Thursday 27 December 2012

Valentines Day is just around the corner...




Oh, how swift the moment changes. We bade farewell to our eldest daughter and the grand-children after a twenty-four hour stay at Greenfield Acres and a quick visit to our little vintage store to check out the new floor. The white Christmas tree was still glistening at the apex of the hall of mirrors and a few lucky dips still dangled from the foil branches. Not for long though - Ruby and Amelie stripped the branches in no time at all and strode around the upper floor in lucky dip finery before giving Grampy Greenfield a farewell peck or two.

Christmas over, my thoughts turn to St Valentine. I came across the heart shaped mirror screen a couple of days ago and my mind turned to visions of love. Six weeks away. That's all! And with Saint V comes the first inklings of spring. I love the spring.

I promised Mrs G our first trip to Venice in the spring. Remind me when the time comes all of you...

I won't need reminding...

The shop tree will disappear before twelfth night, but the one at home will stay until the very last moment. And the mistletoe still works...

I'm turning in for the night now. Non stop shop and then the seasonal celebrations have fnally floored me. We have our little break in Wales coming up - and then on into the newest of years...

I'll just give that heart-shaped mirror a little polish...

Goodnight all!


Saturday 22 December 2012

Love, Peace and Harmony from Mister G.

Listen to 'A Shropshire Lad'

It looks as though we survived the whole end of the world thing. Here at Greenfield Acres life goes on as crazily as it ever has.

The little vintage shop we own doubled in size on the twelfth of the twelfth of the twelfth at 12:12...and we survived the upheaval that caused and the buzz is out. We've already supplied seasonal gifts for some of the local authors our part of the world seems to breed. Of course I couldn't possibly mention any names, but just think equestrianism and sex and you'll be in the right ball park.

Mrs G and I are exhausted, but there is a short break on the horizon. We're off to our favourite little Pembrokeshire hidey hole. Nestling on the cliffs above Amroth with expansive views of the Atlantic Ocean. I threatened the kids that I'm taking part in the New Year's Day swim... (I already went skinny dipping in October...) but it's not happening - we just like to wind them up. They should left home years ago, so they deserve a scare from time to time.

My book, Slow Poison, is picking up some good reads. The story is set at this time of year and is well worth checking out. (Here's a link to a free sample read: Slow Poison Sampler )

You'll have noticed another link at the top of this blog. It's a link to a favourite track of mine from David Ireland. A gentle little protest song of sorts called 'A Shropshire Lad'. Well worth a listen. Listen to 'A Shropshire Lad' 

A few more days of trading in the vintage store before we head to Wales to recharge the depleted batteries. I may have a chance to write a few more thoughts before the end of the year. Let me take this opportunity to wish you all the very best for the season with a big helping of love and peace and harmony for good measure.

Happy Christmas, Cas


Wednesday 19 December 2012

Slow Poison; Casimir Greenfield's Perfect Winter Chiller!


Slow Poison; Casimir Greenfield's Perfect Winter Chiller!

Set in the snowbound Cotswolds, Slow Poison is a tale of vengeance, abduction and snow. Casimir Greenfield's debut novel paints a picture of English rural life seldom seen. Slow Poison will do for the countryside what Trainspotting did for the town.

Read a sample at the Amazon link Slow Poison Sample

Slow Poison Casimir Greenfield Cover 1000



Slow Poison is the debut novel of UK author Casimir Greenfield. Set in both Amsterdam and The Cotswolds, Slow Poison is a hard hitting, uncompromising look at the seedier side of life. Set in the mid 1980s, Slow Poison moves through several decades and draws in life on a Cotswold housing estate, Amsterdam and the holocaust together in an unprecedented way.

A reader comments; 'This is a good play on mistaken identity - the imprisonment of a youth for a shocking murder in Amsterdam when, it eventually transpires, the real murderer is another person who has an agenda of death to meet on others in vengeance for the mayhem he once experienced on a seedy Gloucestershire estate.
I was first attracted to this book because of the contrast between the beautiful Cotswolds, which I know quite well, and the brutality which, I had thought, irreconcilable with such a place.
Perhaps more interesting though, is that the killer is incited to commit his trail of murders by coming under the influence of a diary written about the WWII death camps and I do sometimes wonder whether, even today, society somewhere, in some country, might still be so fragile as to have failed to recognise when evil can creep back again.' Martin C (UK)

Slow Poison in a nutshell: Slow Poison opens in Amsterdam in the days around the feast of Saint Nicholas in December in the mid 1980’s.

The brutal slaying of a British tourist and the subsequent arrest and imprisonment of a young football supporter sparks off an orgy of violence. But the killing is no random act. The boy is innocent. The real killer returns to England to begin the final chapter of an obsessive campaign of revenge spanning several decades.

The twisted acts of violence and vengeance are punctuated by the pages of a stolen diary written in the dark days of the second world war. The killer identifies with the unspeakable horrors of the death camp as he coldly wreaks revenge for a series of traumatic events that took place in the mid 1950s on a Gloucestershire council estate.

The story culminates with an abduction and a bloody siege high in the snowbound Cotswold hills.

And nothing and no one is quite what they seem...

(This book contains very strong language and scenes of a sexual nature. )

Slow Poison is the first of three books set in and around The Cotswolds that we can expect from Greenfield. Bloodstones and Red House will both be released in 2013. For now, Slow Poison is set to become one of those chilling stories that, although not to everyone's taste, once read will not be forgotten.

Saturday 8 December 2012

12/12/12/12/12


12/12/12/12/12

Long days. Up at Five, bed at One.

Were refurbishing our little shop, opening a second floor and there is much to do. The new stairs have been hand built and installed. The ceiling has been tented with white canvas and the walls have been painted white. The wooden floor is jet black. Four blood red chandeliers to be hung and blood red rugs to be laid and we'll be open for the press and public on the most auspicious date we could have hoped for.

When pressed for an official opening time, there was of course one waiting.

So, we're opening at 12.12 on the twelfth or the twelfth of the twelfth.

The candle burning is mainly because we're doing all of this work on a shoestring budget and the shop has to be manned and open while it's all going on.

Plus, with the festive season upon us, we're now open seven days a week.

So, the shop is full of lovely customers. We have supplied a Christmas gift for one of The Cotswolds most successful writers (think sex and horses...) and the milliner to the stars was in yesterday too. And Mrs Hodges dropped by for a brooch. A young guy from the fish stall from the market was looking for a cloth cap. He's shaving his head for charity. (a friend has leukaemia and he's raising money to help him...) And a couple of our customers brought us gifts of wine and chocolate. It doesn't get better than that!

Think of us on the twelfth  It is the dawn of a new era. A time of bright hope for the little person. That would be nice. It's about bloody time!

If you want to have a peek - check the website after the big day. www.stroudvintage.com

We have a short break booked for the end of the year - the cottage in Pembrokeshire. There will be time to sleep then. But knowing us,, we'll be up and off and doing from morn till night. You're a long time dead!

And on that cheery note, adieu!


Image by Carl Hewlett courtesy of the SNJ


Wednesday 5 December 2012

Pushed To The Limit


Sometimes you've just got to know when to stop.

It's not always easy to know, not always easy to stop....but when those warning signs rear their ugly little heads (or whatever it is warning signs do) something has to give.

It was at the point that Mrs G tried to get out of the car while we were still moving that I realised that summat was up!

We have been revamping our little vintage shop and the stress and strain of trying to reach a suddenly unattainable deadline had started to get to us.

After a morning of sourcing canvas to tent a ceiling, project managing a herd of cats involved in stair fitting, floor painting and general refurb mayhem Mrs G and I were at breaking point.

The deadline is ours and ours alone. No one is waiting for that one specific day - so, this morning, at 5.25, we called a halt. Friday is out! 12 12 12 is in.

What a perfect and unique date to launch a new endeavour.

Calm...

Chilled...

ps: if you want to see how we got on, have a look at www.stroudvintage.com in a couple of days - there should be some very glamorous images to whet the appetite.

Saturday 1 December 2012

November Fades In A Foreign Place

I can't remember the last time I went on a holiday. As a self-employed freelancer, holidays are an intrusive luxury I simply can't afford.

Well, there were the four days in Pembrokeshire in mid-October. They would have been delightful, but when our twenty-something sons joined us twelve hours in, they brought with them all the chaos and debris that is usually the realm of teenagers. So that doesn't count.

So, the last real holiday was a week in Malta three years ago. Mrs G had lived there as a child and this was a significant trip. And through the tears and reminiscences we had a perfect time.

Then came last Thursday.

I had occasion to need my passport to verify something or other. Good lord, the photo still looked like me. I'm not growing any more hair, so that wasn't a problem. But the darn thing was thirteen months out of date!

So, a quick phone call to the passport office fixed up an interview for a full moon Friday...

Yesterday actually...

We motored along the far banks of the Severn, avoiding floods and traffic until we realised that the time was cracking on, so I really put my foot down.

Newport looked amazing in the crisp winter air. Amazing architecture, both ancient and modern and we reached our destination with one minute to spare.

I tumbled into the office, poured the contents of my pockets into the security man's bucket. Nothing much of note. Phone, small change, gum - that kind of thing. Then upstairs for the interview.

Just a waiting room with others waiting. No interview. Just handed the forms in when my number was called. Then the first hitch. My photos were too thin. The wrong shape. So into a handy photo booth in the corner of the waiting room to add five pounds to the Welsh economy.

Handed in the photos (which actually looked like me for once) paid the money and headed back down to find Mrs G and Coco The Wonder Dog who had elected to travel with us.

Happy in his crate, we found a multi-storey in the centre of town, took the lift and emerged into the town centre. Much building work wherever we looked.

Into the nearest pub. 'Are you dog friendly?' 'Nah - and you won''t find anywhere in the centre that is, either!' I looked around and thought, well, you let THAT lot in! Didn't voice it though. Part of his ear had been bitten off.

CTWD would be just fine crated and asleep. So we went off in search of Americanos. Crowded streets full of Christmas shoppers. An old bloke accosted us. 'Everywhere you go there's a bloody foreigner following you...'. I answered him in Dutch. 'You foreigners then?' 'We're English. Does that count?' Then I went on to point out that it's a big world and that really, we're all the same... Deaf ears. Probably a UKIP supporter. Great start.

Coffee and a giant chocolate chip cookie. Starbucks. Not my favourite. As always, messy tables and a bit of a smell. Purple plush seats though and a good view of the street.

Outside, a pretty girl in a white bobble hat, anorak and backpack smilingly approached the passers by. The silent rebuffs took on  myriad forms. In the twenty minutes we sat there, not one person stopped to listen. She had no clip board, no leaflets. We were intrigued. The smile remained, but no one stopped. What a thankless task.

Outside, Mrs G went her way and I thought I'd investigate Bobble Girl. She ignored me. The first willing victim and she ignored me. Ho hum...

Caught up with Mrs G and shopped.

Later, I made my solo way back to the car with some heavy bags and Bobble Girl approached me. At last! I'm not the Invisible Man... Greenpeace! Ah! I'm a supporter. She was all the way from Cheltenham. Had been in our shop. Thought I'd recognised her.

We chatted, the smile was genuine, we parted on the best of terms.

Then I bumped into old UKIP again. As xenophobic as ever. CTWD was happy to stay in the car, and I needed to get to the Passport Office. Four hours had flown (with a pleasant lunch in between) and I needed to locate the place. Took a hopeful short-cut down a back alley behind the dog unfriendly pub come nightclub.

I was dressed like a businessman; grey Lauren overcoat, Burbury scarf, olive green trilby...so I must have looked a little incongruous hauling the twelve yards of black chiffon covered with sequins out of the skip halfway down the alley. But I'm not going to let a length of chiffon go to waste. There was a black feather boa too, but it came out in pieces and that was a step too far. Must have been quite a hen night though. Or stag do - you know what rugby players are like!

So, my second trip to the Passport Office required me once more to empty my pockets. Same as before, but this time accompanied by twelve yards of glittery chiffon. I didn't have a bag, so there it was, a huge sticky bundle of dubious provenance. I know. I know. I must have looked a little odd.

I was past caring at this point.

Upstairs, waiting room, full, me in business garb with glittery bundle.

The passport was ready. I was more than ready to leave the country.

Mrs G was not at all surprised with the chiffon. We go back a long way. I can only imagine what old UKIP would have to say.

We roared out of town after paying through the nose for the parking and we headed for the Severn Bridge (free from the Welsh side) and England.

An hour later we were at a marquee manufacturers discussing false ceilings. Like you do. Then home for Cypriot potatoes and tuna.

coda;

When I was a boy, I heard of the 'World Passport'. I thought it was a wonderful idea. I loved the idea of border-less travel, of being a 'foreigner', of being vaguely exotic. But in the real world there are borders and squabbles and war and other nasty stuff.

But I did travel. I did become a foreigner. And briefly, there were no borders in Europe, no checks...then things changed a little.

But, for half of my life. I've always been an outsider. On the inside.

This week our town has a Goodwill Evening. The theme is 'Make Love, Not War!'. In my world, there is still hope. Peace and Love to you all.




Wednesday 28 November 2012

Britain's Got Talent - Phase One


I've just had coffee with a friend of mine. You know, the one that entered 'Britain's Got  Talent'.

It was lovely to hear how the whole thing went. Let me share a few little nuggets with you.

The queues had already formed before friend and their family turned up for the audition.

The weather was reasonably clement, so queueing up for the required two and a half hours did not present too much of a problem.

The queue. A be-fezzed magician who constantly got the card tricks wrong, a darts player in a black suit with diamante lapels (who would end up singing 'Delilah') a couple of gay punks with mohican haircuts who kissed and cuddled all the way to the entrance just to keep warm.

And in the background a huge truck with a laser display showing Les Mis the movie clips and ads for BGT.

The entrance? To what? Well it turned out that they were in the gym hall of a county cricket ground. And the whole place was full of artistes, all waiting to strut their stuff.

Drag artists, girl bands, more dart players and my friend.

Cameras everywhere, but no Simon, no Amanda...of course not. My friend had done the research. These were the preliminary heats. Thousands whittled down to an ultimate five hundred or so.

Interviews were done, songs were sung and all before the real thing. My friend was in group F, and was the last of the day to go up.

Room 21. The President's Suite.

Diamante Dart Player was in and out in ninety seconds...friend was in for about six minutes. And it seemed to go well. LA guy behind the desk was very encouraging.

So, the waiting begins.

I know nothing. I will keep you informed.

If friend makes it to the next stage I'll be sure to tell you - every vote counts, so we'll be counting on you!

Monday 19 November 2012

Slow Poison - A Foreign Language?


Some of you dipping into my blog may not be native English speakers. I lived on the Continent for a quarter of a century, so I have learned to choose my words well, and hopefully manage to communicate my thoughts so that everyone can understand.

Recently an American publisher interested in my work commented on my use of dialogue and slang that might render some of the book difficult for the US market to understand.

Oh heavens! I thought I'd cracked it language wise!

So...if you have the chance to have a read and let me know what you think and whether you can make head or tails of my scribblings, I would be most grateful.

Check out chapter one and send me your thoughts.

Cas

Slow Poison Chapter One



Thursday 15 November 2012

Two Hundred Shades Of Gray


Quite a week!

The week began with a visit to my dentist. She's an old school friend, and there's nothing better than being strapped to a chair with someone's fingers and implements holding the mouth open while being regaled with stories about everyone we ever had in common.

I missed out on an old boys' reunion dinner last week (went to a blues gig instead...) so hearing about those people from the past was entertaining and a little reassuring too.

If any of you have been to a reunion  you'll know what I mean. For me it was two hundred guys in grey suits who it was hard enough to identify in school uniforms, let alone grey suits.

I've only been to one. I'd just moved back to the country after a quarter of a century abroad. At school I'd been the mouse. The shyest guy in the world. Not any more.

So, I hatched a plan. The best way (I thought) to announce my presence to this grey room would be from the stage. So, I put myself forward as guest speaker. They jumped at the chance. So...free dinner, great seat, Cas the show-off got to speak for twenty minutes. Raised some laughs too. Sat next to the bishop, the headmaster and various other luminaries.

I had fun gazing out across the sea of grey...disbelieving faces... 'Is that REALLY Cas Greenfield?'

Then the hall door burst open! Puffy Waldron! Newted as a Pea...drunk as a lord! 'Effing Hell - it's Effing Greenfield! How are you, me old mate?'

Well, I was just fine. I always liked old Puffy. Beat off the bullies a few times for me. A good mate.

We all finished off the evening in fine form, most of them still unsure that it was really me.

I gathered some of them up at the end of the evening and delivered the drunken bodies back to their partners. I don't drink, so driving around was another chapter in another book.

But I didn't go this year. Bumped into Pete Barnes. 'How was it?' 'Food was alright...' 'Puffy?' 'No, he wasn't there...I didn't know a soul...'

Oh dear - the sea of gray!

The filling was successful, I left the dentist's chair with some more anecdotes. Thus, my busy week began with a numb jaw and a head full of bits.

Coffee with the BGT friend later today. Now, that should be fun.

Watch this cavity.



ps; You can check out Slow Poison's opener by clicking this link; Slow Poison - Read The Opening Here





Thursday 8 November 2012

Britain's Got Talent - First Impressions...

I know someone who is going for a Britain's Got Talent audition!

Of course, I'm not at liberty to divulge any information whatsoever on pain of death, but I'll be curious to hear how the experience was over a cup of coffee in the near future.

I have no idea what their chance of getting anywhere will be - a naked knife-throwing dog act on stilts may not be to everyone's liking - but hey, it's not me that's entering!

Their act will be a pure and simple performance, letting the personality shine through in a gentle way. No frills, no fireworks - just ninety seconds of something sweet and gentle. Ninety seconds! That's all the time they will get to impress. The wait beforehand could be hours, but those ninety seconds will be vital. When I know more, I'll let you know.

The skill of impressing in a short space of time is what we all strive for I think. For me it has to be the opening of a book. Those first 600 words or so are vital. It is apparently just about the most an agent will read before moving on to the next book. A sobering thought!

So, over the months, I have been paring back my books and honing as much as I can to get it right. At the moment, I'm more than happy with the opening of Slow Poison. I believe it sets the tone, draws the reader in and hopefully will propel you forward into reading more.

The old cliché comes to mind. You only have one chance to make a first impression.

Not strictly true in these days of ePublishing, but you get the picture.

So, my friend at BGT had better get it right.

I hope I did...

Let me know what you think. You can check out Slow Poison's opener by clicking this link; Slow Poison - Read The Opening Here




ps. I'm due for that cup of coffee any day, so I'll let you in on the BGT juicy bits...

Sunday 4 November 2012

Remember, remember...Bang Bang; a slight amendment...

Another day, another celebration looms. Since the invention of fireworks in China countless years ago, each civilisation has found the need to let off those big bangers from time to time. Now, whether that's November 5th (celebrating the Gunpowder Plot in the UK) or the Dutch New Year, a firework will always do the trick.

And for those deprived of the Catherine Wheel in their local supermarket - there's always the thrill of a real war.

Me? Can't stand the bangs. War? I lean toward the John and Yoko camp. Love, peace, understanding and a quiet night in...


If this feels like a meagre posting, it was one of those early morning doodles. 

A few little additions: Our town is holding its annual 'Good Will Evening' in a few weeks time. The theme this year is 'Love and Peace'. It's one of those places. A little bit Glastonbury, a little bit Stonehenge. It's where we have our vintage shop, it's where I come from. Stroud just has to be the centre of the known universe...

One of our sons works in the shop and has been asked to dress up in our finest 60s gear to publicise the evening. So it's either Beatle jackets from the Help! era or an original kaftan with love beads and Jim Mcguinn glasses. 

Our little corner of the world is one of the greenest places on the map, hosts every kind of protest group going (Queen's Mr May and his badger activities for one...) And one of our many musicians, Dave Ireland, has also just recorded a gentle song about war. I've added a link. The song is titled A Shropshire Lad 

It has to be time for a little peace...

So, we'll be buying ear-plugs for the dog, practising our peace signs and hiding under the blankets...

(if you read Slow Poison - you'd never imagine that I was such a scaredy cat!)

ps - he plumped for the Jim McGuinn look

Wednesday 31 October 2012

SOS - or How Many Police Officers Does It Take To Mend A Broken Leg

Mrs G and I decided to take Coco The Wonder Dog, for a mid morning trot on Haresfield Beacon this morning. We arrived at the car park after a long slow climb up the long slow hill leading from the M5. The car park was full and unusually, there were two ambulances and a few ambulance persons wandering about. We spoke to a few other dog walkers, but no one seemed to know what was going on.

We decided to let Wonder Dog have his usual twenty mile run (we walk half a mile - he runs twenty) across the beacon. Then, behind us we heard the sound of several sirens. Three police cars arrives, blue lights flashing and screeched into the car park.

This is a National Trust site. It looked like a crime scene. We wandered off toward the Severn view with a couple of cops taking a parallel path a little lower down. There was some activity on the edge of the escarpment, but we kept a safe distance.

A brief distraction as Coco met Fudge and darted around rolling and tumbling while we passed the time of day with the Grandpuppy Sitters as they described themselves.

Boy, it was cold, so after chatting we did a U turn and headed back. Then, across the fields trundled a cross between a golf buggy and a tank, heading toward the officers and a bundle huddled at the edge...

We kept our distance again.

Back in the car park, there were even more police vehicles. We looked up for a helicopter, but there was none.

The Sitters told us that someone they knew, Irene, was walking her dog and he toppled her over and she had broken her leg. Hence the police and ambulance activity.

Goodness knows how many would turn up if there was a crime. And, if any of the criminal fraternity caught wind of the whereabouts of the police - the crime rate in the villages around the Beacon probably rose considerably.

Irene is okay. But how much did this all cost? Should I be reassured if I am toppled over by The Wonder Dog?

Mrs G would probably drag me back to the car and still expect me to drive home...




All Hallow's Eve, All Saints Day

We have four children and most of them are Scorpios... I'm not sure what the star sign characteristics are, but we have raised four fiercely independent individuals - and that includes the Gemini child.

Our youngest was born on All Saints Day. He came early. It was on a Sunday and we were not quite prepared. His first diaper belonged to his brother, almost exactly two years older and was akin to putting the poor child in a bucket seat.

We used to call him our 'Rainbow Baby'. First of all he turned blue and we had to rush him of to hospital. Did I mention that most of our children were born at home? We lived in the Netherlands. Children were born at home. So, with the labour beginning on Halloween... You get the picture. It was quite a night. Carrie was not the film Mrs G should have been watching.

So he turned blue and was whisked off and put in an incubator with   little portholes on the side and him in aviator sunglasses. Well that's what they looked like.

And then he turned yellow. Jaundice.

We always knew he would turn out to be an artistic child.

These days, I'm not sure what I think of Halloween. Despite the somewhat gruesome nature of my books, I am quite squeamish. But, in the mid nineties we lived in a large and sprawling Gothic school building out in the polders. And we gave the most amazing Halloween parties. Always fancy dress, always full of the most exotic guests in the most exotic costumes. The house would be lit only by candles, we would decorate throughout and with the dry ice machines and spooky music everywhere, those parties were the talk of the town for months.

The biggest problem was that, even though the youngest children were away for the night, they would arrive back the next morning for their birthday celebrations. And the house would be full of the evidence of the evening's doings. Gravestones, candle wax and the odd body lying around.

Those were the days.

Back in the UK, we just don't do those things any more. Plus, I confine my ghoulishness to the pages of my writing.

I will be using one of those parties as the backdrop to a scene in Red House - out in 2013.

So, tomorrow, we celebrate in gentler style. No party. And one of youngest son's gifts was a 'Knitting For Men' course at the local Art's Centre. Then on to brunch at our favourite cafe. What a Rock & Roll lifestyle we have!

Halloween. Scorpions and knitting. What a combination.

Enjoy your trick or treating, wherever you are. And if you were at one of our parties...I hope you found your way back home...



(an aside...someone who was at one of those parties contacted me last evening...oh, the power of blogging!)


Thursday 25 October 2012

Welcome To Burlesque

You would be forgiven for thinking that we authors spend much of our time in the solitude of our studios committing our creative outpourings to the hard drive. There is much truth in that thought - writing requires a great level of solitary concentration and sheer determination and key bashing. But where do those words come from?

The answer is everywhere and anywhere.

Part of my life involves event organising, primarily in the fashion industry, and over the past few years I have seen the rise of the strange and wonderful world of Burlesque.

Living in Amsterdam, as I did for a quarter of a century, I was party to the ongoing Continental heritage that is cabaret. Amsterdam still has at its heart the extraordinary core of political satire that expresses itself in music, dance and mime. In Germany, too, you will find the remnants of political satire and even in the 1980s it was possible to visit one of the infamous 'telephone bars' in a town somewhere. Let me explain.

The plush interior of such a bar was filled with small intimate tables, each with a couple of chairs, each with an ornate telephone atop its numbered table. And at one end of the room, a small stage complete with husky voiced beauty of indeterminable age or sex offering songs of lost love to a smoky crowded room. And then the phone at your table might ring. Well, not so much a ring as a flashing light. To lift the receiver was a thrill. To hear the low voice whisper their table number another. Ok, so it was Mrs G having a laugh, but you get the picture.

Back to the stage. In a lone spotlight, accompanied only by a pianist at a baby grand, the singer began in earnest. Pale white face, red painted lips and rouged cheeks and a blond wig to die for.

'Falling in love again, never wanted to...what's a girl to do? Can't help it!'

Close your eyes and it could have been Ms Dietrich. (I'd had a couple of Campari's) And then the clothes began to come off...

The Cotswolds. 2009. Mrs G and I have been invited to an evening of burlesque at a local venue. Of course we go. Dressed in our finery we enter another world. I'm back in the little German town again. All around are hordes of punters, dressed to the nines, eager for an evening of glamour. The Mistress Of Ceremonies takes to the stage. Miss Demeanor, or something akin, she could have stepped out of Luhrmann's Moulin Rouge, and the effect was almost perfect. I say 'almost perfect', because everything was fine until Miss D announced the raffle and pointed out to us the buffet. The prize was a hamper full of pies (baked by Miss D's mum) and the buffet consisted almost entirely of more pies, both savoury and sweet, all identical in size and shape and un-labelled! Not a great start for a vegetarian! Beef & Onion - or Apple? You get the picture.

But the evening was fun. A mixed bag of entertainment. A music hall singer, several strippers, a fearsome solo female bass guitarist who screamed out neo-punk songs for far too long, and Miss D herself, who sang sweetly and took off far too much.

I didn't win the hamper, but I did win a set of nipple tassels.  Pasties to you!

Now, everywhere you look in the UK you'll see the influence of Burlesque. The Forties and Fifties look, the red lips, the careful coiffures, the corsets and feathers. And for the most part it is wonderful. In a time of recession, everyone needs a little cheering up. And Burlesque is one of those looks where being a size 6 is not a requirement. The big girls out there finally have their day! This is good. To see them rejoicing in their curves and size is a delight. An industry is burgeoning. There are websites galore. Clubs and events starting up. Magazines on the High Street dedicated to the look and lifestyle.

Now me, I always favoured the straight up-and-down look of the thirties, but to see this much fun in straight-laced England (it's not the Swinging Sixties anymore...) has to be a positive thing.

Mika said it best; 'Big girls, you are beautiful!'

So...come on down to The Butterfly Lounge - welcome to Burlesque!

Watch Mika's Big Girls

Now...how did I get started here? Oh yes, inspiration. Slow Poison has it, Red House full of even more...





Burlesque? You ain't see nothing yet!


These photos are of choice pieces from our vintage store, Time After time in the Cotswolds, speciallt photographed by Gloucester photographer Will Davis...check us out at stroudvintage.com






Wednesday 24 October 2012

Slow Poison - The First Reviews


Slow Poison has been available on Amazon for a few weeks now, so I thought I would share a few of the reviews I have received so far. I love to know what you think too.


For those of you who have yet to sample Slow Poison, here is a link to Chapter One: Slow Poison Chapter One 



Surprisingly different, unique and elegant but shockingly dark

  2 Oct 2012
By It’s Only Me "JK"
Slow Poison is beautifully written and has a darkness, a violence, that creeps up on you and comes as a total surprise. I can honestly say that I haven’t read anything like this before, it’s certainly unique, and I enjoyed it. This is a story of how slow, creeping revenge can reach out from the past and effect what’s happening right now, and not in a good way. There’s a shocking case of mistaken identity which leaves a killer at large but; there’s also a diary with a world of darkness at it’s heart. There are multiple layers of planning and plotting as you travel from one era to the next, one location to the next, but it’s handled well and you don’t feel lost. Strange, quirky, took me a while to get into the style of writing but certainly worth downloading because it’s so different.   (from http://manorfarmbooks.co.uk/slow-poison/)



3.0 out of 5 stars Disturbing and not implausible19 Oct 2012
This review is from: Slow Poison (Kindle Edition)
This is a good play on mistaken identity - the imprisonment of a youth for a shocking murder in Amsterdam when, it eventually transpires, the real murderer is another person who has an agenda of death to meet on others in vengeance for the mayhem he once experienced on a seedy Gloucestershire estate.
I was first attracted to this book because of the contrast between the beautiful Cotswolds, which I know quite well, and the brutality which, I had thought, irreconcilable with such a place.
Perhaps more interesting though, is that the killer is incited to commit his trail of murders by coming under the influence of a diary written about the WWII death camps and I do sometimes wonder whether, even today, society somewhere, in some country, might still be so fragile as to have failed to recognise when evil can creep back again.
The story has pace and though it didn't have the love of the language that I like to find in an author, it stimulated thought and awakened me from some of my too comfortable preconceptions.

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4.0 out of 5 stars

 So much potential16 Oct 2012
This review is from: Slow Poison (Kindle Edition)
I think that with a bit of editing, this book would have been a masterpiece. The electronic version at least is quite hard to follow in places as the chapters etc are not clearly marked. However the content made up for some of this. I love the style; page upon page of beautifully written prose, always with a dark edge. Some of the scenes are very graphic in their violence and sexual content, but with so much more lying under the surface.
I was left with a lot of open questions, which is just how I like my books. I would love to quiz the author. The scenes that took place on the council estate touch areas that are seldom explored, and I found myself both fascinated and repelled by the characters.
I would definitely read more by this author.

Thursday 18 October 2012

Gale Force Winds and Starlit Skies


Gale Force Winds and Starlit Skies


The drama of the Pembrokeshire coast confronts us every day we are here. An October break is the perfect thing for us. I think I lay on a sun lounger once on a recent trip to Malta. It felt as though I had spent the entire day on the contraption. We think it was actually about twenty minutes tops. Just not my idea of a holiday. If we’re not up and doing, it all feels like wasted time and opportunity.

Consequently, we have visited table-top fairs, extraordinary beaches, fish restaurants, vintage dealers…and that was just Monday!

We are doing anything but relaxing. Well, there is a hot tub at the cliff-top farm cottage we are renting. Beats the sun-lounger any day. Lying back among the bubbles, watching the clouds scud across the sky, whether blue or star studded is pure joy.

And then, yesterday morning, the gales hit the coast. Torrential rain interspersed with brilliant sun and the sea whipping up into a frenzy. The tides were thrown out of kilter and the long dog walk was out of the question. So, the boys hiked through the forest, while Mrs G and I roamed the antique centres of the gentrified towns a little inland. (The green feather 1930s cloche was worth the trip alone…)

Mah Jongh was promised for the evening, but the wild sea drew us down the hill. We moored the Rover in the pub car park and braved the elements. The sheer power of the sea was overwhelming. The rattle of the pebbles as the retreating waves dragged them back was thunderous. We stayed to watch for half an hour. Not more.

Then back for a trio of games, then bed with the backdrop of the wind and the sea. The stars were bright. 

Off for a beach-side breakfast now, then on to Marloes, followed by fish then some live music.

Mrs G is calling. Time to go...

Link to video of Barafundle


Friday 12 October 2012

Rechargeable Batteries

The skies over the Severn Plains are crisp and blue and clear. There is that feeling of anticipation in the air.

Maybe it's just me, but when October rolls around and the autumnal colour hits the leaves, I start to get that creative tingling creeping through me.

Monday will arrive bringing my birthday with it. That could be part of the tingling thing. But really, I've had far too many to still be experiencing any kind of excitement. Ah, but when you write for a living, every single thought has potential, every act has a literary passage lurking somewhere in the background. So, of course I'm tingling!

This year's birthday gift from Mrs G is a goodie! It involves the re-charging of the batteries. Big time.

Sunday morning early will find us heading out toward the Severn, taking the far road to Ross for a little R&R at the boot sale at the old cattle market. (We'll avoid the greasy spoon breakfast of dead pig slices and beans however...)

And then we take the open road that will lead us to the magic world of Pembrokeshire. Dog and one son will be with us, another son will join us later.

We'll be staying at one of our favourite haunts in a farmhouse overlooking the ocean. There s something wonderful about returning to a tried and tested spot: the home-made scones will be waiting, a bottle of red and some dog biscuits and a ten minute chat with Ann from the farm and then we begin the recharging process.

Our one regret is that we raved too much about the place when we had first visited it - now it's hard to find a free spot to take our breaks. So this year, joy of joys, the free spot is my birthday present.

We are only ever here during this season and somehow we always have to most beautiful weather. Blue skies, bright days, warm sea...

I may become a little silent for the next few days - the internet connection there is patchy. But I'll be back, fully charged, raring to go and officially one year older.

Mrs G is good at choosing birthday presents. Yay!

Follow this link to share a taste of the gentle calm I hope to find.

Barafundle




Wednesday 10 October 2012

Casimir Greenfield joins the Author Marketing Club


As a new author, finding the best way to promote the work can be an absolute minefield. With Slow Poison on Amazon (and selling...) the marketing process is well and truly under-way

Then I happened to come across the Author Marketing Club. For a debut author like myself, this is turning out to be an absolute treasure of a find.

With their help, Slow Poison will continue to grow the band of readers that have discovered my work.

I've added a link below so that you too can check out the site.

Cas




http://www.authormarketingclub.com


Tuesday 9 October 2012

Slow Poison Out Now On Amazon

Click on the link to check out the book: Slow Poison now available on Amazon


I recently uploaded the first chapter of Slow Poison. The response has been overwhelming. The book was briefly available as a free download and reached the heights of the Amazon top 15, with over 25.000 downloads over the two special offer days.

Following that amazing reaction, Double Infinity Publishing released the final edit on October 1st at a special low price of $2.99.

Apologies for the shameless plug, but it has been an exciting week!

So, while Slow Poison does whatever it's destined to do, I'm cracking on with the writing and editing of Red House.

The cover is ready, the ending (of sorts) is in place and it is turning out to be a dark and wondrous thing...

I'll keep you posted.

Feedback on anything and everything most welcome.

Cas




Wednesday 3 October 2012

Double Rainbows, Fields Of Gold

I'm an early riser. Mrs G is allowed to sleep on as I begin my breathless morning write - as many words as I can before the world wakes up.

Wednesday morning began early with rain on the skylight, but when the sun rose it hit the maize fields at the back of the stables and flooded the entire plain with gold. The backdrop of the sky was, however, near black and threatening.

And then, the most perfect rainbow I have ever seen began forming. Rising in a majestic arc, beginning (or ending) in the fields of gold and ending (or beginning) somewhere in the distant estate.

So, Mrs G was woken with more than her coffee and muesli.

By the time we had opened the skylights to get a better view things had changed.

For the better.

A second arc had formed above the first, just as bright, just as perfect. We were blessed.

I can only imagine the impact of a natural phenomenon such as this in simpler days, before technology, before media. It would have been seen as an omen of sorts. A good one, surely?

Blessed indeed. Our day (our shared day) began in spectacular fashion.

Images? No. We simply gazed in wonder and let nature leave an indelible imprint on our memory.

Aah, look at the colours!

Richard Of York Gave Battle In Vain

Do you have a favourite mnemonic?

Now...back to the books: Bloodstones & Slow Poison

Slow Poison Chapter One - have a read on me!

...and why not? Here's Chapter One of Slow Poison as published on Amazon - click here for the link: Slow Poison on Amazon

(Let me know what you think and I'll post Chapter Two...)



Chapter One

Amsterdam, December 6th

A man was waiting for The Six, huddled in Armani camel, watching the doorway of the Casa Rosa. The red lights glowed like cinders in the crisp December air. Snow had not yet fallen, but the night was keen with pre-frost whispers. This was the third night and they were repeating the ragged routine of the past two days, clattering noisily through the back streets toward the plush surroundings of the Victoria Hotel. Bulls they were, looking for china shops.

Den, Pete, 'Dog' Barker, Mart, Kev and Richie; careering through the City of Love, leaving a trail of phlegm and expensive scratches, yob-high on Mercedes lacquer.
On that first evening in the Victoria, they had exploded into the restaurant, destroying his reverie. On an impulse he had followed them into the night. They could be useful. He would need someone like them. He closed the leather-bound diary he was reading to watch the swell and swagger of denim. His chest felt tight, his mouth was dry and he hardened. The city was nervous of them. Wild things, sniffing the cosmopolitan air like rutting beasts.

On the morning of the third day, he had watched them spew through the steel exit doors of the Sleep-Inn on the Rozengracht, groping their way into the bright winter sunshine, unwashed and unshaven, a breakfast of beer in progress. He watched them gesticulate and curse at the waves of cyclists teetering through their group, bells clamouring.
'Fuckin' Cloggies! Why don't ya watch where yer fuckin' goin'..? '

When at last The Six emerged from the deep red core of the Casa Rosa, he limped behind them as closely as he could.  They roared on before him down the urinous alleyways of The Walletjes, singing their City anthems in tuneless tenors and baritones. Few windows in those dark clefts escaped the lick of their Pentels.

He watched them crumble their hash into roll-ups in shadowy doorways. He watched one of them crack the window of a Showarma bar on the Kloveniersburgwal, watched them run from the honing steel of the Israeli owner who chased after them, cursing them in Hebrew. He located them again, homing in on the noise. They stormed the Victoria. The waiters armed themselves with small change and haughty sneers.

'Shit! ', said one of them, built like a flamenco dancer. 'The scum are back!’

They stomped their way into the hotel, rattling the ashtrays and coffee cups in the glazed sidewalk conservatory.

'You don't know nuffin about fucking tactics...'

'Lissen! The fuckin' ref was well out of order.'

'Yeah…yeah... '

So much sarcasm squeezed into two little words.

'Who was there? Well...go on...I was fuckin' well there..!'

The man sat at a corner table and felt for the diary in his coat pocket and laid it on the table. The flamenco waiter was suddenly at his shoulder, pen poised.

‘Meneer?’

'Spa Citroen, alsjeblieft.'

The man turned to the diary. He glanced at a yellowed page, at pencil marks that had faded almost to invisibility. In the half-light of the piano bar, it was hard to make out the words. He pulled the decorative candle closer, but not too close. Just near enough to enable reading.

'July 3rd 1939. The summer cottage. The two of us, sequestered in pastoral seclusion. Lowing cattle, bleating rams, sheep. We find green berries ripening in the hedgerow. Behind the cottage, wisps of early mist rise above the clover. Ghosts, listlessly undecided between earthly delights and paradise...’

He struggled over the forgotten words, this disease of a language that none of their droning had prepared him for. His heart slowed to its regular beat as the two couples looked up at the noise. The Six were mobile again, slamming themselves into the outer edge of the Bechstein.

The man closed the diary and leaned back into the shadows. He sipped his Spa Citroen and looked around the bar. He lit a Sobranie and blew the smoke into the candle flame. At the other table, two couples were giving their orders to the flamenco waiter. He tapped out a staccato exit into the blaze of the kitchen lights.

'The whole damn place is full of the bloody English tonight’ he muttered to the kitchen staff. It was true. The piano bar was occupied solely by the English. By coincidence and chance.  

In the street a barrel organ played, catching the last of the rush hour crowds, infusing the air with merry calliope renditions of Arlen and Berlin tunes. Inside, the Bechstein resonated with the percussive rapping of the grubby fingers of The Six. 'Fuck this and fuck that...'



The two couples sat at their table half-hidden from the man. Fretwork shadows played over their faces, candlelight gleaming in their eyes. The men and one of the women were in their early forties, the other woman was younger. Glyn and Janet, Fred and Becky.
Fred Farthing was a big muscular man. Black hair, brush-cut, and a broad tanned face with full lips part hidden by a bushy moustache. He sat grinning, his fat unmanicured fingers curled around his glass, warming the cheap champagne.
'I'm looking forward to this!', said Fred, rubbing his ample belly.
'You eat too much for your own good!', laughed Becky.
'When I lose sight of me shoes, I'll start worrying!'
'It's not yer shoes you should be worrying about!' said Glyn.
Glyn Wood was plump, with wispy ginger hair showing advanced signs of receding. He and his wife Janet were holidaying with the Farthings. The party were in a bright mood. This evening's meal was Fred's treat. Glyn had done the honours the night before. Champagne and a small phial of AnaisAnais for each of the ladies. Glyn was a software salesman, his first respectable job. Janet all M&S and Waitrose, worked in 'Pumpkin Pie', a wholefood restaurant in Stroud. Glyn and Janet were pleasant friends.
'Right!'
Fred was standing, raised glass in hand.
'I'VE got a surprise for the girls tonight.'
He winked knowingly at Glyn, who smiled bemusedly. Fred handed Becky and Janet a small gift-wrapped cube, first to Becky, then to Janet. Sinterklaas paper. A sticker read 'SURPRISE' Fred watched them both excitedly with his grin widening across his flushed face.
'Oh, Fred... it's beautiful..!'
Inside the packages were small black cases, which hinged open to reveal tiny diamond pendants hanging from fine gold chains.
'Oh, Fred...I don't know what to say...I've never seen anything so lovely...' said Becky.
Fred moved behind Becky's chair. He helped her clasp the pendant around her neck. He stooped to kiss the nape of her neck before sitting down.
'Love you!' He whispered.
Janet held her gold chain taut, sending the diamond spinning, catching candlelight in the facets, filling dark filigree shadows with unwanted light. The man started at the unaccustomed brilliance.
'Come on, Glyn - do the honours!'
Janet angled her neck so that Glyn too could act the gallant. He fumbled with the clasp and leaned over to Fred.
'I dunno Fred, you're a dark horse. I wondered where you went thisafty.'
Glyn put his arm around Janet's shoulder as he sat down. Becky smiled at Janet. Fred slipped his big hand between Becky's thighs under the cover of the tablecloth and drew her attention back to him.
'I must say WE were wondering where you'd got to as well.' Said Janet in a voice full of mock rebuke, 'This is a wicked city for an innocent little lad like you to be let loose in...' Right Becky?
The meal arrived. Steak, chips, runner beans from a can, applesauce and limp winter lettuce. A wholly unsuitable last supper. The flamenco waiter left them to it.
'Great. Look at this!', Said Fred, sprinkling his meal liberally with salt and pepper. They all helped themselves to the vegetables and salad and began to eat.
'Oh god..!' Becky spluttered into her napkin,' My beans taste of Lifebuoy Soap.'
Becky explored her mouth with a tentative tongue, wary of what else she might discover.



Fred knew the taste of Lifebuoy Soap. Oh yes. Stonehouse Primary. Caught saying 'bugger' during morning assembly. During the Lord's Prayer.
'Our Mother, who art in the kitchen, buggered be thy tits...'
Horsefall had pounced, his thunderclap voice riveting the gigglers and fiddlers to the spot.
'FARTHING!'
Fred, eight, was lifted inches from the ground by the scruff of his grimy neck, and carried into the cloakroom. The cloakroom; pegs in rows, names and pictures, coats and hats, and at the far end the double sink.
'You vile little insect!', Horsefall hissed into his face. The stench of peppermints made Fred fart.
 'WHAT ARE YOU?'
'...insect sir...'
'AND WHAT DO WE DO WITH FOUL MOUTHED LITTLE INSECTS, FARTHING?'
Impale them with pins? Stamp on them? Cover them with chocolate and give them as booby prizes on 'Open the Box'
'Dunno sir...'
'WE MAKE SURE THEY NEVER, EVER DO IT AGAIN, INSECT!'
Horsefall picked up a bar of slimy pink Carbolic and ground it into Fred's astonished mouth. O. Horsefall panted and sweated. Fred wriggled and retched and gurgled ghastly sounds. Horsefall cuffed him about the ears for good measure and sent him flying across the cloakroom. Fred landed among the duffel coats, jarring his right elbow on the white tiled wall. He watched with a mixture pain and bemusement as Horsefall leaned back against the wall, panting heavily, eyes closed, flecks of white spittle at the corners of his mouth, hands groping at his groin. Indelible ink.



Voices drifted across from the Bechstein.
'...Fuckin' will, you know! I'll fuckin' bottle 'em!'
Fred looked up, looked across, clenched his fists, and shouted at The Six.
'Keep it down, lads. There's ladies present...'
'Can't fuckin' see none!'
Fred laid his napkin down and began to rise.
'Don't be daft, mate.', Glyn echoed, 'you can see how pissed they are!'
Fred tried to ignore them, but the mood was gone, Becky was suddenly distant, swirling Merlot to freshen her mouth. Fred pulled his chair closer to the table. Glyn attempted to stitch together the lost moments.
'Here's to us!' he said, 'Cheers!'
The four friends raised their glasses once more and clinked them together. Fred finished his steak and half of Becky's in silence, and they ordered exotic ices from the flamenco waiter.
'Aaah!', said Glyn. 'This is the life'
'TWATS! I'll fuckin' 'ave 'em!'
The Bechstein.
'Coffee?'
'TWATS! I'll fuckin' nail 'em!'
'No I'll have tea.’ said Becky. 'I'm dying for a cup.'
Music filled the piano bar. Not the distant barrel organ, not the muzak from the foyer. The music came from the sextet of savage voices humping the piano.
'CIT-TEE! CIT-TEE!'
The taut strings of the grand boomed out under the flat of their callused palms.
 'CIT-TEE! CIT-TEE!'
The flamenco waiter looked on helplessly, their cropped skulls and rude tattoos beyond his wildest dreams.
 'CIT-TEE! CIT-TEE!'
Two trams in convoy rumbled down their rails toward the Dam bulging at the welds with commuters, windows dripping like monstera leaves in a sultry rain forest, passengers peering out from the safety at the straggles of vociferous groups, long December scarves in warrior colours, rattles and rosettes, echoing through the night streets and countless nervous bars.
'CIT-TEE'
The coffee came, biscuits nestling in saucers. The four shifted uneasily on their chairs.
'I thought you wanted tea.’
Fred was bristling.
'It's all right...coffee's fine...'
'I'll change it...'
'No...don't make a fuss...'
But the flamenco waiter had already escaped.
They began to make plans for the evening ahead. Glyn had tried unsuccessfully each night to steer the ladies toward the blush tints of the Red Light District.
'It's only a bit of fun. Why not?'
A party of Americans came in noisily and set the candles shivering in their slipstream. The bar was filling up.
'I'm not going into any of those shows...', Janet insisted.
'We'll just go window shopping!', Insisted Glyn. 'Just a bit of fun...that's all.'
Three girls with wet stringy hair came through from the foyer and sat at a table near the window, near the man. The flamenco waiter glided in to serve the party of Americans with their Cokes and beers. Fred called him over on his way back to the kitchen.
'Waiter...'
Castanets. A poised pen. A trembling hand.
'We'll have some more coffee, and some Drambuie...'
Fred covered a noiseless burp with his hand and shifted slightly on his chair.
'I'm off to the Gents' All this booze has got to me...'
Glyn rose and followed Fred into the foyer. Den and 'Dog' swivelled round on their bar stools. Kev muttered something under his breath that made them all snicker. Then Den and 'Dog' turned a full circle.
The Gents' was in the souterrain, reached by a dimly lit narrow flight of freestanding filigree stairs. The dainty treads were carpeted in deep purple plush. The hallway between the Heren W.C. and the basement disco was floored with terracotta. The disco, promisingly named 'Madonna's' had not yet opened. The dance floor was unlit and grimy, pitted by nights of stilettos and smouldering cigarettes. A malodorous melange of drink and perfume oozed from the open doorway. The DJ and a cocktail waitress were chatting just inside the entrance. To the left was the Heren W.C. with its three glass partitioned urinals, two blue-lit junky-proof booths, a washbasin, an air-drier, no towel, and a contraceptive machine.
'Thirty five cents for a bloody slash!' , Fred complained.
The two friends stood side by side, relieving themselves.
'Are you all right, mate? You seemed a bit funny earlier on... I dunno...'
'Nah, nothin' wrong with me, mate...', Fred replied.