please surf on over and check it out.  And if you happen to read it, hey, it would be wonderful if you left comments there on WattPad, or here, or just IM’d me and told me what a talentless idiot I am and how I should give it up.  

And maybe if my friend Becky sees the above photo, she’ll tell us–from deep in her bag of knitting knowledge–what the heck it is.

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