Thursday, October 27, 2016

Sisters Blend Magic, Music, and Mythology




Fox Point - Lisa and Lori Minneti are identical twin sisters who have done everything together.
They have been friends their entire lives, hanging out in the same social circle.
Now they have written a book together.

They will promote their book, "Hazel Moon," at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 1, with a visit to North Shore Library.

In writing "Hazel Moon", they reminisced about their 20s, when their lives were defined by new wave music acts like Echo and the Bunnymen. They got into the band because of Lori's late husband, Kent Parco, who was in Take Me, a Racine new wave band that opened for Duran Duran and Cheap Trick. Their love of new wave music surpassed appreciation, more closely resembling devotion.

"We didn't want to be anywhere else than seeing Take Me," Lori said. "The music was everything."

In "Hazel Moon," the Minneti twins blend their love for new wave music with Lisa's interest in mysticism. The sisters plan to write a trilogy of books in the same style, influenced by alternative music and the 13 cycles of the Celtic moon. They are in the process of writing a book pairing the Hawthorn Moon and grunge music from the 1990s.

The main characters in "Hazel Moon" are November and Angela, outsiders who spend their day at the mall and are planning to head to an Echo and the Bunnymen show that night. The characters were based on their experience, although they said they don't identify with one character over another.

"There's things about them that are like us, but as we were writing them they took on a life of their own," Lisa said.

"There's magic that happens in the writing process where things which just evolve and all of a sudden it works," Lori added.

Lisa, of Fox Point, is an interior designer, and Lori is an actress, singer and host of "Builders Showcase" on Fox 6. Lisa said she first got the idea to write a novel when she saw a brochure at a library. They say they never really grew up, which is how they created a book that appeals to teens and young adults, as well as older readers who appreciate mysticism and 1980s nostalgia.

Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Giving Back to the Library Culture





Taking Hazel Moon Full Circle...Lisa here, I was near my home in Fox Point and decided to stop in to our local North Shore Library. Our novel, Hazel Moon, got its start in a similar library almost 10 years ago now, when after spending time in the library I noticed a brochure about how to write a novel. 



Ten years later, I was feeling the need to give back and so I approached the librarian, told them about our novel, and suggested that Lori and I hold a seminar where we discuss the Celtic legends and lore connected to our story. We were given an enthusiastic green light, I gave them some of our books to make available to check out, and we're in the process of setting up the date for the full-circle experience of giving something back to the library culture that has meant so much to both our lives and to the lives of countless other children and adults!


Great Minds...




When Lori and I decided on the name for our main Hazel Moon character, November Rainer Savitchian, the inspiration came from knowing a good friend who was Armenian and recognizing that many minorities feel the sting of discrimination during their lives. We wanted to address that issue through our character of November.

Well, I guess Great Minds Think Alike because...

Our recent Facebook post: 

CBS writers "borrowed" our character idea!! In the new CBS YA film, Middle School, an Armenian boy, Rafe Katchadorian, can't stand all the regimentation and rules and decides to rebel...sounds a little like our beloved rebel, November Rainer Savitchian!!! Go CBS!! Of course, James Patterson, the author of the Middle School book series came up with the idea first, but honestly we did not know about "Rafe" when creating our character, November.

Here's a summary of the series: Imaginative quiet teenager Rafe Katchadorian is tired of his middle school's obsession with the rules at the expense of any and all creativity. Desperate to shake things up, Rafe and his best friends have come up with a plan: break every single rule in the school and let the students run wild.

PS Note, the film is based on a bestselling book series, which reminds us that if we want our dream to come true, to have a film made based on our Hazel Moon series, we've got to find a wider and growing audience of avid readers!

Friday, September 16, 2016

Turner Hall - Echo and the Bunnymen Concert





Last night, Thursday, September 15, 2016, was the Eve of a Full Celtic Moon, by Celtic tradition, a Vine Moon, shining brightly on the iconic venue, Turner Hall, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where Echo and the Bunnymen were playing a concert. We'd hoped to have more of our friends and family there, but early on we only bought a handful of tickets, then, the concert sold out. Yes, this band from the '80s is still relevant. Our gifted cover photographer, Larry Zamba, was in the house along with our publisher, and our dear friend, Kelly, who will play our character, Mrs. Casimir, when we produce our book trailer.



When Lori and I learned of the concert date a couple of months ago we could hardly believe our good fortune. In a magical example of Life Imitating Art, Echo and the Bunnymen, a central character in our novel, Hazel Moon, was performing at a music festival on the Eve of a Hazel Moon. By what magic did the actual band show up on an actual Eve of a Full Celtic Moon in the real world Lori and I live in? But that morsel of mystifying magic is just the beginning.



Lori chose a black leather dress and fishnet stockings. The dress was a gift 30 years earlier from the actual man who inspired the Cash Reynolds character in our novel. This guy was a gambler and whenever he won big he'd share his good fortune with his friends and family. The fishnets turned out to be the actual ones Lori wore for the Hazel Moon cover shot (see below).



On the drive to Turner Hall Lori was reminiscing about the past times she'd seen the band live. Thirty years ago, in 1983, The Bunnymen played a concert near our hometown, Racine, Wisconsin, at the Uptown Theater in Milwaukee. Lori wanted to go, expecting to run into Kent Parco, the mysterious bass player of Take Me, but without someone to go with her Lori ended up not going. Kent was there and later on at the show last night she ran into several people who had been to that Uptown concert!



Kent and Lori soon became an item and by the time she did see The Bunnymen live in concert, she was married to Kent and the concert took place in Chicago around the year 2002. Kent, a fine musician in his own right, a bass player with the local band, Take Me, had taken to The Bunnymen and their music inspired the song lyrics and style for his band. When Lori got married, the wedding band played a Bunnymen tune, "Do It Clean" which the band played last night! Some years later, when Kent died, which followed the passing of our brother, Mark, Lori and I began conceiving of a story, a novel where we could honor their memories and Hazel Moon was born.





For Lori the night was filled with nostalgia, fond memories of the good days with Kent and cherishing his connection to Echo and the Bunnymen. Last night Lori mentioned how wrong she was about Ian, the lead singer. Before she actually saw the band Lori had the impression that Ian was a nerd of sorts, in a good way, but last night she was blown away by his superstar status, charisma on stage, and his vocal musicianship. 






Being a singer herself, she noticed he had four choices of things to drink to sooth his throat. She also noticed that he'd protected his voice early on, but as he warmed up his voice got stronger and impressively stronger. Lori even suspected he'd cut way back on his smoking, once a feature of his brand and only noticed him taking a couple of drags on a cig during the concert. Last fall we'd taken a spontaneous road trip to Detroit, to the Fillmore, for an Echo concert. Lori remembered that Ian, imitating the artists' voices quite well, covered both Frank Sinatra and Elvis songs and we got the feeling he thought of himself as being quite the crooner! The writer in us pitched some ideas about a new novel focusing on The Bunnymen exploring the idea that Ian leaves the band to pursue a new kind of singing career.




Before the concert we'd actually connected with the band via email, told them about our book, got on the guest list, and even was given a small table from which to promote Hazel Moon. We absolutely believe it would be a win-win for the band to get behind our marketing efforts. During the concert Lori and I went up close to the stage and noticed a whole passel of younger female fans. There music is that good, classic, and now timeless and our book could help build their fan base among this new generation.



After the show, we managed to interest a number of fans in our book and even though we weren't supposed to, sold a copy to a guy who had not only been at that first Bunnymen concert in Milwaukee 30 years ago, but who just happened to be longtime buds with my guy, Jeff. We got a strong feeling that our novel would be a big hit with The Bunnyman fans...and there are thousands and thousands of them!! Let's hope the marketing seeds sown that night will take root!!!

https://www.lulu.com/shop/search.ep?keyWords=Hazel+Moon+Lisa+Lori+Minneti&type=

All in all, we were encouraged and intend to keep putting ourselves and our wonderful novel, Hazel Moon, out there!

PS PIC

We were thrilled to have gotten enough attention from the band that they put us on their guest list for the concert. Here's the ticket envelope with Lori's name on it!!!  


 

Sunday, August 7, 2016

Armenian Fest Book Signing



Our Hazel Moon protagonist, November Rainer Savitchian, proudly Armenian, was inspired by one of our dear friends over the years, also Armenian, Christine Martin (on the right in the picture below). Early on in the process of conceiving, writing, and publishing our book we'd imagined sharing it with members of the Armenian Diaspora living here in America, but especially in our home town, Racine, Wisconsin. Well, today, that dream became a reality!

 


 


 

An unexpected celebrity was seated only a few feet from our book signing table upping the wow factor for our overall experience! Speaker of the House, Paul Ryan, made an appearance to the delight of many of his supporters who had attended Armenian Fest!



One of the first amazing things that happened involved life imitating art. In the Prologue of our book, Hazel Moon, there is a scene where November has a Turkish Coffee drink prepared for her by a barista...and...not 10 feet from our book signing table was a vendor preparing, yes, Armenian (Turkish) Coffee!! Lori had just driven back from a long weekend performing up north and the delicious coffee was just the stimulant ticked to get up back up for the signing. (of course we had to drink our coffee from a straw!)



A note to you aspiring writers out there, getting your book published is just the first hurdle. Getting our book accepted by the Armenian Fest committee took persistence and perseverance, but in the end it was all well worth it.



The committee was looking for Armenian characters in any book before they would consider the authors for a book signing during their once-a-year festival. We had to provide an advance copy, some weeks passed, fortunately the church librarian, Pam, immediately returned a follow-up call, supporting the book, making everything possible. It was her influence that just got Hazel Moon accepted in time for the August 7th festival date.



The people running the cultural center could not have been nicer, engaged us about the book and it's Armenian character, November, gave us suggestions which we plan to use to up the Armenian factor in the book and or in its sequel, Hawthorn Moon.



For example, I wanted to honor the colors of the Armenian flag, red, blue, and apricot, by painting my nails those colors, but speaking with one of our customers, an Armenian professor, we learned that the colors of the flag had been a source of contention creating factions in the Armenian Diaspora.



But in 1991, with the collapse of the Soviet Empire, Armenian was once again resurrected as an independent country and the original flag with its original colors were once again accepted by all or most Armenians around the globe.



When we were discussing adding a scene with November painting her nails the colors of the flag, that sparked a lively discussion. With the book set in 1984, doing such a thing would have depended on which Armenian faction November's father identified with as to what he would have taught her about honoring the flag and its colors. On the other hand, November was something of a rebel anyway, her mother had died, then her father, so without being affiliated with an Armenian church, we all agreed that adding such a scene would be true to the character and not pose an ethical problem for today's Armenian reader.


So many wonderful people stopped by our book signing station, a number of them purchased books, but what was most surprising was their level of engagement and respect for our project once they learned that it featured an Armenian protagonist.




The professor was pleased that our story didn't focus on the Holocaust. He'd been hoping more authors would use fiction to describe the more modern experience of members of today's Armenian Diaspora, exploring the challenges of adapting to modern life in America and or in the Armenian conclaves anywhere else in the world.



When our book signing period ended, it was off to sample the wonderful ethnic food; the sarma and the hummus and the cheese beoreg squares, and the lahmajoon, the kebobs and pastries; the bourmah, mavish, shekerlama, zylook, katah and choreg, meet and greet a few other people, but then it was out to enjoy the music.




And the dancing...




Lori and I are known to be unable to just sit and watch when the right kind of music hits our ears. True to form, we tried to hold back, but first Lori...










...then I joined in...



...and amazingly Lori's performance practically stopped the band as they were transfixed by her beauty, grace, charm, and unique allure on the dance floor!



A wonderful time was had by all, our book signing was an unqualified success, and we felt grateful to have been able to share our story and our character, November Rainer Savitchian, with these incredible people today.





















   

Saturday, July 23, 2016

Q & A with authors Lisa & Lori Minneti





Hazel Moon authors, Lisa & Lori Minneti, candidly answer several questions related to their writing process and what inspired the writing of their novel in this series of videos.



In this first video they describe what it was like to be such close sisters and how it contributed to their collaborating on developing the story and characters for their novel, Hazel Moon.



In this next video they honestly share that working together wasn't always smooth sailing, there were disagreements and sometimes hard choices that had to be made!



Lisa and Lori have been in love with the concert culture forever and in this video they give their take on what it was like to be "groupies" although Lori disagrees strongly, insisting she was a "band-aid" not a groupie!



In the next video the authors discuss their opinions about the magic referenced throughout their novel and whether it has any relevance to their real lives and the real world.



In the final video the authors explain just how important the role of music was to both their lives and to the drafting of their novel.



Find below a more detailed Q&A

The Sister Angle

Q — How do two sisters — identical twins that obviously share a lot for starters — write a novel together?

Lisa: Twins are usually so close because they share all those memories at the exact same age from the moment they’re born. That’s certainly the case with Lori and I. We ended up writing about a time in our lives, growing up with music, when we fell in love with both life and the concert culture. All the characters and the plot were adapted from both our personal experiences. Though I was the one who acted like the secretary and wrote everything down, we were both critical to the process of creating the novel, both contributing ideas and shaping the scenes before pen hit paper.

Lori: The spark that led to writing Hazel Moon came from the untimely passing of our beloved brother, Mark, and my husband, Kent Parco. Shortly after their deaths we began writing Hazel Moon primarily to honor their lives through sharing our lives as adapted in the characters and storyline of Hazel Moon. That was nine years ago. A year ago we met our publisher who took on the project and the book was released in December of 2015.

Q — Did you and Lori ever disagree on how the plot of the story should develop, what should happen next, the end of the book?

Lori: Of course we disagreed…we’re sisters, after all, but we’re also the kind of sisters who supported each other, and were happy for the other sister's successes and contributions.

Lisa: That attitude carried over into drafting the novel. It was always about sharing, not competing. When we did disagree, I usually deferred to Lori. For example, in the final chapter Lori insisted I change a line that Lady Luna said, and I did just that!

Q — Which one of you would consider to be a more creative thinker?

Lori: Weve always been creative. We’re both drawn to the arts music color design song acting, and though we have our strengths Lisa’s more about color and design while my creative outlet has always been the stage, and I've been on many, acting, singing, and as a television personality.

Lisa: I always saw Lori as the creative one. Being with my sister makes me feel like there’s a novel to be written inspired by each day in her amazingly creative soul. I’ve always thought of myself as being more mysterious.


Life vs. Fiction

Q — How much of your real-life experience went into Hazel Moon?

Lisa: Well, on one page our protagonist, November, might be doing something Lori had done in the past, while on another page November or Angela might be reflecting something I’d done in the past. Everything Lady Luna does, however, that’s all Lori. Anyone who knows us well will see so much of ourselves, our personality traits, our strengths and quirks, embodied in our characters.

Lori: For example, I started it, drinking anything, wine, coffee, cola with a straw, Lisa followed, and our character November is shown drinking from a straw in our story! Of course, since we were young teens we've both been drawn to the concert culture and over the years each of us has attended hundreds of concerts, often together, and that passion is still there. 

Lisa: Last fall we hopped in my Subaru and drove to Detroit to see an Echo and the Bunnymen concert, a road trip made all the more memorable and significant because our novel featured that band. And that band was a symbol for all the wonderful live acts we'd both been present for over the years.

Lori: Our characters, Angela and November, are flawed real human beings and again, anyone who knows us will recognize how much they are patterned after who we are. 


Q — Do you consider yourselves “groupies?”

Lisa: Groupies...Lori would say...NO NO NO...but I might explain that I was one of those girls up in the front right by the stage dancing and screaming at every show of a certain local band and I guess that kind of groupie.

Lori: I wouldn’t really do that. For example with the local band, Take Me, after a show I would sit at the bar and wait for the musician I was interested in, Kent Parco, the bass player, whileLisa insisted he would never come over. To my surprise, he did just that!

Lisa: In one aspect we were both "band-aids" like in the iconic concert culture film, Almost Famous. That meant we didn't sleep with the musicians, we were there for the music, we wanted to support the bands and their invaluable contribution to the concert culture we thrived on.

Lori: Destined to be together, Kent courted me both of us sensing we would have a love affair spanning lifetimes.


Q — Does music effect your every fiber as it does November and Angela?

Lisa: Absolutely...and it's the same for both of us. When we get together at home we're spinning vinyl and reminiscing about songs and albums and bands and concerts.

Lori: I'm constantly learning new songs for new shows I'm performing in.

Lisa: And besides attending many concerts all year round, I'm fond of WMSE 91.7 FM because they showcase lots of local and other music that doesn't necessarily get played on the other stations. So much of the daily joy in our lives revolves around music. For me specifically, I’m never really comfortable indoors unless there’s music playing, outdoors it’s different, walking my dog, being in nature, but when the two are together it’s heavenly. 


Mental Health

Q — November seems to be a troubled individual, self-mutilating and such to relieve stress. What was your research in this topic?

Lori: We wanted to weave in characters with some of the mental health issues that some of our readers might be struggling with, but present them in a nonjudgmental real way.

Lisa: That being said, those issues don’t define the character, it’s not what the character is really about. Everybody has something, some demon they struggle with, so we are challenging the reader to look past the cutting and find what the character is really all about.

Lori: As far as research, we'd had personal experience with someone close to us who slipped into that dark place where stress and depression and deep mood swings led her into cutting as a form of self help. Fortunately, she was able to stop that practice and it is no longer a problem for her. So, our research was personal, not based on medical studies or other information. 


Q — Was it important to bring attention to mental health with November’s challenges, or was it simply a character development tactic?

Lisa: November’s character kept morphing when we were writing, especially when she came to life and began guiding the story and her development, describing herself to us. Many aspects of her transition were really not conscious except that we wanted to create a character people could relate to and root for.

Lori: November's cutting was primarily about character development, a way to let the reader know that if cutting was something they'd experienced, they were not alone. It wasn't about judging the act one way or the other, but it is a serious cultural problem as millions of girls primarily end up hurting themselves as a way to cope with dark periods filled with stress and depression. 

Other

Q — Is Luna a real person or more of a subliminal influence on November’s life?

Lori: Yes, Luna was a real person, someone who born, grew up, but when she died, Lady Luna became a spirit being and in a future sequel we’re planning to concentrate on her.

Lisa: She has one chapter in Hazel Moon, a flashback that reveals some of her past and in future sequels more scenes will be devoted to her past lives so readers can draw parallels between her soul’s growth and theirs.

Lori: One of the reasons Lady Luna became November’s spirit guide is that they share many similar personality traits. Lady Luna, however, knows who she is and knows how to take care of herself first before worrying about November. In the context of our fairytale, then, Luna is a real person, not a figment of November's imagination, like guardian angel might be, or a fairy godmother. Luna can shapeshift and she reincarnates from one lifetime to another.  
  
Q — Have you experienced or do you believe in the kind of mysticism as detailed throughout the book?

Lisa: We really do...in our world Lori and I refer to that kind of mysticism as "Magic" and recognize that magic surrounds most of us every day, often in little things that we can shrug off as mere coincidence when in fact the powers that bring magic into our lives do it to help us spread joy in the world through the knowledge that there is more to life than just what we can see and touch.

Lori: On our blog there are a number of examples of the magic that has accompanied the writing, editing, and publication of Hazel Moon. And those magical incidents have picked up once again as we began working on the sequel, Hawthorn Moon!


Lisa: And, I’ll admit to having quite a collection of Celtic magic spells which I’ve tried out from time to time. Lori’s late husband, Kent Parco, used to tease me about being a white witch. 




Wednesday, June 29, 2016

"Sonny Likes the Sarma!"




For those of you who've been following our blog from the beginning of the literary adventure that our novel Hazel Moon has become, you know that besides all the references to Magic throughout our fictional story, we can't ignore what seems like real magic that has popped up as we've worked on the manuscripts for Hazel Moon and now Hawthorn Moon.



As a summary of some of the remarkable coincidences that accompanied the writing and editing of Hazel Moon, for example within hours of editing a scene where a dead bunny was found on the road, its parts scattered around November's Camaro, our editor found a dead bunny, for the first time ever on his driveway. Within hours of editing a scene involving November and Angela as Marlboro Girls, doing promotion at a festival, that same editor found, for the first time ever while riding his bike through his neighborhood, not 1 but 2 empty packs of Marlboro cigarettes! And again, within hours of working on a scene where Cash Reynolds pulls out a wad of cash, our editor finds a $20 bill for the first time in his life on a driveway.

Hawthorn Moon by VeniceSighs


We weren't really thinking about all that magic, but during the last two months Lori and I have been working diligently on the sequel to Hazel Moon, Hawthorn Moon.



I'd recently gone to our local Armenian Festival, something I'd done many years earlier, but in the opening of Hawthorn Moon there is a scene set at an Armenian Fest.






This year I was determined to get more involved, seeing as I needed to do more research to get that scene in our book right, so for the first time I slipped into the line of dancers, hooked pinkies with the person next to me, and tried as best I could to follow the steps!



When it was time to go home, I'd been given orders to bring home some pastry to our mother, but also decided to get a plate of sarma for our dad. I saved a couple sarma (stuffed grape leaves) to take home, but after a long day, while sliding them into the fridge, the plate tilted, the sarma slipped onto the floor, and my trusty yellow Labrador, Mr. Jake, scarfed them up!!!

OMG...immediately my writer's mind went right to the scene at the beginning of Hawthorn Moon  (find below) where November's dog, Sonny, ended up eating the sarma that our character, Marcus, just couldn't stomach!!

So, you see, the magic is heating up as we get deeper and deeper into developing the manuscript for our sequel, Hawthorn Moon!!!!

ARMENIAN FESTIVAL SCENE FROM HAWTHORN MOON

1




WEEPING WOUNDED HEART

Seattle, May, 1991

I’ve never been in love,
Don’t know what it is,
I only know when someone wants me…
                                                     Jane’s Addiction

“SONNY LIKES THE SARMA,” said a surprised Marcus as the midday spring sun haloed around his natural Afro in a crazy supernova sort of way.
The cap he normally wore was in his pocket…an afternoon thing when he liked his hair to have some freedom.
“Well, of course he does,” I replied, “…we’re pals, but it’s more than that. We’re close, like twins. Sonny ate the sarma cuz he knows that if he offered me some of his kibble, I’d try it…get what I mean?”
My words flowed out amidst the wafting Mediterranean aromas of spicy boreg, a layered pastry often filled with cheese; eech, an Armenian bulgur salad; and lahmajoun, a kind of pizza and a popular street food made with ground lamb, parsley, and tomatoes.
“I haven’t been to an authentic Armenian festival in way too long so this is a big deal for me, I buy some sarma and you won’t even try them…they’re just grape leaves stuffed with rice. Come on, I know you’ve got the chutzpah to choke at least one down.”
“No…nope…I don’t think so, November…I don’t know what it is…I’m not feeling it and one thing I’m not is an ass-kissing hypocrite, but the rest of the fest really kicks! Look, girl, there must be a reason there aren’t any Armenian restaurants…think about it, so it’s not happening, just saying.”
With his last argument, worthy of a Supreme Court chief justice delivering the final word on Roe v. Wade, Marcus put on his charcoal newsboy cap, the style that had skulls with lemon moon eyes looking back at you, and smiled as he fed Sonny, sitting there drooling with anticipation,  another one of his meat-filled sarma. After woofing down the last one, Sonny proceeded to lick clean Marcus’ hands and his long, beautiful deejay digits.

LEERING AT HIM TOOK ME back to his loft, the one above St. Andrew’s Grocery Store. Through my mind’s memory eye I could clearly see the old, peeling vermilion velvet wallpaper and the heavy rustic driftwood beams crisscrossing a ceiling with patches of plaster ready to fall to the floor.
It was the perfect crash pad to sit for hours and read Rilke poetry, such as the line, Perhaps all the dragons of our lives are princesses who are only waiting to see us once beautiful and brave, or listen to a vinyl recording of the great Jimi Hendrix belting out “Hey Joe,” and all while drinking Merlot and chamomile tea at the same time.
His sparse makeshift kitchen contained not much more than a plug-in hot plate and microwave, but my head was swimming with images of boxes upon boxes of cheap macaroni and cheese. While remembering them, I lost my taste for the Armenian delicacies I’d purchased.

WE WERE PRIVILEGED to be at the revival of the only Armenian picnic in the Seattle area. The last one took place over a decade ago. Walking about the grounds we came upon the cultural tent first.
Looking inside, my first step was filled with trepidation. A weird wave of foreboding washed over me, as if I was in a home movie with my father behind the lights and camera. I grabbed on tight to Marcus’ hand, knowing I’d need his support, and walked in with my head held high. 
Capturing our attention immediately was a wall of old photographs. The chilling images were of children, girls, boys, women, and men of all ages dressed for combat. You could see on their stern, stark faces that they were battle-hardened—they’d seen death and dealt death to their enemies.
The most gut-wrenching picture was of a mother and daughter, both weighted down with a double row of heavy caliber belts of machine gun ammunition. They weren’t wearing a uniform, none of them were, but they’d adapted their clothing to be rugged and warm. Their entire society was in a life-and-death struggle for survival and every citizen was forced to become a soldier.
Moving on from their Wall of Valor, we saw an author signing books.
He was Armenian and his books told various stories connected to the Armenian saga. Again, I felt a strange, close, personal connection to him. Something about his head, the shape of his head, like a globe, like a soccer ball…like my father’s.
After purchasing his memoir, a personal story about his growing up Armenian in the Seattle area, we left the cultural tent and walked into their food court.
Smiling at us, hoping to leave us with a cherished memory, were the ethnically charming Armenian ladies in their black hair nets, many stout with dark hair and dark complected, who’d lovingly prepared the food, using recipes handed down from generation to generation, going back to their homeland in the Middle East.
As a result of the Armenian Holocaust in the early 1900s the Diaspora spread all over the world, with a close-knit group from a certain region in Armenia settling in Seattle.
One of the servers noticed that Marcus was turning up his nose at whatever sample she offered him, but she wouldn’t give up. Her aged face had the same black-and-white photograph features I remembered from a picture of my mother that strangely disappeared when I was a girl.
With her classic Armenian gold hoop earrings dangling, her wrists covered in gold cuffs, her eyes were dusted with gold flecks. Stunned, I was reminded of that missing picture of my mother as a young woman—a survivor, her image projecting strength, power, and mystery. It was not a look for parties, but oozed smoldering intensity through eyes constantly at war with a dangerous world. 
It was a face, not unlike my mother’s, one which carried the struggle, pain, and pride of generations—influences that threatened to but didn’t accomplish warping the shape of her heart which was constantly battling with itself. Despite the past I could tell her soul lived in the present joy of a garden of golden pastries—flaky, buttery, rich, and savory.
She looked at me without any judgment, knowing I wasn’t and might never be where she was. She’d earned her survivor’s look of stone—I’d stolen mine.
“You…you try this shakalama…you will like, believe me,” she said, offering a piece to Marcus with the reverence of a priest holding the Holy Eucharist. “It is the sweet taste of Armenia!”
Putting his open hand up as a barrier, Marcus replied, “I know…Armenians can be sweet,” as he paused to look affectionately in my direction, “thank you, but no, darling, not today.”
After that I knew it was going to be a lost cause with Marcus and let him feed his food to Sonny, but somehow what happened made me sense that the day was destined to unfold in some significant, life-changing way that I could have never imagined, something…something was going to happen that would shake our world.

UNABLE TO SHARE SOME OF my cherished ethnic culinary heritage with Marcus was taking me down, but before bottoming out some unusual, imported, and so-damned-honest sounds caught my attention. The festival parking lot came alive with ethnic music and this aspect of Armenian culture my Black boyfriend was interested in tasting.
“Hey…dear Novi…you’ve been holding out on me, these guys are really kickin’ it. Don’t just stand there!”
“But we don’t go to this church?”
That didn’t matter to Marcus who grabbed my hand, waved Sonny on to come along, and we joined the line of folk dancers holding hands and all performing in unison a series of repeating moves with their feet while slowly snaking around the dance area.
The repeating pulsing music became hypnotic, the crescendos exhilarating, the distinctive sound of the kanun gloriously evident, its strings rising above the other instruments, as Marcus and I broke into the human chain joining hands with members of the Kaprelian and the Andykian families—kicking when it was time to kick, swirling and laughing as we were caught up in the collective euphoria of the experience.
Sonny found a spot right by the band and seemed to be dancing in his own way, panting to the beat. The music was mesmerizing, the extended manic sounds, the fairytale dance steps, and there I was with Marcus, right in the heat of the meandering moment, part of an ancient celebration, a ritual featuring thumping hearts the blissful pomp and circumstance of unbridled, free-flowing movement.
Part of that joy was feeling accepted. I wasn’t from their church, Marcus was African American, yet despite our differences we had all become one unified soul joined in harmony by the music and dancing. I could see Marcus dripping sweat on the unusually warm and humid spring day, but you don’t notice minor discomforts like that when you’ve slipped into the Twilight Zone of an Armenian folk dance.
Just then a cooling breeze washed over us making us feel like the sky was dropping cool petals of lily white flowers on us…hmmm…heavenly. Looking up I saw bewitching cotton-ball clouds magically dancing along with the music.
While we were standing on the sidelines catching a rest, Marcus spoke up to break the spell I was under.
“You handle yourself well out there, but I thought Angela was the one who loved to dance, why isn’t she here with us?”
“Believe me, she wanted to but duty called. She’s working a promo.

AT THE LOCAL MALL Angela was with her mother selling fragrances.
“This place is awesome, the folks a little different than the LA crowd, but do you think teal nail polish will work here in Seattle to match the Eternity bottle?”
Angela Gonzales-Gondola was sporting a new sassy shag-do tinted in a pretty Mediterranean off-center red, projecting her most seductive fall-in-love-with-me smile as she captivated a passing couple wearing matching brown hoodies.
“Yep, my baby poopsy, that should work. See, I’ve got on my icy-green fishnets to match the bottle…ooh, I like this song...hippity hoppity, right?” mother Rosa asked as she began to break out in some not-bad street moves, showgirling it in front of their fragrance kiosk for their last kicking gig at the mall.
“Mom…the song is, “Rapper’s Delight,” by the Sugarhill Gang, and the lyrics go, I said a hip hop, hippie to the hippie...  There’s more, Ma, but will you please at least get the first part right, and the name of the rapper from the band is Master Gee,” Angela clarified, while busting out some badass moves of her own.
Glaring at Rosa were several pairs of eyes from their competitors trying their best to push their lines of perfumes, but Angela and Rosa seemed to attract all the fragrance-buying customers that day, and most days, frustrating the other sellers to no end.
Angela answered the final question before closing the deal for the couple who’d been presented with a series of small samples sprayed on business cards, sniffing a jar of strong coffee beans to clear the nose of the previous scent before trying the next.
“Yeah, that’s the one. I like the subtle but strong earth tones…yep, wrap it up and you’ve been a big help describing all the differences between the samples,” the guy from the couple said, obviously flustered from his close encounter of the erotic kind he’d just had with Angela.
Yes, Angela was good at what she did, she knew her fragrances, but the real dance taking place between her and her customers was about raw, sexual chemistry and Angela had it going on in that department. She made the sale to a couple, but it was the guy who first made the move in Angela’s direction, to the consternation of his date as the sales soiree unfolded.
“Game on, Mom…score two more for me…ooooh, Angela is good, now isn’t she!”
They got paid just for being there at the mall and talking up their Calvin Klein line of fragrances. They earned the posh gig of being paid to go on the road merely promoting the company’s fragrances because they were the most successful sales team by far in their district. Beyond that, they had fun competing to see who would end up closing the most customers when the mesmerized person, male or female didn’t seem to make a difference, opened their wallet to buy something they were pitching.
Angela’s bold boast triggered Rosa’s competitive instincts and she didn’t have to take a backseat to anyone. Rosa had been a dancer all her life, her prime cut shapely legs and rounded calves constantly turning heads. Her dancer’s feet were always wrapped in sexy open strap sandals, shoes, and boots, not so much for the open-toe look but because they sweat so much. Adding to her visual impact is a three-inch stunning skunk streak down the center of her long luxurious hair. 
“Watch this, half-pint,” challenged Rosa, eyeing up a fifty-something handsome UPS guy in his brown uniform.
Her pitch usually got the job done. It always began with a huge, broad, welcoming smile boasting lots of teeth and gums to go along with pumping up her shoulders a couple of times like she would do proudly serving a pan of homemade lasagna. But that was just the opening salvo. The UPS driver was about to slip into her seductive sales web.
“Tell me something about your honey. Do you think she’d like a sensual scent or something fun and spirited on you?”
Before he had a chance to answer, Rosa would press the assault after noticing he had a wedding ring on.
“I see you’re married. What is your wife’s name?”
“Kelly,” UPS Guy answered while raising his ring finger to show Rosa.
“Try this, new from Calvin Klein, Eternity for men, but really this fragrance was made for women. In fact Calvin Klein’s wife’s name was Kelly, just like your Kelly. He picked the name Eternity because it carries the magic of the purity of white flowers symbolizes how a man feels when he falls in love with the woman of his dreams, and that kind of love is Eternal…you’re just going to love on it,” Rosa tactfully insisted after setting the romantic stage as she proceeded to spray a sample on him.
This was the risky reverse-seduction phase of the sell. When the right fragrance mixed with the man’s natural scent, the potent pheromones released could be intoxicating, sending Rosa and Angela into a swirl of erotic intensity. The girls would often have to wait a minute for the butterflies to settle before they could continue a pitch.
That’s what happened with the UPS driver and he noticed Rosa swoon after inhaling his enhanced manly scent. The poor guy was outgunned, though, and smiled a look of surrender as Rosa proceeded to close him, all while Angela, who knew exactly what was happening, smirked wistfully in Rosa’s direction before engaging in her new habit, swirling her wedding ring round and round when she was in the midst of any intense emotion.
Although Angela and Rosa spiced up their promo days with a little good-natured competition, it was obvious to anyone who knew them or saw them together that they were close.
Score: Angela 2, Rosa 1, but the ladies called it a draw.
“Alright girl…who’s rockin’ Seattle now?
After a high five they began busting out Salt-N-Pepa moves right in the middle of the mall while singing the lyrics to, “Ooh Baby Baby,” both of them positioning their hands up to their mouths as if they were holding microphones.

BACK AT THE ARMENIAN Festival, there was a lull in the action as the band took a break, so Marcus pulled out his harmonica and was serenading me with the song, “Dixie,” his style soft and slow…right from the heart.
I grabbed his cap while he was playing and put it on laughing, “This is mine for the rest of the day since I’ve got to go to some poser lame photo shoot you got me into…rockin’ out with Marcus Duprees!”
I pulled it over my way wavy long hair, that on this  day was coppery brown and shaped with three thin braids.
“Hey, that’s exactly why they wanted you—November Rainer Savitchian can ROCK OUT. These guys trust me to steer just the right talent to them. The gig is at the Den Zen End bowling alley and the guy’s name is Gutter…he’s a way cool scenester. I mean, him and I go way back, he digs your incense, and he wants someone real, earthy, and different for the video…and…he’s paying you some good cash. Gutter Man is a character. He drinks like a fish and owns the Singing Telegram Modeling Agency…some guy…know what I mean.”
“Are you kidding me…what is all that supposed to mean? I just know I’m not going to like some dude who sings and drinks. I do like his name, though…different, for sure, and I’m wondering what his last name could possibly be. You’re right about the incense though, he is a loyal Tomorrow’s Rainbow customer. I mail him a lot of it every month. But, how come you don’t know the name of the band the video is for and by the way Angela, my very best gal pal, is in town. She’s staying at the OK Motel. We’re going to get together there later and listen to some music if you want to join us.”
With that I jumped on the back of Marcus’ shiny blue Buell roadster, Sonny leaped into the Robin sidecar, and I instinctively began stroking both his and Sonny’s hair…just something I like to do…just saying. Then, Marcus shot an arrow right through my wounded heart with words that slapped my misty Seattle love world silly.
“I’m dropping you off at the Weeping Wounded Heart gas station…you know the one…with that huge weeping willow out front. Gutter will pick you up there. There’s a nice concrete bench outside. Why don’t I pick up your Italian friends at the mall, it’s been awhile since I’ve been there, I’ll pick up some pizza, and after you’re done shooting the video we’ll get the party started at their motel! So tell me more about this Angela. Does she really have five kids with three different guys?”
“No…that’s four, all boys, Gunner, Garlito, and the twins, Giovanni and Giancarlo,” I answered, while petting Sonny some more in the sidecar, trying not to think, to stay in the moment, that place where I was always safe, wondering what I’d said to Marcus…oh how damning and ordinary conversation can be.

I WAS ESCORTED OFF his bike onto a corner that faced the Fresh Fish Market. After inhaling the pungent smell of rotting salmon and cod coming from their dumpster, more than ever I felt like the last thing I could possibly want was to be in another typical music video exploiting women as sex objects and be groped by some drunk guy named Gutter.
Peering down at my favorite blue calico cotton summer dress, wearing black combat boots, with my dad’s brown cardigan on, I just couldn’t imagine why anyone would want to photograph me. I pulled the skull cap down and watched as my Marcus rode off with Sonny who was looking back at me with those ageless canine eyes, to do what I did want to do—see my friends and listen to some tunes.
I missed Angela so after leaving her behind when I moved to Seattle, but then I could just sense that tonight was going to be a supersized soiree that would make up for all the time we’d been apart—allowing us to feel closer than ever.

THE CRUNCHY WHITE GAS station gravel was stained with the remains of various petroleum products as I literally ran to the only thing that seemed to make any sense—the large weeping willow, covered with fresh Popsicle-green new-growth leaves and gleaming with the look of endless possibilities.
I paused, then turned to hug the trunk, my mind racing back to that fateful Eve of the Hazel Moon so many years ago, tears flowing knowing how much that night changed me.
Looking down I could see pairs of nightcrawlers, opposite ends lined up next to each other, carrying out their mating rituals. Looking up to the chirps of song sparrows, I saw a male and female prancing as a prelude to procreating, and following the sound of scampering to the right I noticed a female red squirrel being pursued by two chunky suitors hot on her trail.
Standing next to the great willow I felt myself at the epicenter of a natural world teeming with the hanky-panky life force of renewal and where was I—November Rainer Savitchian, abandoned at the Weeping Wounded Heart Gas Station. But then, I began tingling all over.
An early May breezed picked up. It carried an intoxicating familiar fragrance—lily of the valley, spiced with the warmer notes of Patchouli. Raising my eyes I saw a swirl of white hawthorn flowers. Slowly emerging from the cloud of petals, breathtakingly beautiful, singing with a songbird’s voice, yet always projecting her sassy devil-may-care personality, there she was.

“Luna!”