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He's Not Me

12/31/2017

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“NO! No, no no,” screeches Miss Madden’s ghostly voice stretching across almost seven decades from my eighth grade classroom at Columbian Grammar School. “After the verb ‘to be’ you must use the subjective case. Change the title of this blog at once!” As if she knew what a blog was.

So my young mind learned her rule, and I was doomed. When I answered the phone and someone asked for me I’d never say, “That’s me.” Instead I’d respond “It is I,” thereby avoiding Miss Madden’s wrath that otherwise surely would descend. But at least her rule allows for such lively dialog as:
 
“Who’s there?”
“It is I. Are they the Hancocks on the porch?”
“Yes, They’re they.”
 
If you’ve read all four of these sentences, you’ve wasted too much time. And wherever you found them you’d probably read no further (unless they were in this blog, of course). You know people don’t talk that way. They never did, and now less than ever. You’ve all heard commentators, talking heads, and guests on TV! I rest my case. I venture none of them were in Miss Madden’s class.

But when I started on fiction, I worried about such things, this being only the first of many differences between how I saw things and the real world.

For example, in school I learned “different” is followed by “from,” not “than,” but “different than” is the more frequently employed phrase.

I learned an event did not occur “at about five o’clock,” but it usually takes only a day of newspaper perusal to find professional journalists using the phrase on a regular basis. The problem is something happens either “at” a specific time (3:00:51, virtually impossible in the mathematical sense) or “about” a specific time (perhaps between 2:51 and 3:07).

Proper spelling was crammed into my head with huge word lists. But I remember distinctly a time in my youth when I accompanied my mother on a bus to the big department stores in Newark. We passed a woman selling “vegtupuls,” announcing her wares with a huge sign. It was an eye opener. I was young enough to think that once you were grown you never made spelling mistakes. I have learned to discount that theory.

I rarely swear, although with the current condition of our state, country, and world I admit to many a slip. But even when I was a teenager virtually all my male buddies issued choice words (never girls, at least in public). Now everyone does.

I literally feel ill when I hear someone use the “N” word, or derogatory terms for any ethnic group. I am saddened and disgusted by the sexual harassment accusations currently plaguing our state and nation, and of the denigration of women in any form. I am sickened by the destruction of tens of thousands of American lives every year as a result of the proliferation of firearms. I fear for our nation as politicians lie and squirm to achieve power and reelection, dispatching any attachment to moral values or the local or national good. Yes, the world is full of people acting in ways abhorrent to me.

So here I was, beginning my writing career. Was I supposed to write only about those like me?
The problem was I had this hangup. If one of my characters uses “bad” grammar, or swears, or makes a racial slur, or molests a woman; what will my readers think of me? I didn’t want to be thought of as embracing such actions.

“Bob, that’s plum crazy, and I ain’t kidding.”

Here I am almost at the end of the blog. I was sure I’d get through it without Elmo barging in. I would have thought he’d be happy to stay away after what he put out last week. Can you hear him laughing?

But, as is usually the case with Elmo, it’s worth listening to him. Because he’s almost always right. I’m telling a story. Any writer will wonder why I even worried. It indicates what a neophyte I was to the world of fiction creation and is just one of many areas we’ll cover in these blogs where growth was necessary.

I had to learn the most elementary of facts: If I’m going to tell a realistic tale, I have to have realistic characters.

I thought about authors who have written repulsive things. Not for one second did I ascribe the same thoughts to them personally. More often than not I felt they were showing up the character’s ideals for the crap they were.

I think I’ve learned. Bad grammar, intentional misspellings (sadly the unintentional ones creep in all too often), swearing all appear in my books. When a character issues an ethnic slur, as happens in Patriotism, I take an intense dislike to him or her, but I do not sugar coat it.
​
While I care deeply what my readers think of me, I no longer give a damn if my characters offend them. Just remember, if one does, he’s not me.

1 Comment

Ho, Ho, Ho

12/23/2017

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Er, uh, lemme see. Oh, hello. Um, not sure what I’m supposed to do. Sort of miss Bob. He told me he’s going to take some time off because of the holidays.

I could see right off the bat it wasn’t right, him leaving you fine folk in the lurch like that. So I said to him, “That is absolutely wrong. You owe them.” Didn’t sway him one bit.

In fact he became downright annoyed when all I was doing was trying to help. You can see that, right? He gave me a nasty look and stalked out saying, “If you’re so concerned, just go ahead and write it yourself.”

He was kidding, of course, but then I figured why not give him a hand. He’s a good friend and I assume he’ll be delighted with my assistance. So here I am. I’m sure I’m a natural for this.

“Elmo!”

Huh? “Oh, yes my love.” That’s Michelle, my wife. A real charmer. You can meet her in all of Bob’s mysteries, except Patriotism. Still annoyed with him for not calling on me to help with that one. Sure, I was on sabbatical in Europe, but still.

Back to Michelle. Wonderful woman. And smart. She runs marathons. Isn’t that amazing? Helps out when bad things happen to me. That seems to occur fairly often. Can’t think why.

Last night she served up a yummy meal, healthy and everything. She started to clear the table, but I told her I’d do it. She looked kinda panicky and said for me to just sit down.

No way, after she worked so hard doing all that cooking. I’ve always admired servers in restaurants. Ever notice how they clear a table by stacking dishes on top of each other and even balance some up their arm? Before last night I didn’t know how they did it. But I figured it was time to learn. I approached the table.

We didn’t use much, one dish each, one glass, and silverware. So on a dish I placed a glass, a fork, and a knife; then positioned all on my arm. Stayed there real nice. Next I picked up the remaining dish and loaded it with glass and silverware. Only thing left was to carry everything to the dishwasher.

I’ve got to tell you, I could be employed by any restaurant in the world.

Of course, there was a wee problem when I got to the dishwasher. Don’t know how it happened, but when I leaned down to open it, the stuff that was balanced on my arm fell to the floor. Still can’t explain why. I tried to catch it before it hit, of course. As anyone would. Sadly, I had forgotten I was holding other items. Wound up dropping them so I could grab those that were falling. Well, it wasn’t a pretty sight. Sometimes I hate the law of gravity.

Michelle, that treasure, was damned nice about it. Some people might have said she was resigned, but I’m positive the look she gave me was nothing but love. I, of course, offered to clean up. But she always thinks of me. She told me to sit down and she would take care of that task, that I’d helped quite enough that evening. She seemed a little curt, but I’m sure I’m wrong.

She’s the best, but mentioning all this revives a tad of anger I have with Bob. He saw fit to mention in his books other minor problems I might have experienced. There was absolutely no reason for him to do that.

“Elmo, tell them who you are.”

“They know, my love. Bob mentioned me.”

“Elmo!”

Oh, okay. My names Elmo Sherwin and I’m a runner.

“Elmo.”

I guess she thinks I should say I’m a mathematician, but Bob’s already told you that. Hey, I know what she wants. Probably wants me to talk about some mathematics. Beautiful stuff, math, don’t you think?

I know the perfect subject: the Riemann Hypothesis. Of course you know the conjecture that the Riemann zeta function has its zeros only at…

“They don’t want to hear that, Elmo. Just tell them what we agreed.”
​
Oh, good idea. Wonderful woman, my Michelle. Have I said that? I’ll repeat exactly what she told me to say.
 
HAPPY HOLIDAYS TO ALL.

​
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Whodunits/Puzzlers

12/17/2017

1 Comment

 
We mathematicians are a strange lot. We have these things called “Theorems” which are simply statements that are true. But we don’t know a theorem’s true until someone convinces us using something called a “Proof,” which is nothing more than a sequence of logical deductions derived from previously known facts. Those who were forced to take geometry in high school will remember the creation of proofs with various levels of fondness.

I loved geometry and I love theorems, so maybe it’s not so surprising I have always liked Whodunits and Puzzlers where deductive reasoning is paramount. I use Whodunit to mean a mystery where the perpetrator of the crime is discovered by uncovering a sequence of “truths” until there is only one conclusion. By Puzzler, and I can find no real meaning online, I refer to strange circumstances seemingly impossible to comprehend. Both types of books—and a single tome might be both—supply the reader with all the facts that allow her to determine the guilty party or explain the inexplicable.

To me the queen of the Whodunit is Agatha Christie. I loved Hercule Poirot’s and Miss Marple’s analytical abilities. Christie was fair, all the clues there for the observing. Ellery Queen (actually two collaborators) was another who gave the reader every opportunity to solve the mystery. Of course, one can’t ignore Arthur Conan Doyle who created that fellow Sherlock Holmes. His stories always are a fun read, but I found certain clues seen by that great detective were unavailable to the reader.

In my mind the absolute master of the Puzzler is John Dickson Carr who also wrote under the name Carter Dickson. His forte? Locked room mysteries. They can take many forms and I plan to devote a future posting to the genre. The stereotypical example is a murder that takes place in a room where all doors and windows are locked on the inside. Scores of authors have created such scenarios, but none with the ingenuity and frequency of Carr.

I thought it would be fun to write a locked room mystery myself. Then I discovered it’s not so easy. How can you arrange for the impossible to occur and then explain it? Finally, and I mean after a long while, I came up with an idea. It’s in Patriotism, and it took folks over 300 pages to figure it out.

“I could have.”

Oh, dear. Elmo’s back.

You were out of the country, so I couldn’t ask you.

“There’s something called a phone, you know.”

Enough, Elmo. And besides, while you did a good job in the other books, it took you a while also.

I don’t want you to get the idea Elmo’s anything other than kind and sweet. He’s just a child—a brilliant child—in many ways. I may have to let him take over this space at some point or he’ll pester me to death. In any event his self-confidence is deserved. His research has astounded the mathematical world. And it’s true he’s been instrumental in solving some confusing crimes.

Whodunit/Puzzlers don’t seem to be so popular nowadays. Present mystery authors are superb storytellers, with cleverly contrived twisting plots that glue you to the pages. It seems as if there would be interest, though, in these other forms. Murder She Wrote, which appeared on CBS from 1984 to 1996, had a logical detection component and was obviously popular. Twelve years is a long run in television.
​
Well, I can’t worry about current trends. So far all my mysteries have an element of either a Whodunit or a Puzzler. Will I always write in this genre? Who knows? But I am a mathematician after all.
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Hi There!

12/10/2017

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​So I thought it would be interesting to write a blog. That was then. Now it seems daunting. Don’t make it boring, I tell myself. Don’t write too much. Don’t take yourself too seriously. For Heaven’s sake, don’t be a know-it-all. And be myself.

In some way or another it’s going to be related to writing, at least in the beginning, including my slow, slow process of learning how to write. I welcome comments of any kind and hope you’ll feel free to post them. I’m happy to give the space over occasionally to anyone who feels compelled to create an appropriate missive. If you want an email notification of posts, just let me know via the contact page on this website.

When I get a new book, I jump to the back cover to learn about the author. I suspect I’m not alone in such behavior. Under that assumption, I thought I’d mention a little of my background.

I was raised in East Orange, New Jersey in a school system that at the time was recognized as one of the best in the country. My college days found me in the Boston and New York City areas. I spent a year in Australia, worked in industry for about 12 years, and then switched to academia for the perfect life from which I retired in 2004.
I learned a lot about writing from my high school teachers, but more from my father. In dreaded hour-long sessions we would sit side-by-side at the dining room table going over every phrase, every sentence, every paragraph, every organizational approach. In college I realized how much that had paid off, and how much I owed my dad.

“Er, Bob.”

What? Oh. Excuse me a moment. What is it Elmo?

“You said I could write to these fine folk.”

Not now. I never said now.

I’m sorry for the interruption. Anyway, I was about to say I’ve been writing most of my life with over a hundred published articles having such captivating titles as Some Properties of Binary Counters with Feedback, Computationally Efficient Bounds for the Catalan Numbers and Graphs Simultaneously Achieving Three Vertex Cover Numbers. Makes you want to rush to the library, doesn’t it?

You might have guessed it. I’m a mathematician, but please don’t let that put you off.
​
“Why should it?”

Elmo, go away.

I apologize again. Elmo’s a mathematician too, and unlike me he’s well renowned. Certainly he’d be a fan of the papers named above. He’s a wonderful guy, but he’s high maintenance and tends to make me lose my train of thought. Let’s see, where was I?

Oh, yes, I was about to say when I started writing fiction I wrote like I would a technical paper. Honest evaluation: It was terrible! So much I had to learn, and I hope to cover some of that experience as our get togethers continue. But that’s enough for…
“Bob, tell them something about me.”
​
Oh my! I’m afraid I’ll have to say something or he won’t give me any peace. Elmo hopped into my first mystery Math Is Murder (coauthored with James Reed). Then through no fault of my own he reappeared in Murder By the Numbers. When I wrote “You’re Almost There,” based in the running community, I was sure I’d lost him. You see, he never exercised and was more than somewhat pudgy. All of a sudden there he was. He’d trimmed down and decided he’d run a half marathon. Fortunately he was out of the country when I wrote Patriotism, but he’s making noises about getting into my present book. I tell you, he’s a trial. Here’s a short excerpt from Murder By the Numbers to show what I mean. Elmo was visiting the home of friends Jim and Donna Albright:
 
“What’s that?”
Running water.
A moose reciting a ditty?
 
Old MacDonald had a farm,
Ee i ee i o,
And on that farm he had a basenji,
With a        here and a        there,
Here a        there a        everywhere a                    ,
Old MacDonald had a farm,
Ee i ee i o.
 
Donna, between giggles, gasps, “Elmo’s singing in the shower!”
She’s triggered my laughter. “I know the song. But something happened to the tune.”
“I know. He’s trying to make it operatic. I realize, Jim, he’s an amazing mathematician, but he has the worst voice I’ve ever heard.”
“What’s with all those spaces where the animal sound should be? All I could hear was the running water.”
Donna’s in tears, “Jim, you know …” The attempt is valiant, but she can’t stop laughing.
“What?”
“The animal in the song. It’s a …” Another breakdown, then a renewed attempt. “It’s a …, it’s a basenji!”
“O-kaaay. A kind of dog, isn’t it? So can’t he say, ‘arf, arf’ or ‘bowwow’ or something?”
“But it doesn’t …”
“Doesn’t what? Donna, you’re driving me crazy.”
She finally spits it out. “That kind of dog, it … it doesn’t bark!”
 
Typical Elmo. Adorable but definitely a little strange—make that a lot strange. If you want to have more contact with him, follow this blog and maybe catch up with him in some of my books.
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