Doc's Codicil
by Gary
F. Jones
GENRE: Family humor, mystery
BLURB:
When
Wisconsin veterinarian Doc dies, his family learns that to inherit his fortune,
they must decipher the cryptic codicil he added to his will—“Take Doofus
squirrel-fishing”—and they can
only do that by talking to Doc’s friends, reading
the memoir Doc wrote of a Christmas season decades earlier, searching through
Doc’s correspondence, and discovering clues around them. Humor abounds as this
mismatched lot tries to find time in their hectic lives to work together to
solve the puzzle. In the end, will they realize that fortune comes in many
guises?
Doc’s Codicil is a mystery told with gentle humor.
It tells the story of a veterinarian who teaches his heirs a lesson from the
grave.
Excerpt:
The
house was dark except for the pool of light thrown by a lamp behind my chair
and small multi-colored Christmas lights surrounding the window on my left. The
lights gave a dim but cheerful glow to the edge of the room. The crystal,
silver, and pastel globes on the Christmas tree standing against the opposite
wall reflected that light, and as the furnace kicked in, the reflections danced
across the wall, betraying currents of warm air moving gently about the room.
Heat,
wonderful heat. I gave my wine glass a twist to celebrate feeling my toes
again. The liquid ruby swirled round the glass, as I offered a silent toast to
Mary, may she sleep soundly tonight. On the second glass, I was startled by a
swoosh of air exhaled by the cushion of a wing-backed chair to my left. I
glanced at the chair, but couldn’t bring it into focus. Contacts must be dirty,
I thought and returned to my book.
I
. . . poured a third glass. This had to be the last. Tomorrow would be another
fourteen-hour workday. I took another bite of Stilton, crumbly yet creamy, a
pungent and savory blue with a background of cheddar, when I heard a throat
clear.
I
put my book down and looked around the room. Empty.
.
. . A shadow moved in the dining room .
. . “Who’s there? What the hell is going on?” I whispered.
A
man’s voice came from the kitchen. “Cripes, some host you are.”
Guest
post:
The
teacher who taught me to write.
Whatever
skill I have as a writer I owe to Joe Thicke, the English teacher I had through
all four years of high school. Having a teacher for four years would have been
unlikely had the school been larger. There were only about 200 students, and
that was freshman through senior year. That fit a rural community of 912.
He
was a little sparrow of a man, although his glasses made me think of an owl. As
a freshly minted college graduate, he was only about eight years older than my
classmates and me. We were one of the first classes he had as a teacher, and
after four years, it was clear we were his favorite class. That’s not to imply
he didn’t have a temper. I remember him going in seconds from normal to beet
red and bellowing when the son of a school board member pulled some nonsense in
class.
Mr.
Thicke enjoyed teaching writing and literature, and taught them no matter what
the syllabus said was supposed to be covered. He taught me how to write a
sentence, how to structure a paragraph and an essay, and introduced me to the
Elizabethan, Cavalier, and Restoration poets, the satirist Jonathan Swift, and
the eighteenth century novelists Daniel Defoe, Henry Fielding, and Voltaire. At
least those are the ones I can remember after fifty years.
My
fondness for Fielding’s The History
of Tom Jones, a Foundling may have been partly due to the release of Tom
Jones, the movie, in 1963. Sex had been a taboo topic in public until
then—married couples in movies and on television slept in twin beds—until Tom
Jones hit the screen. Ministers and teachers thundered against the movie,
which probably doubled the audience.
Thicke discussed the
book and the movie in class. He approved of both. I saw the movie six times,
and still remember the comic use of narration and the harpsichord. Because of
Thicke, I was probably a better writer when I graduated from high school than I
am now, but at that age I had nothing to say. I’ve run into enough walls since
then to have learned a little about life.
Mr. Thicke didn’t fare as
well. A few years after I graduated, he seemed to suffer a nervous breakdown
and died by his own hand.
AUTHOR BIO:
According
to Gary Jones, his life has been a testament to questionable decisions and
wishful thinking. His wife of forty years, however, says she knows of nothing
in the record to justify such unfettered optimism. Jones says the book is a
work of fiction; that's his story, and he’s sticking to it.
He’s part of the last
generation of rural veterinarians who worked with cows that had names and
personalities, and with dairymen who worked in the barn with their families.
He’s also one of those baby boomers, crusty codgers who are writing their wills
and grousing about kids who can be damned condescending at times.
Gary practiced bovine
medicine in rural Wisconsin for nineteen years. He then returned to graduate
school at the University of Minnesota, earned a PhD in microbiology, and spent
the next nineteen years working on the development of bovine and swine
vaccines.
Doc's Codicil is the bronze medal winner
of Foreward's INDIEFAB Book of The Year awards, humor category.
Links:
Giveaway:
$20 Amazon or Barnes and Noble GC
Follow the tour and comment; the more you comment, the better your chances of winning.
5 comments:
Again, thank you for hosting
Great post - I enjoyed reading it. Thanks for sharing :)
Victoria, glad you liked it. There are quite a few as good or better in the book.
What a fun concept. I'm going to love this.
Thanks Mary. I hope you find it a blast. If you're in a cold part of the country, you will empathize with some of Doc's problems with the weather.
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