This Month
February 2007
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28
Year Archive
Login
User name:
Password:
Remember me 
Search
Recent Visitors
winston - Sat 21 Nov 2009 05:15 AM CST 
Max123 - Sat 31 Oct 2009 01:40 AM CDT 
tom jenny - Fri 30 Oct 2009 01:50 PM CDT 
HELLOOOOOOOOOOOO - Fri 16 Oct 2009 07:45 AM CDT 
gordman - Thu 15 Oct 2009 02:10 PM CDT 
RSS Newsfeeds
justeastofeden Main RSS Feed Main Page RSS
Bookmark and Share
View Article  Magical Jeems Bayou

Jeems Bayou 1

http://www.gondwanapress.com

View Article  More Uncertain Texas

I couldn’t resist.  Here are a few more pics of Uncertain.

http://www.gondwanapress.com

Uncertain City Limits Johnson's Landing Uncertain Boat Channel House on Stilts

View Article  Near Uncertain, Texas

Uncertain (yes, there is such a place) is an ecletic little town on the banks of scenic Caddo Lake.  Here are a few pics to give you a feel for the place.

http://www.gondwanapress.com

Alligator Heaven Bait Shop Uncertain Caddo Near Uncertain Knees Near Uncertain

View Article  Pixie Beneath Caddo Mushroom

Another pixie shot from near Caddo Lake.

http://www.gondwanapress.com

Blue Nude Pixie beneath Mushroom

View Article  Pads on Caddo

The fauna of Caddo Lake is diverse and exotic.  Here are two pics to show what I mean.

http://www.gondwanapress.com

Cypress Knees  Pad Flowers  Pads Caddo 

View Article  Lucky and Rouge

Here are a couple of pics of two of my babies, Lucky and Rouge. Hey, and one of Kate, too.

http://gondwanapress.com

    Rouge Yawn  Lucky on His Back  Kate Kitchen

View Article  Jeems Bayou Pixie

Much of the area from Shreveport, Louisiana to Jefferson, Texas was once covered with a body of water known loosely as the Fairie Lakes.  Fairie, supposedly, was a place-name rather than a reference to tiny magic beings.  Most of the water is gone but many gloriously beautiful places still exist.  And like in times past, the area is still one of the most mysterious places on the face of the earth.  Are there fairies to be found?  Well, check out this pic I took a while back near the Jeems Bayou Bridge.

http://www.gondwanapress.com

Jeems Bayou Pixie

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

f

View Article  Jeems Bayou Bridge

A short distance from Vivian, Louisiana is the Jeems Bayou Bridge.  Continue on this highway and you will soon reach Jefferson, Texas.  Jeems Bayou offers much in the way of beautiful southern scenery.  Here are a couple of pictures.

http://www.gondwanapress.com

Beneath Jeems Bayou Bridge  Jeems Bayou Bridge

View Article  Mushroom Girl

Mushrooms in Dead Tree w girl

http://www.gondwanapress.com

View Article  Let's Party!

It’s Mardi Gras day and this year’s Fat Tuesday signals continued recovery from the devastation of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.  This year, there are more available hotel rooms and 95 % of them are occupied.  Many more restaurants and night clubs are up and running and signs of hurricane destruction are gone from the parade course.  There is much more to do, but this year’s Mardi Gras shows that New Orleans survived the storms and continues to recover.  Way to go, NO!  Happy Mardi Gras Day.

http://www.gondwanapress.com

View Article  Bigfoot Spotting in Atoka County, Oklahoma

I just came across this report of a bigfoot sighting near Caney, Oklahoma.  The tiny town of Caney is located in rural southeast Oklahoma.  Several locals reported seeing the creature prompting bigfoot researchers to fly in from California to investigate.  Below is a proported picture of a bigfoot captured by a wildlife camera.  To me, it looks like a hairy creature with a wolf pelt (?) on its back.  Who knows?

http://www.gondwanapress.com

Bigfoot1

View Article  On Emily Dickenson

A rejection of four of her works by Atlantic Montly convinced Emily Dickenson to keep the nearly 1800 poems she had written during her lifetime to herself. Only a couple of her poems were published while she lived. What a pity for her contemporaries but what a blessing that her poetry was posthumously released. For those of us fortunate enough to read and experience the poetry of here genius, here is but a single example:

IX

Have you got a brook in your little heart,
Where bashful flowers blow,
And blushing birds go down to drink,
And shadows tremble so?

And nobody knows, so still it flows,
That any brook is there;
And let your little draught of life
Is daily drunken there.

Then look out for the little brook in March,
When the rivers overflow,
And the snows come hurrying from the hills,
And the bridges often go.

And later, in August it may be,
When the meadows parching lie,
Beware, lest this little brook of life
Some burning noon go dry!

http://www.gondwanapress.com

View Article  Storm Hawk Over Edmond

Storm Hawk

http://www.gondwanapress.com

View Article  Top 10 Most Expensive Sci-Fi Books Sold at AbeBooks.com in 2006

Abe Books, the large new and used book store, is highlighting their science fiction and fantasy section.  In an e-mail from them received today they listed the top ten most expensive sci-fi editions they sold in 2006.  The list is quite interesting and here it is:

10). The Hobbit, J.R.R. Tolkien – $3,000

9). Brave New World (1st Edition), Aldous Huxley – $3,250

8). Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang, Kate Wilhelm – $3,975

7). The Ship That Sailed to Mars, William Timlin – $3,995

6). Brave New World (true 1st Edition), Aldous Huxley – $4,025

4). (tie)  The Healer’s War, Elizabeth Scarborough – $4,500

4). (tie) I Robot, Isaac Asimov – $4,500

2). (tie) The Dark Tower – The Gunslinger, Stephen King – $7,500

2). (tie) Neuromancer (2), Count Zero, Mona Lisa Overdrive, William Gibson – $7,500

1). 1984, George Orwell – $8,258.40

Check out more wonderful books at http://www.gondwanapress.com although none so expensive.

View Article  Excerpt from New Orleans' Novel Blink of an Eye

It’s the 2nd Mardi Gras since Katrina and Rita.  Fat Tuesday is February 20, 2007.  I am writing a sequel to the Big Easy called Blink of an Eye.  It starts out with two cops, Tony Nicosia and his partner, staking out a Mardi Gras Parade.  The book won’t be out for some time.  Meanwhile, if you have an insatiable need to experience New Orleans – and who doesn’t? – then please read Big Easy or Murder Etouffee.  Both are available at http://www.gondwanapress.com.

Big Easy Front Cover   Murder Front Cover

BLINK OF AN EYE

A Novel by Eric Wilder

CHAPTER ONE  

Lieutenant Anthony Nicosia didn’t look like a cop. He didn’t feel like one either, and his baggy green shorts, black Reeboks, white socks and plaid windbreaker did little to change anyone’s first impression. Along with his thinning hair, sallow complexion and dumpy physique, he looked like a middle-aged. couch potato, more interested in soap operas than crime. His muscles ached from months of disuse and he vowed to visit the Y soon as Mardi Gras ended. Now, sore muscles or not, the world’s biggest block party was swinging and he was on duty.

Although the Muses parade had barely begun, crowds of observers already agitated into a state of mass hysteria jammed Canal Street. Consecutive days of policing parties, parades and revelry had left Tony Nicosia’s nerves frayed, his temper short. His extra ten pounds of body weight resulting from his recently failed diet pounded away at his legs, sore knees and tired feet. His shoulder holster chafed his chest raw and he felt like screaming. No one would have noticed. The sea of frantic people surrounding him raised the chaos level to an ear-splitting roar when Nicosia’s younger, red-headed partner, Sergeant Tommy Blackburn, tapped his shoulder.

"You look like hell, Tony."

"Yeah, and Fat Tuesday still a week away!"

"Not to mention we missed lunch."

Nicosia hadn’t forgotten. Piquant aroma of boiled crawfish from a nearby tailgate party wafted toward them in an enticing and unattainable cloud of tasty temptation. Blackburn looked more like a defensive end then his older partner’s middle-aged beer drinker image conveyed. He and Nicosia, along with fifty other cops and state troopers, mingled with the Mardi Gras crowds, trying to quell the growing spate of violence and vandalism. The plan worked but every over-stressed man on the force felt ready to drop from exhaustion.

Nicosia and Blackburn had little time for conversation as the parade’s lead float rumbled off St. Charles Avenue and headed toward the Mississippi River, down Canal Street. The raucous crowd grew more animated and nosier as masked Musers rained beads, baubles and souvenir doubloons from the gaudily decorated floats. Costumes mimicked float colors, each Muser dressed in the Krewe’s theme for the year. Burgundy tunics draped black tights on the lead float and grotesque masks made it impossible to determine the sex or race of the souvenir tossers. Canal Street revelers didn’t care, parting in human waves as the lead float approached.

Gorgeous southern college girls, middle-aged tourists and a multitude of locals that had seen it all before, comprised the crowd. They all had something in common — loss of inhibitions and lack of common sense. One female, not much older than Nicosia’s youngest, bared her breasts and hugged his neck, caking crimson lipstick on his cheek as she wobbled away down the street. Nicosia wondered if she would make it home okay and why at least a few parade watchers weren’t crushed every year beneath the wheels of the floats. He had little time to ponder the question.

An explosion of sound erupted and several bullets passed over his head, riveting his attention to more pressing matters. An unknown shooter had just unloaded the contents of a semi-automatic pistol into the crowd. A local gang-banger, Nicosia quickly decided. Someone nearby had incurred his wrath and she lay on the ground, hugging her bullet-nicked arm. Mostly unhurt, her boyfriend jumped to her immediate rescue. The bullets, as if by miracle, struck no one else in the crowd.

It wasn’t Lieutenant Tony Nicosia’s first dance. He’d been shot at before. Whirling around, he dropped to his knee and drew his revolver. Tommy Blackburn, ten years younger and several steps faster, had already reacted, racing after the shooter, trying to exit the scene. The crowd, mostly unaware that someone had unloaded an automatic weapon in their midst, resisted the burly sergeant as he shouldered his way after the fleeing perp. Seeing the unfolding fray, Nicosia rose to his feet only to have his leg collapse beneath his weight. Grabbing his left knee, he squeezed as searing pain surged through his extremity. The crowd didn’t notice or care.

Floats passed, beads raining from the Musers. Gray, February clouds further darkened the gloomy day, the third float passing on Canal. Lieutenant Nicosia shielded his face as the crowd, intent on catching flying beads and dated doubloons, stepped on and over him.

Unaware of his partner’s injury, Sergeant Tommy Blackburn bullied his way through animated spectators, bowling over revelers in his wake. The going was slow but the man he pursued had the same problem. His pistol empty, the gang-banger swung it ineffectively at people crushing around him. Most of them didn’t notice, their attentions focused on flying beads and trinkets. Blood flew from a woman’s mouth when he nailed her with the barrel of his gun. She dropped to her knees in pain, her husband oblivious to her plight.

As Tommy Blackburn gained ground on the shooter, he saw the injured woman but didn’t stop. Close enough to recognize gang tattoos on the back of the man he pursued, it caused blood to surge up Blackburn’s shoulders. Rising blood pressure turned his thick neck and florid face an angry red. Redoubling his efforts, he fought to within six feet of the shooter, his stare focused on the back of the man’s head. When he finally saw his opening, he dived forward, grabbed a pair of legs he prayed were the right ones and rolled the person to the ground, knocking down half a dozen unsuspecting revelers along with them.

Blackburn transferred his grip to the man’s tee shirt. The young Chicano gang member backhanded Tommy, ripped the shirt down the front, tore it away and was back on his feet in a single fluid motion. Blackburn, ignoring his broken lip and skinned knees, didn’t bother yelling for him to halt, charging after the gang-banger instead.

Six-four and two hundred twenty pounds, Tommy Blackburn was an imposing man. Ten years out of high school, he still held the State shot put record. When his hand snagged the strap of a digital camera, he slammed it into the fleeing man’s back. The gang member dropped in pain. Just enough time for Blackburn to overtake him, rolling him bodily through the crowd.

Tommy Blackburn wasn’t prepared for what happened next. The young Chicano retrieved a knife from his baggy pants. Opening it with a flip, he stabbed it into Blackburn’s mid-section. Yanking the blade free, he went for Tommy’s throat, trying to end the larger man’s attack. Tommy grabbed a strong wrist and held on, his own strength quickly ebbing as blood gushed from an open stomach wound. Realizing the life-or-death struggle at their feet, people drew back in horror, forming a barrier around the two combatants. Mesmerized by the struggle, no one stepped forward to help the desperately injured police sergeant.

The gang-banger’s blade cut his face but Tommy resisted, even though he no longer felt sharp pain that set his stomach afire. Nor could he feel his arms and legs, his mind dulling, threatening to shut down completely. He could only see his mother’s face, and his grandmother’s, and they were both crying. Consciousness had faded when what next happened.

Strong hands grabbed the gang-banger’s neck and squeezed.. The gang-banger’s body went limp and he dropped the knife. Lieutenant Tony Nicosia pulled the slack body off his fallen partner, kicked the perp in the head for good measure, then turned his attention to Blackburn. Quickly assessing the situation, he removed his windbreaker, stuffing it into the flowing wound. Grabbing his walkie-talkie, he called for backup and medical assistance. Each cop carried a GPS device and reinforcements would quickly reach them.

Lieutenant Tony Nicosia, after surviving the weight of the crowd, pushed off the ground and dragged his useless leg through the melee, following the fleeing man and his partner.

"Police," he yelled, waving his badge. "Move it out of the way!"

Nicosia’s knee hurt like hell, the beignet he’d eaten earlier lying like a rock in his stomach. His inner warning sirens screamed. Tommy Blackburn was in deep shit and needed his immediate assistance. He kept moving, trying unsuccessfully to focus on something other than searing pain racing through his leg, knocking people out of his way to enter the circle where his partner gasped his last breaths. When he reached the two men on the ground, Nicosia reacted. Almost too late for his fallen partner. Tommy’s eyes were closed and pluming blood painted a growing stop sign on his chest. Nicosia had learned the choke hold in police academy. It was no longer taught, at least officially, and no longer used. Again, at least officially.

It didn’t matter to Lieutenant Tony Nicosia. With the situation dire, it was either the choke hold or a bullet through the gang-banger’s brain. If he could have grabbed his service revolver before the man slit Blackburn’s throat, there would have been nothing to decide. As it was, he had only enough time to dive for the throat, grab it and squeeze.

http://www.ericwilder.com

View Article  Mardi Gras, 2007

Some disbelievers said it would never happen again, but New Orleans is in the throes of Mardi Gras for the second time following the devastation of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. The venerable city and its heroic citizens survived a near-fatal blow from the brace of wild storms. Mardi Gras Day, known by everyone as Fat Tuesday, provides its own brand of wildness this year on February 20, 2007. Take my advice and experience the festivities for yourself. You won’t be disappointed.

If you simply can’t make it to Mardi Gras, at least read my new novel Big Easy.  It’ll give you a thirst for the City you won’t be able to quench without a visit there.

Available at http://www.gondwanapress.com

Big Easy Front Cover

View Article  More Jeems Bayou

Driving east of Vivian on Louisiana Highway 1, you will soon encounter the road to Trees City.  A large filling station, convenience store, restaurant and casino called The Station marks the intersection.  Follow the winding road a few miles and you will reach the Harts Ferry Bridge that crosses Jeems (sometimes called James) Bayou.  Years ago, there was a very old oil well on the north side of the road.  The well is gone but snowy egrets, waterlogged cypress trees, lily pads and acres of marvelous scenery remains.

Growing up in north Louisiana, I remember traversing the road with my parents following heavy rain.  High water would rise almost to the asphalt, old cars and trucks having transported families, fishing with cane poles on both sides of the road.  The old bridge would be under water, passage to Trees City impossible except by boat.

Here is a topo map of the present Harts Ferry bridge, and a pic of some of that marvelous scenery.

http://www.gondwanapress.com

Harts Ferry Bridge  101_1008

View Article  Oklahoma Snowdrops

Winter weather in Oklahoma, like much of the country, is bitter this year.  Still, Okies are tough, as are Oklahoma animals and plants.  Here is a pic taken less than an hour ago in my front yard.  Yes, they are blooming flowers – Oklahoma snowdrops.

http://www.ericwilder.com

0003

View Article  Evil Eye Palm
Evil Eye Palm_000001827293Large http://www.ericwilder.com
View Article  Comment on the Novel Short-Timers

I’m presently reading Short-Timers, a novel about the Vietnamese war by author Gustav Hasford.  Director Stanley Kubrick based his movie Full Metal Jacket on this book.  I loved the movie but it pales in comparison to the book.  Powerful?  Well, you be the judge.  Here is a short passage about what happens to a dead soldier being shipped home in a cheap metal box, to give you a taste:

“You’re friends from school and all of the relatives you never liked anyway will be at your funeral and they’ll call you a good little Christian and they’ll say you were a hero to get wasted defeating Communism and you’ll just lie there with a cold ass, dead as a mackeral.”

This book is not for everyone, but neither is war.  Powerful?  Read it and you’ll get a real feel for seeing the person beside you take a bullet through the heart and then bleed to death on your boots.

http://www.ericwilder.com  http://www.gondwanapress.com

 

View Article  Killer Twisters in Florida

I just watched some video shot from a helicopter over tornado-ravaged Florida.  I could not believe the destruction.  Oklahoma, as everyone knows, has its share of tornadoes and the category 5 tornado that struck Moore and Oklahoma City several years ago wreaked its share of damage.  Still, I wonder what manner of storm produced the massive destruction in Florida.  Was it a group of several tornadoes, or a single killer twister?  Whichever, I have great empathy with the poor people in Florida that lost their homes, and in some cases their lives.

http://www.ericwilder.com