Michael Murphy's Blog, page 8
May 1, 2013
Win a signed copy of Goodbye Emily
Just a short note. If you’d like a chance to win a signed copy of my return to Woodstock novel, Goodbye Emily, you can enter by “liking” my Goodbye Emily Facebook page.
Not sure if it’s the book for you? Check out some of the fantastic reviews on the Goodbye Emily website including one from Country Joe McDonald and one from Wavy Gravy.
One final roadtrip
The post Win a signed copy of Goodbye Emily appeared first on Goodbye Emily.
April 23, 2013
RIP Richie Havens
Sadly another Woodstock icon has passed away. If you haven’t heard Richie Havens died of a heart attack. To honor Woodstock’s initial performer, here’s my original post about his performance.
The post RIP Richie Havens appeared first on Goodbye Emily.
April 16, 2013
Tim Hardin, Singer/songwriter at Woodstock
Tim Hardin is best known as an incredible songwriter. His music was recorded by artists such as Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Bobby Darin, Bob Seger, The Youngbloods, even Frank Sinatra. Born in Eugene, Oregon in 1941, Hardin perused the Boston and Greenwich Village folk music scene and released two albums before Woodstock that included his biggest hit, Misty Roses.
Singer/songwriter Tim Hardin
Many people remember Hardin for writing If I Were a Carpenter, made into a hit by Bobby Darin. Darin returned the favor by writing the terrific anti-war song Simple Song of Freedom, a song Hardin performed at Woodstock.
Hardin’s performance at Woodstock and subsequent career was marred by tarnished addiction. Unfortunately, he died of an overdose in 1980, but his music lives on.
The post Tim Hardin, Singer/songwriter at Woodstock appeared first on Goodbye Emily.
April 12, 2013
A final Goodbye Emily excerpt
I’ve enjoyed sharing excerpts from Goodbye Emily with you as part of my fellow authors who’ve written novels that feature baby boomers, but I want to return to focusing on Woodstock. Kudos to Boomerlit Friday blog hop authors. Check out their wonderful excerpts.
Below, Sparky goes after Emily who has left Woodstock. He’s determined to find out whether she feels about him the way he feels about her. Just a couple of complications. He knows she’s a local girl, but doesn’t know where she lives or even her last name, but with Josh’s encouragement he has to find out.
What was I doing? I’d known Emily less than a day, a few hours really. Josh, Buck and I planned this roadtrip for months and now I planned to walk away from the festival.
“This is crazy, man.”
“You have to do this.”
“If Buck was here—”
“If Buck saw in your eyes what I see, how you feel about this girl, he’d tell you to go after her, too.”
“You think?”
“If you don’t try to find Emily,” Josh clapped a hand on my shoulder, “you’ll regret it the rest of your life.”
I wiped rain from my eyes and glanced back at the hundreds of thousands and the empty stage. The once-green fields and brightly colored tie-dyed shirts now melded into a sea of gray, soupy mud.
I took a deep breath and stepped across the downed fence. At the road, I glanced back and waved.
Josh waved back and shouted over the din of the pounding rain.
“Go find Emily.”
Through the steady downpour, I walked away from Woodstock determined to see this through. No matter how illogical or impractical my quest might be, I had to find out how Emily felt about me.
I followed the twisting line of side-by-side cars that led away from Yasgur’s farm. I stepped into a puddle, and my shoe sank in thick sucking mud. I pulled and my foot came out of the shoe, which I reached down and fetched with my hand. I stumbled. Soaked, literally from head to toe, I laced back up and continued my slog in the rain and through the mud.
Hope you’ve enjoyed these excerpts from Goodbye Emily. This weekend, I’ll be blogging about the late Tim Hardin, singer and songwriter who performed on Day One.
The post A final Goodbye Emily excerpt appeared first on Goodbye Emily.
April 5, 2013
Boomer Lit Friday excerpt from Goodbye Emily
Hope you’re enjoying the excerpts from Goodbye Emily and other baby boomer novels as part of Boomer Lit’s Friday blog hop.
In this scene, Sparky’s attractive next door neighbor, Meagan, has agreed to help him prepare a heart healthy meal to convince his daughter that he’s seriousl about dealing with his broken heart syndrome. He doesn’t understand Meagan’s interest in him and when she kisses him, Sparky feels a stab of guilt and chest pain.
Meagan’s hand ran up my leg and a stabbing jolt shot across my chest. I grimaced in pain, which seemed to excite her even more. Her breathing quickened and she kissed me again. She grabbed my hand and held my palm against one of her considerable breasts.
Oblivious to my distress, she pulled me down the hall. In my bedroom, she shoved me onto the bed. She slipped out of her satin blouse and revealed a black lace bra and a peace symbol on her right breast. The irony of the peace symbol wasn’t lost on me.
Weak and short of breath, the chest pain made it nearly impossible to move. My breathing grew short and ragged, which Meagan mistook for passion.
She crawled on top of me, unbuckled my belt and kissed me. I began to hyperventilate. I tried to ask her to stop, but the words came out of my mouth as squeaks and groans.
“Oh, Sparky.”
Face flushed with passion, Meagan pinned down my wrists then let go.
“Are you all right?”
I couldn’t answer but managed to shake my head “no.”
“Your heart?”
I nodded.
“Oh, my God!” Meagan leaped off the bed. “I could’ve killed you.”
One final roadtrip
The post Boomer Lit Friday excerpt from Goodbye Emily appeared first on Goodbye Emily.
March 30, 2013
Woodstock and the anti-war movement
Woodstock is not remembered as a significant anti-war event. There are many reasons for this, the great music and the media’s focus on the rain, mud and nudity.
Many believe a year earlier, the anti-war movement peaked with the massive demonstration at the Democratic Convention that resulted in the Chicago Seven trial.
Anti-war movement
In April of 1968 Martin Luther King was assassinated; in June, Robert Kennedy. Many activists lost their enthusiasm. The Democrats chose Vice President Hubert Humphrey over Senator Eugene McCarthy. The result was the election of Richard Nixon, an escalation of the war and twenty thousand more American deaths.
Today Woodstock is remembered as three days of peace, love and music, yet during the festival many attendees burned their draft cards. Performers gave speeches against the war. Country Joe McDonald sang maybe the greatest anti-war song ever, I Feel Like I’m Fixin to Die Rag and exhorted the crowd “if you want to stop this fucking war, you’ll have to sing louder than that.” Even Jimi Hendrix’s famous National Anthem contained a musical reference to the war as I mention in my novel, Goodbye Emily.
In spite of political differences then and now, an accurate recap of Woodstock’s place in history can’t ignore the festival’s place in the era’s anti-war movement.
The post Woodstock and the anti-war movement appeared first on Goodbye Emily.
March 29, 2013
Goodbye Emily excerpt Boomer Lit Friday
Continuing to blog hop with my fellow authors who write novels about and for baby boomers in the Goodreads group Booomer Lit. Check out excerpts from some great novels.
Below is a flashback scene to Woodstock. Emily and Sparky hooked up, and the next morning, she’s unexpectedly unhappy.
“Emily, wait.” The mud grabbed my shoe as I went after her. I lost my balance and fell to my hands and knees in the soft clinging sludge. I pulled myself up, wiped both hands on my already filthy jeans and hurried after Emily.
By the time I caught up, she’d arrived at the area where we left our friends the day before. Crystal sat alone on the side of the hill. Where were Buck and Josh?
Crystal scrambled to her feet with a sleeping bag draped over her shoulders. Mud streaked her hair and wet clothes. Missing one of her sandals, she hardly resembled the girl who caught my eye.
She hugged Emily and began to cry. “This festival sucks. I’m soaked. I haven’t slept all night. I could barely see the stage.”
Crystal’s stomach growled. “Where’s the food you went after?”
I reached into my jacket pocket. I handed her the cold hot dog and Emily’s panties dropped to the ground.
Crystal rolled her eyes. “Are you kidding me?”
Emily grabbed the panties, stuffed them in her jeans pocket and shot me a scorching glare.
A smirk crossed Crystal’s face. “Stan won’t be happy.”
Stan? “Who’s Stan?”
***
You can read what others think about Goodbye Emily on this website link, and my website.
The post Goodbye Emily excerpt Boomer Lit Friday appeared first on Goodbye Emily.
March 22, 2013
Another Goodbye Emily excerpt
It’s Boomer Lit Friday again, and time to check out excerpts from all the great baby boomer novels. Just click on the link and browse away.
Below is another excerpt from my return to Wodostock novel, Goodbye Emily. The scene occurs as rain interrupts the performance on day one of Woodstock, just after Sparky and Emily meet:
We held our hands toward the sky as the rain sprinkled down in a welcome cooling mist. The mist turned into sheets of rain. I removed the windbreaker and held it over our heads. I drew Emily close and enjoyed her damp body against mine.
Many in the crowd scattered to the shelter of tents and cars in the camping area at the farm’s edge. More sought cover near the speaker towers, which swayed in the storm’s wind and downpour.
“We should go back.”
Emily took several steps in a different direction, toward the stage. She stopped and held out a hand to me as the flower painted on her cheek slid down her face in wet yellow streaks. “You can go back, or you can come with me.”
***
If you’d like to read more, Goodbye Emily can be ordered for your Kindle, Nook, or at a bookstore near you.
The post Another Goodbye Emily excerpt appeared first on Goodbye Emily.
March 17, 2013
Woodstock Performers Continue to Tour
Woodstock music continues to live on as performers at Woodstock share their music by touring around the country and around the world ensuring the legacy of Woodstock.
If you haven’t seen them, Crosby, Stills and Nash sound as great today as they did at Woodstock, most recently without Neil Young. Check out their tour info.
CS&N Tour
Joan Baez continues to tour. She looks and sounds great. Her tour resumes in June.
Joan Baez
Arlo Guthrie just completed a European tour. He’s wrapping up a tour of Australia and will continue his tour in the U.S. later this month.
Country Joe McDonald also performs and has been paying tribute to Woody Guthrie this past year. Here’s info on John Sebastian’s upcoming tour dates.
I’ll update this blog with more tour dates of your favorite Woodstock performers. Happy St. Patrick’s Day to you all.
The post Woodstock Performers Continue to Tour appeared first on Goodbye Emily.
March 15, 2013
Blog hopping with Goodbye Emily
Third Friday of Boomer Lit blog hopping. For snippets of some great books, click here. I’ve been so honored by all the people who’ve read Goodbye Emily and posted reviews. 28 readers have left four and five star reviews on Amazon.
Below is a portion of a scene in the novel where Sparky Ellington comes to visit his old high school buddy, Buck Jamison at a garage Buck owns. Their conversation is interrupted…well, you’ll get the idea:
The door to the office in back opened, and a hot-bodied redhead half Buck’s age stepped out. Candy apple-red nail polish matched Angelina Jolie lips. She wore a diamond studded nose ring, stiletto heels and a red leather halter-top. She tugged car keys from the snug pocket of Daisy Duke shorts.
She acted as if Lady and I weren’t there. She pressed her toned body against Buck and kissed him, her teeth nipping his lower lip. “Mamma’s gotta dance, baby. Be back around six.”
“Ashley, this is my old friend, Sparky.”
“Sparky, yeah.” She gave me a quick hug and a whiff of sweet perfume. “My man talks about you all the time.”
Buck flashed a sheepish smile.
“Don’t you boys get into any trouble. On the day shift I won’t make enough cash for bail money.” Shapely hips and the stilettos set a rhythm as she strutted toward the yellow Mustang. She climbed into the convertible, showing off half her left butt cheek and a tattoo that read “Spank Here.”
One final roadtrip
The post Blog hopping with Goodbye Emily appeared first on Goodbye Emily.


