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***The CRC Blog welcomes submissions from published and unpublished fiction genre writers for INSIDE THE EMOTION OF FICTION. Contact CRC Blog via email at caccoop@aol.com or personal Facebook messaging at https://www.facebook.com/car.cooper.7
****Rick Robinson’s Alligator
Alley is the nineteenth in a never-ending series called INSIDE
THE EMOTION OF FICTION where the Chris Rice Cooper
Blog (CRC) focuses on one specific excerpt from a fiction genre and how
that fiction writer wrote that specific excerpt. All INSIDE
THE EMOTION OF FICTION links are at the
end of this piece.
Name
of fiction work? And were there other names you considered that you would like
to share with us? Of all my novels, my personal favorite is
Alligator Alley. I thought about calling it the Alligators of Prisoners' Lake,
referencing a story within the book.
Fiction
genre? Ex science fiction, short story, fantasy novella, romance, drama,
crime, plays, flash fiction, historical, comedy, etc. And how many
pages long? The genre is literary fiction and it is 160
pages.
Has this been published? And it is totally fine if the answer is no. If yes, what publisher and what publication date? Alligator Alley was published by Publisher Page, an imprint of Headline Books in 2013.
Has this been published? And it is totally fine if the answer is no. If yes, what publisher and what publication date? Alligator Alley was published by Publisher Page, an imprint of Headline Books in 2013.
What is the date
you began writing this piece of fiction and the date when you completely
finished the piece of fiction?
I started writing this novel when I was 17 years old, but could never get past the first couple of chapters. Essentially, I could never figure out what the book was about. As I hit my 50's, the story began to mesh with my values of the time. That is when the words started flowing
I started writing this novel when I was 17 years old, but could never get past the first couple of chapters. Essentially, I could never figure out what the book was about. As I hit my 50's, the story began to mesh with my values of the time. That is when the words started flowing
Where
did you do most of your writing for this fiction work? And please
describe in detail. And can you please include a photo? Like all my books, Alligator Alley was written in places
where there were lots of activity. For some odd reason, activity helps me
concentrate. Bars tend to be my favorite places to write.
What
is the summary of this specific fiction work? Despite his material success and outward appearance of happiness, James
Conrad feels empty inside. He is spending his 50th birthday alone in South
Florida when he decides to take a drive
along Alligator Alley into the depths of the Everglades. Searching for childhood memories of his great uncle—a man who left his family behind to live on a Seminole Indian reservation—James discovers his small town definition of success may all be a ruse. When given the chance to make a real
change, James Conrad must make the hardest decision of his life. Alligator Alley is the story of one man's struggle with his own destiny, but it could be the story of anyone facing change in his or her life.
along Alligator Alley into the depths of the Everglades. Searching for childhood memories of his great uncle—a man who left his family behind to live on a Seminole Indian reservation—James discovers his small town definition of success may all be a ruse. When given the chance to make a real
change, James Conrad must make the hardest decision of his life. Alligator Alley is the story of one man's struggle with his own destiny, but it could be the story of anyone facing change in his or her life.
Can
you give the reader just enough information
for them to understand what is going on in the excerpt? In many respects, Alligator Alley is autobiographical and
includes many gut feelings from my own life at the time I wrote it.
Please
include the excerpt and include page numbers as reference. The excerpt
can be as short or as long as you prefer. Right now, I would gladly trade my new plasma
television for simple peace of mind and a night in bed where my own screams do
not wake me from my sleep. Call my desire for personal serenity a longing for a
second shot at so many things – Life 2.0, I guess.
I
spent most of my time on earth believing that life was a zero sum game – a
personal philosophy based on a fundamental principle that you get out of life
precisely what you put into it. I grew up being told those who put in enough
hard work would reap an equal amount of success. Wait for success to come to
you and you die waiting. Emotionally, it all balances out. Moments of
occasional sadness are balanced by laughter. Start feeling too giddy and that
feeling of emotional weight starts building right behind the eyes. It all
washes out. Zero sum.
Such a
core belief in equality rested in an underlying broad world-view that life is
fair. I grew up in a small town where I was taught a person’s actions lead to
parity. My parents, my Sunday school teacher, my girlfriend’s mom all told me
to work hard and I would succeed. I did not see then what is so clear to me
now. They were all feeding me a line of bullshit. Monetary rewards and the
material satisfaction that follows may come from hard work, but at some point a
person desires more than the newest electronic toy.
My
middle-aged malaise likely came from the definition of success adopted by me
and my generation. Material wealth was how we measured our own value. Our
parents regaled us with stories of how they sacrificed during the depression,
wearing their impoverished upbringing as a badge of honor. When our fathers
gathered to talk in the alley, it was a competition about who was poorer as a
child. They wanted something more for their children, they told us.
We took their suggestion of “something more” and
pushed forward with gusto. Our parents were poor and seemingly happy.
Possession of things should make us that much happier. We bought the newest
car, the largest home and had more nips and tucks to our bodies than any
generation before us. Hard work was one way to attain the material success that
we were led to believe is the measure of one’s life.
Unfortunately
for us, we never looked at the balance sheet. All the things had credit
attached to them. We became a generation of new cars, plasma televisions,
McMansions and no money for retirement. So we took on second jobs and tried to
convince our egos that down-sizing was not the equivalent of failure. We worked
so hard to find a way out and our reward was early heart disease, high blood
pressure, and depression.
As I
got older, I came to discover that life is not fair. Fairness is at the bottom
of the list when it comes to God’s cosmic ranking of intrinsic worth. Often
those who put the least into living, are those who least deserve the rewards a
virtuous life bestows, but who somehow get those rewards anyway. One only need
watch the nightly news and see the film of who wins the lottery to understand.
There was a time when one of the distinctions between the big urban cesspools
known as American cities and small communities like the one I grew up in was
the way people in the little nooks and crannies of the country took care of
each other.
In my
town, there was an old guy named Dan who was mentally disabled. His parents
were dead and his sister looked out for him. Every day – in a suit and tie – he
walked from store to store, checking the wall clocks against his own Timex
wristwatch and tearing down the day-to-day calendar that hung behind each cash
register. We called him Dan “the Time Man.” In the afternoons, Dan would
handdeliver packages from those same shops to their customers for tips and an
occasional glass of lemonade or a bologna sandwich. No one ever thought twice
about it. Dan was simply doing his job and he did it nearly until the day he
died.
I had
not thought of Dan in years until last month when we had a going away party at
a local bar for several employees who had fallen victim to my company’s latest
reduction-in-force, an action somehow “demanded” by the dictates of nameless
shareholders. As I looked into the eyes of my departing colleagues, I saw the
fear in their eyes. Men and women who had dedicated their lives to the success
of the company were being cast aside by the demands of capitalism. Then I
noticed that the rest of us – those staying at the company – had nearly the
same look. Dan “the Time Man” should have taught me a lesson. People are
capable of loyalty. Institutions are emotionless bastards.
Shortly
after my final visit with Gator, I got my first job as a soda-jerk at Pete’s. I
would take telephone lunch orders for Pete to prepare and then serve up ice
cream for malts, sundaes, and cones for all the walk-in customers. I made
enough money to occasionally take a girl to the movies and drop a couple of
gallons of gas into my old man’s car. Flood waters threatened the main drag one
year, and I became a hero to all my friends for giving away Pete’s ice cream
for free before we battened down the store. On Friday nights, Pete let me and a
couple of other kids unplug the jukebox and play Dylan tunes, occasionally
struggling through Peter, Paul and Mary style harmonies.
My
parents had brought the whole family to Pete’s on my first day of work. Angel
was so proud of my strong work ethic. I served my family banana splits and
cherry phosphates. The tip Angel left me was as big as the tab itself. I gave
it to a kid in my class that bussed tables and washed the dishes. His parents
had never been to Pete’s to see him work.
The meek may inherit the earth, but it is the assholes who own it during
our lifetimes.
Why is this excerpt
so emotional for you? And can you describe your own emotional experience
of writing this specific excerpt?
At the time, I was going through a difficult stage in my life where I was trying to figure out my middle-aged lot in life. The entire book is a reflection of that struggle, but this one stands out to me.
At the time, I was going through a difficult stage in my life where I was trying to figure out my middle-aged lot in life. The entire book is a reflection of that struggle, but this one stands out to me.
Other works you
have published? https://www.amazon.com/Rick-Robinson/e/B002L2OVV4/ref=dp_byline_cont_ebooks_1
INSIDE THE EMOTION OF
FICTION links
001 11 15 2018 Nathaniel
Kaine’s
Thriller Novel
John
Hunter – The Veteran
002 11 18 2018 Ed
Protzzel’s
Futuristic/Mystery/Thriller
The
Antiquities Dealer
003 11 23 2018 Janice
Seagraves’s
Science
Fiction Romance
Exodus
Arcon
004 11 29 2018
Christian Fennell’s
Literary
Fiction Novel
The Fiddler
in the Night
005 12 02 2018 Jessica
Mathews’s
Adult
Paranormal Romance
Death
Adjacent
006 12 04 2018 Robin
Jansen’s
Literary
Fiction Novel
Ruby the
Indomitable
007 12 12 2018 Adair Valerez’s
Literary
Fiction Novel
Scrim
008 12 17 218
Kit Frazier’s
Mystery Novel
Dead Copy
009 12 21 2019 Robert Craven’s
Noir/Spy Novel
The Road
of a Thousand Tigers
010 01 13 2019 Kristine Goodfellow’s
Contemporary
Romantic Fiction
The Other
Twin
011 01 17 2019 Nancy J Cohen’s
Cozy Mystery
Trimmed To
Death
012 01 20 2019 Charles Salzberg’s
Crime Novel
Second
Story Man
013 01 23 2019 Alexis Fancher’s
Flash Fiction
His Full
Attention
014 01 27 2019 Brian L Tucker’s
Young Adult/Historical
POKEWEED: AN ILLUSTRATED NOVELLA
015 01 31 2019 Robin Tidwell’s
Dystopian
Reduced
016 02 07 2019 J.D. Trafford’s
Legal
Fiction/Mystery
Little Boy
Lost
017 02 08 2019 Paula Shene’s
Young Adult
ScieFi/Fantasy/Romance/Adventure
My Quest
Begins
018 02 13 2019 Talia Carner’s
Mainstream
Fiction/ Suspense/ Historical
Hotel
Moscow
019 02 15 2019 Rick Robinson’s
Multidimensional
Fiction
Alligator
Alley