Monday, December 24, 2012



"A Rose by any Other Name: An Alphabet of Tales About a Man and a Woman"


Customer Reviews


6 Reviews
5 star:
 (6)
4 star:  (0)
3 star:  (0)
2 star:  (0)
1 star:  (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
 
 
 Only search this product's reviews
Most Helpful First | Newest First

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars stranger than short fictionJune 13, 2012
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
Last night, I bought it and read it before going to sleep...when I finally rested, I dreamed I was the size of a brownstone, with NYC tap water running through my veins. When I woke up I had 26 girlfriends and spoke 17 dialects of English. CHECK IT OUT!
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No

5.0 out of 5 stars God, I loved it.June 6, 2012
Each story had enough to suck you in. And keep you riveted. And then left you wanting. And if you know anything about seduction, well...consider me seduced. 26 times. It was lovely. I put the book down to go out into the world, and I would fantasize about coming home to read it. I can't remember the last time that happened, and certainly not with short stories.

I loved it. I'm actually weirded out by how much I loved it.

Do yourself a favor and bring this one home.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No

5.0 out of 5 stars LovelyMay 4, 2012
This review is from: A Rose By Any Other Name: An Alphabet of Tales About a Man and a Woman (Kindle Edition)
As someone who rarely ventures away from non-fiction, I am thoroughly grateful to have indulged in this quick, riveting read. Whether you're trying to get the girl or get rid of the girl (or boy for that matter) you just might learn a trick or two while being fully entertained. Mazo is quick to turn a phrase, twist a plot and tug at your heartstrings. This book is a perfect balance of what a collection of short stories should be. Only wish there were more letters in the alphabet...
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No

5.0 out of 5 stars Sweet smell of RoseApril 26, 2012
By 
christine Heath (NORTHPORT, NY, US) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Rose By Any Other Name: An Alphabet of Tales About a Man and a Woman (Kindle Edition)
Just finished my copy.. really enjoyed it, read through it so fast you would have thought it was on fire. Thank you for the smiles, laughs, and the tears from the story about your grandfather. for some reason I really want a pickle and I am considering going to NYC to obtain it. I think I have been everyone of those 26 roses at one point or another.. well except for the doctor... so far.
LOVE&KAOS
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No

5.0 out of 5 stars Great read!April 24, 2012
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
Mr. Mazo creates characters and story lines that grab your attention and make you want to know more. In fact, that may be my only compliant, I was left wanting to know more about all the characters. It was gratifying to see the cross pollination between some stories but let it be known, "Brian Mazo, novel please!!"
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No

5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Book Of ShortsApril 19, 2012
By 
Virginia I. Heath (San Francisco, CA United States) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: A Rose By Any Other Name: An Alphabet of Tales About a Man and a Woman (Kindle Edition)
The stories in this book leave you wanting more, which is exactly what a short story should be. They are all different, totally readable and every one created an emotional reaction. I especially appreciated Mr. Mazo's ability to accurately describe the feelings of the women in the stories. As an avid reader I often find male writers unable to give an accurate voice to their female characters. I am a female, so I don't find myself able to judge the reverse - female authors writing from a male perspective. I also really enjoyed Mr. Mazo's ability to put voice to feelings and emotions he could not ever have felt himself - a woman suffering a miscarriage - the writing just felt true and real, like it was from the mind of a real person.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No



Buy a copy here or download the Kindle version now right here. If you would like an inscribed copy drop me an email at 26tales@gmail.com ($14US + shipping/handling)

Thanks much and happy holidays,
Brian

Sunday, December 23, 2012

Well, it's official- Nick Swisher is no longer a Yankee. Poor bastard will be plying his trade for the Indians for the next four years. And Raul Ibanez is gone now too- off for his third go around up in Seattle. Both were fan favorites- Ibanez for his homerun barrage this past post-season when seemingly no one else in pinstripes could get the ball out of the infield. Swish, on the other hand, delighted the fans with his antics out in right field and played a respectable first when needed, but was diminished when the "real" Yankee season started and that, along with the contract demands, is what lead him out of town. Very happy at least that Swish, of whom I was already a big fan from watching how he played the game out in Oakland, didn't wind up heading north to Boston. Wasn't quite ready to hate him.

But with Cody Ross "down off the board" as the free-agent tracker sites like to say, the prospect of signing a righthanded outfielder to supplement the now-all lefty one of Gardner, Granderson and Ichiro is left to Scott Hairston. Story is that he would like to stay in New York, but re-sign with the Mets, makes you wonder where the guy's drive to win is. Right?


Been spending much of the last month or so buried in books. Just followed up the excellent prequel, "Kings of Cool" by Don Winslow with its predecessor, "Savages" which is the last Oliver Stone movie. Having read a bunch of Winslow after the aforementioned KoC, it's been interesting to watch his prose style - lots of white on the pages, lots of lingo - develop over the course of a number of books that intersect characters like "Dawn Patrol," "The Gentleman's Hour," and "The Death and Life of Bobby Z." (an unwatchable movie version exists of that one, too) and "The Winter of Frankie Machine."

Having adored the more recent Jeffrey Franzen work, "Freedom" I have an older one on the shelf - "Strong Motion" lined up on the bed-stand as "next."

Can really recommend the trilogy by George Alec Effinger that starts with "When Gravity Fails," followed by "A Fire on the Sun," which lead me to some of his other work. I put away "The Nick of Time" in a day and its follow-up, "The Bird of Time," should follow the Franzen. Interestingly enough, I took a flyer on an old Jonathan Lethem novel, "Gun, with Occasional Music," which, coincidentally enough, turned out to be quite the homage to the Effinger trilogy to surprise me that I read them in succession having no previous knowledge of their clear connection.

I had read some of his magazine pieces, but I think "Downtown Owl" was the first novel I have read by Chuck Klosterman. His Mid-Western settings and music references will see more of him on my shelf. If you're buying me books - or yourself, I suppose as well - there are new novels out by the likes of Jess "The Financial Lives of the Poets" Walter, Mark "House of Leaves" Danielewski (sic?), Junot "The Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao" Diaz (check out my book's Facebook page for a very cool picture/quote by that author here.) and Michael Chabon.

Okay, happy reading to you all especially in these cold weather months. My book is available here or by emailing me directly at 26tales@gmail.com for an inscribed copy.

Cheers
B.

Monday, December 17, 2012

As of this writing it's not official, but it sure does look like the Toronto Blue Jays are continuing their winning ways this off-season with their potential acquisition of 2012's NL Cy Young award winner. RA Dickey was a great story in New York - not quite Linsanity - but from a financial point of view, getting a good haul for a 38 year old pitcher - albeit a knuckleballer - may benefit the Mets more than holding on to the righthander for another season, one that won't make a difference when it comes to making the playoffs, and receiving the best catching prospect in baseball along with a power pitcher.

Sandy Alderson, Mets GM, made the fans as happy as they are capable of, by re-signing other fan favorite, David Wright, to a long-term extension earlier in the hot-stove league, but by all appearances, Dickey was on the way out, either having pitched 1 more season without a contract for the next, so to get a great package from the win-now Jays is about as good as it gets for the other New York team.

And as much as the Yankees and Cashman have seemingly stood pat, taking care of the veterans they wanted back for one more go around before the lesser-Steinbrenners make good on their plan to get beneath the luxury tax cap in 2014 of $189M, this is a team that was capable of more than 90 wins equating to the best record in the AL in 2012, outside of the Toronto team, the rest of the division didn't get any better. The Bosox will be different, and they can't be much worse than last season, but their willy-nilly signings of character-guys isn't going to equate in the 25-30 more wins they will need to compete in the division, although getting to play the Astros this season should benefit most teams at least a little.

Looks like Ichiro is up next now that Youkilis has been signed to play third in A-Rod's absence. I suppose he's a better option than the names, like Troy Glaus and Cody Ransom who wanted the gig. There's still the absence of a powerful right-handed bat and as of now, the catching spot is available for the combo of Cervelli, Romine and Stewart to battle with whiffle ball bats over.

It's only two more months until pitchers and catchers report for spring training and one has to suspect that Cash has a trick or two up his sleeve. I bet, despite how crazy this may sound, that he misses answering to The Boss, who always wanted to win as much, if not more, than pretty much any fan. I miss the man...

Hey! If you're X-mas present hunting, my book is available either directly through me signed or from one of these sites:

paperback or Kindle

Thanks much,
Brian

Sunday, December 16, 2012

If you were expecting to read about baseball today, you're out of luck when it comes to me and original material. But I present someone else's pieces -- and really a baseball whopper of a tale -- about dads, bats and the late, great Roberto Clemente. This is a fairly lengthy piece, but you should read it.

Meanwhile, if you're planning on being in Minneapolis for New Year's Eve or if you're looking for something to do, this is it:


Event

1 Blink = Dance
This new year's eve, there will be thousands of parties  but only one where the DJ uses only his eyes to make the magic happen

Our new years eve party at Old Arizona combines a great time and a great cause with an extraordinary story. The story centers around David Anderson overcoming the limitations of an ALS diagnosis to creatively express himself by uniting the party goers with music. David has activated and inspired a group of artists, musicians, videographers, engineers, software and hardware experts to create the experience. Bringing together the technology to enable David to DJ with his eyes, and uniting the people at the party in a larger experience, is just the beginning. Everything that we learn and earn will go toward creating a more robust affordable solution for others like David, to control the technology that most of us take for granted, with their eyes.

The combination of an intimate venue with a team of inspired creatives, united by the goal, will offer an experience unique to Minneapolis and most NYE parties.  The experience will activate and inspire,  stretching our understanding of the possible. Guest will be swept into a magical interactive world of inspired cirque performers Entertainment does not occur on a single stage at a certain time, it bursts all around participants at all times encouraging guest interaction. Performances by aerialists, body painters, life action painters, body balancers and more will immerse you in the enchanting celebration.  Interactive photography and projections by Playatta will bring you into the ambiance of the event.  

Dress: This is not your typical New Year's Eve party.  Dress to express!!  Adorn yourself in your fondest eye candy.  Bust out your glitter, fur, sparkles, dangles, feathers and leathers.  Dare to leave a little untouched to be brushed up by our body painting artists.  Come as the most creative you! 
We will be providing some amazing and zany costume pieces for you to borrow for the photobooth and/or for the evening if you are challenged in that department

This event will sell out. Get your ticket now!

Learn more at www.1blinkequalsyes.com


As for me, working on getting Rose on some shelves here in Minneapolis to go along with the couple in Wisconsin that I had little to do with. Readings, signings, etc. will be the call of business for the new year-- if we get that far.

Thanks
B

Monday, December 10, 2012



Well, unlike last year, Winter showed up yesterday here in the upper Mid-West. Over a foot of snow was dumped on our heads over the course of the day. Having planned on shutting down for the weekend regardless, it was all the excuse I required. Made it a cooking and Netflix kind of a few days, but it's back to the toil today.

It was a far more active weekend around the hot-stove league of MLB. As expected, the Dodgers signed Greinke for an outrageous amount of money -- although they have that and in spades now -- the most ever for a righthanded starting pitcher. And while I haven't seen him pitch all that much, I don't think he's all that. But LA doesn't seem to mind; they have the money so they're going to spend the money. The log-jam of other starters should start falling like dominoes with Lohse and Sanchez most likely the next free agent pitchers to get signed somewhere.

Big deal though in a trade for TB's James Shields going to Kansas City for whom many are calling the best hitting prospect in the game. KC gets Wade David as well with a few more prospects going to the Rays. At least for this season, this should make things a little easier in the AL-East as the return for investment that Tampa Bay received won't be ready to start the season in the bigs.

The Yankees meanwhile have done little other than re-sign their own, although the additions of Andy Pettitte, Mariano Rivera and Hiroki Kuroda cannot be considered anything than major. You wish your team had signed them this winter. Word on the street is that Ichiro is next to return although Eric Chavez and Andruw Jones have signed elsewhere. Now that Reynolds signed in Cleveland - where many thought Youkilis would go and re-unite with his ex-skipper Tito Francona - the expectations that the hated Greek god of walks will likely be in pinstripes this season are become more and more a reality. Well, perhaps he figures out a way to right his oft-injured ship and stick it to his former club and hated rival much like Clemens, Boggs, Damon and others have done.

But if you asked me, I don't want him...

Cheers
B.

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

The contracts going out this MLB off-season have already gotten fairly ridiculous and the big fish have yet to be reeled in. Word on the street is that Zach Greinke is going to get the biggest contract in the history of pitchers and that is just idiotic for a guy who's had one great season only and is a risk due his personal make up. Biased naturally, but CC Sabathia had long proved to everyone that he is a horse, an ace and a guy onto whose big back a lot of trust could be committed. That could be one of the better free agent pitcher signings even with the opt-out clause that lead the Yanks to extend him. Greinke is no CC and who ever overpays for him will feel that sting.

Although right now the Dodgers have all the monopoly money  in the world so they will most likely be his landing spot.

And while Texas makes the most sense for Josh Hamilton that still hasn't happened and the Ranger brass did some early seed-planting in order to ready the fans should their stud CF'er depart for other pastures. One rumor spreading a little is that Cashman trades Granderson and goes after Hamilton. At least the Rangers didn't overpay their on-the-decline catcher, who's really a part-time backstop and should be DH'ing and maybe some first.

But the bosox in their attempts to re-build with better clubhouse guys went all-in on Napoli after signing a bunch of guys that just don't make much sense on the field. They still have done nothing to address their lousy rotation and with the steps taken by Toronto this off-season, the nation may prepare itself for another last place finish.

Speaking of last place, the marlins just jettisoned the prize major league piece in their salary dump trade with the Jays. Escobar and his $5M salary for 2013 was traded across state to the Rays for a minor leaguer. Perhaps Cashman can grab Stanton making the player happy and answering the right-field job for the Yankees.

But the Giants overpaid in re-signing Pagan and Scutaro. Keppinger just got a huge deal too. I am rooting against the Yankees picking up either youkilis or aj pierzinski (sic) as I don't like either -- and the world of MLB seems to agree on AJ- he's apparently the most disliked guy in the game. Who needs that?

Not so much a hot stove league you ask me...

B

Monday, December 3, 2012

Yeah, yeah, it's been a few weeks but when you don't have anything nice to say...

But I'm pretty adamant that MLB commissioner Bud Selig has got to go. His term has been all about the business and damn the game of baseball. Really the 'why' behind his treatment of the McCourt/Dodger fiasco was all about making more money for his friends and from keeping anyone else out. Was McCourt bad for the game, bad for the Dodgers? Hell yes he was, but it wasn't until he threatened to undercut the MLB TV deal that Selig wanted was he ousted.

Meanwhile, down in South Florida, all hell has broken loose. Loria and his team of skeevy carpetbaggers have done it again and when it was in the power of Selig to block a trade all he was roll his eyes and say what can you do. Lies to players and taxpayers mean not a damn thing. I'd watch soccer if I lived there before going to another Marlins home game. Loria recently just nudged out Fidel Castro in a popularity contest. Ozzie Guillen is lucky to be gone.

Meanwhile, despite selling 49% of the YES network to Rupert Murdoch, the new Yankee brass seems set in stone about keeping under the $189M salary mark to avoid the newest rounds of luxury tax. Sharing the wealth and the payments to smaller market teams would be one thing but if the owners just put the money in their pocket then really -- why subsidize then. Brian Cashman is probably hamstrung by 1-year deals this winter as the signings of Pettitte, Kuroda & Mo (although we're all rather happy to have them in the fold for another season) bear out. Losing Russell Martin to Pittsburgh is okay- he's more noise than thunder. Even the fan favorite Swisher had to go as he fails to show up in the post-season. As for who catches and who provides some thump from right-field, remains to be seen.

Meanwhile out in LA, the 'new' Dodgers got their sick TV deal - even far more profitable than YES is for the Yankees and they will be the team for the next few seasons that drives up free agent salaries. Scott Boras must be licking his chops. Funny that in the midst of all of this and when PED tainted stars Bonds, Clemens and Sosa hit the Hall of Fame ballot for the first time, Marvin Miller, the head of the players' union who was the man behind free agency and the boon to the salaries of the players died at the age of 95.

I am seriously considering boycotting Opening Day and the All-Star game (ok, I rarely watch the latter anyway) until Selig resigns and Joe Torre is made the new commissioner. That, indeed, would be best for the game.

B