Showing posts with label GoodReads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GoodReads. Show all posts

Saturday, April 29, 2017

Comic Con



Curiosity led this cat to attendance at my first Comic Con event on this beautiful Spring day (that reached Summer temperature) in 2017. Along with me were my wife and our daughter. The latter is a big fan of graphic novels, the hilarious animated TV show Teen Titans, and all members of Suicide Squad with special affection for Harley Quinn. My wife doesn't go in for superhero stories much, but as a professional illustrator she appreciates the artistry that goes into creating comic books.

As for me, I can't help but marvel at the worlds of Marvel and DC and beyond. Others are far more fanatical about their fandom than I am. My level of enthusiasm is moderate enough to retain dignity, but I have nothing but love for the zealots who go full out. If you're going to be over the top passionate about something, it may as well be something cool. Batman and Superman stories may not receive official stamps of approval from fancy book award committees or Oprah, and they aren't assigned reading material in most English Literature classes, but they are unarguably cool.


A post shared by Roy Pickering (@roylpickering_author) on

A post shared by Roy Pickering (@roylpickering_author) on




I was too busy being dazzled by the bombardment of colorful imagery while squeezing through the bustling crowd to take as many pictures as I wanted, but I did manage to snap a few shots. Check them out below. Maybe I'll run into you at a future convention such as New York Comic Con in October. You're never too old to be a kid at heart. Only a dastardly villain would tell you different. Fortunately superheroes save the day and refuse to let them get away with it.


Her turn in the role bombed at the box office and deservedly so, but Halle Berry wore the hell out of that cat suit and I happily snagged this doll, I mean, this action figure.



There is no cooler set of wheels than the Batmobile, any version of it.






















And there is no motor vehicle more terrifying than Stephen King's CHRISTINE.




This bearded guy knew who to call.





“The reason birds can fly and we can't is simply because they have perfect faith, for to have faith is to have wings.” J.M. Barrie

“If you were born without wings, do nothing to prevent them from growing.” Coco Chanel







Superheroes need coffee breaks too.



Everybody can't be the hero. Somebody has to be the villain. Sometimes the bad guy also gets a cool car.


I haven't written a comic book...yet. But I did write a novel entitled Matters of Convenience and you can enter the giveaway contest at Goodreads for a chance to win a free copy. Good luck!




Goodreads Book Giveaway

Matters of Convenience by Roy L. Pickering Jr.

Matters of Convenience

by Roy L. Pickering Jr.

Giveaway ends May 29, 2017.
See the giveaway details at Goodreads.
Enter Giveaway


Price of Kindle edition of MATTERS OF CONVENIENCE to be discounted at Amazon 5/13/17 - 5/20/17. The earlier you jump in, the bigger the savings you get.



Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Q and A: #AuthorInterview






Favorite All-Time Read: That has never been an easy question for me to answer.  For now I will cheat and say it is a tie between Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez and The World According to Garp by John Irving, with The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz nipping at their heels.

Who do you consider your author crush? See my answer to first question.  If I must pick only one I will say John Irving since he is the only one of the three I have met.  The other major literary hero/crush I have been fortunate enough to stand face to face with is August Wilson.  Two gargantuan talents who were kind and generous to me.

What do you like most about this author? There are a great many things to admire about the prose of John Irving.  I will say his greatest talent is laying out goals for his main characters to strive for in a manner that puts you in their skin, making you feel the urgency and desperation, causing you to share the exhilaration of the moment of triumph upon arrival, if indeed it does arrive.  Otherwise, experience the despair of coming up short as if it was happening to you.

How big of a reader were you, growing up? I was an extremely avid reader as a kid and that habit remains undiminished.  Shortly before Thanksgiving last year I gave #ReaderThanks on Twitter (where I go by the name @authorofpatches) to Beverly Cleary, Donald J. Sobol and Jules Verne for being amongst the first to fuel my fire for stories. 






As an adult reader, what genre do you tend to read the most?
Literary fiction, but I certainly do not restrict myself to it.  I have two rules for myself as a reader.  Read often...Read varied.  This not only keeps things fresh as a lover of stories created by others but is also invaluable to me as a writer.  The influences on my writing come from many sources.  When it comes to reading, what I seek are good books.  This is not technically a genre, but perhaps it should be. 

Do you have to be in a certain mood to write?
I do not.  Certainly there are times when I feel more creative than other occasions.  I am more of a night owl than a morning person and this extends to my pen hand.  But there is no telling when the muse will strike, and if I must summon her I will do so rather than waiting for her to show up.  A writer writes as much as possible.  The more I am writing, the happier I am.  It is also a very effective diet plan because when immersed in writing I tend to neglect getting around to eating.




And do you have an ideal writing space?
Not really.  I have a lovely writing desk in my attic that I have not sat down to write at in ages.  These days I am much more likely to be found writing on my couch, or at my dining table, or on the train to or from work, or at my 9-5 corporate desk, or on a park bench.  One of my favorite writing experiences was scribbling a short story while sitting at a loud and crowded bar.  It happened to be an outdoor bar, but when walls surround me my mind is no more confined than when they do not.




Preference of genre to write in?
The first full length novels to enthrall me were those by Jules Verne.  I rapidly went through 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, Journey to the Center of the Earth, Around the World in 80 Days.  I have read many more science fiction novels since.  Yet when it comes to stories of my own creation, I am most comfortable writing about people here on earth dealing with situations and emotions we can all relate to.  On any given day depending on who was asked about which story of mine, I suppose it could be called literary fiction, or mainstream, or contemporary, or upmarket commercial, or ethnic/African-American.


How did the inspiration for Patches of Grey come about?
To date the sparks for my novels have come in the form of a question that I felt compelled to fully explore.  With Patches of Grey the question had to do with self identity.  People fit certain descriptions and to varying degrees allow this circumstance to determine how they see themselves.  Of the various descriptors placed on us, race is one that I am especially intrigued by.  We do not choose it.  The ways in which it differentiates us from those of another origin are primarily cosmetic, at least at a glance.  But the ways in which it determines how we view the world and our desires and our prospects are often potent.  These issues are what set me off to writing about a young man coming to terms with how to define himself, and with how others see or fail to see him, regardless of what he does to influence perspective. 


There are times when aspiring authors come face to face with rejection. Do you have any counsel on how they can handle such moments?
Shrug it off. If you are lucky enough to get helpful feedback rather than a form rejection letter with zero personalization to it, consider yourself lucky and be sure to consider the advice.  But you are the final judge so feel free to ignore what does not strike you as being true.  It is your story.  Write it as best as it can be written, which will mean plenty of rewriting, but you alone must declare what readers will get to see.  Rejection of your writing does not mean that it is not any good.  It does not mean your dream has been killed.  It is simply the fork in the road.  Take it. If you do not find this answer sufficient motivation to keep on keeping on, check out my blog post HANDLING REJECTION FOR DUMMIES – I MEAN WRITERS


How do you deal with writer's block?  I write until it goes away, which must mean it was never truly there to begin with.  That uneasy feeling must have merely been garden variety laziness.






Do you have a writing process that you adhere to? Not really.  Unless you call staring at a blank piece of paper or white box on computer screen until my fingers start moving a process.  Once they do start moving, the only way I know of to write a novel is to first put down everything that comes to mind, followed by twisting and shaping and reshaping the unwieldy first draft down to its essence.




Shorter works seem to be in vogue more than ever.  Do you think that more and more authors will go that route such as you did with your ebook novella Feeding the Squirrels?
Attention spans are decreasing daily it seems.  The internet has a lot to do with that.  It used to be that publishing a novella was much more difficult than publishing a novel because publishers did not really get to charge much less for a novella in order to turn a profit.  So readers might feel ripped off by paying just as much for considerably less word count.  But we live in a new day, a largely electronic one, and people seem to have less free time than ever even though days continue to be the same 24 hours long.  This has provided an opening for greater receptivity to short stories and novellas.  None of this is why I wrote Feeding the Squirrels or why it was published in e-format.  That is simply how things worked themselves out.  I had no idea I was writing a novella at the time.  I was working on a literary experiment, a series of short stories that each featured the same lead character, and eventually I figured out a way to link them and form a whole.  It is a novella that like life itself, happened while I was busy making other plans.






Is there an aspect of being a published author that you enjoy more than anything else?
I love reading what somebody else (perhaps a reviewer I submitted to, maybe someone who picked my book up and gave it a chance) thought about the result of my hours of toil - most especially when they are enthusiastic about it.  Every so often someone says something that causes me to look at my writing in a new manner and it brings forth a smile from deep within.


A writer's life has its ups, downs and sideways. How can they best deal with those times?
Go and write some more.





Do you think social media and overall web marketing are the most powerful tools in promoting a book?
The most powerful tool in promoting a book continues to be writing a really good one that leads to positive word of mouth that catches on like wildfire.  The author has little control over this process after the writing a really good book part.  Social media and web marketing offer some of that control, so authors would be foolish not to partake.  Unless of course they have already managed to garner positive word of mouth that caught on like wildfire and led to plenty of people buying and reading their books, in which case they can get involved with social media as much or as little as they want.  But just about everybody is embracing facebook/twitter/instagram/whatever these days, including those who seemed to think social media was just a passing fad not so long ago.  If you can't prove them wrong, join in the fun.  There's room enough for everybody.


You've published over 50 short stories in journals and magazines. How do you know when a story is a short story or when it warrants a whole novel?
Do you think that short stories are a good way for writers to hone their craft?
I always have a pretty good idea in advance how long a story is going to be, and that of course determines whether it will be called a novel or a short story.  Today I cannot imagine being a writer who does not work in both formats.  I took on the challenge of novel writing before tackling short stories.  Prior to enrolling in a short story writing course in college I believed that I only had BIG stories inside of me.  A short story seemed nearly impossible.  Confining myself to just a few pages was a daunting task, but I gave it a shot since a grade depended on it, and I got the hang of it.  The best part of writing a tale is finishing it, and this can be done much more quickly and often with a short story than a novel.  It is not like I consider short story writing as practice for writing novels however.  They are very different from each other – and very much the same.  I advise young writers to try anything and everything, and then stick with what they love best.


How can an aspiring author get better at writing, whether the intention is to write a short story or to write entire novels?  This is another question that I addressed at my blog A Line A Day in the posting, Advice to Aspiring Authors.  Truth be told, there is only one way to get any good at writing.  Read a lot, write a lot, repeat steps 1 – 2 over and over and over again.


How can authors better prepare themselves prior to publication?
Read a lot, write a lot, repeat steps 1 – 2 over and over and over again.  Also check out some of the advice that is out there for writers.  There is certainly no shortage of it.  Much is even free.  A lot of it is repetitive and obvious.  But every so often you will discover a nugget that had not occurred to you that may end up being quite helpful.  Then go back to reading a lot and writing a lot.


What are some of the things you wished you had known before you published your first book?
I knew EVERYTHING there was to know, which is to say I knew not only that I wanted to be a writer, but that I had to be a writer because a writer is what I am.  Only thing left was to prove it by writing.  In order to work up the courage to lay my soul on the page for random people to pick over, I needed to believe I had something valuable to say and that there were others who would agree.   I understood some other essential things to be true and have learned a great deal more over the years, but what I knew from day one is what truly mattered.  I had to write.


What are your thoughts on critique groups and beta readers?
I have used both over the years to varying degrees of satisfaction.  It is of great value to let other pairs of eyes read what you have written.  Find some who are unbiased, select one of two who may be partial but are also honest.  But again, it is your story, you are the one with final say on how it ends up being told.  Best of luck with telling it well, and with it catching on like wildfire.


What do you have coming up next for readers?
I recently completed my second full length novel – Matters of Convenience.  Snippets from it can befound at the Pinterest board I created and an excerpt posted at my blog A Line A Day during composition of the first draft is located HERE.  Next up will be recording myself reading an excerpt from it.  Yet to be determined is by which method I will bring Matters of Convenience to the light of day.  Perhaps I will land a deal with one of the Big 5 Publishers or a smaller independent publisher.  Maybe I will join a cooperative of independent authors working together as a mini publishing house.  Or once again I may opt to go it alone and simultaneously wear the hats of author, art director, copy editor, publicist, marketing department, mailroom guy, etc. etc.  Going it alone will not be particularly lonely since enlisting the aid of many people will be necessary to help me spread the word.  We shall see.  I also recently completed the first installment in a planned children's book series.  If I end up going the DIY route for them, it will be in collaboration with my extremely talented wife Erin Rogers Pickering who will serve as the illustrator.  No matter how things work themselves out, I am eager to get more of my work out there and I am preparing for all that will entail.  And I am looking forward to hearing what readers have to say.


Kindle edition of Patches of Grey will be available for free 10/24 - 10/25.




If you wish to take a shot at winning a copy of the print edition, enter the contest at Goodreads:




Goodreads Book Giveaway

Patches Of Grey by Roy L. Pickering Jr.

Patches Of Grey

by Roy L. Pickering Jr.

Giveaway ends October 31, 2014.
See the giveaway details at Goodreads.
Enter to win

So there is no shortage of opportunities to obtain a copy of Patches of Grey for free in October of 2014.
But if you are one those who has already bought or is planning to spend a little hard earned money to purchase it, you have my deep gratitude.  Happy Reading!







Sunday, January 5, 2014

LESSONS - #ShortStorySunday




‘You learn how to cut down trees cutting them down.’ - Bateke proverb

Lessons
      By Roy L. Pickering Jr.
First published in PROVERBS FOR THE PEOPLE



I can do this, I know I can do this.

            So what if she’s the prettiest girl in the whole wide world, while I’m just …  I’m just a guy who’s terrified.  I don’t want to be rejected.  More than that, I don’t want to be rejected by her.  If only I was more experienced at this sort of thing.  If I could look back at a time when I had been successful, I’d be more confident this time around.  But since it’s my first time, how can I know if I’m doing it right?  My grandpa says that some things can’t be taught.  Certain things you just do, and when you’re done, then you’ll see how it went.
            The problem with that is, I can’t afford to do this wrong.  I’m pretty sure I’ll get just one shot.  Screw it up and somebody else will be quick to take their turn, probably a smooth talking senior who’ll know exactly what to say and how to say it.  I don’t think I could take it if she shot me down.  Not after I’ve spent so much time daydreaming about us being together.  Night dreaming too.  Perhaps I shouldn’t give her the chance to rewrite my dreams.  After all, if I don’t ask then she can’t say no.  But she wouldn’t have a chance to say yes either.  And maybe she will say yes.  It wouldn’t be the craziest thing to ever happen.  I’ve seen her smile a few times in a way that seemed custom made just for me.  It could have been my imagination.  That’s what my best friend says.  But I don’t think so.  I think I do have a shot at winning her over.  If I do this just right.  If I do it perfect.  Like my grandpa says, loving is a much braver act than simply loving back, and sweeter too.
            There she goes, right where I knew I’d find her, taking books for her first classes of the day from out of her locker.  I am lucky enough to have a locker only a few feet away from hers.  My grandpa says never to underestimate the value of location.  Other students walk by laughing, talking loud, horsing around, greeting each other, completely unaware that I’m about to do this extraordinary thing, that my knees feel as wobbly as a newborn colt.
            Her hair is prettily separated into dozens of spaghetti thin braids.  Her hair clip is shaped like a butterfly perched on a flower in full bloom.  Last year she wore braces, which did not keep her smile from speeding up the beat of my heart.  But after they were taken out, the impossible happened.  She became even more beautiful.


            I had thought these last steps would be the hardest to take.  Never would I have expected to grow so calm, so bold.  I suppose I feel that this is beyond my control now.  I’m like my grandpa’s great big Cadillac, moving forward on cruise control.   But when I arrive by her side, I realize that the calmness was a mirage.  My mouth refuses to open.  I feel dizzy.  I think I might puke.  Even when I had a bad case of the flu this past winter, I managed not to do that.
            Time to regroup.  I walk past her and stop in front of my own locker.  Why am I freaking out?  I’ve spoken to her several times before.  But never about anything important, just small talk I’ve managed to sneak in whenever she wasn’t occupied by the attention of others.  She has never made me feel that my clumsy attempts at conversation were unwelcome.  But I’ve never been convinced that she was inviting me to say more, to speak what I really think, what I truly feel, how I truly feel - about her.  I know that once I do, everything will change.  It may change into bitter disappointment and heartbreak, or else transform into something absolutely amazing.  There is only one way to find out which.   
I was hoping to take command of the situation today like an action movie hero.  I would follow my grandpa’s advice, tell her that I liked her, and more importantly, let her know specifically what I like.  For example, her big hazel eyes; the pitch of her laugh; her ability to expertly mimic the nasal voice of our school librarian; the way she purses her lips in concentration when we’re taking a test and she doesn’t realize I’m paying more attention to her than to the exam; the magical scent of her hair that I catch as I pass by her in the hallway.
            Instead of saying these things I just stand here, helplessly peeking out of the corner of my eye, afraid to be caught staring, afraid that if I let her out of my sight, the opportunity to act on my runaway feelings will be forever gone.  Resolve is a lot tougher to locate once it’s already been had and lost.  So my grandpa says anyway.
            Some might say I’m biting off more than I could possibly chew.  My best friend Kurt is one of them.  He insists that she’s one of the hottest sophomores in school, as if I had not figured this out for myself.  I also don’t need to be told that she’s very popular, usually surrounded by friends from the school journal or the tennis team she’s on, not to mention muscle bound admirers from the football team who think they can effortlessly charm her because they wear jockstraps and jerseys, never mind that they won only four games last year.  But Kurt doesn’t see, or can’t see, that her main priorities are not about being beautiful and in demand.  She’s not like the extra fine, extra shallow girls that Kurt lusts after who would pass on a guy like me with scarcely a glance.  If she was, she wouldn’t need to reject me because I wouldn’t be interested in her to begin with.  It so happens that she is an honor student just as I am.  And like me, she can often be found in the library checking out not only books that are assigned to us, but also those chosen for pleasure.  Yes, she is pretty and athletic and popular.  But she is also smart and ambitious and creative and funny and sweet.  In short, she’s perfect.  Perfect for me.    


Oh, there is one other thing.  She has the finest looking butt you ever did see, sweet as a chocolate covered cherry, especially in this pair of jeans she wears every other Wednesday like clockwork.  They hug her hips just right, outlining her curves with expert precision.  In anticipation of seeing her in those jeans, I wake up extra alert on those days.  Or at least a certain part of my anatomy does.
            What does Kurt know about what girls want?  Not a whole lot, no matter how much junk he talks.   He’s had exactly one more girlfriend in his life than I have, giving him a grand total of one, and that only lasted a month.  He says I’m chasing after a girl who is out of my league, but there’s nothing wrong with the league I’m in, whatever it happens to be.  I may not be a jock or one of those guys who walks around in phat gear and blinging jewelry like a big shot in a rap video, but I don’t think I’m someone a girl would be embarrassed to be around either.  I’ve been called cute plenty of times, well at least a few times, the message usually delivered second hand.  But the girls who have lazily pursued me in the past were ones I was not all that interested in, and the ones who have sparked my interest did not pay me much mind.  I’m not sure why my love life, or lack thereof, has worked out like it has.  I often see much dopier looking guys than me with pretty girls on their arms while I stand by enviously and alone.  Maybe those guys are simply luckier than I am.  Or braver.  Probably a combination of the two.  I’m guessing that Lady Luck will not just fall in my lap.  I’ll need to test her to see if she’ll work for me.  As for bravery, I’ll have to fake it.  Maybe brave people are sometimes nothing more than cowards doing a good job of acting.                    
            My grandpa told me recently that my dad was quite awkward and shy in high school.  I think he was saving the story until I reached puberty.  My dad was tall, which is usually a plus, except that he was the gangly type rather than one of those guys who take off their shirts on playground basketball courts to show off their 3-D abs.  Apparently my dad did plenty of tripping over his feet and his tongue when trying to impress girls way back when.  But his frame and his confidence filled out as he grew older, and by the time he graduated college he had successfully managed to win over the most beautiful girl he’d ever met - my mom.  There was hope for my dad, so there must be hope for me too.  I’ve met the girl of my dreams at a younger age than my dad met his, so I’ll need to grow into my own at an accelerated pace.  I’ll need to get off the sidelines and into the game, as sports obsessed Kurt would put it.  
            I wonder what my grandpa would say if he were here beside me, an invisible guide coaching me to action.  How would he motivate me to push away this gigantic boulder that my fears and insecurities have merged into?  I’m surprised to draw a blank.  The boulder seems too heavy for even my grandpa’s endless wisdom to budge.  I remember him once telling me that if you can’t push something out of your way, you need to find a way around it.  But this boulder is not only impossibly heavy, it’s also much too wide to circle in the amount of time at hand. 
While I stand here idly considering my options, the bell goes off and she goes off with it towards her homeroom class.  Everything around me suddenly speeds up from the slow motion it seemed to be have been moving in when my vision was locked on a single target.  Lockers clang shut, conversations are cut short to be resumed later in the day, sneakers squeal as their inhabitants rush past me in opposite directions, my classmates for the moment nothing but a blur of colors.  Not wanting to receive detention for late arrival, I have no choice but to join the stream.


            I don’t hear a single word said to me throughout the school day.  What my teachers are trying to place in my head, I have little patience or luck attempting to hold in.  In history class the talk is of wars fought long ago.  Geometry presents a bunch of fancy names for simple shapes.  My French teacher communicates in a strange curvaceous tongue.  In biology class I absently create colorful potions that sizzle in beakers.  And if all of this isn’t thrilling enough, I am forced to grunt, groan and sweat for the entertainment of Mr. Bellamy, who apparently was unable to decide between becoming a gym teacher or a drill sergeant, so decided to split the difference.  But not a single lesson taught from bell to bell explains how to find the courage to speak to a beautiful girl.
            When my final class ends I rush outside and head home as if wearing blinders, desperate to avoid an encounter that would only deepen what is already an ocean of shame.  I don’t want to risk seeing her again today.  I don’t want to be reminded of what I let slip away before I was ever able to grab hold.  With every step I further realize that my flight is senseless.  I can hide from her today, but I will no doubt run into her eventually.  There are still three years of high school left to go.  And even if I somehow was able to keep our paths from crossing for all that time, it wouldn’t stop me from remembering.  Remembering how crazy I am about her.  Remembering that I’m a coward. 
            I arrive home to the sight of my grandpa nestled in his easy chair, spectacles hanging precariously at the very tip of his nose as he reads a thick, leather bound book.  I’ve seen him in this pose a thousand times, watched him run his large veined hands over his neatly trimmed salt and pepper beard when he’s about to turn a page, observed his bushy eyebrows raising every day to acknowledge my entrance when I get home from school.   It gives me comfort to know that some things do remain the same.  They can be relied on no matter what happens around them.
Instead of waiting for him to greet me and ask how my day went, I break our ritual to ask the question I came up with on my lonely walk home.
“Grandpa, what’s the hardest thing you ever had to do?”
My grandpa answers every question of mine as if he was expecting it and had rehearsed giving the perfect response.  This time proves to be no exception.
“I tried to make myself the father I never was to your dad.  I’m still trying.”
“I don’t understand.”
He removes a bookmark from his shirt pocket to hold the page he’s on, places the book on the table beside him, and takes up his pipe.  Although he puts the pipe in his mouth, he makes no move to light it.  My grandpa gave up smoking years ago, transferring from daily packs of cigarettes, to a few cigars after dinner, to one smoke of his pipe late in the evening, until arriving at his goal of total abstinence.  He still holds the pipe in his mouth sometimes, usually when he’s worried or in deep concentration over some important matter.  This tips me off to pay especially close attention to whatever he’ll say next.
“You see, when your dad was growing up I wasn’t around for him very much.  I used the excuse of trying to build a career, providing amply for my family.  But even when I was home, I wasn’t involved like I should have been.  I left the day to day details to your grandma, not realizing that the day to day details are what make up our lives.  She’s the one who went to the PTA meetings, bandaged your dad’s bruises, went to his school plays, protected him as a growing boy and showed him how to be a good man.  The most I did was watch the occasional ball game on TV with him.”
I am somewhat surprised, close to stunned actually.  My grandpa is saying things beyond the logic of the world I have experienced.  The words he speaks don’t match up with the deeds of the man I know him to be.  Recognizing the disbelief in my eyes, he explains himself further.
“I was amazed by the kind of father he turned out to be, especially under the circumstances of having to do it mostly by himself.  I used to make excuses for the way I’d been, saying I had the worst possible role model in my old man.   But what he passed down to me, I failed to pass along.  Maybe the fact that your dad had to become both father and mother to you had something to do with it.  He needed to somehow fill the void left by your mother’s passing, and he did one hell of a job.  I watched him raise you with enormous pride, and in the process, I got my first lessons on how to be a real father, not just the man who pays the bills.”  
Hearing him speak of my father like this really gets to me, but I manage to hold my tears in check.  Okay, I hold most of them in.  Can you blame me for letting a few slip out?
“After the accident when you moved in with me, I was given the opportunity to put into practice what I had learned.  And I must be doing an okay job the second time around because you’ve grown up to be a wonderful young man, even if you do wear your pants too baggy for my taste.  I’m guessing you’ll grow out of that eventually.  In life you grow in and out of all sorts of things.”
“You’re doing a great job, Grandpa.”  I would give him a hug if he was more of the touchy-feely type, but knowing better, I just return his contagious smile.  He puts his pipe back down and takes his book up, pushing his glasses closer to the oval auburn eyes that I inherited.  I cross the living room of our bachelor pad, as my grandpa is jokingly fond of calling the house, and head upstairs to my room.
For reasons I do not comprehend and will not bother trying to figure out just now, the talk with my grandpa has released my apprehension.  I find myself able to get to the business at hand.  Knowing her last name and the street her family lives on, locating her phone number in the White Pages is a breeze.  My fingers do not tremble as I dial.  There is no quaver to my voice when I ask if she is home.  And when she appears on the other end of the phone line, I simply begin speaking to her as if it’s the most natural thing in the world to do, rather than the near miracle I know it to be. 



Our first real conversation lasts nearly two hours.  It goes easier than I could have ever imagined, like a baby squirrel figuring out how to climb a tree.  She seems to have expected my call, to have been waiting for it even.  I learn countless new things about her.  We turn out to have a whole lot in common, sharing the same favorite flavor of ice cream, and favorite song currently on the Top Ten countdown, and favorite book read in Literature class last year, and mutual annoyance at the frantic hand waving done by a certain pigtailed know-it-all in every class.  I quickly grow fond of the frequently said phrase - “me too”.
            As the phone call draws to a close, nervousness finally returns.  I ignore this emotion and tell her that I have one more question to ask.  To calm myself, I close my eyes and recall the first time I ever rode a bicycle without training wheels.  I remember the shock of looking back and learning that my father had stopped running alongside to keep me balanced, that I had been riding for awhile all by myself.  I remember how unstable the bike got after that, how I lost control, the skinned knee earned for the effort.  I remember getting back up, brushing myself off, hopping on the bike again and riding towards my dad like I had been doing so all my life. 


            The details of life when my dad was still around grow fuzzier as time passes.  I don’t want to forget anything about him, but little by little my memory fades.  Once I ran home in a panic after school because I suddenly realized that I couldn’t picture what he looked like.  I flew into my house and straight to the nearest photograph with him in it.  That picture is of my parents, the father taken from me by a drunk driver and the mother I never got to know at all because she died while giving birth to me.  Neither of them died as heroes, such as what they’re calling the firemen and police officers who rushed into the World Trade Center back at the beginning of the semester.  If you have to die, I guess it would be nice to be called a hero by those you leave behind.  My father and mother were just ordinary people with worse than ordinary luck, I suppose.  Then again, my grandpa says heroes come in all sorts of shapes and sizes that you can’t always recognize. 


With heroes, and my long ago bicycle lesson, and the steadying hands of my father, and a mother I never met who has always seemed like my own personal angel in mind, I ask a girl if she would like to go out on a date with me.  It is the first time I have ever done such a brave and wonderful thing.  I probably didn’t do it perfect.  But I did it.  And how did it go?
            As my grandpa says, sometimes it is the journey that matters, not the destination.  She answers that this weekend isn’t good for her.  My heart drops.  Then she says that the following weekend would be much better.  So my destination is the movies next Saturday night.    
I don’t know how I’m going to wait so long without bursting.  I sure do wish it was sooner, although I’ll probably need all the time I can get to prepare myself.  It will probably take me at least a few days to learn how to be charming and clever and whatever else girls like a guy to be. 
Fortunately, my grandpa is a great teacher.







Goodreads Book Giveaway

Patches Of Grey by Roy L. Pickering Jr.

Patches Of Grey

by Roy L. Pickering Jr.

Giveaway ends February 14, 2014.
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