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Tornados, Owls, and HootersJune first in the year of our Lord, 2001
Greetings from BFE...
Forward this e-mail or I'm
sending out self-nudie pics with the next rant...yes that is a threat!
Old business:
E-mail regarding the last
newsletter.
Q.) Are you serious about
this?
A.) Hell yeah...what
would give you the idea I wasn't?
Q.) Why do you insist on
making fun of people?
A.) Could be worse, I
could be making fun of you...
Got a question or comment, drop me a line at:
racox@officetex.com
Wondering what you've missed? Check out
previous installments of my newsletter at: http://www.racox.com/photo.htm
+++
Sorry this is late, I was planning
a rant about living in BFE vs. living in town, and I was trying to think of
the things I love about living in the country -- then an F3
tornado came within a couple of miles of my house and I lost my concentration.
Hey, it's a better excuse than
the dog ate it...
What is so great about BFE
anyway?
The people? They
are salt of the Earth type folk out here in BFE, real eyelets in the Bible
belt I tell ya. There's our closest neighbors who have the farm
across the road and are nice enough to share their herbicide with us everytime
they spray their fields -- the apple tree's really needed to go anyhow.
There's our phone guy, who is nice enough to stop by and check our phone
service everytime my wife decides to sunbathe in the back yard -- I've
noticed the phone goes out alot around these parts? There's the former
owner of the place where we now live -- the government foreclosed on him
four years ago, but he still drives by every now and then just to check on our
welfare -- the unexplained fires have even stopped now.
There are other great things
about living in BFE -- I've brought up the convenience of being able to pee
anywhere and at anytime I want before, and I wouldn't bring it up again
except that...well that's just a really big plus for me. There's the
privacy -- at least there will be when we figure out where the phone guy has
his telescope set up. There's the wide variety of weather -- which is
fine as long as we never live in a trailer house again. There's the
quiet communing with nature -- owls big enough to eat cats and
chiuauauaauas (no really, that's a plus), mosquitoes big enough to stand flat
footed an analy rape a turkey, coyotes that yap at all hours of the night.
There's the skunk that periodically takes up residence in the crawl space
under our house -- him and the owls must have a truce of somekind. I can
go outside naked if I want or need too -- that would certainly throw the
phone guy off and chase the coyotes away...however I worry about the owls.
But seriously, I wouldn't have
it any other way. Now I have to cut this short -- I need to prepare
my emergency provisions, first aid kit, and camping gear to go into town to
rent movies and pick up some Dairy Queen for supper. Be back next
week...
+++
The Cox family kid quote of the
week comes from Rhoan -- again. We were loading the kids up to go
out to the ranch the other day, and I was communing with nature (peeing in the
tall grass) as I'm apt to do, when Rhoan looks over at me and says,
"Daddy, I have a fatter hooter than you!"
It was cold that evening...I
swear. I wouldn't have included this in the newsletter at all except
that my wife would have told you anyhow...she's told everyone else.
+++
Some good news to report, my
short story "Mysterious Ways" has made it as a finalist in the
Panhandle Professional Writers Contest. I let you know how it goes after
the awards banquet at the Frontiers in Writing Conference next weekend. You
can read "Mysterious Ways" here: http://www.horrorauthors.net/gallows/cuttingedge/mysterious.htm
I've been getting some very
good responses on The Sword of God, but I'm also hearing from people
have missed installments or are getting a certain amount of html gobbelty gook
in their e-mail. You don't have to miss a thing, the Installments are
posted at: http://www.racox.com/excerpts.htm
Until next week, don't let the
owls get your chiuauauauaua...
R.A.
"Size doesn't matter..." ~ Anonymous
Copyright (c) 2001, R.A. Cox, All Rights Reserved.
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