We
can legitimately lament, and perhaps mourn, the transition of the bookstore and
the rise of the electronic book. But one of the benefits of e-books, and there
is more than one benefit, is the accessibility of short works – short stories,
novellas, short novels – that would never have seen the light of day except packaged
with similar-length works. I’ve been working now and then on my own novella,
which will most likely emerge one day in pixilated form.
Before
us are four such short works – two children’s stories, two suspense stories.
Peter
Pollock’s A
Very Different School is the first of his Professor Alexander stories.
The town of Rosefields has constructed a new school. Even if only a small
number of students will be attending. The teacher is Professor Alexander, and
he has a unique way of teaching – by time machine. In this first story, he takes
his students to the very first Easter week, to see Jesus enter Jerusalem on a
donkey, the last supper, the betrayal by Judas, the prayer in the garden of
Gethsemane and the arrest of Jesus, Peter’s denial, the crucifixion and the
resurrection. Three of the children in the story just happened to share the
same names of Pollock’s own children – and that’s how the story came to be
written.
Pat
Hatt’s Tune
at High Noon is a very different kind of story – a rhyming story about
the town of Rumbling Tumblewood and a host of animals who are the townspeople. It’s
a sleepy, happy kind of town, until a band of outlaws (played by cats; Hatt has
a cat or two that he often writes poems about) arrives and takes over. Things
go from bad to worse, until Goosey Air (who runs the saloon) figures out a way
to corral the cat gang and their cohorts. It’s great fun, and it’s mean to be
read aloud.
I
can see myself reading both of these works to my grandchildren, an engaging way
to learn about Easter and a fun way to learn about standing up to bullies.
And
now two for adults.
Rearview by Mike
Dellosso was originally part of a collection of seven stories by various
mystery and suspense writers, and then broken out as a separate novella (or
long short story). Dan Blakely is a college professor who arrives at school one
morning to find himself accused of assaulting one of his female students. He’s
told to clear out his office and leave. As he experiences his life turning
upside down, he decides to kill himself, but survives a car crash to find his
been given a reprieve of seven hours. So what would you do with your last seven
hours? We find out what Blakely does, and Dellosso weaves a story that is
reminiscent of the old Twilight Zone
television programs.
Mirror
Image,
a short story by Dellosso and Aaron Reed, begins in a library. A man finds a
book, and the picture of the author is the man’s doppelganger. He finds himself
tracking the author down, learning what his life is like, and then determining
to take the author’s life as his own, even if murder is required. This is
another story with twists and turns, as we come to occupy the mind of a man
determined on a fateful course of action.
Four
short works, two for children and two for adults. And all thoroughly enjoyable.
Related – author’s blogs:
3 comments:
Thanks a ton for the run. Yeah it does open up a whole wide array of options that would never have seen the light of day otherwise. Makes it easier to break into to, as picture books were never super long, but hard as heck to break into.
Wow, thank you SO much for including me, Glynn!
Would it be a little cheeky for me to also mention that just yesterday, I published a special, full color illustrated edition of A Very Different School?
http://amzn.to/1bY5U9P
Thanks so much, Glynn, for including my stories in this post. I had so much fun writing these stories and hope folks have as much fun reading them. Thanks again!
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