Meanwhile...

Meanwhile...
I love all creatures. I consider them, all of them, to be sentient beings... I write thrillers, fantasy, mysteries, gothic horror, romantic adventure, occult, Noir, westerns and various types of short stories. I also re-tell traditional folk tales and make old fairy tales carefully cracked. I'm often awake very early in the morning. A cuppa, and fifteen minutes later I'm usually writing something. ;)

Monday, August 30, 2021

The Murderous Muddle On Murray Hill, --- Chapter 7...

 


   It was almost dark. It had been raining all day. I was sitting with Thomasina, leaning up against the tufted white vinyl headboard of my bed. My bed was closest to the single window in the little upstairs bedroom I shared with my sister in my ma's house. There were three bedrooms upstairs. Ma had one; Nonnie had one and my sister and me had one. I wished the walls were light pink, the exact color of strawberry ice cream. The walls were white. I hate fucking white walls. 

   I was feeling really down. Good that Carol went somewhere, probably shopping with her friends, with, as always, a trip to Cinti's Deli for sausage and pepper sandwiches, potato salad and donuts, afterwards. I shifted, put the Photoplay magazine down. Tony Curtis was jealous because he thought Kirk Douglas was making a pass at Janet Leigh during the filming of "The Vikings". Who the hell wanted to read about how some actress or actor accused their husband or wife of cheating? Who cared if an actor was a rapist, a damned womanizing bastard?

   I frowned, and what the fuck had Emilio meant when he asked me to marry him? He'd seemed serious. It was tempting in a wild sort of way. Ha, it would be an arranged marriage! And, Ma would practically have a stroke at even the thought of me marrying wild man Emilio Leone. I'd been having the shakes, cold, then, hot, I was a disaster! Was I sick, physically? Part of me, really did want to marry Emilio. He seemed to me like a brilliantly dark angel, ~ exciting, tempting, yet, also somehow, sweet and endearing. But, a big part of me wanted someday to fulfill my dream of becoming a commercial artist. I wanted so badly to go to the Cleveland Institute Of Art, which was world famous.
 

It was a fabulous school that I knew I could never afford. I was just taking beautician courses at the Patti Jeanette School Of Beauty, so I could do something creative; I knew it would never, ever be good enough. Who wants to set little old lady's thin hair for the rest of their life? With an art degree from the Cleveland Institute I could go anywhere. It would be so great! 
   
   I threw the stuffed toy autograph hound that was on my pillow across the room. That startled Thomasina. I petted her to reassure her and scratched her around her jaw. She put her dainty chin up and purred. Yeah, really, I was angry and frustrated that the image of Mike Leone wouldn't get out of my brain. I picked up my sketchbook, my colored pencils. But, I put them down too. I didn't feel like drawing. What the hell? Why was I such a miserable emotional mess? I knew!...

    I went downstairs. Our only phone was in the kitchen. Nonnie was sitting in one of the straight-backed ghairs at the kitchen table, Enrico lying across the back of her shoulders. She was knitting, working on a black wool blanket for the back of Paulie and Helen's new couch. She was drinking her homemade limoncello, the half empty corked bottle sat next to a small goblet of it. I loved her limoncello. Zanne was lying at Nonnie's feet. He sat up, licked Nonnie's hand. His head was higher than the table, like a blackish wolf. He was panting a bit. It was a warm day. His perfect long white fangs showed on either side of his big pink tongue. But, he just looked at me, placidly, with his intelligent chestnut brown eyes. He was a good dog. Zanne seldom threatened anybody. He didn't need to. Actually, he got along with practically everybody, people and animals, with few exceptions. He liked Enrico and Thomasina. He was very protective, though. He seemed to instinctively know that he was born to defend the more vulnerable than him, the helpless.  

   "Have a limoncello, " Nonnie said. I got a goblet from the cupboard. "Why don't you call him?,", in Italian, of course. 

  I swallowed a big gulp of the delicious liquor. "What? Call who?" I was always annoyed when Nonnie read my mind. "Do not play coy," she said. "You know, the very handsome light haired one with the beautiful blue eyes. You have been interested in him for years. He is smart and he is strong, a clever survivor."

   "And, you like that."

   "Yes, very much. Many of the young men of the region where I was born have very wild and violent youths. Yes, that's usual. and nothing to be upset about, but then maybe they settle down, become very good providers, husbands and fathers. They sometimes are even kind and make wonderful lovers."

   "Nonnie!" I tried to sound shocked, and a saw a tiny smile tugging around Nonnie's lips. 

   "A girl is never, never, never, ever supposed to call a boy," I said. "It just isn't done!" Nonnie looked down at her knitting. "Since when do young girls not call young men on the phone?"

   "Since practically forever!"

   "What a stupid custom! How is a young man supposed to know that a young girl is interested in him, in this country where parents do not make a practice of making fine matches for their beloved children?"

   "He's, uh, I don't know! I don't know!!"

   "Few young men can read minds."

   "Like you can!"

   She shook her head. "Young girls are so easily upset, so delicately balanced. I am glad I no longer suffer. from such things. Now, I am calm."

   "And, you never think of men?" I frowned. "I don't believe that, not even for a minute."

   She smiled serenely, without looking up. "You are very right. I am not dead yet, dried up, but not dead. Look how well this blanket is coming! Hmmm?" She held it up for me to see. Then, she said, "You should bring this handsome, strong and smart young man here. I would like very much to meet him."

   "I don't know him well enough to bring him home," I said. I felt like shouting it to Nonnie, but I would never ever even think about shouting at Nonnie. She shrugged, her thin shoulders going up and down. She whispered, "Do not be foolishly shy or too proud, and wait too long." Nonnie patted Zanne's head.  
  

    --- Copyright by Antoinette Beard/Sorelle Sucere 2021.

Saturday, August 28, 2021

Empaths KNOW...

 


IT IS BOTH A BLESSING AND A CURSE TO FEEL EVERYTHING SO DEEPLY.

Friday, August 27, 2021

Little Italy, --- Cleveland...

 


LITTLE ITALY, --- From "The Cleveland Encyclopedia"...


LITTLE ITALY is from E. 119th to E. 125th streets on Murray Hill and Mayfield roads. Established in 1885, this physically well-protected and well-defined ethnic enclave is bordered by the forested bluff of LAKE VIEW CEMETERY to the north and east and the Regional Transit Authority's Windermere-Airport Rapid Transit line and the CASE WESTERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY CAMPUS campus to the west. Little Italy Often referred to as "Murray Hill," by locals and Cleveland natives because of the street by that name in the center of the neighborhood. The Italian hill town has a reputation as a closed community whose assets are historic and original. By the late 1890s, many Italian immigrants had settled in the Mayfield-Murray Hill area and worked in the nearby marble works, one of which, the Lakeview Marble Works, was founded by skilled stonemason JOSEPH CARABELLI. In 1911 it was estimated that 96% of the inhabitants were Italian-born, and another 2% were of Italian parents. Many of these Italians were Neapolitan and were engaged in skilled lacework, garment making, and the embroidery trades. The largest group came from the towns of Ripalimosani, Matrice, and San Giovanni in Galdo, located in the Campobasso Province. Present-day Little Italy is one of the few city neighborhoods attracting thousands of suburban shoppers in a rush to capitalize on its historical charm. At one time, the Mayfield Road Mob was an organized crime threat, and so was John Scalish and his operatives. But, today, relatively crime-free, Little Italy is a trendy, upscale center for art, dining, and gracious living. As of 2021, the Italian character and presence in the neighborhood remains typically predominant. However, in recent years, Italian residents have been joined by others, including numerous Asian and Middle Eastern graduate students from CWRU, as well as ALBANIAN and Latin American immigrants. In the community where the macaroni machine was invented in 1906, visitors will find the Little Italy Historical Museum, the ALTA HOUSE, named for Alta Roosevelt, and Library, Murray Hill School, CORBO'S BAKERY, HOLY ROSARY CHURCH with it's annual famous Feast Of The Assumption in mid-August, it's fabulous restaurants, and artists' studios and shops. The Murderous Muddle On Murray Hill... Prologue:

They are the REAL super heroes!!!...

 


Thursday, August 26, 2021

No matter what happens in your life you CAN start over...

 😚😙💖💝😍...


The Murderous Muddle On Murray Hill, --- Chapter 6...

 

   We rode for quite a while. I was freezing. It's always about ten degrees colder on a bike than it is regularly outside, because of the wind. It was misty when we pulled into Metropolitan Park. People in the Cleveland area knew the spot. It was called "The Emerald Necklace," acres and acres and yet, more and more acres of gorgeous wooded land, huge ancient looking trees with big roots that snaked along the surface of woodsy paths, lush undergrowth, pretty meadows, ferns, moss, cool secluded little spots  and, of course, the picnic areas. It was like the "forest primeval" of that old, old poem by Longfellow, that we read in school. 

   We drove on the park's roads, winding into it. Emilio was silent; I snuggled into his back. At last we stopped. I knew where we were. Through the mist rising from the ground I could see the Squire's Castle, the small part of a beautiful old gray stone gate house that I heard was built in the eighteen nineties, supposedly as the very first part of a great estate that was never finished. I always meant to look up the whole story of Squire's Castle, but I never did. (It was probably a tragic tale.)

   Emilio's feet were on the ground. He killed the bike's lights, put it on it's stand and helped me off. My teeth were almost chattering. "Jeez, Maria," he said. "Here take my jacket."

   He removed his motorcycle jacket and put it around my shoulders. I sighed, gratefully. "Thanks." I put my arms into it, zipped it up. It was deliciously warm from his body. "Why are we here?," I asked.

   He shrugged. "It's romantic."

   Man of mystery. "That's all?," I said when he didn't add more.

   "Yeah, an', no."

   "What do you mean 'no'?"

   He reached into one of the side pouches of the bike, pulling out a metal thermos. He unscrewed the cup, unscrewed the top and poured a steaming cup for me.

   I smiled. "Hot chocolate."

   "Yeah, I don't like coffee."

   "Or, tea?"

   "Yuck!"

   He looked down, rubbed the side of his nose, leaning back on the bike, his long legs crossed gracefully at the ankles. Then, he took my hand led me to some boulders where we could sit down. Fortunately, the moon kept coming in and out of clouds and we could sort of see where we were going.

 

   He took the cup from me, drained it and put it back on the thermos. He set the thermos on the ground, Emilio took me in his arms, kissed me. I put my arms around his neck. He deepened the kiss, then broke it off. He looked down at the ground. "No use puttin' this off," he said. 

   I raised my eyebrows. "Oh?"

   "Yeah." His eyes, in the part shadows, looked totally black. His stare was intense. "I need a wife."

   "WHAT?"

   "Damn, my ears! An', you're gonna scare all the little critters here."

   "I don't care! Did you just ask me to marry you?"

   He grinned. "Yeah."

   "Why?"

   "I told ya. I need a wife."

   I frowned. "Not near good enough. I look on marriage as a life long commitment."

   "Me too."

   "Well, then, I don't get it. Uh, this is a bit sudden."

   He grinned again. "I know."

   "And, are you going to tell me why you need a wife, uh, so quickly."

   "No."

   "Then, the answer is a big fat no-no-no!" I folded my arms across my chest.

   He looked off in the distance, scowling. "So, the promise of my whole life, my body an' whatever worldly goods I might get don't do it?"

   I put my chin up. "That's right. Nice try,"

   "I suppose ya want love."

   "Yes!"

   Those deep set blue eyes with the long lashes, narrowed. "Will ya think about it?"

   I gave him my fiercest look. "Sure. Why not?"

   His lips formed the faintest of smiles. "Ya hungry?"

   "Starved."

   "Fried Chicken from Kenny King's?"

   "Great."

   The smile became full. "Hey, I know quality."

   "Does that apply to me?"

   He walked to the bike. I followed. "Ya know it does."

   "Thanks."

   He lifted a leg over the bike, waited for me to get on. "Sure. You're just about the prettiest girl I've ever seen. Prettiest girl on the Hill, for sure, a natural beauty."

  "No kidding."

   "I don't lie about that kinda thing."

   "But, you'd lie about plenty of other things."

   "Maybe, but not that, never that."

   "Really?"

   He shrugged. "I'm too much an admirer of feminine beauty."

   I suspected that was entirely true. 

        

   --- Copyright by Antoinette beard/Sorelle Sucere 2021.   

      

Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Use Regular Tea As An Antiseptic...

 


***HERBAL TIP: Have you run out of antiseptic? Use warm tea to clean the wound. Bruises?... Use compresses of cool tea. Yes, just regular tea that you can buy in any store. Tea is acidic and discourages the growth of bacteria. It also draws, bringing infection to the surface. Tea is great to bath wounds on animals because it is non toxic if the animal licks the wound. Use tea to flush wounds too. Fill an ear syringe with tea and squirt it directly into the wound to clean out pus, --- cheaper and less destructive to tissues than hydrogen peroxide.

--- More tea uses:

* Clean windows and floors with it. It cuts grease and needs no rinsing, if animals walk and/or babies crawl over the wet flor it's non-toxic.

* Dye fabric with it for a lovely antique look.

* Clean garbage cans and ash trays. Tea deodorizes.

* Sooth sore feet with a basin of cool tea, sooth sunburn too.

* Rinse brown and black hair with tea. It restores hair's acid mantle and makes it shine.

* Make your dogs fur smell better by sponging him with deodorizing cool tea.

* Temporarily sooth a toothache by holding a warm tea bag directly on it, also sooth any mouth sores, and canker sores, or baby's teething.

* Dry up a pimple with compresses of warm tea.


Tuesday, August 24, 2021

***The Godfather's Cat... =^_^=

 

      

DON'T GO MESSIN' WITH THE GODFATHER'S CAT!!!... 🙀😾😽😼😻😺😸💖💋

And...


This is Don Vito Kitty-leone. 😘😏💖.

Friday, August 20, 2021

***OH, BOY!!!... My "From Scratch" Pasta Sauce Recipe...

 


🍝 --- Those who are of Italian background might just call this RED SAUCE...


(I had a boyfriend whose mama was from Naples, Italy, Could she cook!!!... I remember that often there was a pot of sauce bubbling on a back burner of her stove. And, there was fresh baked bread to tear off and dip in a bowl of that delicious sauce. This sauce would be especially wonderful with homemade meatballs or sweet Italian sausage added to it.)

6 plum tomatoes, quartered

1 head of garlic, peeled & chopped

1 or 2 large onions, peel & chopped

2 tbs. extra virgin olive oil

2 medium cans of tomato paste

1/4 cup fresh basil, shredded

1/4 cup fresh oregano, shredded

1 dried bay leaf, removed after cooking is finished

1 carrot, shredded

1/3 or so cup of sugar, to cut the acidy taste, and/or about 1/2 cup sangria wine

Salt & black pepper, or tabasco sauce, to taste, if desired

Added water, depending on how thick you want your sauce, and more, if desired, during the long, slow cooking 

   Add all ingredients to large crockpot, turn on "low" and allow to simmer, pretty much all day, --- 12 hours. Stir and stir, regularly, add water, if necessary, Be very sure the bottom of the sauce doesn't burn. It will be better the next day, or two, when all the flavors meld. Add water, if the final product is too strong and/or too thick, but I like a thick sauce.


Wednesday, August 18, 2021

The Murderous Muddle On Murray Hill, --- Chapter 5...

 


We pulled up to Erieview Drive-in at eight thirty. It wasn't close to Lake Erie, but that didn't matter. The first movie wouldn't start till nine thirty, after it got dark.

   "Beth Papalardo is here,' I said, "I can smell her."

   "Yeah, Shalimar." Yvonne wrinkled her nose. "She uses too much! Of course she's still scared of me since I broke her fingers with my little souvenir Cleveland Indians baseball bat. Too bad I did her right hand. I didn't know shes left-handed. "


   "Yeah, Shalimar is like Brillcream or Lucky Tiger Butch Hair Wax, a little dab will do ya."  


I don't like that stiff either, " Yvonne continued. "I mean, you're kissing a cool and cute guy and you want to run your fingers through his hair, but you already been looking at it all evening, thinking, uh, noooo, too greasy and stinky... Stupid greaseballs." Another nose wrinkle. "I heard that Beth Papalardo is going to be heading for Hollywood as soon as she can come up with the bus fare."

   "Oh, really?"

   "Yeah, go figure. You know how she's wanted to be an actress ever since she got the lead in the school play in her freshman year."

   "Right. And, she got that because..."

   "Because Steve Schomler's smarmy uncle, who worked on some B-grade movies in Hollywood, wrote the script, and he was..."

   "Don't say any more, please. I don't want to barf."

   "Well, Beth thinks she's so boss."   

   "Yeah."

   "She's dying to go to fancy-schmancy fucking Hollywood now..."

   "Feature that..."

    "Ever since Madame Zara told her that she'd be a big sensation out there."

   "Madame Zara, who tells fortunes in back of  Googey's Thrift And Coffee Shop on Saturday afternoons?"

   "The same."

   "Madame Zara will say anything you want to hear if you give her ten bucks. She's a good student of human nature so she can figure out easy what your little heart desires. I heard her real name is Conchetta Delgado. She ain't no powerful bruja..." "Not like your nonnie! Everybody on the Hill knows your nonnie is the real thing!," Yvonne said. "Oh, damn!" "What?" "Is that Emilio Leone?" I ducked down to the floor of the truck.

    "Yeah, I think it is."

    "Don't let him see me!"

    "How? We're already hooked up to the speaker and are we going to just pull out of here? No, no. I just paid. Why you acting so goofy, Maria?

   "Never mind!"

   Yvonne grinned. "You're like this because you got big hots for Emilio, not that anybody could blame you. Like who doesn't? Hey, he's coming right over. Cool... Hi, Em-il-io!," Yvonne called, coyly, too coyly; she was enjoying this.

   Emilio leaned into the open window. "Whatja doin' on the floor, Marie?"

   "Oh, uh, I dropped the pen out of my purse."

   He smiled. "Did ya find it?"

   "Uh, no, but, I hope to. You never know when you need to write something."

   "Yeah, one never knows about that."

   I shrugged my shoulders. I got back on the seat, unzipped my purse, made like I was looking for the pen. Emilio opened the door, grabbed my arm and pulled me out of the truck. "Bye, Mariaaa!" Yvonne waggled her fingers at me. "HAVE FUN, MARIA!" she yelled. 

   Just great. I heard laughing and giggling from the kids around us. It would be news all over the Hill tomorrow. It would get back to Ma because that's what kids did at the drive-in; they made out. Although, good girls only allowed petting above the waist.


And, then, it would be how I left the lot to go into the bushes to make out with sharp Emilio Leone. (That I wasn't a good girl.) Probably, the talk would be that I did the deed, had crazy sex with him and because, of course, I wasn't really a good girl, and it was too hard and uncomfortable to do in a car.

   "What the hell?," I said, really annoyed. 

   It was getting dark fast. I could almost see the stars. Emilio pulled me behind a row of cars, the last row, on the edge of the big bushes of the lot, and kissed me, hard and deep. "That's more like it." He was laughing.

   "You sure got a hell of a fucking nerve!" I jumped back. My hands were on my hips. "What the fuck gives you the fucking right?"

   "I thought ya'd like it."

   "Well, you thought all wrong!. I don't like being grabbed! I'm not easy!"

   He turned his head, this way and that, teasing. "Since when?"

   "Since forever, you miserable fucking bastard!"

   He caught my hand before I hit him. "What if I asked ya to go for a ride with me."

   "On your Harley."

     "Sure."

   "Just a ride, okay? No funny business."

   His eyebrows went up. "Sure."

   "Uh, okay, I guess."

   "Ya guess."

   "Yeah, okay, only because I really like bikes, and your's is a beaut."

   He grinned again, giving me that two thousand watts of teeth. "Sure, Baby."

   "Don't call me 'Baby'."

   "Sure, Maria."

   I smiled "Better."

   We walked to his bike. "I love it when ya play hard ta get."

   "It's not an act." I tossed my head. "I am hard to get, near impossible."

   He smiled again, threw his leg over the bike. "Hug into me if ya get cold. It may be chilly." 

   I stepped on the peg and pulled myself up behind him, but I have to admit I loved sliding my body slowly down his back as I got on the bike. Yeah, lovely.

   I am, I really am, secretly, a slut. I've been accused of being a prude numerous times. But, I've known for years that I'm not a prude, like good girls were always told they were and accused, by frustrated boyfriends, of being cock teases and giving their boyfriends "blue balls". I don't know how many times I heard this from my former slimeball boyfriend Harry, laying this guilt thing on me, him telling me I was making him very, very sick from "blue balls," because I wouldn't have sex with him. And, that his balls were going to get strangulated, were in danger of losing circulation, that I'd put him in the hospital and that I could cure this easily by satisfying him. What a load of bullshit. So insulting that he thought I was so stupid that I'd fall for such absolute crap. Some jerky guys never get it through their heads that you might not want to have sex with them simply because the way they're acting toward you is repulsive, and that they turn you off, completely, the weirdos, the creeps. Naturally, that they're pimple-faced, morons doesn't help their causes a bit.


I put my arms around Emilio; I could feel the heat of his body, even through the soft black leather. I rested my cheek against his warm back. We took off, spitting dust.


--- Copyright by Antoinette Beard/Sorelle Sucere 2021.


Marilyn Monroe's Red Diary???...

 IT WAS NEVER FOUND... I don't believe it existed, bur Marilyn did keep notebooks, in which she recorded her thoughts... 💖💥💔💥😞💋...




The Red Diary

The Red Diary
So much has been written about the supposed red diary yet no one has ever produced it. Even the released FBI files haven’t revealed whether the diary has been found and if so where it is stored. It diary-important1is unlikely Marilyn had any serious writings in the book. The Kennedy brothers weren’t fools. They weren’t going to reveal government secrets to an unstable woman, especially one in the habit of using barbiturates. Jeanne Carmen, Marilyn’s good friend, suggested the diary revealed the Kennedys’ innermost feelings but I doubt it. It’s much more likely that the diary revealed Marilyn’s innermost feelings, the reason for keeping a diary. Whatever Marilyn recorded in the notorious little book doesn’t seem to have caused any problems in the history of the Kennedys of the mafia. I don’t believe the mob killed Marilyn Monroe over a red book.

It’s much more likely that Marilyn wrote about her feelings for JFK and possibly for Robert Kennedy, although the latter probably didn’t have a sexual affair with Marilyn. Jack sent Bobby to marilyn-diaries“clean up” his mess with Marilyn. There was no way Bobby was going to place himself in the same situation, especially in light of the struggle Jack faced in ending their relationship. The phone call to Jackie Kennedy had been the last straw in the Marilyn-Jack relationship: Jackie warned him to end it or they would finally divorce. That Jack did, cutting off the telephone number he’d given Marilyn to the White House. Marilyn admired Bobby from afar but he wasn’t fool enough to have a tryst with her. The last thing he needed was for his wife Ethel to also receive a call from Marilyn Monroe.

Dramatization
However so-called documentaries insist on dramatizing the red diary as if it held crucial secrets about the Kennedys and the government. Too much emphasis is placed on the silly book, as if Bobby and Jack Kennedy faced ruin from its contents. At the worst if Marilyn threatened to release the book to the press, the Kennedy’s would offer her a bribe in exchange for the book. Failing that, they would send someone to the house when Marilyn wasn’t present to find the book. Professionals wouldn’t take long to find it. In fact if the house was bugged they would have found those too. In the previously linked video, It’s more likely that Bobby referred to audiotapes Marilyn may have lied and said she made of her and Jack, or perhaps herself and Bobby. Had that been the case I could understand the Attorney General’s frustration. However his anger with Marilyn would have intimidated her enough to make her give him whatever it was he wanted. He might have played on her affection for himself or Jack Kennedy, if indeed there was anything of value to be found in Marilyn’s house. The tapes have been discussed yet again they have never been released and no one in the public has heard them. Myself, I am of the mind that without evidence, there is never proof of any rumour. People enjoy rumours. It creates mystery. It causes scandal. It is the reason why cheap magazines such as The National Enquirer and The Star sell so many copies.

520 marilynHowever a number of people who knew Marilyn insisted over the years that there was indeed a red diary. Robert Slatzer claimed she let him read it while they sat together on Laguna Beach, south of Los Angeles. He claimed Marilyn had written Bobby Kennedy was going to “kill Fidel Castro” (ridiculous) and that everything she wrote began with Bobby told me...” (10:36). This is quite plausible. A starry-eyed Marilyn probably reiterated verbatim everything Kennedy said from his views on the current national unemployment rate to the colour of his socks. He may well have spoken of Castro but my feeling is he explained patiently to Marilyn why Castro was a threat to the United States, and how it was that he was a poor leader for his people. Kennedy would have expressed a loathing for the man, but I don’t believe he went so far as to tell Marilyn that he wanted to assassinate Castro.

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Deborah Gould, Lawford’s ex-wife, claimed Marilyn told her she had been passed around between the two men and she was distraught. She was going to reveal to the press everything the Kennedys had done to her and to reveal the political secrets they had told her. She also stated that the night before she died, Marilyn contacted Lawford to tell him it would be “best for everyone if she died, she was going to kill herself.” Gould continued, Lawford’s response was to “quit the nonsense, Marilyn. Pull yourself together but my God whatever you do, don’t leave any notes behind.”  Lawford denied this conversation but years later “he did state he was consumed with guilt that he hadn’t immediately gone to her aid.” One reason he didn’t was that a dinner guest talked him out of it, telling Lawford if anything was happening at Marilyn’s house he would also be implicated. Anyone would feel as Lawford did, especially since he had no way of knowing Marilyn was indeed suicidal. Most likely Marilyn had threatened to kill herself on numerous prior occasions. She had a long history of suicide attempts and there were probably many occasions where she threatened to kill herself then made no attempt. I don’t believe Lawford’s actions reveal guilt or a cover-up about Marilyn’s death.

Marilyn’s Answer
marilynLet us allow Marilyn to answer the question about the red diary herself. Sometimes when things just happened I used to write it down….but then I used to tear it up.That information is very accurate. The book Fragments by Marilyn Monroe, published in 2011, (a great read, btw) is a collection of her thoughts and observations of her life and poetry. Key in her writings is her self-deprecatory comments about her acting ability. There is no mention of the Kennedy brothers, the mafia or anything controversial. I should imagine actually living these experiences would be more intriguing than writing about them.

Marilyn’s Writings
There are several and they are edited chronologically in Fragments. The first writing is a type-written letter, very legible by a 17-year-old heartbroken Norma Jeane who is waiting vainly for her husband, Jim Dougherty, to return from his mistress’ house. It is 4 pages long and details her betrayal and loneliness. The many other writings have been edited only to make them more legible for the reader; the content isn’t changed.A significant example of the content reveals her lack of confidence about her acting prowess. It mentions nothing of the Kennedys or the mafia.She may have written her feelings and thoughts about significant people in her life but I do not believe she wrote “government secrets”, or threats about exposing the Kennedy brothers to the press. Marilyn believed she loved JFK. Causing his career irreparable damage makes little sense had she truly wanted him to marry her.


Most likely Marilyn’s diary focused on the person every diary writer focuses on: herself.

Tuesday, August 17, 2021

Heh-heh-heh...

 😠😝😜😛😚😏💥💝💟💕💔👺👹👵💋💋💋...




Monday, August 16, 2021

Who was Aradia??? (From "Occult World")

 



WHO WAS ARADIA???...

The Tuscan legend of Aradia, the Beautiful Pilgrim, the daughter of the moon goddess Diana, was published by the American folklorist, Charles Godfrey Leland, in 1889. Leland said the legend had been passed on to him by a woman named Maddalena. Godfrey said the name Aradia is a corruption of Herodias, or Queen Herodias, the wife of Herod, with whom Diana came to be identified by the 11th century.



Leland went to Tuscany in northern Italy in the 1880s. There he met a “sorceress” named Maddalena, whom he employed to collect from her “sisters” old ways and traditions. In 1886, he heard about a manuscript that supposedly set down the old tenets of the Craft. A year later, Maddelana gave him a document in her own handwriting.

Leland translated it into English and published The Gospel Of Aradia. He was struck by the references to Diana and Lucifer, and offered it as evidence of the Old Religion. In his preface, hacknowledged drawing from other, unspecified sources. He never produced Maddalena or any documentation to verify her existence.

Aradia recounts the story of Diana's daughter and of Diana's rise to become a Queen. Diana is created first among all beings and divides herself into light and darkness. She retains the darkness and makes the light into Lucifer (whose name means “light-bearer”), her brother and son. She falls in love with him and seduces him by changing herself into a cat. Their daughter from that union, Aradia, is destined to become a "Messiah” figure. Aradia lives for a while in heaven and then is sent to earth by Diana to teach the Arts. When Aradia's task is finished, Diana recalls her daughter to heaven and gives her the power to grant the desires of the meritorious of the Craft who invoke Aradia. Such requests include success in love, and the power to bless friends and curse enemies, as well as:

To converse with spirits.
To find hidden treasures in ancient ruins.
To conjure the spirits of priests who died leaving treasures.
To understand the voice of the wind.
To change water into wine.
To divine with cards.
To know the secrets of the hand [palmistry].
To cure diseases.
To make those who are ugly beautiful.
To tame wild beasts.

The invocation for Aradia is given as follows:

Thus do I seek Aradia! Aradia! Aradia! At midnight, at midnight I go into a field, and with me I bear water, wine, and salt, I bear water, wine, and salt, and my talis- man — my talisman, my talisman, and a red small bag which I ever hold in my hand — con dentro, con dentro, sale, with salt in it, in it. With water and wine I bless myself, I bless myself with devotion to implore a favor from Aradia, Aradia.

The truth about the origins of Aradia may never be known. Some skeptics believe that Leland fabricated the entire story, or that he was duped by Maddalena, who made it up. A more likely scenario, put forward by scholar Ronald Hutton, is that Maddalena, pressed to deliver, collected some authentic bits of lore and embellished them. Leland, who is known to have embellished his other folklore accounts, probably added his own flourishes. Contemporary folklore scholars do not accept Aradia as authentic.

Aradia had little impact on contemporary European Craft, but enjoyed more prominence in America. In contemporary Craft, Aradia is one of the most often used names for the Goddess.

Sunday, August 15, 2021

The hard & the soft of it...

 


The Murderous Muddle On Murray Hill," --- Chapter 4...

   


   I was sitting on the front porch, babysitting my cousins Bobby, Gracie and Joannie. It was Saturday morning, ten thirty on the Hill and it was already about eight five outside, hotter even inside. Today would be a scorcher. Ma, Aunt Sofia and Nonnie were at the market. They'd bribed me to stay at the house with the promise to bring me a dozen chocolate pizzelles. Probably, the bribe wasn't necessary because without the Pontiac I couldn't go anywhere interesting, anyway. Nonnie and Ma always walked to the market, Nonnie with her old basket over her arm. But, Aunt Sofia had just had foot surgery, got all her nasty old numerous plantar's warts removed. The bottoms of her feet were still sore so she borrowed the car to do some strictly pleasure shopping.

   I was so, so bored I was almost cross-eyed, watching numb, as Gracie was in the middle of a double Dutch jump rope being turned by Pattie Moffat and Hildy Norton. (Most of the kids in the neighborhood were crazy about jumping rope. Sometimes Ma and Nonnie could hardly find a piece of clothesline to use.) 

   They were chanting, --- "Margie had a baby... She named him Tiny Tim... She put him in the bathtub and taught him how to swim... He drank a gallon of water, ate a bar of soap... Next day he died with a bubble in his throat... In walked the doctor, in walked the nurse, in walked the lady with the alligator purse...


'Dead,' said the doctor... 'Dead,' said the nurse...  'Dead,' said the lady with the alligator purse... Margie ate some marmalade... Margie drank some beer... Margie drank some other things that made her feel so queer."

   I thought the rhyme was a bit freaky, but what the hell.  It was just as good as the other one, --- "Alice, where are you going?... Upstairs to take a bath... Alice, with legs like toothpicks and a neck like a giraffe... Alice, slipped in the bath tub... Alice, pulled out the plug... Oh, my body!... Oh, my soul!... There goes Alice, down that hole!... Alice, where are you going?... Gulb-glub-glub."

    At ten and eight Gracie and Joannie were still halfway manageable, but at thirteen Bobby was a total brat, starting to get rebellious about being babysat, the miserable little squirt.  He considered himself to be a "man," he said, because he was, he said, "Italian". Sure, he was Italian, but just being thirteen and Italian will never make a guy a man. Ha, try to tell cranky little Bobby that! Yeah, Bobby was a royal pain in the ass, sitting on the steps, scowling, sharpening his pocketknife. He'd wanted a switch blade, the usual eight incher, but his dad, my Uncle Bob, wouldn't allow it. I knew Bobby would get that switch blade, anyway, somehow, and I had a feeling it wasn't going to end good. Bobby's best friend was Billy Sanno, and everybody knew that over half the huge Sanno family was in the Business. of course, so was half of my family, but my family was more secretive about it, being way smarter than the brutish Sannos. And, besides, most of the most loyal of my family were back in Italy and, mostly in Sicily.

   My girlfriend Yvonne Rossi came driving by, stuck her head out of the window of her dad's old red and rust Ford pickup and said, "Hey, you wanna get together tonight? Dad said I can take the truck to the drive-in."  (The Rossis were one of the first families that settled in the area of Mayfield Road that we all now call Little Italy. They worked as stone carvers and diggers for Lakeview Cemetery, as did many families from Northern Italy.)

   "Great," I said to her. 

   She waved out the window, and the truck moved off, the muffler loud and rattling. "'The Creature From The Black Lagoon,' is showing,


and 'It Came From Beneath The Sea'.


I'll be over at eight," she yelled back. 

   The movies playing didn't matter. It was the kids there at the local passion pit that would be fun, who was dating who, --- ya-ya-ya... (Maybe, there'd be some sharp new guys there.) And, then there was the gorging on the tubs of buttery popcorn. Some of the girls liked to come to drive-ins in their P.J.s, especially if they were at pajama parties. And, the guys always found out that girls from a pajama party were coming to the drive-in, and they adored that. Especially, if the pajamas the girls wore were those cute and very sexy baby dolls, which were really lingerie. 

   Well, yeah, Yvonne had broken up with her boyfriend Tom Jenkins, not too long ago, so she was probably almost as bored as me. I'd sworn off men, for the summer, at least, since the primo disaster with that schmuck Harry Dobrowsky.  He'd two-timed me for the last time and broke my heart with that rotten over-stuffed slut Beth Papalardo. I got back at Harry by slugging him in the face with a board and while he was out, I used my staple gun and stapled the sides of the shirt he was wearing to the floor. I could have done a lot worse to him with a staple gun. Yvonne fixed Beth, but I still wanted to pull every hair out of her bottle blond head. No amount of bleach could make Beth Papalardo, "Big Banana Nose," look like lovely, sexy Marilyn Monroe.

                                                         


--- Copyright by Antoinette Beard/Sorelle Sucere 2021.

Saturday, August 14, 2021

Monday, August 9, 2021

Grandma Maggio's Homemade Spaghetti Sauce (plus some yummy extras)...

 



I'M GONNA TRY THIS, WITH MY ADDITIONS, --- OF COURSE...  I'VE NEVER MADE HOMEMADE SPAGHETI SAUCE!!!... 

About 2 or 3 tbs. olive oil

1 large onion, chopped

1 head garlic, peeled and chopped

2 cups fresh canned mushrooms, chopped

1/4 cup  fresh basil leaves, chopped, or 2 tbs. dried basil

A 28 oz. can whole tomatoes, or 5 whole plum tomatoes

A 15 oz. can tomato paste

1/4 cup shredded carrot

3/4 cup Merlot, Chianti or Burgundy wine

1/4 cup sugar

2 tsp. dried oregano

salt & pepper to taste


--- Fry onion, garlic and fresh basil, if using it, in the olive oil till the onion is translucent. Stir in the mushrooms and cook about 10 minutes. 

--- Pour in can of whole tomatoes, or add the plum tomatoes, shredded carrot, stir. Let simmer slowly, about 15 minutes.

--- Add tomato paste and wine. Add dried oregano (or dried basil) and sugar, stir. Season with salt and pepper. 

--- Simmer very slowly, even for hours and hours, until you think it's done. (Remove plum tomato skins.) Be careful not to burn the sauce on the bottom of the pot. Add some water, if necessary.

 --- Sprinkle with hand grated Romano cheese right before serving, 

 --- Enjoy with homemade Italian bread, spread with butter!

   ***MANGA!!!...🍅🍛🍛🍛💝💋

Sunday, August 8, 2021

A Very Brief History Of Spaghetti...

 



   "EVERYTHING I AM, I OWE TO SPAGHETTI." --- Sophia Loren. 💖💝💕💋💋💋🍝🍝🍝

                                                    ***************************

   The first written record of pasta comes from the Talmud in the 5th century AD and refers to dried pasta that could be cooked through boiling,which was conveniently portable. Some historians think that Berbers introduced pasta to Europe during a conquest of Sicily. In the West, it may have first been worked into long, thin forms in Sicily around the 12th century, as the Tabula Rogeriana of Muhammad al-Idrisi attested, reporting some traditions about the Sicilian kingdom.

   The popularity of spaghetti spread throughout Italy after the establishment of spaghetti factories in the 19th century, enabling the mass production of spaghetti for the Italian market.

   In the United States around the end of the 19th century, spaghetti was offered in restaurants as Spaghetti Italienne, which likely consisted of noodles cooked past al dente (solid to the teeth), and a mild tomato sauce flavored with easily found spices and vegetables such as clovesbay leaves, and lots of garlic, and it was not until decades later that it came to be commonly prepared with oregano and/or basil.