Doug Skinner: An Archive on Your Gizmo

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Lunch on Mount Kazbek

April 22nd, 2018 · Comments Off on Lunch on Mount Kazbek

Here’s another excerpt from my collection The Snowman Three Doors Down. In this story, the eagles discover that Prometheus is open for business. (For the rest, please buy a copy of the book.)

LUNCH ON MOUNT KAZBEK

Zeus looked on with satisfaction as Kratos, Bia, and Hephaestus chained Prometheus to the face of Mount Kazbek. Prometheus protested that the punishment was unjust, but Zeus was inexorable. Zeus reminded him that he’d stolen fire from the gods, and given it to vile mortals. Prometheus reminded Zeus that the burnt offerings so prized on Olympus needed fire to be burnt. That only made Zeus angrier, since Prometheus had tricked him out of the best offerings, back in Mecone.

Prometheus adamantly refused to show his pain, even as Hephaestus drove in the iron stake that fixed him to the rock. Then, Zeus and the others flew back to Olympus, leaving Prometheus to his torment.

For the first few days, Prometheus lay alone on the barren peak, scorched by the sun by day and chilled by winds at night. He never slept, because Titans never do, and could see nothing but the blank sky and the bleak expanse of the Caucasus stretching to the horizon. He suffered atrociously.

One day, he spotted two specks high above him. Gradually, they grew larger, and he saw that they were golden eagles (Aquila chrysaetos). They fluttered down beside him, and perched on an outcropping, furling their wings.

“Good morning,” said one. “I’m Saba, and this is my wife Tamar.”

“Good morning,” said Tamar.

“We hear there’s some mighty good eating around here,” said Saba.

“We’re told the liver can’t be beat,” said Tamar.

Prometheus said nothing, since he didn’t speak Georgian.

“Must be shy,” said Saba.

“I guess we just dig in,” said Tamar.

Bon appétit!” said Saba. “Or, in our good native tongue, gaamot!”

Gaamot!” echoed Tamar.

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Musical Instruments (18)

April 8th, 2018 · 2 Comments

Le Scat Noir, the online journal published by Black Scat Books, has suspended publication. With it, so has my regular page of musical instruments. This is the last one I drew, the 18th. That means I’ve come up with 162 instruments, which is quite an orchestra. Well, I’ll keep drawing them, and try to make a book of them…

(You can, of course, enlarge it by clicking on it.)

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The Snowman Three Doors Down

March 21st, 2018 · 2 Comments

The Snowman Three Doors Down is now available from Black Scat Books! It has 24 stories! It’s 246 pages! Hapless characters slog through tangled plots and formal constraints in this bracing collection. Will the Chromatologist find the shade of green that identifies the adulterous cosplayer? Will a group of tipsy scholars discover the secret to Ben Jonson and Thomas Nashe’s suppressed play? Will Gumball Gaffigan make it safely to Georgeville? And will Chicky and Chalky finish that snowman? Laughs and bewilderment await you! It can be found on Amazon, or from Black Scat Books.

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The Music of the Spheres

March 11th, 2018 · 2 Comments

Here’s a keyboard reduction of the 8th string quartet (see last post). Oh, those spheres!

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String Quartet 8: The Music of the Spheres

March 4th, 2018 · 3 Comments

Athanasius Kircher gave a brief realization of the music of the spheres in Musurgia Universalis (1650). Saturn, Jupiter, and Mars correspond to the soprano; the sun to the alto; Venus, Mercury, and the moon to the tenor; and the earth to the bass. I expanded his four measures to a hundred. He suggested that the planets orbit through the modes; I added key changes and ornamentation.

This is inevitably ambient. I suspect a concert audience would not be entertained. If you like, you can make it longer by repeating the first 96 measures a few times, and then closing with the last four.

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An Interview with Horace Ballantine

March 2nd, 2018 · Comments Off on An Interview with Horace Ballantine

Black Scat Books has released a free Peek-A-Book of “An Interview with Horace Ballantine,” from my upcoming collection The Snowman Three Doors Down. The veteran cartoonist has to contend with an interviewer who never heard of comic strips, and it’s not easy for either of them. You can download your PDF here.

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String Quartet <1: Ah Youth

February 25th, 2018 · Comments Off on String Quartet <1: Ah Youth

My less-than-first string quartet collects a few pieces from my teens that I thought worth saving. Here, for example, is a rollicking polytonal number I wrote when I was 16 (recopied for legibility).

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Jumpy

February 18th, 2018 · Comments Off on Jumpy

A piano piece that requires a lot of jumping around the keyboard. I used it in some of my shows with Bill Irwin in the ’80s.

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Gumball Gaffigan

February 11th, 2018 · 2 Comments

Here’s another story from my upcoming collection, The Snowman Three Doors Down. In “Gumball Gaffigan,” our protagonist goes to great lengths to procure and promote his favorite food. At a crossroads, he meets his old friends Gerhardt Goldicote, Gabby Gilfeather, and Hilarion Hachementier, all on quests of their own. Many things could go wrong. Here’s how it begins…

GUMBALL GAFFIGAN

Gumball Gaffigan awoke in a cheery mood.
“My, but it’s sunny out,” he yawned, tossing off the quilt and stretching his limbs. “I wonder what time it is.”
The clock cuckoo popped out to chirp, “It’s morning!”
“That’s not very specific,” Gumball observed.
“It’s good enough,” the little wooden bird retorted. “You have no appointments. You just wander around all day looking for gumballs.”
“A man must eat,” Gumball said.
“Well, bring back some wooden caterpillars if you think of it,” piped the cuckoo, retreating to its sanctum.
Gumball pulled on his shirt, pants, and sandals, and donned a cap to shade his nose, which was sensitive to the sun.
He locked his shed, and strolled out onto Main Street. There he met his friend Gary, who was leaving his shed too.
“Morning!” said Gary. “Out for gumballs?”
“You bet!” Gumball answered with an amiable smile.
Graziella Gottfitz approached from the other direction. She smiled coquettishly from under her twirling parasol.
“I know where you’re headed!” she simpered, pointing a soiled glove in mock accusation.
“My habits are predictable,” chuckled Gumball.
Gumball turned the corner onto Subsidiary Street, murmuring, “I’ll bet there’s a machine here.”
His grandmother, Granny Gaffigan, waddled out from her shed, and glared at him disapprovingly over her unifocals.
“And where might you be going, young man?” she asked sharply.
“I’m gumball bound,” said her grandson.
“What do you do with all that candy?” she asked.
“I make vegetable stock,” he explained.
“Gumballs aren’t vegetables,” the old woman protested.
“They’re made of plants,” Gumball said. “Sugar, dextrose, corn syrup, malic acid, glycerine, tapioca dextrin, carnauba wax: all nature’s bounty from the good green earth.”
“You need a more varied diet,” she said.
“The gumball is a sphere,” he replied, “like the earth that is our home, the sun that lights our days, the moon that guides our nights. Its center is in the middle, and its circumference equidistant around it.”
“My daughter didn’t raise you right,” grumbled his mother’s mother as she waddled back into her shed.
“Aha!” cried Gumball, as he sighted a machine. “Come to papa!”

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Herbert’s New Profession

February 6th, 2018 · 1 Comment

We have here another excerpt from my upcoming collection, The Snowman Three Doors Down. In “Herbert’s New Profession,” our protagonist chooses a rather unlikely job to earn some extra money. Here’s how it begins…

HERBERT’S NEW PROFESSION

My name is Herbert Shrike. I’m 75 years young now, as of my last birthday. I’ll be 76 soon. I retired several years ago, after working most of my life for Quonset Gas and Electric. I was in the accounting department. It wasn’t exciting, but it paid the bills.
And that’s getting to be a problem now. Believe me, it’s not easy living on a fixed income. Prices keep going up, even though they say inflation isn’t too bad these days, and it’s harder and harder to stretch that check to the end of the month. I never married or anything like that, so I don’t have kids to help me out when I’m short, like some people do.
Naturally, I started thinking about how I could supplement my income. I’m not too handy, particularly with the arthritis, and my memory isn’t what it used to be. Sometimes I can’t think of a word that I want, and that kind of thing. So I guess I need a job that doesn’t take too much skill or intelligence.
That knocks out a lot of possibilities. And you need to provide some kind of service. If someone’s paying you, they want something for their money. That’s just human nature, and is kind of basic to our economy. But after some thought, I came up with what might be a workable idea. Maybe I could become a prostitute.
There are pros and cons to the idea, of course. There are pros and cons to every idea. I’ll get the cons out of the way first, so I don’t have to dwell too long on the negative. I like to stay positive.
First of all, I’m a man. Most of the prostitutes I’ve heard about, from watching TV or movies, are ladies who sell their services to gentlemen, and I’m a gentleman who would be catering to ladies. But then, times have changed, and the relationships between the sexes are different now than when I was young. They’re changing all the time. Maybe it’s not as much of a problem as it seems.
Second, I might be considered too old for the job. I’m the first to admit it. Most prostitutes are much younger, and many people, both men and women, consider younger people more appealing. But there may be women who are looking for the experience and dignity of an older man. You never know until you try.
Third, I’m not conventionally attractive. Even when I was younger, ladies didn’t find me particularly handsome. I certainly didn’t look like the movie stars they always swooned over. I can’t think of their names right now, but I do know there wasn’t much resemblance. Objectively, I can’t say that I’ve improved with age. I’ve gotten thinner on top and thicker in the middle, which is what happens when you get older, and I think my nose has gotten even bigger. But I’m not deformed or anything, and I’m sure I’d be acceptable under the right circumstances.
Fourth, I’m not particularly experienced. I had sexual relations with a few women when I was younger, but not many, perhaps because I’m not conventionally attractive, as I mentioned above. Those relations were short-lived, and usually involved heavy drinking. And I’ve never actually visited a prostitute, so I have no experience as a customer in the business. I’ve seen a lot of movies and TV shows about them, though, so I do have some practical knowledge.
Those are the cons. Now for the pros.

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