We're happy to be hosting Mark Connelly and his WANNA-BE'S Blog Tour today! Please leave a comment or question for Mark to let him know you stopped by!
Title:
WANNA-BE’S
Author: Mark Connelly
Publisher: Mark Connelly Productions
Pages: 188
Genre: Literary Fiction/Humor/Satire
Author: Mark Connelly
Publisher: Mark Connelly Productions
Pages: 188
Genre: Literary Fiction/Humor/Satire
With his new girlfriend – a soccer
mom with a taste for bondage – urging him to “go condo,” failed screenwriter
Winfield Payton needs cash. Accepting a job offer from a college friend, he
becomes the lone white employee of a black S&L. As the firm’s token white,
he poses as a Mafioso to intimidate skittish investors and woos a wealthy
cougar to keep the firm afloat. Figure-skating between the worlds of white and
black, gay and straight, male and female, Jew and Gentile, Yuppie and militant,
Payton flies higher and higher until the inevitable crash. . .
Praise for
Wanna-be’s:
This book right here! What can I
say about Winfield Payton...is he the most unlucky pasty or most unlikely fall
guy...what a schmuck...I laughed so hard at this,for this guy....with this
guy....every character described in this book will immediately remind you of a
real life joker in the in the 24 hour news cycle on all of the Major networks
and cable television channels regurgitating skewed facts benefiting them and
lining their pockets....it's hip and fresh writing which could easily become a
HBO series....or Starz..maybe..anyway get this book....I laughed so
hard...almost popping my recent stitches from surgery...Mr. Connelly...thanks
for making my recuperation fun...this book is not for the faint of heart..or PC
sensitive readers...
-- Lynda Garcia Review
For More Information
Book Excerpt:
Winfield Payton awoke to a mother’s voice. Not his mother—but someone’s mother. It was
the commanding yet compassionate voice mothers develop, stern but
apprehensive. It was a voice rarely
heard in Downer Estates, a brick apartment complex housing the usual collection
of upscale “singles” who live within Frisbee range of urban universities,
attend jazz concerts in the park, practice safe sex, drive alphabet cars (BMWs,
SUVs, VWs), cybersex on company laptops, faithfully recycle Perrier bottles,
and sip low-cal cappuccino in Starbucks while checking the fates of
their mutual funds.
It was a suburban voice, a beach voice, a picnic voice. The voice of a concerned mother directing her
brood. “Now, look, Brandy, I told you
before. Mommy will be home in just a
little while. You can have cereal. Where is Heather? OK, tell Heather to give you some raisin
bran. Take your vitamin. And don’t go near the pool until I get back.
Do you understand? Don’t go swimming until Mommy comes home.”
As yet Win had not opened his eyes; he was too
exhausted. Confronting daylight would be painful.
Feeling the sun warm his naked back, he buried his face in the pillows. For a moment he imagined he was at
Bradford Beach, snoozing while mommies and kiddies trooped over him, sprinkling
his blanket with sand and popsicle drippings.
But
no, he was in bed. His bed. His fingers felt the familiar smooth
lacquered headboard. The pillow bore the scent of Old Spice, his
cologne—mundane but reliable.
Home.
He turned his aching neck. This simple movement triggered intracranial alarms.
Now everything hurt. His head throbbed.
His neck tightened. His back ached. Streaks of raw flesh burned across his
chest and thighs.
Oh! His body bore the imprint of what his clouded
mind failed to recall. Opening an eye to the sun, he saw a gleaming bottle of
Absolut on the bedside table. The bottle
was nearly empty. Oh! A ceramic ashtray held the twisted remains of
weedy joints. Oh! Two broken poppers lay on the carpet. Oh!
Leaning over, he saw—amid the tangled debris of his clothes—three
lipstick-stained balls of Kleenex, each containing a spent condom. Oh!
Rolling
over, Win groaned, feeling like a crash victim.
The female voice in the other room called out to him. No longer the mommy voice, it was the
supportive, deferential, eager-to-please voice of a Sixties sitcom wife. Mary Tyler Moore exuding “Oh, Rob!”
compassion. “Do you want Motrin?” she asked, “I’m making coffee.” He heard the sounds of housewife bustling in
his bachelor kitchen.
“Motrin,” he croaked, like a
wounded GI begging for morphine. Motrin, hell. He needed intensive care.
IV’s. Oxygen. And Band-Aids. Sitting up,
blinking in the sun-light, Win noted
the thin, blood-lined scratches and nicks across his chest and thighs. Steve McQueen tangled by barbed wire in The
Great Escape.
“Here, baby.”
The woman standing in the doorway bore no
relation to the voice flowing with flight attendant charm. Despite the black eye makeup, false
eyelashes, and hooker-red lipstick, she was clearly pretty. Her sensibly short
blonde hair was cutely, boyishly cut. It complemented the husband-bought
Mother’s Day earrings. No doubt she had been trying
to look like Debra Harry since fifth grade.
Below the chin she was decidedly
dissimilar. Her neck was gripped by a
two-inch leather choker studded with steel points. Metal chains led to a
leather corset which maximized her cleavage and girdled her waist with tight
belts and more chains. Handcuffs dangled over a thigh encased in torn fishnet.
Her wrists and ankles sported matching leather cuffs.
Instinctively, Win drew
back. Only her soft voice re-minded him
that he was not in mortal danger.
“Oh,
baby, look at those scratches. I’m so
sorry! I for-get about these
nails.” She wiggled the fingers of her
right hand, their dagger-like points flashing blood-red in the sun-light. Her left palm cupped three red caplets.
He took the pills, then,
reaching for a water glass accidentally gulped three and half ounces of
Absolut. God!
“Oh,
honey!”
Sitting
up, Win rubbed his eyes and brushed his unruly hair. The woman sat on the edge of the bed and
began un-buckling her cuffs, dropping them into a black leather shoulder bag.
“Mind
if I take a quick shower? I have to get
home to the kids.”
“Go
ahead, Barbie.” Barbie. Gratefully her name came back to him. She
disappeared into the guest bath. The architects of Downer Estates had
thoughtfully equipped each two-bedroom
apartment with two full baths. Single
tenants and their partners of choice could shower at the same time, going
through their customary after-sex hygienic rituals in private. Alone in the main bath, Win gargled with
Scope, doused his sore member with hydrogen peroxide, then drew a bath.
About the Author
Mark Connelly was born in Philadelphia and grew up in New Jersey. He received a BA in English from Carroll College in Wisconsin and an MA and PhD from the University of
Wisconsin-Milwaukee. His books include The Diminished Self:
Orwell and the Loss of Freedom, Orwell and Gissing, Deadly
Closets: The Fiction of Charles Jackson, and The IRA on
Film and Television. His fiction has appeared in The
Ledge, Indiana Review, Cream City Review, Milwaukee Magazine, and Home Planet
News. In 2014 he received an Editor’s Choice Award in The
Carve’s Raymond Carver Short Story Contest; in 2015 he received Third Place in Red Savina Review’s
Albert Camus Prize for Short Fiction. His novella Fifteen Minutes received
the Clay Reynolds Novella Prize and was published by Texas Review Press in
2005.
Mark’s latest book is the literary fiction/humor/satire,
Wanna-be’s.
No comments:
Post a Comment