2024 06 01

June 2024 Newsletter

Life in Calgary

Maybe too much air in the tires?

Canadian Tire had a sale on mountain bikes last week. I found one I liked but the back tire was flat, so I asked the sports clerk to inflate it. I then bought the bike and threw it in the back of my car.

By the time I got home, however, the tire was again flat. I immediately turned around and went back to the store, receipt in hand.

Unfortunately, CT has a lot of problems with people banging canoes into rocks and trying to get their money back, so they no longer allow most sports equipment to be returned or exchanged.

The customer-service clerk pointed to my bill. “See, it says right here, no returns or exchanges.”

“But you sold me a flat tire,” I responded. “You do see the irony here.”

“What?”

“Your store is called CT. Do you want to change it to CFT?”

The clerk pondered for a moment. “Canadian Flat Tire?”

“I was thinking of another four-letter word.”

She eventually relented and allowed me to exchange my bike for the same model. “Is there anything else you need help with?” She asked

“Yes, I hear you rent car tires, as well. Can you give me your flat rate?”

Coming This Fall!

Reading and Signing at Owls Nest Books, September 15, 4 pm!

An Interview With Author Gordon Cope

Crystal Ball is the sixth book featuring FBI Agent Jack Kenyon. To what do you attribute the longevity of the series?

I’ve been writing the series for several decades now, and the characters – Jack, Jasmine, Marge – are all like old friends. Whenever I start a new book, it’s like a reunion. I also try to create a unique crisis – hackers, genetic terrorists – that reflects what’s happening on the front pages of the real world. And finally, there’s lots of twists and turns that keep readers turning the pages!

A lot of series are episodic, in which the action happens and then everyone switches back to default mode until the next crisis comes along. Do you do that with this series?

Jack and the other characters have evolved through the series, growing older, changing jobs, etc. Crystal Ball is an important installment in their lives, in that Jack and Bee are getting married, and one of the main characters dies. It’s going to be a very traumatic book for fans of the series.

How long does it take you to write a book?

It takes me about twelve months from start to finish. I spend a month or two plotting out the premise, then about six months writing the first draft, then another month editing and getting feedback from my cadre of volunteer readers, and then laying out the book and having it converted to eBook and paperback files for Kindle. I end up wearing a lot of hats! By the time the book reaches the official launch date, a year has passed.

Are you planning another book for Jack Kenyon?

Yes! Without giving away too much from Crystal Ball, Jack and Bee start a new life together, with lots of complications ensuing! Once I launch Crystal Ball, I’ll begin plotting out the premise for the next book.

Recipe: BBQ Cod

This is an easy and delicious summer meal; simply flavor the cod and let it cook! Great with asparagus and rice on the side.

Ingredients

4 cod fillets or cod loins about 8 ounces each

1 ½ tablespoons olive oil

1/2 tablespoon Cajun seasoning

½ teaspoon salt

1 clove crushed garlic

Chopped green onion

Chopped fresh parsley

Lemons for garnish and juice

Instructions

Pat the cod fish very dry with paper towels. Brush them with olive oil.

Combine the Cajun seasoning, salt, and crushed garlic. Sprinkle evenly over the filets.

Bake in the BBQ at medium for 10 minutes or until the fish flakes easily with a fork at its thickest point.

Sprinkle with green onion and chopped fresh parsley.  Serve with fresh lemon wedges or spritz with fresh lemon juice.

Book Review

Trunk Music

By Michael Connelly

Connelly is our all-time favorite police-procedural author, and we’ve been reading him for several decades. Trunk Music came out in 1997, and is one of his classic tales revolving around LAPD Detective Hieronymus (Harry) Bosch.

The book opens with the discovery of a murder victim in the trunk of his Rolls Royce, which is found abandoned in a fire lane above the Hollywood Bowl. Harry and his team are called out to investigate what appears to be a mob hit; the corpse was killed with two execution-style wounds to his skull from a .22 pistol.

Harry soon focuses on a mafia gang that has its tentacles in a number of Vegas casinos, but things aren’t quite what they seem; the evidence pointing to a prominent capo is simply too good to be true.

Harry’s dogged determination to find the real killers makes all kinds of enemies both within the mafia as well as LAPD headquarters, where entrenched interests would just as soon not see the truth revealed. Soon, Harry is dodging more bullets than a marine on D-Day. Justice ultimately wins out, however, and the bad guys are royally punished.

I found reading the book just as enjoyable today as when I first laid eyes on it over a quarter-century ago. I highly recommend Trunk Music!

Movie Review

Queen Bees

Streaming on Netflix

This is a feel-good movie starring some of Hollywood’s most endearing actors. Ellen Burstyn plays Helen, an independent widow living on her own until she gets forgetful and lights her kitchen on fire. Her worried daughter insists she temporarily relocate to a senior’s home during renovation, and Helen reluctantly agrees.

The home is dominated by the Queen Bees, a quartet of bitchy divas led by the seriously uptight Janet Poindexter (played with demonic glee by Jane Curtin), whose purpose in life is to make life unbearable for all the other tenants.

Helen isn’t intimidated by the Queen Bees, and makes it her task to give them their comeuppance. Along the way, she meets handsome widower Dan (played by James Caan), who becomes her love interest.

This is a great movie for cameos; pay close attention and you’ll see French Stewart, who played the delightfully goofy Harry in 3rd Rock from the Sun.

While a few hearts get broken, it all ends well; I especially like the fact that there wasn’t a single car chase scene or shoot-em-up in the entire movie. I highly recommend Queen Bees!

Christmas candy canes taking a tropical beach vacation for a winter holiday. They stand as a group of friends, traveling together and having fun in the white sand along the aqua blue water of the Caribbean Sea, Mayan Riviera, Mexico.

December 2022 Newsletter

Life in Mexico

There is a new mural on the wall beside the entrance to Santiago cemetery. A small girl with curly blonde hair is rising into the air. The Grim Reaper is reaching for her. He has a big smile (which is about all you can manage with a skull).

The girl, for her part, seems rather serene, considering that one moment she was running for the ice cream truck in her Sunday dress, and the next she’s being embraced by a grinning skeleton in a black cowl.

I’m curious; was Jesus busy getting his halo buffed and couldn’t make it? I can see him on his cellphone. “Hey, Grim, you got time for a pickup? No, leave the scythe, you’ll scare the shit out of the kid.”

If I ever have naughty grandchildren, I’m going to paint this mural on their ceiling.

Joan the Saint now available on Amazon!

I’ll be at the Mujeres lunch on Wednesday December 8 at 12:30 to sell autographed paperback copies, but if you can’t make it, you can purchase a paperback or eBook on Amazon.

Another amazing book by Gordon Cope!”

Amazon 5-star review

The much-anticipated sequel to Magnus the Magnificent is finally available!

Joan of Arc, born in northeast France during the Hundred Years War between England and France, arose from obscurity to become her nation’s greatest hero. Guided by the voices of St. Margaret and St. Catherine, she defeated the English army at Orleans and crowned Charles VII king of France in Reims.

The year is 1431. Joan of Arc has been captured by the English and is being tried for heresy in their stronghold of Rouen. Abandoned by the French, Magnus the Magnificent sets out on a quest to foil her fiery fate.

You can purchase the eBook edition and paperback on Amazon!

Book Review

Desert Star

By Michael Connelly

Author Michael Connelly is the undisputed king of police procedurals. His main protagonist, LAPD Detective Harry Bosch, has been solving murders since Cain slew Abel. Now retired, he is a volunteer for the Open-Unsolved Unit.

The unit, set up by the LAPD to rehash cold-case files, is commanded by Renée Ballard, a young detective with a plethora of moxie and an amazing tolerance for the irascible Harry.

Two cases dominate their work; the unsolved murder of a city councilman’s younger sister, and the slaying of a family of four. The former is given precedence because the councilman has the power to shut down the unit, and the latter because it has haunted Harry for decades.

Working methodically, Harry, Renée and the team of researchers sieve through the case books, searching for overlooked suspects. Each time a clue leads them to a prime suspect, however, their hopes are dashed when a witness or undisputable evidence provides an alibi. Undeterred, they plod diligently on, until the perpetrators are finally exposed.

As always, Harry is the epitome of the knight errant, tilting at windmills and making life uncomfortable for the powers-that-be. Renée Ballard is the perfect foil, cherishing her relationship with her mentor Harry, but knowing all too well the pitfalls that await.

Although the book stands on its own, it is a welcome addition to the Harry/ Renée series. I highly recommend Desert Star!

Recipe: Coq au Vin

This is a recipe made famous by Julia Child around a million years ago, but it has a timeless appeal due to its great taste and ease of preparation.

INGREDIENTS

8 chicken thighs

1 ½ cups red wine

1 cup chicken stock

 ¼ cup brandy

1 tsp salt

3 strips bacon, cut into ½ inch pieces

1 medium onion, quartered then thinly sliced

2 medium carrots, cut into 1-inch piece

4 cloves garlic, minced

2 tablespoons tomato paste

2 teaspoons fresh thyme leaves (or 1 Tsp of Italian herb mix)

8 ounces mushrooms, thickly sliced

8 ounces pearl onions, peeled

Beurre blanc (a mix of 2 Tsp of flour and 2 Tsp of soft butter)

Cooked rice or pasta.

DIRECTIONS

Marinate the chicken thighs in the wine, chicken stock, salt and brandy.


Fry the bacon in a Dutch oven (electric skillet) over medium-high heat until the bacon is crispy. Remove it from the pan with a slotted spoon.

Remove the chicken from the wine marinade (save the marinade) and dry the chicken with paper towels. Place the chicken in the pan. Sear until it is golden on both sides (about 5 minutes on each side) and then remove the chicken.

Add the sliced onion, mushrooms, pearl onions and carrots to the pan and let them cook until the onion is golden brown. Add the garlic to the pan and let it cook for 1 minute.

Add the tomato paste. Pour the reserved wine marinade into the pan, scraping the bottom to remove any stuck-on bits.

Place the chicken and bacon into the pan and sprinkle the thyme/Italian herbs over top. Cover the pan, turn the heat to low, and simmer for 20 minutes.

Add the beurre blanc. Stir it into the sauce and let it thicken. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

Serve on rice or pasta.

Enjoy!

TV Series Review

Wednesday

Streaming on Netflix

As a child, I recall seeing the macabre cartoons by Charles Addams, enjoying their morbid humor, but it wasn’t until the advent of The Addams Family that I really became a fan. Most of the antics revolved around Morticia and Gomez, but Lurch, Thing and Cousin Itt were all indispensable to the cavalcade of weirdos.

Now, Tim Burton (The Nightmare Before Christmas), has brought his own ghoulish sensibilities to the newest installment, an 8-episode series on Netlfix. It centers around Wednesday, the dead-pan teenage daughter who was always thinking up new ways to torture her little brother Pugsley.

Wednesday (played by Jenna Ortega), is a nihilistic Goth who is sent to a boarding school after filling her high school swimming pool with Piranha. Both Morticia and Gomez are alumni of Nevermore Academy, and are confident that their daughter will blossom in the midst of all the oddballs who attend (and teach) at the school.

Wednesday vows to escape, but after nefarious persons unknown attempt to poison, torture and murder her, she begins to warm to the place. Aided by her handyman Thing and Uncle Fester, she puzzles out the mysterious monster disemboweling town folk and students, leading to a rather gory climax. I highly recommend Wednesday!