THIS WAS PUBLISHED TWO YEARS AGO AND I JUST READ IT NOW!
http://www.bookviral.com/cradle-of-crime-a-daughters-t/4594052167BOOK VIRAL REVIEW
THIS WAS PUBLISHED TWO YEARS AGO AND I JUST READ IT NOW!
http://www.bookviral.com/cradle-of-crime-a-daughters-t/4594052167BOOK VIRAL REVIEW
My Cradle of Friends rock my fear,confusion, attitude, confidence, and spirit. Thank you for sharing the storm. I will bring my light back because of you.
I feel like a butterfly wing, trying to fly without my twin.ย Hang on, we haveย to fly solo.ย The world feels harsher, the obstacles immense, one wing is better than none. ย ย 
One winged flight with breath of fright, just a step I have to take to the next destination.
In a week of famous iconic people who’ve committed suicide, my heart breaks and my mind asks, why is everyone shocked? Chronic depression, anxiety, and loss of a life view are not particularly inviting topics of conversation. I know, the last two years of my life these disturbing emotions tried to get a noose around my neck… NO WAY. Enemies cannot win, whether they are in your head your heart or at your doorstep.
The answer is to get involved in someone’s mental decay, agony, and hopelessness is a risk most people are not willing to take. I suggest the simplest of remedies; accessibility by way ofย phone calls and drop-ins.
Suicides have increased thirty-percent since 1999 and according to Suicide Statistics one hundred and twenty-three each day.
Who do you know that needs attention?
ADVENTURES IN LIVINGNESS FALL ON… moving without a new address. This is the pinnacle of the If Girl, an identify that suits me.ย I’ve met dozens of men and women who are transitioning from one local to another, one partner to another, one pet to another, the if is the true arch of our character.ย If we reach to high we may end up withย a knock on the head, if we reach to lowย we disappoint ourselves.ย If you are not moving internally, well, I guess you are happy where you are. I’ve never known that.ย Maybe its the writer in me, without conflict what to write about?
Direction is a choice; move back home, move near your children, move for a job, but in my case I move because my act in Santa Fe has closed. I’m like a space between two paragraphs; a blank slate sounds romantic, no commitments or tangible responsibilities my home is rented and so like a nomad, I’m searching for a new beginning. Some say its an adventure, some say the answer will come in time,ย as I lay my head down on a hotel pillow, the interim is asking me to be peaceful, as my belongings are reduced to a partial wardrobe,ย my cat, three books, and my coffee maker.
Its like when I went off to college,ย a liberating extension of those early days when belonging to things didn’t matter, life mattered.ย If you are single and without children this is the knife that weย must slice into a piece we accept, or no peace at all.ย 
ย Facebook offers a donate application. Click on that and key in Texas or Houston. I chose Houston Food Bank. Red Cross and Salvation Army are available.

SOME OF YOU may have already seen my announcement on Facebook. For those that have not, my memoir CRADLE OF CRIME- A Daughter’s Tribute, is now available on Amazon in the USA, Canada, and the UK.
I began writing my way home in 1996.
If you choose to read I’d love to hear back from you!

Listening to Miles I imagine my pen moving on paper in straight lines and indentations. The beak of the pen breaks out of its shell and abstractions of thought spill. Without prior meditation, feelings form the thoughts. Emotion versus reasoning. Miles musical pen is all emotion. That’s Jazz music!

The throw of the dice this week lands on Adventures in Livingness.ย The last time I wrote a column about life beyond the book was the Malibu series.ย Iโm still tainted by the U-Turn out of Malibu, but as Dad always said, โIf you fall off the horse you get back on!’ย Thatโs what this book is all about; ย just how impressionable we are as children.
ย My pals who have commented after reading this material in six different memoirs are immensely important to this writer. Word press followers, you are recognized with every comment!ย Pals, Baron, Blair, and Stone who took my hand into the offices of agents and editors thank you for believing in my dice!
Santa Fe. NM 3/26/2016
A photographic day for capturing the stillness of light on the roseย
buds. Winter was a lot of writing, editing, and films. I must have seen a hundred this winter. All easy paved paths to escape.ย The one I’d recommend is Divided We Fall; a Polish film set during the occupation of Poland. The Director managed to weave suffering and horror with extraordinary hope and brotherhood. If you like mystery-crime dramas,ย Nine Queens, an Argentinian film that rattles the roots of a cheaters.
A FEW DAYS LATER
Today is sprayed gray and white cloud cover, and tiny drops of wet snow. I call the climate of Santa Fe, a woman with PMS.ย Iโm listening to Nat King Cole and withering under a ย hang-over after a sensational evening with Brother Marc, (the son I wanted) White Zen, his Mother, and Rudy. Iโve watched Marc grow up. Over the last seven years heโs transformed from a shy, confused young adult, into a man of the mountain; wilderness is his passion.ย He drives those big snow plow machines and grooms the mountains in Steamboat Springs, Colorado. He works at night and when he takes a break heย looks at the stars.ย Six-foot thin muscle, shoulderย brown curls, and eyesย shaped like two row boats filled with blue water.ย Heโs not only handsome, his instincts, original expression, and amusing bellowing deep voice tie this lad up in someone you love. Heโs an original. You never get the question or answer you expect;ย he pulls wisdom from his head and heart as easily as folding a napkin. One two three–a brand of thinking shoots out and I just look at him bewildered. Marc is a twenty-nine year old frontiersman andย has been since he was knee high on a San Francisco skateboard. The Revenant!
Easter brings people together and Iโve sensed a developingย surge to be in a group. Distanced friends come closer, family is the bread and butter of vacation, I see so many of them at La Posada, and couples are cooperating.ย No one needs to hug a pillow when they go to sleepย is my motto.
My rise above familiar surroundings and comfort began the day Brussels was terror stricken andย all Belgiansย became one. I checked on Twitter that day, and was touched so deeply when I read the dozens of tweets offering shelter, food, and clothes for those in need. If I were a lifestyle journalist Iโd go there and write about the emotional and physical patterns that will change over time. Imagine the consciousnessโ of those personally affected after experiencing a bomb exploding beside them. I’ve asked a few people how they feel about terrorism. Some are inflamed and others refuse to discuss the matter as it elicits political commentary.ย ย Terrorism has infiltrated the shuffle of disappointment and raised the inner riot in my head to world events. The importance of conversation so we don’t feel alone is vibrating. I don’t mean in text and twitter. It is too instant to embrace.ย ย What happened to,
ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ‘You’ll feel better if you talk about it’ psychology?
ย After a few weeks of submitting the book and reading rejection emails,ย I realized I wasn’t as prepared as I thought.ย Not taking rejections personally is like a handshake after you’ve been swindled.ย I moused over to JK Rowlings and read a few rejection letters she posted after submitting a manuscript under the name of Richard Galbraith. One of the letters suggested she join a writers workshop! ย Anonymous writers like actors, musicians, artists, and photographersย are caught in the storm of celebritism.ย If you are unrecognized theย brick and mortar you have to breakย through is an Olympian challenge.
I was writing a lengthy portrayal of Ben Siegel one day and it occurred to me that he had become a major character in my life.ย He played a role that someone else should have; a noted author, or journalist, or poet.ย Ben Siegel changed my history because I had to learn to love him.ย Learning to love him meant erasing everything I had read or heard. It is said he was a ruthless killer, a savage, violent, and that he loved to kill. I turned to look at a photograph of my mother.ย I was told that she loved Ben too. Where once I believed my mother was naรฏve and uninformed, I know this wasnโt the case. She knew from the beginning. Mom fit into this strangely singular and controversial group of people. I see her in the full frame of who she was. (she is on the right in MGM Ziegfeld Follies 1946)
ย I like her this way because it raised my self esteem; my rebelliousness came from both parents.
While writing about Dad I questioned my prolonged interest in his choices, behavior, and his secrecy. I asked Uncle Myron who shared the same history.ย ย Myron reaffirmed that my father was a true to the code gangster. No one ever got him to talk about what he knew or had seen.
Children feel the repression of truth as clearly as they do the pain of bruise.ย The more you hide or bandage the more they seek and peek. At my root is the inclination to question the world around me, and to mend the breaks in life that molded my identity.
Along the way of the first chapter, I discovered that people like to know how it works; how we write in a state of solitude and selfishness.ย A story or any work of art lives in the artist and God. Miracles do happen!
Dear Readers: Some of you followers may recognize this segment from previous versions.
It was the first time I could read the inscription.
To Smiley, from your pal, Ben.
It was the same man in the โGreen Felt Jungle.โ The photograph placed next to it was of Harry Truman with a similar inscription dated 1963. The disparity of Benjamin โBugsyโ Siegel alongside Harry Truman wouldnโt mean anything to me for another thirty years.
I opened the top drawer of his dresser, thinking I might find a gun. It was fastidiously organized with compartment trays for rolls of coins, a jewelry tray of diamond cuff-links, rings, and watches, and another tray of newspaper clippings. The next drawer was stacked with neatly folded shirts in tissue paper. Under that was a drawer with a lock on it.
โWhat are you doing in my bedroom?โ I slammed the drawer muted by Dadโs abrupt appearance. He pulled a key from his pocket and locked the drawers. His hands shook, and the veins in his neck inflamed.
โHOW DARE YOU GO INTO MY THINGS? What is it youโre looking for? Speak up! What are you looking for?โ
โI was looking for pictures?โ I stammered.
โWhat kind of pictures?โ
โPhotographs ofโฆMommy.โ
โYouโre lying to me! Donโt think you can fool me, you canโt. You want to see photographs have a look at this one.โ Then he pointed to the picture of Ben Siegel. He reminded me of a snarling wolf about to rip my head off. I looked down at the ground and held my breath.
โNow you listen to me and donโt forget this for the rest of your life. This is Benjamin Siegel! He was my dearest and closest friend. Youโre going to hear a lot of lies and hearsay about him. They call him โBugsy,โ but donโt let me ever catch you using that term.ย He was our friend! The best friend I ever had.โ
โWhat else do you want to know? Letโs discuss it right now! โ
โDaddy, what is the Mafia?โ
He stared at me clenching and unclenching his fists; his eyes smoldering with rage.
โWho have you been talking to?โ
โIย heard it at school.โ
โThere is no such thing as, โTHE MAFIAโ! Donโt let me ever catch you using that term again! Have I made myself clear?โ
โYes.โ
I stepped back to the wall and he took me by the shoulders shaking me in tempo with his threats. I was frozen solid. His anger was his weapon and he scared me to death.
โSay it–thereโs no such thing as the Mafia! I repeated it, and started to cry. He raised his arms as if he was going to hit me, then he implored.
โIโm not going to hit you! Iโve never laid a finger on you! If I ever catch you prying into my things, or discussing what goes on in our home, Iโll throw you out on the street.ย Now go to your room and think about what Iโve just said.โ
Later that night confined to my bedroom, I took out the diary my mother had given me. This was when the diary became my best friend. I shoved it in my bureau drawer and covered it with lingerie. At thirteen my diary was safer than asking questions.ย The era of secrecy began.
The day I was born, May 11, 1953 the headlines of the The Los Angeles Time read:
GANGSTERS INVADE SOUTHLAND CITIES.
Among gangsters and their hangers-on named were Abe (Longy) Zwillman, Frankie Carbo, Meyer Lansky, Allen Smiley, whose true name is Aaron Smehoff, Gerald Catena and William Bischoff.
When I met Daddy he had salty sea blue eyes and when my actions were worthy of laughter, his eyes retracted into a blur of skin. Dressed in perfectly matched shades of pink, silver and blue my child eyes rested cheerfully on his silk ties, a collage of jewel tones. The feel of his fabric was soft like blankets. He was very interesting to look at when I was a child and open to all this detail.
I clung to his neck in the back seat of his baby blue Cadillac. He sang songs and his hand fluttered about, catching me by surprise behind my head, and his laughter echoed in my ears. Sometimes we drove through the Paramount Studio Gates, and I was chauffeured in a cart to the Western Stage where we watched cowboys and musical dancers. I was too young to understand this was just a film; thus began my insatiable yearning to be a dancer.
Rory Calhoun was one of the stars Dad was close pals with.ย Just this week I dug into research about Rory Calhoun. I learned he died in 1999, and that heโd also been a ward in Preston Reformatory where Dad was sent at eighteen years old. Rory came a few years later.
We spent a lot of time with the Calhoun family. They had two girls the same age as me. Their exotic Spanish villa on Whittier Drive and Sunset enraptured my girlish senses.ย Inside it was like a movie set, with animal rugs, oil paintings of Spanish Troubadours and Moorish decorations. Rita, Roryโs wife, wore tiny stacked high heels and she clicked across the Spanish tiles like a flamenco dancer. The whole family was blessed with dreamy looks. I didnโt realize that I was surrounded with extraordinary beauty; everyone had these exceptional vogue looks. The importance placed on that kind of beauty was just as distorted as my examination.
Rita danced a stern feminine demeanor, extremely seductive but not without a battle. I learned my first lessons about temptation just by watching her. She fanned the room with perfume and laughter, and men just succumbed like drugged animals. I felt my first tingle of sexuality in the arms of Rory. He was a treasure of natural emotion, physically and orally.ย ย They both gambled, borrowed money from the other, and they bet on everything.
On Sunday we went to Beverly Park, a cherishedย amusement park across from where the whimsical Beverly Center shopping Mall is today. I was only two years old when Dad slung me over a big stinky pony, and insisted I ride around the ring so he could snap photographs.
Inside the Cadillac, insulated from the outside world by metal and glass, he drove without intention of destination, or so it seemed. Though I didnโt know it, he often changed directions to confuse a tailing federal agent. The places he took me became our secret. Sometimes he asked me to close my eyes and count to a hundred. It was a game; he wouldnโt tell me where we were going. Iโd open my eyes and weโd be somewhere unfamiliar, a storefront, hotel room, or someoneโs home.
When the Ringling Brothers Circus came to town, Dad took me every weekend and I met some of the performers. He was no less enthusiastic about the circus than I was. Now I understand as Iโve learned he traveled with Ringling Brothers for a year just after he landed in New York. He was in the wardrobe department! How suitable to his style. Everyone we knew was in some kind of act.
I remember places like Canters Deli on Fairfax. We always had the same waitress, the one with a big air-tight bee-hive.
โ Whatโll it be today honey?โ
โ Iโll have a hot dog.โ
โ No. Last time you got sick. Honey, get her a turkey sandwich. I have to talk to some people outside–make sure she doesnโt leave. โ
โSure thing Mr. Smiley, you go ahead.โ
โWhen are you coming back Daddy?โ
โWhen you finish your lunch. Be a good girl.โ
While I waited for the sandwich, I watched the waitresses very closely. They entertained me; their husky voices and swift mannerisms as they swooshed between tables, calling out orders, โ Matzo ball soup–chicken on the side, Russian on rye no mayonnaise.โ Sometimes he left me long after the sandwich was gone. Iโd turn and watch the door, to see if heโd come in, or ask the waitress.
โ Would you please tell my father Iโm finished.โ
โFinished already! What about dessert? How about a slice of cheesecake?โ Even if I said no, sheโd bring me dessert. Several times I was left so long that I got up and went outside looking for him. I noticed my father down the street talking with some other men. I ran back to the booth and waited. When he came back to the table, I asked him,
โWhere were you Daddy?โ
โI had to meet someone about business. You remember what I told youโMommy doesnโt have to know about this.โ
โI remember.โ Why my outings with Dad remained fixated as birth marks is because they were filled with wonder, amusement, and mystery. My father mixed a little business with my pleasure, but it wasnโt obvious because no one had an office. His business associates worked out of shoe stores, cigar stands, hotels, barber shops; all sorts of fronts that camouflaged the booking of bets.
I bet too. That when I lose Iย never give up on the silver lining.

LUCILLE CASEY SMILEY
All my life people have asked me the same questions:โ Whatโs it like knowing your father is a gangster? How old were you when you found out? Arenโt you afraid of his friends? You know they kill people.โ
I live in a temporary tide-pool, a lily
floating against the current, weighted
down by a suit of armor that shields me
from the beauty, love and freedoms stirring in my bud.
What seemed insignificant at the time was the diving board into my Dadโs history. I was watching a Bugsy Siegel documentary on my television in San Diego during 1993. It was the first one Iโd seen. Three historians joined in on the violence Bugsy honored and esteemed. Half-way through the celebratory lynching of Bugsy and his pals, a reporter made the statement that โItโs obvious Allen Smiley was there to set Bugsy up for the hit.โ Andy Edmonds stated that Dad conveniently disappeared into the kitchen during the time of the shooting. It wasnโt until a photograph of my dad appeared on the screen; a man with thick graying hair that I noticed an expression Iโd never seen, horrifying misery. I moved closer to the television to see his face up close. A kaleidoscope of emotions rose to the surface: anger, shame, curiosity, and disbelief. I was forty years old.
The first time Iโd seen those photographs of Ben Siegel slumped on that sofa; an eye bleeding down his face was a day back in 1966 at the age of thirteen. My best friend Dena lived in Brentwood with her divorced mother and siblings. We hooked in the unfamiliar and confusing imbalance of a broken home life. Dena was suffering depression after her parents divorced and I was dangling from my fatherโs fingertips hopelessly conflicted after my mother died. Dena wouldnโt let a day go by without calling me. โAre you all right?โ She didnโt like my father and her reasons were mature beyond her years, โYour father scares me.โ After school one afternoon we stopped in the Brentwood Pharmacy. Dena was looking at the book rack and I was following along.
โLily, my mother told me your father is in a book, The
Green Felt Jungle. Itโs about gangsters. Wanna see if they have it?โ I agreed to look because Dena was interested, but it meant nothing to me. She twirled the book rack around as I stood behind her watching.
โThatโs the book! Let me look first and see what it says,โ she whispered. I could feel her arm tense up as I grasped it.
โOh my God! There he is,โ she said. We hunched over the book and read the description of my father, โAllen Smiley, one of Ben Siegelโs closest pals in those days, was seated at the other end of the sofa when Siegel was murdered.โ Dena covered her mouth with one hand and kept reading silently.
โWhat does that mean? Who is Siegel?โ I asked.
โShush–not so loud. Iโm afraid to tell you this. Itโs awful.โ
โWhatโs awful? Tell me.โ
โBugsy Siegel was a gangster in the Mafia. He killed people. Your father was his associate.โ
โI donโt think I should see this.โ I turned around abruptly to leave the drugstore. Dena followed me out.โ
โLily you canโt tell your father you saw this book. Please donโt tell him I told you.โ
โWhy not?โ
โMy mother told me not to tell you. Swear to me you wonโt tell your father!โ
โI wonโt. Donโt you tell anyone either.โ
A few days later after Dad left for the evening I opened the door to his guarded bedroom. I walked around the bed to a get a closer look at the photographs on the wall. It was the first time I could read the inscription.
Entertainment website ยท Marketing agency ยท Advertising agency ๐งโฝฃ๐ ๐
The inner voice where gaps of expression are liberated.
Funny Blogs With A Hint Of Personal Development
Become a Story Hunter!
It's just banter
Larry Harnisch Reflects on L.A. History
Escaping reality or facing reality.
Saratoga Springs, New York - Arthur Gonick, Editor
Space, Travel, Technology, 3D Printing, Energy, Writing
Live Your Dreams Don`t Dream Your Life
Even a bad guy can have redeeming qualities
Books and Lifestyle with Hermione Flavia.
KNOWLEDGE IS POWER / IGNORANCE IS BLISS - YOU DECIDE
Author of the Avery Shepard Detective Mystery Series
For Readers and Writers
Life is either a daring adventure or nothing.
Entertainment website ยท Marketing agency ยท Advertising agency ๐งโฝฃ๐ ๐
The inner voice where gaps of expression are liberated.
Funny Blogs With A Hint Of Personal Development
Become a Story Hunter!
It's just banter
Larry Harnisch Reflects on L.A. History
Escaping reality or facing reality.
Saratoga Springs, New York - Arthur Gonick, Editor
Space, Travel, Technology, 3D Printing, Energy, Writing
Live Your Dreams Don`t Dream Your Life
Even a bad guy can have redeeming qualities
Books and Lifestyle with Hermione Flavia.
KNOWLEDGE IS POWER / IGNORANCE IS BLISS - YOU DECIDE
Author of the Avery Shepard Detective Mystery Series
For Readers and Writers
Life is either a daring adventure or nothing.