Tuesday, May 13, 2025

Coming Soon: The Weaver's Answer

by Roger Chapman and Charlie Whitney 

Weaver of life, let me look and see 
The pattern of my life gone by shown on your tapestry. 

 Just for one second, one glance upon your loom 
The flower of my childhood could appear within this room 
Does it of my youth show tears of yesterday 
Broken hearts within a heart as love first came my way. 

Did the lifeline patterns change as I became a man 
An added aura untold blends as I asked for her hand 
Did your golden needle sow its thread virginal white 
As lovers we embraced as one upon our wedding night. 

Did you capture all the joys, the birth of our first son 
The happiness of family made a brother for the one 
The growing of the brothers, the manliness that grew 
Is it there in detail, is it there to view 
 Do the sparks of life grow bright as one by one they wed 
To live as fathers, husbands, apart from lives they've led.

Are my lover's threads cut off when aged she laid to rest 
My sorrow blacking out a space upon our woven crest 
A gathering for the last time as her coffin slowly lain 
Ash to ashes, dust to dust, one day we will regain 
Does it show the visits when grandchildren on my knee 
But only hearing laughter when age took my sight from me. 

 Lastly through these last few years of loneliness maybe 
Does by sight a shooting star fade from your tapestry 
But wait, there in the distance your loom I think I see 
Could it be that after all my prayers you've answered me 
After days of wondering I see the reason why 
You've kept it to this minute for I'm about to die. 

 Weaver of life, at last now I can see 
The pattern of my life gone by upon your tapestry. 

Saturday, May 10, 2025

"Dividend on Death" by Brett Halliday (1939)




Published in 1939, “Dividend On Death” introduces private investigator Mike Shayne, who later appeared in some 70-plus novels written under the pen name Brett Halliday (birth name: Davis Dresser). That intrigued me. Halliday/Dresser must have been a virtual writing machine. Imagine supporting your family by churning out such material, book after book, year after year. And apparently readers liked the character, because people kept buying them. 

Based in Miami, this tale name-checks familiar places such as Jackson Memorial Hospital, Flagler Street, Biscayne Boulevard and the Roney Plaza Hotel. It also contains steamy passages such as: “A woman was descending the stairway, and she reached the bottom just as Shayne passed. She wore the white uniform of a nurse and carried a napkin-covered tray. She was a full-bodied blond of about thirty, with predatory eyes. Shayne glanced at her as he passed and caught a fleeting, almost animal look on her face. Her lips were pouted as though in assent, thought he had not spoken to her.” 

Later on, this woman appears unannounced at Shayne’s apartment and insists that he make love to her. I leave it to the reader to imagine how that turned out. 

At no time does this hard-boiled private investigator brandish a gun or beat up anyone. In fact, he himself is beaten up, his pain and suffering described in detail. But he solves the case, an elaborate swindle involving a Raphael painting. This is where the tale strains credibility. In a many-paged discourse at the very end of the book, Shayne explains to a room full of people who the real swindlers are and the diabolical plot they put into action. But how did he figure that out? There is little or no previous plot exposition to support it. But with this one exception, the book is well-written and I tore through it like a house on fire. I’ll read more of this author’s work.

David Souter, Julius Caesar and Donald Trump

Retired Supreme Court Justice David Souter died recently. This quote from his AP obituary caught my eye: 

"What I worry about is that when problems are not addressed, people will not know who is responsible. And when the problems get bad enough...some one person will come forward and  say 'Give me total power and I will solve this problem.' That is how the Roman republic fell,  Souther said in a 2012 interview."

After some digging, I found this:

"Having defeated all his enemies, Caesar was granted a 10-year dictatorship for purposes of restoring the republic. His solution was to reconstitute himself as a Roman form of Hellenistic divine king or ruler."