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Hobbit-Hole Progress, Part 1

In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit. Not a nasty, dirty, wet hole, filled with the ends of worms and an oozy smell, nor yet a dry, bare, sandy hole with nothing in it to sit down on or to eat: it was a hobbit-hole, and that means comfort.

Okay, I just opened a new category for these posts, linking to and/or elaborating on my video-dairy of converting a barren and ill-cared for studio apartment into my personal sanctum. The name? You guessed it. Hobbit-hole.

I also considered Nerd Eye for the Fan Guy, or something like that, but decided against it. I always thought Queer Eye was lame, even though I was almost one of the straight guys on the show. They almost filmed our wedding. True story.

So anyway, here are three more videos. I just shot the last two, and it is like 1:30. I can barely keep my bloodshot eyes open in the last one. I look totally stoned.

Day 2 Progress 1

Day 2 Progress 2

Day 2 Progress 3

Posted on October 3, 2009 at 1:41 am by PeatB
Filed under Craft, Hobbit-hole, Interviews, Life, Musings
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Tool Time

Tool_Time

In July of last year, Brett Family Incorporated (Brooklyn franchise) increased its staff size by 50%. Since Dani has brown hair and I have black, we decided to increase workplace diversity by adding a redhead. This new hire was ratified by stock holders before the ad was run in the paper, but there was only one applicant. Still, we conducted detailed interviews for some 40 weeks. Can’t be too careful with all these weirdos around.  Thus, Cassandra Hope Gero Brett was born… er, hired:

Nazguuullllll

Of course, this led to some logistical problems. When it was just Dani and me, our two bedroom apartment seemed huge, even with both of us home together during the day. With Cassie in the mix, however, things quickly became cramped. We moved her into our bedroom at first, for ease of bi-hourly care and feeding through the night. This became less necessary and more of an imposition as time went on, however.

But where else to go? We couldn’t put the crib in my office, because I work at night, nor the living room, or we would never be able to watch TV or anything at night. We thought about moving, but we didn’t really want to. I was desperately trying to finish The Desert Spear and other projects, and both of us were struggling as new parents. The last thing we had time for was house hunting. Plus all of our friends are around here and we love the neighborhood. I would be loathe to give up having Prospect Park practically right across the street.

A solution presented itself in the form of buying a separate studio apartment in the same building and turning it into an office, then making the old office Cassie’s room.

It took MONTHS to close the deal because of the mortgage crisis. I pride myself on having excellent credit, but even that isn’t enough when you get paid in sporadic advances and royalties rather than a steady check. At least now. A year ago, those same banks were beating down my door with offers, but now, because of the greed of a small portion of assholes, the rest of us suffer.

But I digress…

We just closed on the apartment, and over the next few days I will be converting it from a poorly maintained unit with good architecture into my own personal hobbit-hole, beautiful and cozy and welcoming. A place where visitors will immediately feel at home and be reluctant to leave.

But it also needs to be my place of retreat, a sanctum sactorum. Fortress of Solitude. Batcave. Holmes Library. Eyrie. Whatever you want to call it. The place I go to be alone with my thoughts as I walk the Krasian Desert in my mind, or venture north into the mountains of Miln. A place of Power, where I am surrounded by things I loved as a child and continue to love today. The books and comics that shaped me. The toys I used to send on such detailed adventures. The art people have made based on my work. My sword collection. Etc.

I will be keeping something of a video diary of this process on my YouTube channel. I realize that the vast majority of readers of this blog don’t care about this stuff, but for my friends and family and any fans who enjoy a good episode of This Old House, the first two videos, my “before” tour of the apartment, are up now: Before Tour 1 and Before Tour 2.

Posted on October 2, 2009 at 2:13 am by PeatB
Filed under Craft, Interviews, Life, Musings
5 Comments »

Ray of Sunshine

It’s been a rough couple of weeks. Even after my jinxed week, there’s been a huge confluence of stressful things in my life. Two weeks of Jury Duty, copyedits to Desert Spear, finishing Brayan’s Gold (my new young Arlen Messenger novelette), closing on my office studio so Cassie can finally get her own room, rush renewing my expired passport (it expired during my jinxed week, of course) so I can visit the set of Resident Evil 4 (in 3D) and meet with the film people, putting together progress materials on The Daylight War, etc., etc.

For the most part, it’s all good stuff, or at least frustrating stuff that will end in good stuff, but more and more I’ve been feeling the weight of being a grown-up, of having no one to turn to when life problems need solving, and, now that Cassie’s come along, no ability to just cancel everything for a day and crash. I miss being a kid.

But then yesterday, when I was dragging myself out of the courthouse after a frustrating day, about to get rained on by a threatening sky, I checked my e-mail on my phone and saw that one of my fans had sent me this letter:

Hi Peat!

Maybe you remember me. I’m Iris, the german Fangirl. I made the Grimoire, remember? ^^

Well, I’m writing you (again), because I did some Fanart (again). I drew a picture of Arlen, or better the painted man. Yesterday evening. I went to bed at 1:30 AM and yes, I went to school this morning.

I just wanted to let you know, because I think after your “jinxed” week and all the stress you have to handle at the moment, that this would make you happy.^^

http://rainbow-sword.deviantart.com/art/The-painted-man-Arlen-138635661

And your wonderful book, let me smile this week again. Cause I met an american fan of your book via the internet (on deviantart.com. Caught you ;)) . And we are both a little bit frustrated, that there isn’t one real fansite at the wonderful internet. Maybe well make one of our own, but that’s still very vague or better unsure.

kind regards

Iris

She included this picture with the e-mail:

Rainbow_Sword_Arlen_web

Thank you, Iris. You made my day!

Posted on September 30, 2009 at 10:18 am by PeatB
Filed under Cassie, Contests, Desert Spear, Fan Art, Fans, Germany, Life
4 Comments »

Word of the Day

Hey all, sorry I’ve been so quiet on the blog lately. In addition to 9 hours a day of jury duty all last week and this, I’ve been proofing 881 pages of Desert Spear copyedits, working on a new Arlen Messenger novellette, trying to close on my new office studio (which I will immediately need to paint and repair before I can move my desk in), working on the outline for The Daylight War (due next month), and making plans to fly out to meet movie people and attend the World Fantasy Convention next month.

Plus the whole husband/daddy thing.

As a result, I have had very little time to myself, and while I have a TON of material I want to blog about, I am usually too fried to get to it. Thankfully, this convergence of stressful events will soon be over, and the Peephole will get interesting again.

In the meantime, I leave you with last Friday’s Word of the Day.

Posted on September 28, 2009 at 9:11 am by PeatB
Filed under Desert Spear, Life, Movie, Writing
7 Comments »

Jinxed

Apologies to my mom for all the cursing in this entry, but it’s been an interesting week.

Sunday was the Brooklyn Book Festival, which was pretty fun. The weather was perfect, and the festival drew a  sizable crowd. There were kids activities and cool swag and semi-celebrities like that guy who played Vizzini and Grand Negus Zek, or that guy that writes those Star Trek books Dani likes. NY ComicCon took over a whole parking lot, and had some cool panels, signings, and vendors. I was on their Sci Fi and Fantasy in NYC panel, which was great fun. It was a well attended panel with the right number of speakers and a broad topic. Dave Roman did a great job moderating, and I got to hang with my con buddy SC Butler.

After the panel was my signing, which was kind of a letdown. I sold one book right away and another girl asked me to sign her notebook, and then I spent the next hour feeling like a wallflower at a party. I realize this is par for the course, especially for new writers like me, but it’s still a phobia of mine.

Once, when I was a kid, my mom planned this big birthday party for me. I was all dressed up in my parents basement, which was decorated with streamers, Spider-man plates & napkins, etc. But it was February, and a blizzard hit. A bad one. Absolutely no one came. I was left in that room by myself, feeling like I didn’t have a friend in the world. Ever since, I’ve had this terror of planning events that no one shows up to. Every time I throw a party, I get butterflies in my stomach and can’t stop pacing the floor until at least 10 people show up. Thankfully, I had a couple of friends there, in addition to Dani and the baby, to keep me from feeling too unloved.

That night, one of my teeth was strangely sensitive.

Monday I went for a walk in the park, and then stopped at Terrance Bagels on Prospect Park West for a sandwich. It was awesome. Honey maple turkey on a sesame bagel with lettuce, tomato, salt & pepper, bacon, and a dash of mayo. Perfection.

I took it to a bench in the park and ate it while reading Ender’s Game. Delightful. But then, as I was chewing, there was this horrific crunch. I reached into my mouth to pull out the offending object, and thought it was a bone. That was odd, finding a bone in deli meat, but I shrugged and tossed it away, going back to eating.

But the more I thought about it, the more I realized that it wasn’t a bone. It was too shiny and enameled. It was part of a tooth. A human tooth.

Immediately, my writer’s brain took over. How did a tooth get in my sandwich? Was someone murdered at the meat packing plant? Caught in a machine? Should I take it back to the store and complain? I started thinking about the hoax a few years ago where someone claimed they found a human finger in their fast food and sued the chain. Can you get a disease from biting into someone’s tooth? It’s surely not sanitary.

But then I gave a start and a light bulb flickered on in my head. With dawning horror, I put a finger in my mouth. Sure enough, the tooth that had been sensitive the night before was now missing a huge chunk. I bit down experimentally. No pain. Huh. I called the dentist and booked an appointment for Wednesday. Looks like I’m getting old. Next thing, I’ll fall out of bed and break my hip.

Tuesday we had a full schedule. Cassie needed her last pediatric orthopedist visit to make sure her hip dysplasia was cured. We had to go up to Lennox Hill hospital on 77 & Lex in Manhattan for that, which is a hellish place to park. Indeed, it took me a half hour of circling to find a spot several blocks from the hospital. Cassie checked out fine. They measured her and the tape said she was practically perfect in every way.

Then Dani had a doc appt. on 73 & Park. Another half hour to find a spot. After that it was around 2:30 and I just wanted to go home and work, but Dani wanted to get some stuff at Bed Bath & Beyond, so we headed over to the BB&B on 61st and 2nd. Lo and behold, we found a spot immediately! Huzzah! It was one a metered street packed with cars. I put an hour in the meter and we went inside it was 2:45pm.

35 minutes later we come out, loaded with packages, and the car is gone.

Just gone.

Dani was about to call the cops, but the owner of a diner on the corner came out and told us it was towed. Apparently, the street switches to a no parking zone at 3pm. He says they do this every day. The traffic cops stand on the street at 2:59 and pre-write the ($115) tickets so they can put them on the cars the SECOND it turns 3. Then they call the tow trucks that come at 3:01 ($185 to get your car back from impound).

3pm. Who ever heard of that shit? I look up, and there is a bent sign, twisted behind a lamp post and half-hidden by some tree branches.

So we’re trapped in the city with no car, a baby, and a shitload of packages. We can’t take a cab, because we don’t have a car seat, and it’s illegal to drive with a baby without one. I go to the cop who wrote the ticket (he was directing traffic), and ask him WTF. He shrugs and tells me that’s what I get for parking illegally. I tell him I am stuck with a baby and no way to get to the impound lot and ask if there’s anything he can do to help. He shrugs and tells me this is NYC. (Translation: “Go fuck yourself”.) I ask if he can at least tell me where they took my friggin’ car. He says 33 and 12th. This is ALL the way across and down town. It is also WRONG. The impound lot is on 38th. Asshole. Is your mother proud of you? I doubt it.

We end up calling Dani’s stepmother to pick her and the baby up while I go get the car. Of course, it is a huge pain in the ass where I am treated like a fucking criminal.

I have a lot of respect for police in general. It is a hard job that pays shit, often puts you in harm’s way, and gets you little respect or thanks, even though it is absolutely necessary for our civilized society to function.

But that said, laying a trap so you can steal my fucking car in the middle of the day and extort $300 out of me doesn’t engender much love. I realize the city is broke, but I don’t see why bad city management makes it okay to use mobster tactics rob the citizenry. My car wasn’t blocking a fire hydrant or hospital entrance. It wasn’t in front of a driveway or loading dock. It wasn’t blocking traffic, and the street wasn’t even busy. It was at a meter with fucking time on it! They knew I would have to be back in 45 minutes either way. Was it REALLY necessary to fucking TOW the car?

No, of course not. They just wanted an excuse to jack me out of more money. Where does car theft fit in the serve and protect motto?

By the time we got everything settled, it was rush hour, so we were stuck in the city anyway. Got home at 8:30, almost five hours later than we should have.

Wednesday I went to the dentist. He said I needed a crown, and should come back the next day to get fitted. I stroll out, and decide to stop at the bank on my way home. I have a bunch of checks to deposit. Over $10K, actually. For a moment I think I should go to a teller because it is an unusually big deposit, but the checks are all neatly written and Chase bank has those fancy check scanners in the ATMs now, so I just go to the machine.

The machine took the checks, but didn’t register them. This happens sometimes, and it spits them back out and tells you to use a teller. I wait for them to come back out.

And wait.

And wait.

There is a grinding noise, and then a message comes up that the machine needs service. Fuck.

I run into the bank and go to the customer service desk, feeling frantic. There are 4 women at the desk. One is going through papers, the other three are standing around chatting. None of them are helping customers. Whew.

“The ATM just ate over ten thousand dollars of my checks!” I cry. “Can someone please help me?”

No one even looks up. One of the chatting women glances at me for a split second, not even making eye contact, and holds up a hand. “Just a minute,” she says.

You know how cartoon characters sometimes get so mad that steam comes out of their ears? That was how I felt in that moment. “Maybe you didn’t hear me,” I snapped. “The ATM in your bank just ate TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS of my money. Will one of you please help me right the hell now?” I wasn’t quiet about it, either. People all around looked up.

The woman who had talk-to-the-handed me sighs and turns to me, all pissed off. She doesn’t make eye contact even now. Just takes my info, gets her keys, and goes into the room behind the machines. A few minutes later, she returns with the mangled checks, pushing them at me still without meeting my eyes. “If you don’t trust the ATM, use a teller,” she said.

“Why are you acting like I’m the jerk here?” I ask. “I’m sorry I raised my voice (I wasn’t, really), but when I come in with a legitimate emergency and none of the FOUR of you can even be bothered to look up, what do you expect?”

It’s clear she doesn’t give a shit. I consider looking for the manager, but decide I have better things to do and storm over to the teller to deposit the checks.

Thursday I was scared to leave the house. I was feeling jinxed. But I wanted to get fitted for the crown ASAP, because I am starting Jury Duty Friday. I go and listen to the sounds of drilling in the waiting room before I’m called in.

The dentist gives me a shot of Novocaine and starts drilling. As he does, he starts muttering. “Oh, no. Not good. Not good. Aw, geez. Lots of decay here. Uh-oh. Nope.” Then he looks at me.

“I can’t save this tooth,” he says. “Since you’re already numb, I suggest you have it pulled right now. I can refer you to an oral surgeon uptown.” Thirty minutes later, I am in the surgeon’s chair as he grunts and twists the pliers in my mouth.

“It’s not moving,” says. “Gonna have to cut it in half.”

Twenty excruciating minutes follow. I’ll spare you the details. Suffice it to say the day cost me another $955. Good thing I have dental insurance… oh, wait. I don’t.

So now it’s Thursday night. I feel like I’ve been punched in the jaw, and am still tasting blood. Tomorrow I need to be at the Brooklyn Borough Hall (also the location of the Book Festival) at 9am to begin serving on a Grand Jury. No choice in the matter; I’ve been drafted. Grand Juries meet every day for a month.

A fucking MONTH. Who has that much of their life to spare? Screwed by the city twice in one week.

Hopefully that is the only bad thing that will happen tomorrow. I’m wondering if I accidentally walked under a ladder or broke a mirror.

Thankfully, when I am feeling beaten down by life, I have my own personal Tony Robbins to get me fired up and ready to go.

***UPDATE***

So I went in to Jury Duty, and found out that I was only assigned to a two week (10 business day) turn instead of a month. Granted that is “less bad” luck rather than good, but while I was there I put a dollar in a vending machine for a $.75 Snickers bar, and got $.50 change!

A small sign, perhaps, but after the week I’ve had, I will take it as evidence of an uptick.

Posted on September 17, 2009 at 11:58 pm by PeatB
Filed under Appearances, Cassie, Life, Musings
16 Comments »