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Monday, October 31, 2011

Happy Halloween





My cousin Randy's birthday coincided with Halloween and when we were children we would spend the afternoon stuffing ourselves with candied apples, corn candy and ice cream in-between playing Pin the Tail on the Donkey and bobbing for apples. My Aunt Betty would make a slit in each apple and insert a penny. A treasure for a child. One birthday, Randy swallowed the penny and the doctor advised letting nature take its course. Eventually it did. My father won the penny (I never did find out why,) and claimed it would bring him luck.

Whenever my parents, aunts, uncles and friends got together for a fierce game of penny and two poker, my father would bring out the penny. The penny's magic didn't work when my father played cards but he kept on trying. Perhaps the luck was in the laughter and love we found in the family.

Bests,

Elise
My cozy eBook mystery titled Scene Stealer is available through Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Carina Prress and wherever eBooks are sold. An audio version has been produced by Audible.com








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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Along The Marble Road






I kneel to examine an advertisement (thought to be the first Roman infomercial) drawn on the glistening Marble Road that begins at the Koressos Gate and extends to the Library of Celsus in Ephesus, Turkey. I see a woman’s head and a heart--interpreted as waiting for love—a footprint—turn here—and two fingers—one finger points to the library, the other to the remains of The Brothel of Ephesus built across from the library.
A twenty-minute bus ride from the spirited port town of Kusadasi, Turkey, 55 miles south of Izmir has brought me to the ancient metropolis of Ephesus—a major Greco-Roman excavation site—a city built of marble, once the most important of the 12 Ionian Greek cities built during the 11th century BC and a major departure point for trade routes in Asia Minor. Blessed with water, a beach with a fresh-water spring and a sheltered harbor Ephesus grew into an impressive international center of commerce and culture, inhabited by 250,000 people.
I follow the finger that points to the Library of Celsus and stop in front of a two-story façade, splendidly decorated with copies of statues (the originals are in Vienna), recessed in Corinthian columns. Inscriptions on pedestals holding the virtues show that they represent Episteme (knowledge), Sophia (wisdom), Ennoia (intelligence), and Arete, (virtue). The bright morning light coming from the east shines through the emptiness between the columns where three levels of galleries held over 12,000 scrolls kept in cupboards on double walls; the gap between walls protected the rolls of parchment from humidity. Three entrances, the highest and widest in the center, invite both casual tourists and archeologists to study the history discovered during excavations.
The library, one of the most spectacular structures in Ephesus and the third largest in the antique world, is a stately memorial to Celsus Polemeanus—Roman Senator, General Governor of the Province of Asia, and an avid collector of books. His son, Proconsul Gaius Julius Aquila began the library, designed by the Roman architect, Vitruoya, as a tribute to his father in 110 AD. The Governor rests inside a marble sarcophagus—decorated with garlands, rosettes and figures of Eros and Nike—buried beneath the library’s ground level.
Citizens walked along the Marble Road to The Great Theatre, the largest theatre in Asia Minor and of vital importance in Ephesus. First built during the Hellenistic Period, 3rd century BC, and enlarged during the rule of the Emperor Claudius in 41-42 AD, today’s theatre seats 24,000. The bustling three story structure, whose façade was ornamented with columns, reliefs, statues and niches, is located on the red and brown slope of Panayir Hill. Large bronze or clay vessels placed at different points around the theatre improved the sound—no mikes in those days. I decide to test the acoustics, look around the strikingly designed structure and belt out a few notes from Rodgers’ and Hart’s musical, The Boys from Syracuse adapted from Shakespeare’s Comedy of Errors—the setting is Ephesus. Dropped pins, coins and recitations echo around the theatre—the acoustics are excellent.
A box sculptured from marble was reserved for the Emperor and seats with backs (made of marble) were occupied by persons of merit who enjoyed concerts and plays, religious, political, and philosophical discussions. The Harbor of Ephesus presented a spectacular view but gradually became victim to silt and is six miles from the Aegean Sea. A protective high wall around the orchestra attests to gladiatorial contests and mortal combat with exotic beasts that followed higher pursuits. stork, wild and innocent, resting on the column.
Ephesus, throughout its history has been governed by many powerful nations. In the mid 6th century BC by Croesus, “The Golden Monarch of Lydia,” Persia ruled under King Cyrus. The Persians were driven out by Alexander the Great in 334 BC and under his rule, Ephesus grew. The city passed to the Romans around 133 BC, remained a thriving commercial center, and the capital of the Roman Province of Asia. Crushed by the Goths in 262 AD, Ephesus faded. Citizens succumbed to malaria, trading declined and Ephesus became uninhabitable. In 1090 AD, Turkey conquered the area but Ephesus, despite a renaissance in the 14th century, was forgotten until excavations began in 1863—and thankfully, for those of us who like to time travel, they continue today. Temples, artifacts, public buildings, sculptures and portraits have been uncovered and offer a vivid picture of an ancient world. The 21st century knows Ephesus, a UNESCO World Heritage listed site, as one of the world’s grandest archeological locales.





Bests,










Elise










My cozy mystery eBook titled Scene Stealer is available at Barnes&Noble, Amazon, Carina Press and wherever eBooks are sold. An audio version has been produced by Audible.com
Audiobooks at audible.com!

Monday, October 17, 2011

HEROS, VILLAINS, AND VICTIMS

Why do some professions produce fictional heroes? Others lend themselves to villainy and still others sprout heroes. Royalty is chock full of victims and villains—Shakespeare’s live on. Politicians? Many more villains than heroes--example The Manchurian Candidate by Richard Condon. Perhaps we'd better stay away from politicians unless we're writing about George Washington. Most of John Gresham’s lawyers are role models. Professors can be exciting—think of Harrison Ford chasing after The Holy Grail. But stay away from Colin Dexter’s Oxford and a few of the professors that teach there. Those dastardly intellectuals keep Inspectors Morse and Lewis busy solving their crimes. Then we have doctors—in real life and most television shows we are filled with admiration and usually follow everything prescribed but fiction? A doctor often falls off the pedestal he or she is placed on. There is the crusading newspaper reporter—a hero and the gossip columnist who wrecks havoc with lives and careers. Politicians? And victims—Susan Isaacs In her book Compromising Positions used Dr. Fleckstine, a dentist as a victim. Laurence Olivier as Dr. Christian Szell—a former SS dentist, featured in Marathon Man made a splendid villain. I’m sure movie patrons lived with excruciating pain before keeping their dental appointments. But I’ve never read about a fictional dentist as hero—fellow writers the character is all ours.


Bests,

Elise

(photo by Sfn1/dreamstime.com)

My cozy eBook mystery is available at Amazon, Barnes&Noble, Carina Press and wherever eBooks are sold. An audio version has been produced by Audible.com


Download hot ebooks from Carina PressAudiobooks at audible.com!