SEEDLINGS by Aaron Paul Lazar


What's New?

FAME (Previews)

Back Issues

FMAM Merchandise

Contests

Reviews

Columns

Guidelines

Advertise

Links

DIME

FMAM Staff

FMAM Home

WELCOME TO


Aaron Paul Lazar resides in Upstate New York with his wife, three daughters, two grandsons, mother-in-law, dog, and four cats. After writing in the early morning hours, he works as an electrophotographic engineer at Kodak, in Rochester, New York. Additional passions include vegetable, fruit, and flower gardening; preparing large family feasts; photographing his family, gardens, and the breathtakingly beautiful Genesee Valley; cross-country skiing across the rolling hills; playing a distinctly amateur level of piano, and spending “time” with the French Impressionists whenever possible.  Although he adored raising his three delightful daughters, Mr. Lazar finds grandfathering his “two little buddies” to be one of the finest experiences of his life.

Double Forté is the founding book of the LeGarde Mystery series and was released in January, 2005. Upstaged followed in October, 2005. His third, Tremolo: cry of the loon, is scheduled for release via Twilight Times Books under the Paladin Timeless Imprint November 15, 2007. Mr. Lazar is currently working on his twelfth book, For Keeps. The first book of his paranormal mystery series, Moore Mysteries, will be released in May 2008, followed in June 2008 by Mazurka, the next book in the LeGarde mystery series.  He is a regular columnist for FMAM (Futures Mystery Anthology Magazine), Mysteryfiction.net and has been published in Great Mystery and Suspense magazine and the Absolute Write Newsletter. Contact him at: aaron.lazar@yahoo.com, visit his blog at aaronlazar.blogspot.com, or stop by his websites at www.legardemysteries.com and www.mooremysteries.com.


February 2008

 

Unplugged

Crystal coated thistle

In 2007, I nearly ran out of vacation days too early, due to too many unexpected family emergencies that claimed my vacation time. By September, only three precious days remained from my annual allotment.

I needed all three days to have Christmas week off. My employer gave us Monday and Tuesday for free, and with vacation to fill Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, I would be able to secure a ten-day pass, counting weekends. Naturally, I guarded those three little days with my life. When appointments came up, I worked early or late to make up the time. When my daughter needed a ride to college for a few meetings, I took her to work with me after the visit, to avoid using my vacation. It was a hard fought battle, but I did it.

The time off was heavenly. I ate my way through pounds of Christmas cookies, made candy bars mysteriously disappear, and generally behaved in a shameful, glutinous fashion. What a blast.

One of the best parts was being a kid again. I played superheroes with my grandsons. Repeatedly. Julian was Spiderman, Gordon was Superman, and I was awarded the role of Batman. I really wanted to fly, but the boys made me feel better by telling me about my Batmobile. In hindsight, it was kinda fun to drive the Batmobile while humming the Batman song. They were generous, however, and awarded me flying powers by knocking their knuckles against mine with appropriate sound effects. In no time at all, we were flying over mountains and oceans together.

We made play dough, rolling and shaping the blobs until our snowmen were six balls deep and our snakes almost fell off the table. When the boys' great grandma dug out her mini-rolling pin and cookie cutters, it added a whole new dimension to the fun. Never mind that I had to crawl around on my hands and knees later and pick up a gazillion gobs of dough. It was worth it.

But my favorite activity was fishing.

Yes, fishing. In January, in Upstate New York, we sat out in the back yard and cast with their new kiddie poles toward a giant puddle that had formed beneath our Willow tree. Instead of the usual snow and ice, the winter season has been strangely mild, and it was warm enough most days to play outdoors.

Julian picked up on casting like a pro, but Gordie couldn't quite figure out how to press the button and release at the proper time. So, we did it together. Watching the plastic fish bob through the water was delightful, even though I ended up having to rescue the fish from the apple tree branches several times. More often than not, I ended up standing on the lawn chair with a rake to pull the branches down, but it worked, and the fish were saved for yet another cast.

We cooked, too. Wonderful comfort food meals with homemade applesauce, fresh picked veggies like kale, collards, and sprouts, and mashed potatoes. My buddies helped, washing potatoes and adding ingredients. So what if the paprika sprinkled on the deviled eggs was a ¼ inch thick on some and missing on others? They tasted great and we scarfed them up in no time.

In addition to enjoying my grandkids fully, I was able to reconnect with two of my lovely daughters who came home for visits. We played cards, sat by the fire and talked, and took turns babysitting the two new puppies in the family. I also did lots of writing, caught up on correspondence, and actually completed some industrious cleaning projects that had been preying on my mind for months.

One of the best things about this time at home, however, was the lack of connectivity with the rest of the world. I was unplugged for ten days. No television, no radio, no newspapers. I retracted from all the violent sensational headlines, enjoying being cocooned by my excursions into superhero land and sleep hog heaven. I didn't miss it. Not one bit.

Today I unplugged the Christmas lights. There was a twinge of sadness as I walked around the property, extinguishing the white lights that illuminated the yard for weeks, or the blue lights twinkling on the back porch. The two deer and Christmas tree flickered out with nary a tail swish or head bob - ready for next year's display.

Now, after a few days of back-to-the-grind, I'm trying hard to hold fast to the memories and that lovely sensation of pretending to be retired. 

How many days ‘til Easter?

 

Aaron Paul Lazar
www.legardemysteries.com


Return to the Top of this Page


FMAM 2006


Cover artwork copyright © GinELF

FMAM July-August 2006 Issue

Order TODAY!

FMAM 2006


Cover artwork copyright © GinELF

FMAM May-June 2006 Issue

Order TODAY!


Cover artwork copyright © GinELF

FMAM March-April 2006 Issue

Order TODAY!


Cover artwork copyright © GinELF

FMAM January-February 2006 Issue

Order TODAY!

FMAM 2005


Cover artwork copyright © GinELF

Four Issues!

Order TODAY!

Submission guidelines for 2006

PLEASE NOTE: FMAM will be closed to submissions from July 10, 2006 until September 1, 2006 to allow our editors to get caught up on current submissions.




FMAM Special Guest Author


FIRE TO FLY 2004
Winners announced!


SLESAR'S TWIST 2004
Winners announced!


FLASH FICTION CONTEST 2005

Winners Announced!


FMAM's online list! JOIN NOW!

New and not so new writers and artists—this includes cartoonists and screenwriters and you name it, we welcome YOU to join us! The original plan for Futures when I started it was a world wide writer’s/ artist’s community. I felt we could help one another and together do what we might never achieve by ourselves. This list is the next step to the dream! You might be interested in this for any number of reasons, to learn, to teach, to network, you name it. Let me know if you have a special suggestion, otherwise, welcome, jump on in! - babs

Send a blank email to:FMAMwriters-artists-subscribe@yahoogroups.com

or go to http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FMAMwriters-artists


RECEIVE FMAM UPDATES!

We have re-activated the FMAMannounce only list. This is a list where you will find the latest news about upcoming contests, features, guidelines and updates on each new issue of FAME - the new Futures ezine.

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FMAMannounce/


2000 - 2008 © Futures MYSTERY Anthology Magazine and Lida Quillen.
All rights reserved.

Contact Lida: publisher@fmam.biz

Website contact: webmaster @ fmam.biz