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The Tillyville Times - June 27, 2004

 
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johntillyville

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Since: May 31, 2004
Posts: 15



(Msg. 1) Posted: Tue Jun 29, 2004 1:53 am
Post subject: The Tillyville Times - June 27, 2004
Archived from groups: alt>publish>books (more info?)

The Tillyville Times

June 27, 2004
Vol 1 No 5
http://tillyville.com



BEATLES RUMORS SWEEP TILLYVILLE
by Humbert Johns

"They see them here, they see them there," Tillyville Police Sergeant Mickey
McDonald said, "the phones are ringing off the hook."

Beatlemania has swept Tillyville. Rumors that the renowned moptops attended a
closed-door session of the Tillyville City Council have touched off sightings
across town.

"A few weeks ago it was UFOs falling from the sky, and now this," McDonald
said. "I don't know if it's sunspots or something in the water, but lately
it's hard to preserve disorder."

At the Tillyville Barber Shop, rampant Beatlemania choked off business by 35
percent. Amid the empty shop, Pompadour sat with his head in his hands.
"Nobody wants a haircut no more," he said. "I can't even think-a no jokes."

Among those present at Council proceedings was developer Darth Elbow, who
claimed not to hear a Liverpudlian accent anywhere within 16,000 miles. "Maybe
I missed something (Ruth says I do that). I was only presenting blueprints for
the new homes on the north side of town."

City Hall has contracted Elbow Construction to build each resident and
subscriber a free home in Tillyville.

Citizens can choose their own personalized house and Tillyville address! Which
includes mail delivery--free!

Visitors are instructed to stop by the Zoning Commission on the third floor of
City Hall. (Councilman garamond Geneva Owl pointed out that the elevator on
the west side of the City Hall lobby is operational again, convenient for these
hot summer days.)

According to Elbow, homesteaders can choose between the Oregano, the Cilantro,
the Tarragon or the Ginger, or they can submit custom designs or illustrations,
and Elbow will build to order. The models are available for public view on
Lois Lane just east of West Elbow.

Asked by this reporter whether the model homes were named for spices, Elbow
replied, "Naw, for my pet beetles, which are named for spices. There's one
now! Ringo, come down from the nice reporter's neck. As I was saying ...
Hello? Hello? Get this man some water!"



FIREWORKS next Sunday!
You won't want to miss a single, bright BOOM!



This Week in Tillyville

Choosing the right bathing suit is serious stuff, particularly if your name is
Lemon Boy, er, L.Bo. Why don't you come with on SUNDAY, because believe me, he
can use all the help he can get. Oh oh!

MONDAY is the official start of Ice Cream Season, but the Tillyville ice cream
truck has come down with a bad case of ice cream truckitis.

Tilly and Skinny plan a road trip TUESDAY. Don't worry, Skinny's making a
list. Um, on second thought, worry.

WEDNESDAY the road trip takes a wrong turn. Luckily, Tilly and Skinny had
synchronized their flashlights.

Ever the idea man, Skinny figures out a new way for Tilly to take in THURSDAY's
garbage cans.

On FRIDAY, Dorian is a Dalek, one of a race of robots that menace the galaxy,
but have really bad senses of humor.

On SATURDAY, meet Cupcake, who is tired of being bullied. No one seems to
understand her, except the Hm.



Darth Elbow isn't the only builder in town ...

The Staircase

Herbert Swan came over to help Tilly build the staircase. "If there's one
thing you don't want in a staircase, it's rickety," Herbert said. "That's why
I won't build anything with sugar cubes, carrot sticks, or hen's teeth."

"Hen's teeth?" Tilly said, surprised. "Why would anyone want to build anything
out of hen's teeth?"

"Exactly," said Herbert Swan. "Hen's teeth are rickety and unreliable. Now
are you wanting this stairway to go up or down?" Herbert waited for Tilly's
answer.

"Um," Tilly said.

"Up or down?" repeated Herbert Swan. "No stairway in its right mind goes um.
Up or down?"

"Um," Tilly repeated.

"Um is neither up nor down," Herbert said sternly. "It's not even half up and
half down. And no self-respecting stairway goes sideways. Come on, Tilly,
decide."

"Can't it be both up and down?" Tilly asked.

"You mean reversible?"

"I guess so."

Herbert Swan considered Tilly's request. "Okay, up and down. Interesting
concept. Very interesting."

"We are talking about stairs?" Tilly said, just to make sure.

"Stairs, yes," Herbert said. "But we've also got flights to consider. Flights
and landings. And banisters. Can't do without banisters. And luggage racks."


"Luggage racks?"

"Yes. Or rather no. Sorry. Guy confused there for a moment. All this talk
of flights. I was thinking of airplanes for a moment there. Sorry. Sorry.
But say, you wouldn't want to consider substituting a landing strip for your
stairway? Imagine the pizzazz. You could print a schedule for departures and
arrivals. Have a ticket counter. A cafeteria. A government security force.
Remote parking."

"I just want a simple stairway," Tilly said. "None of the frills. None of the
fancy stuff, just a simple--"

"Not even a snack bar?" Herbert interrupted.

"Stairway," Tilly said. "To get to--"

"So it's simple you want, why didn't you say so?" Herbert said. "I have just
the thing." Herbert rummaged through his duffel bag. He pulled out a toaster,
a Tupperware container of acorns, a trumpet mute. "I know it's in here
somewhere," he said. An alarm clock, a one-a-day vitamin, a package of banana
muffin mix. He shook the alarm clock. "Mm, still ticking," he said. "Might
be good for getting up." He looked questioningly at Tilly. "No? Right.
Right. What was I thinking of? A stairway. Hm." He popped the one-a-day
vitamin into his mouth. "Ah, here it is, hiding behind the crowbar as usual."

Herbert drew a length of yellow rope from his duffel bag.

"That's a rope," Tilly said.

"I know," Herbert replied, coiling the rope about his elbow. "A stairway rope.
No frills, no fray. You climb up, you slide down. You climb up, you slide
down. Climbing up is good exercise. Sliding down is great fun. What do you
think?"

"Thanks," Tilly said, "but I think I want something with a banister."

story by Walter



LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Dear Tilly,

I love it. This whole clicking thing is so fun. Anyway great work. This is
really neat and I would like a suggestion from you how I can introduce your
site for some of the families that I know in the practice at work. Keep up the
good work.

Diane



For free stories, jokes and games, come visit http://tillyville.com
Get a new story delivered to you by email everyday.
Subscribe to Tillyville!

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biff

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Since: Jul 03, 2004
Posts: 2



(Msg. 2) Posted: Sat Jul 03, 2004 4:46 pm
Post subject: BOOK REVIEW - The War Bug (SciFi Satire) [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

Title: The War Bug

Author: Biff Mitchell

Author Web Site: www.biffmitchell.com

Publisher: Double Dragon Publishing (www.double-dragon-ebooks.com)

Also at Amazon.com:

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0001YTFRE/ref%3Dnosim/webslead...oo-20/1

Publishing Date: March 2004

Genre: CyberSatire

ISBN: 1-59080-262-4

Pages: 286

Price: 5.99



From Blue Iris Journal



So. What do cheese soup, sentient virtual reality beings, and a
seven-hundred pound sado-masochist have to do with each other? Pick up The
War Bug and unlock the mysteries. Part sci-fi, part action adventure, and
plenty of dark humor is what Biff Mitchell weaves together, along with his
eclectic and electric cast in his latest offering.

Abner Hayes is Virtual Code Geneticist, where he works online studying DNA
codes of plants and animals and then simulating them offline. However, his
offline world is a drag. He's alone, he lives in a hovel, and his parents
have already been "included", which Abner fears will also someday happen to
him. Especially if his secret about his online life is to ever leak out.
Because online, he has a beautiful wife and daughter. They are not avatars
from the real world like he is, nor are they flat coded programs. His wife
Claire and daughter Cassie are the only two online entities to have made the
leap from programs to sentient, thinking and feeling, beings. However, their
time is limited because the 'net is under siege and ready to collapse. Abner
has created a bubble protection for his family, but they've been abducted by
some sinister forces who've figured out his secret and want to unlock it for
themselves. The only way to save his family is to team up with the deadly,
ultimate destruction virus, known as The War Bug, to find and rescue his
family before the entire world crumbles to oblivion.

Thrills and chills abound as the clock ticks down and the race is on for
Abner to save his family. This is a rich and complex world, but Mitchell
makes it wholly comprehensible without ever losing momentum. In his
signature style, the satire and laughs are woven throughout, along with a
plethora of zinging one-liners and unique descriptions. The characters are
rich and varied, fully-fleshed and wholly intriguing. The good guys have
edges, the bad guys have allure. And even amid the brewing chaos in this
strange landscape, the story flies so high and resonates because it's so
very human.

It's rare that a novel can so thoroughly capture the mind, heart, and
imagination. Biff Mitchell is a blessed breed of writer who mixes the real,
surreal, and potentially real by fusing philosophy, science, human emotions,
humor, and terror. And The War Bug is this writer at the top of his game.



Susan DiPlacido, Author of 24/7 and Trattoria

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