Showing posts with label 99th page Blog Hop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 99th page Blog Hop. Show all posts

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Another Kind of 99

Well now. That 99th Page Blog Hop was a lot of fun. It was interesting to see all those pages. Daunting to see how GOOD they all were. No wonder it's so hard to find an agent and publisher.

It was also rather more exhausting than I expected. 41 comments in one day, whew!

Thanks to Alicia, Erinn, Holly, Pam, and Quita.for coming up with this cool idea.

In honor of all those 99th pages, I thought I'd post another 99-related work, the 1984 one-hit-wonder 99 Luftballoons by Nena. This is the English version.


Enjoy!


Thursday, January 27, 2011

The 99th Page

My 99th Page is sort of a turning point. Zorro is in a bar, discovering that rather than imparting "cool" to his girlfriend's daughter, Dawn, he has lost it altogether. Unfortunately, the page starts off with (ugh!) back story. But what can ya do, eh?


Here goes:


After the glory that was Hate you (Gonna Eat Cheese), Willy moved to London and started a solo career. He could have been Elvis great, Morrison great, if he had held off a little longer on the dying part. But as fate would have it, Willy put out his first solo hit and bit the big one all in the same week.

Zorro slurped his third—or maybe fourth—beer in memory of his friend. Willy hadn’t even died of an overdose or in a plane crash or any of the legendary ways. Instead, he got hit by a car in a London suburb. Whenever he thought about the accident, Zorro imagined the picture on the Beatles’ Abbey Road, Willy in the crosswalk behind the Fab Four, creamed by the green Fiat of fate. Even now, he couldn’t bear to look at that album cover… or make of car, for that matter.

If Willy, generous, talented Willy who had been the heart and soul of The MeeMees, the engine behind the musical end of the enterprise, hadn’t been kept back for some higher purpose, who was Zorro to think he actually had?

“Hey,” Ed said, moseying down the bar to collect the latest empty. How about this: Captain Monterey Jack. That’s the ticket, right? Sort of a Billy Joel thing?”

Zorro cringed. There was nothing he could do for Dawn. He thought of those evil little preteens on the library steps. They didn’t see cool when they looked at him. They saw old, has-been, loser. Even with the shades and hair. He was exactly what he’d been before Willy had found him all those years ago. And his songs—all those ridiculous, half-finished songs—could just stay that way.

What did Roger Weitz know of cool?