Friday, October 31, 2014

What To Do When The Light At The End Of The Tunnel Is A Train.

 Nurse: 'Doctor, Doctor the man you just treated collapsed on the front step. What should I do?'

Doctor: 'Turn him around so it looks like he was just arriving!'

*****

Thursday, Oct. 23 – 5:42 p.m.

Word of advice: That falling down thing? Best place to do it is in the hospital. Especially if you are planning to smack your head on the floor and raise a welt over your eye the size of a hamster.

As I write this lead jokes like, “You should see the other guy,” come to mind. Or, “Went one on one with Mike Tyson – but at least he left me my ears.” But even in my weakened state I resist adding such groaners.

Besides, after spending the early part of the day getting poison pumped into my system, and the rest in the Emergency Room being treated for my falling down injuries, I am just too whacked out to put one word after the other in any kind of sensible order.

So, after typing TO BE CONTINUED, I’m off to my bed of pain until I’m semi-well enough to continue.

Friday, Oct. 24 3:33 p.m.

Did my second day of chemo. My left eye is swollen shut and beginning to rotate through the usual rainbow of painful colors. I worried that I’ll scare little children on the way to my appointment. So Kathryn got me a black pirate’s eyepatch suitable for several choruses of “Yo, ho, ho, and a bottle of rum.”

I’ve got just enough juice left to tell you about Thursday’s disaster. But if I run out of steam, I promise to pick up the tale on the morrow.

*****

It happened like this:

Just finished the first part of the chemo. The nurse strapped the CADD Pump full of 22-hours-worth of Adriatic Carpet cleaner about my waist and called Kathryn to come pick me up – telling her that I’d be waiting outside.

I always take a cane with me on Chemo days – extreme dizziness is one of the side effects, after all. So I gathered up my stuff, clutched my cane and hobbled out of the clinic.

On the way, I thought I’d best stop at the restroom – colon surgery gives you a heightened sensitivity about using the facilities whenever you can.

As I approached the commode I suddenly realized that Vertigo was settling in big time. And, WOW! was I dizzy. No way was I capable of answering Nature’s Call in the usual guy fashion.

Tugging at my pants, I turned around to sit – bending my head forward because I suddenly felt that I was going to fall backward and bang my head against the wall.

And then my ears were ringing and my head kept going down and down and down, and then gravity grabbed me by the hair and I completely lost it - lurching across the room and crashing to the tiled floor.

Next thing I knew, somebody was hammering on the locked door, asking “Is everything alright in there?”

Now, here I was… sprawled out face first on the floor. Pants around my ankles. My Irish ass hanging out for all to see.

And so I replied: “No, I’m fine.”

Well, I thought I was. Nothing hurt very much. Small cuts on my arms and hands were bleeding – but no biggie. So I thought myself quite capable of making everything fine. I’ll get up, brush myself off, pat the blood with a few paper towels and no one will be the wiser.

Remember, I’m lying there flat as a buckwheat pancake, left side of my face pressed against the cold tile.

There’s more knocking, so I hurried things along. Pushing myself up onto my right elbow. Legs scrabbling around trying to get some purchase on the slippery tile and then my right arm gave way and my head slammed against the floor.

It was only a few inches, I’m sure, but I felt like I had been punched by a heavyweight. Or, more accurately – that’s I’d attacked a heavyweight’s fist with my head.

Tried to raise my head again – and once again smashed forward.

Finally, I shouted, “No, I’m not alright!” But the door was already coming open and a crowd of professional medical personnel rushed in to rescue me.

I tried to get up again, but my chemo nurse pushed me down and ordered me to stay. Blood was running down my face now and people were pressing cotton pads against the cuts, while someone else was speaking hurriedly – but calmly – into a cell phone.

Then the guys from ER – which is just down the hall – showed up and they were lifting me onto a gurney, checking my vitals and asking questions in that quick, precise manner they have.

Cranial Cat-scans were ordered up. The rest of my body checked for injuries. Thankfully, nothing was broken, but the bruises on my legs and head were already ballooning to scary proportions because of all the blood thinners I have to take.

Ice was applied. Doctors were called. First results of the blood tests came in and there was a little bit of a panic when they saw that my white blood count was through the roof.

Of course this was on purpose. Chemo doesn’t discriminate. It attacks and tries to kill all cells – not just the cancerous ones. Dr. Tomeski keeps me primed with white blood cells so my immune system can hold the line – a sort of Nano “Horatio At The Bridge.”

Naturally, Kathryn had been notified the moment she arrived to pick me up, so here’s my poor wife sitting next to me in ER, worried as hell but trying to maintain good cheer.

And then it suddenly comes to me:

“The good news,” I tell Kathryn, “is that now I have a lead for the next episode of Chemo Brain. I was worried about that.”

Kathryn, who hails from a family of writers and journalists, wasn’t phased one bit.

She just nodded, and replied, “I knew you’d say something like that.”

And so, hours later, when I came home I staggered over to my computer and fired it up and typed the opening sentences that begin this little chemo side adventure:

“Word of advice: That falling down thing? Best place to do it is in the hospital. Especially if you are planning to smack your head on the floor and raise a welt over your eye the size of a hamster.”

So, if anyone should ever ask what writers will endure to get a good lead, you can now reply with some authority:

“They’ll bleed for you, baby. Bleed.”

Thursday, Oct. 30 – 1:18 p.m.

Frankly, this has not been a stellar chemo week. I feel as lousy today as I did last Thursday. Not from the fall. Those are just the ordinary bumps and bruises of life that we routinely ignore after popping a couple of Ibuprofen.

New side effects are making themselves known – like mouth sores. Dr. Tomeski has already warned me about this and says she has suitable medication to ease the condition. I’m also having difficulty swallowing – even plain room temperature water is painful– so it takes a long time to get down any kind of food. And I’m having trouble sleeping – one reason why I was so wiped out they day of the fall.

As for the dizziness thing, at Kathryn’s insistence – backed by the doctor – I jumped on Amazon.com and two days later they delivered a fancy 4-wheel walker with brakes, a seat, and a messenger bag thingie for my Kindle, audiobooks and cellphone. The walker is now my boon companion. I resisted such devices in the past, but the latest fall has finally convinced me to put male pride aside. I might be hobbling around like a frizzly old fart, but at least I’ll be a safer frizzly old fart.

I was feeling a little down yesterday morning, but then it suddenly came to me that I was half way through the chemo ordeal. Six of the bi-monthly treatments have been completed. And only six more to go. Or, in Short Timer’s Calendar speak – five and a wakeup.

And I started wondering about when we might be able to go back to California to see our families – it’s been a long, long time. The treatments will end in late January, early February. Naturally, there will be more tests and further screwing with the body.

We’re both thinking that I ought to be strong enough to travel by next Spring. Around Kathryn’s April 15 birthday would be perfect.

Then new worries crept in. You know how it is. Even after getting a reprieve from the Grim Reaper, it is only human nature that we then hunt down new things to trouble our sleep.

You see, when they cut out the cancerous tumors they also took most of my colon. Stuff goes through me like bacon through a Canadian goose.

In other words, with a drastically foreshortened gut, I’m kind of limited on how many hours I can fly and how much time I can spend in lines at the various airports.

Bummer.

Then Kathryn stepped in.

“No problem,” she said, “we’ll take the train.”

Am I married to a brilliant woman or am I not?

After some research she has it all worked out. We’ll take the Sunset Limited from New Orleans to Los Angeles. Kathryn pointed out that to make sure I’m rested on each leg of the trip we can stop over in New Orleans for a couple of days each way. A major bonus. 

But the train! Ah, the train with the exotic name, Sunset Limited running round my brain.

Think about it.

No long lines. No baggage hassles. No snarly transportation employees who have your fellow travelers so pissed off they are on the edge of Major Freak Out.

I mean, you even get to keep your shoes on, baby.

Plus – and this is huge - you get a private room WITH a toilet. Room service. No stressed Stews. Settling back in wide seats watching our fabulous country go by as we follow the sun home to California.

And the nights – ah, I love nights aboard a train – curled up in your berth looking out the window as mysterious lights in the distance swoop down upon you, only to be whipped away and then replaced by more twinkling mysteries.

Best of all – for the entire trip you can listen to the hypnotic clackity-clack music of the train rocking along the rails. And all the while there is the gentle rocking motion that will carry your soul far and far away from the dark days chemo. 

And so, if anyone ever asks you: What do you do when the light at the end of the tunnel turns out to be a train?

You can reply without hesitation: If it’s the Sunset Limited the answer is: “All Aboard!”



*****




Here's where to get the paperback & Kindle editions worldwide: 


Here's what readers say about Lucky In Cyprus:
  • "Bravo, Allan! When I finished Lucky In Cyprus I wept." - Julie Mitchell, Hot Springs, Texas
  • "Lucky In Cyprus brought back many memories... A wonderful book. So many shadows blown away!" - Freddy & Maureen Smart, Episkopi,Cyprus. 
  • "... (Reading) Lucky In Cyprus has been a humbling, haunting, sobering and enlightening experience..." - J.A. Locke, Bookloons.com
*****
NEW: THE AUDIOBOOK VERSION OF

THE HATE PARALLAX

THE HATE PARALLAX: What if the Cold War never ended -- but continued for a thousand years? Best-selling authors Allan Cole (an American) and Nick Perumov (a Russian) spin a mesmerizing "what if?" tale set a thousand years in the future, as an American and a Russian super-soldier -- together with a beautiful American detective working for the United Worlds Police -- must combine forces to defeat a secret cabal ... and prevent a galactic disaster! This is the first - and only - collaboration between American and Russian novelists. Narrated by John Hough. Click the title links below for the trade paperback and kindle editions. (Also available at iTunes.)

*****
THE SPYMASTER'S DAUGHTER:

A new novel by Allan and his daughter, Susan


After laboring as a Doctors Without Borders physician in the teaming refugee camps and minefields of South Asia, Dr. Ann Donovan thought she'd seen Hell as close up as you can get. And as a fifth generation CIA brat, she thought she knew all there was to know about corruption and betrayal. But then her father - a legendary spymaster - shows up, with a ten-year-old boy in tow. A brother she never knew existed. Then in a few violent hours, her whole world is shattered, her father killed and she and her kid brother are one the run with hell hounds on their heels. They finally corner her in a clinic in Hawaii and then all the lies and treachery are revealed on one terrible, bloody storm ravaged night.



BASED ON THE CLASSIC STEN SERIES by Allan Cole & Chris Bunch: Fresh from their mission to pacify the Wolf Worlds, Sten and his Mantis Team encounter a mysterious ship that has been lost among the stars for thousands of years. At first, everyone aboard appears to be long dead. Then a strange Being beckons, pleading for help. More disturbing: the presence of AM2, a strategically vital fuel tightly controlled by their boss - The Eternal Emperor. They are ordered to retrieve the remaining AM2 "at all costs." But once Sten and his heavy worlder sidekick, Alex Kilgour, board the ship they must dare an out of control defense system that attacks without warning as they move through dark warrens filled with unimaginable horrors. When they reach their goal they find that in the midst of all that death are the "seeds" of a lost civilization. 
*****



Here's where you can buy it worldwide in both paperback and Kindle editions:

U.S. .............................................France
United Kingdom ...........................Spain
Canada ........................................ Italy
Germany ..................................... Japan
Brazil .......................................... India

TALES OF THE BLUE MEANIE
NOW AN AUDIOBOOK!

Venice Boardwalk Circa 1969
In the depths of the Sixties and The Days Of Rage, a young newsman, accompanied by his pregnant wife and orphaned teenage brother, creates a Paradise of sorts in a sprawling Venice Beach community of apartments, populated by students, artists, budding scientists and engineers lifeguards, poets, bikers with  a few junkies thrown in for good measure. The inhabitants come to call the place “Pepperland,” after the Beatles movie, “Yellow Submarine.” Threatening this paradise is  "The Blue Meanie,"  a crazy giant of a man so frightening that he eventually even scares himself. 
*****


Tuesday, October 21, 2014

The Year Of Living Surgically

Chemo getting you down? Thoughts of suicide popping into your head? Well, cheer up, folks. All you have to do is call the Mental Health Hotline. Here are the clear, concise instructions you’ll get from the nice robo-voice when you call:

Hello, and welcome to the mental health hotline. If you are obsessive-compulsive, press 1 repeatedly. If you are co-dependent, please ask someone to press 2 for you. If you have multiple personalities, press 3, 4, 5, and 6. If you are paranoid, we know who you are and what you want. Stay on the line so we can trace your call. If you are delusional, press 7 and your call will be transferred to the mother ship. If you are schizophrenic, listen carefully and a small voice will tell you which number to press. If you are manic-depressive, it doesn’t matter which number you press, no one will answer. If you are dyslexic, press 969696969696969. If you have a nervous disorder, please fidget with the dash key until a representative comes on the line. If you have amnesia, press 8 and state your name, address, phone number, date of birth, social security number, and your mother’s maiden name. If you have post-traumatic stress disorder, slowly and carefully press 000. If you have bipolar disorder, please leave a message after the beep or before the beep. Or after the beep. Please wait for the beep. If you have low self-esteem, please hang up. All our operators are too busy to talk to you. If you have short-term memory loss, press 9. If you have short-term memory loss, press 9. If you have short-term memory loss, press 9. If you have short-term memory loss, press 9…

Sunday, Oct. 12 – 4:12 p.m.

Really have to learn to keep my big mouth shut. After all that talk of feeling great in the last episode I got several swift kicks in my chemo butt today. Yech! You hear me, O Gods Of Chemo Side Effects? Yech and double yech. Satisfied now?

Started a new drug at the IV clinic this a.m. – Neulasta. It’s one of those new breed of wonder drugs taken during chemo to help your bones build up your white blood cells. If you’re curious, here’s a link. They say the Neulasta can result in some nasty backaches, but so far, so good.  If my luck doesn't hold, I’ll hit it with some of Alice B.’s remedy. That should do the trick.

Monday, Oct. 13 – 4:23 a.m.

Lousy night. And painful. Hope it relents soon so I can at least get to sleep before dawn.

Monday, Oct. 13 – 9:25 a.m.

It didn’t and I didn’t.

Tuesday, Oct 14 – 5:23 p.m.

Monday was wasted. Today I had a decent morning and early afternoon. But as the day progressed – not so good. The back pain thing they warned me about took a couple of bites out of me. But Alice B. eased things up.

Wed. Oct. 15 -  4:24 a.m.

Another sleepless night. Just downloaded a couple more segments of the the audiobook version of James Clavell’s Shogun – which thankfully weighs in at 48 hours and 26 minutes.

Rocky day – dozing on and off.

Confession: that week off really had me fooled. Silly me. I thought that when the chemo session ended I’d quickly recover and be back just where I left off.

But Chemo has a mind of its own, baby.

A mind of its own.

Thursday – Oct. 16 – 11:18 a.m.

Hallelujah!!! A good night. Slept until 9 a.m. I am woefully behind in my work. Actually, as far as real work goes – like writing – I’m pretty much limited to this blog right now. Gotta expand. Blow myself up like a blowfish. Edgar Alan Blowfish – like that.

Kathryn advises patience, which I am short of. Did I mention that chemo can make you antsy? A zillion things that “must be done” crowd into your head. Then chemo rips the energy rug out from under you.

Ha, ha. Only joking Chemo Guy.

I’m supposed to see Dr. Tomeski at 3:30. She always makes me feel better.

Friday, Oct. 17 – 1:05 p.m.

Slept late, which is a good thing. Got in some exercise: walking the halls, up and down the three flights of stairs, a little work with the rubber bands. The exercise ball I ordered on the advice of my trainer arrived this morning. Thank God it comes with a foot pump! Otherwise – whoo, I’d be on my butt after three minutes of huffing and puffing. Double protein drink for breakfast. Then a little of Allan’s morning gruel after exercising.

Tomato and rice soup on the luncheon menu. With a mess of crackers mushed in.

Learned from Dr. Tomeski yesterday that the next poisoning session has been pushed to Thursday, instead of Wednesday. So this week the skull and crossbones go on the calendar Thursday, Friday and Saturday.

Then I’ll be halfway through. Six down and six more to go. (Or, five and a wakeup on my Short Timer’s Calendar.) That should put me on the other side in late January.

They are going to do a CAT scan to see how things are progressing after this next session. Assuming there is positive news, Kathryn asked if maybe the chemo sessions can stop early.

Dr. Tomeski just smiled that gentle smile of hers, gave a sad shake of the head and said, “No.”

Saturday, Oct. 18 – 4:05 p.m.

A good night. Listless, but sick-free day. Don’t have two thoughts in my head that I could rub together. Not complaining. If Chemo leaves me alone, I’ll leave it alone. Of course, what could I threaten it with if it doesn’t agree to the truce?

Stick my fingers in my ears and sing out: “Hit me with your cancer stick. Hit me. Hit me.”

( With apologies to Ian Dury and the Blockheads)

Twelve hours after I wrote that I fell over.

*****

Kathryn found me in the dark. I was on the floor in the living room the walker laying across my legs, a small chair toppled over my head. I hadn’t shouted for help or anything, she’d just heard the crash and came running. I was disoriented. Head a vortex of confusion. Couldn’t quite figure out which way was up and when I got that managed I couldn’t figure out how to get out from under the walker and the chair, then leverage myself to my feet. And then if I got to my feet, how could I manage to remain upright long enough to stagger back to bed?

I wasn’t hurt. Just mortified. Couldn’t even get a glass of frigging water in the middle of the night. Kathryn made everything alright. In a short time the living room lights were on and I was sitting in the chair that had formerly been sitting on top of me. She fetched me some water, then stroked me and kissed me and when I said I was sorry she became very firm, saying I’d done nothing wrong – had taken all precautions, like the use of the walker which I normally don’t need and only use for nighttime trips to the bathroom, or the kitchen to fetch some water.

My wrist hurts a little. And one knee. But otherwise I’d once again escaped unscathed. Took a Tylenol for minor pain and swelling, then fell into a deep sleep.

Sunday, Oct. 19 - ????

Sunday.  Forget Sunday. You know what you did, Sunday and you should be ashamed of yourself.  Go hide your head in the corner and stay there until you agree to come crawling out and play nicely with the other days of the week.


Monday, Oct. 20 - 9:26 a.m.

Laura, the oncology nurse from the IV Center called this morning to confirm the next chemo schedule. I already know all this – Dr. Tomeski had told me earlier. But the official call gets me down a little.
In short – it’s  all about to begin again.
I found myself in one of those peculiar Irish moods. It’s  beautiful Florida morning with plenty to bedazzle the eye. Fish jumping in the canal catching insects for brunch, including a huge, colorful butterfly. One side of me is saying, “Ah, Nature. Beauty in all its glorious cruelty." But the other side - the Irish bipolar side - finds me glaring at the ripple the fish made after his successful butterfly capture. And I’m thinking, “Effing fish! Why didn’t he leave the poor butterfly alone? Catch a mosquito or one of  God’s other stupid mistakes. Spoiled the whole damned morning, you slimy little bastard."
Kathryn must have sensed the mood swing. She sat down beside me and after I delivered a few cranky observations about this and that, she said, “Do you realize that this whole thing actually started over a year ago?”
I frowned. A year? The chemo thing has only been going on a few months.
“Well, sure,” she said. “But that’s just the chemo. In reality it all began a year ago this month – right about the time of our anniversary (Oct. 6) – you collapsed in the gym and I took you to the hospital for a battery of tests and then Dr. Lee showed up with his magic scalpel and you underwent a whole series of operations. You spent your birthday, Thanksgiving, Christmas and even New Year’s Eve either in the operating room, or Intensive Care, or in bed at home going through rehab so you’d be strong enough for the next round of operations.
“Then last Easter, when you thought everything was over and done with, you collapsed because of what turned out to be internal bleeding, then spent three weeks in the hospital having colon surgery and getting two malignant tumors removed.”
It was then I started getting a glimmer of what she was getting at.
I said “I suppose one way to look at it – the wrong way - is that I’ve had a year’s run of bad luck. Which, when you have just turned 70 and don’t have that many years left in the bank can be kind of depressing.”
“Well, except for one very important thing,” Kathryn said. “You’ve refused to let it get you down. They keep shooting at you and you keep getting up and getting strong again so you can face whatever comes next.”
That made me feel pretty good.  The day was getting a little more positive.
Then I thought, wait a minute, wait a minute, Allan - you are being a selfish thumb-sucking clot.  I mean, what about Kathryn?
She’s spent a entire year talking to doctors with me, then waiting outside operating rooms for untold hours, holding my hand in ICU while I morphine-babbled, afternoons and evening visiting hours, negotiating dark parking lots at night, privately kicking walls at home to let off steam, then she comes and collects me. I’m a mess when I first get home. Can barely make it to the elevator. Can’t lift my own feet up in bed, so she does it for me, then helps me get up and stagger to the John in my walker. Then there is the rehab. In home nurse three times a week, physical trainer three times a week.
And then, by and by, she stands tentatively back and lets me get onto my own two feet. Listening at night for when I get up and occasionally overbalance and topple onto the floor. Then she’ll hurry out, pull the furniture off me, see if I’m hurt, wash my face, shush me and tell me not to worry and that it is a good thing that I worked so hard during rehab or I could have really hurt myself.

She does this not just once, but innumerable times. 
So, I’m thinking all that, and it comes to me – not for the first time – that whatever I’m going through, she’s getting piled on double. When it comes to stress, she’s getting it all – Big Time. Meanwhile, I’m sitting in my own doped up little world puttering about in the protective bubble she’s created for me. 
 “You’re the tough one,” I told her. “I married Wonder Woman. No - You're Xena Clottin’ Warrior Princess in the flesh.”
Kathryn laughed. “I’ll bet you say that to all the girls who scrape you off the floor in the middle of the night.”

“That’s true,” I said. “I have a weakness for that sort of woman."

We laughed, then after a minute she said, “So, we’re both okay then, right?”

And I thought about it and she was absolutely spot on.

“Yeah,” I said. “We’re both okay.”

Then – “Baby, I love you.”

*****





Here's where to get the paperback & Kindle editions worldwide: 


Here's what readers say about Lucky In Cyprus:
  • "Bravo, Allan! When I finished Lucky In Cyprus I wept." - Julie Mitchell, Hot Springs, Texas
  • "Lucky In Cyprus brought back many memories... A wonderful book. So many shadows blown away!" - Freddy & Maureen Smart, Episkopi,Cyprus. 
  • "... (Reading) Lucky In Cyprus has been a humbling, haunting, sobering and enlightening experience..." - J.A. Locke, Bookloons.com
*****
NEW: THE AUDIOBOOK VERSION OF

THE HATE PARALLAX

THE HATE PARALLAX: What if the Cold War never ended -- but continued for a thousand years? Best-selling authors Allan Cole (an American) and Nick Perumov (a Russian) spin a mesmerizing "what if?" tale set a thousand years in the future, as an American and a Russian super-soldier -- together with a beautiful American detective working for the United Worlds Police -- must combine forces to defeat a secret cabal ... and prevent a galactic disaster! This is the first - and only - collaboration between American and Russian novelists. Narrated by John Hough. Click the title links below for the trade paperback and kindle editions. (Also available at iTunes.)

*****
THE SPYMASTER'S DAUGHTER:

A new novel by Allan and his daughter, Susan


After laboring as a Doctors Without Borders physician in the teaming refugee camps and minefields of South Asia, Dr. Ann Donovan thought she'd seen Hell as close up as you can get. And as a fifth generation CIA brat, she thought she knew all there was to know about corruption and betrayal. But then her father - a legendary spymaster - shows up, with a ten-year-old boy in tow. A brother she never knew existed. Then in a few violent hours, her whole world is shattered, her father killed and she and her kid brother are one the run with hell hounds on their heels. They finally corner her in a clinic in Hawaii and then all the lies and treachery are revealed on one terrible, bloody storm ravaged night.



BASED ON THE CLASSIC STEN SERIES by Allan Cole & Chris Bunch: Fresh from their mission to pacify the Wolf Worlds, Sten and his Mantis Team encounter a mysterious ship that has been lost among the stars for thousands of years. At first, everyone aboard appears to be long dead. Then a strange Being beckons, pleading for help. More disturbing: the presence of AM2, a strategically vital fuel tightly controlled by their boss - The Eternal Emperor. They are ordered to retrieve the remaining AM2 "at all costs." But once Sten and his heavy worlder sidekick, Alex Kilgour, board the ship they must dare an out of control defense system that attacks without warning as they move through dark warrens filled with unimaginable horrors. When they reach their goal they find that in the midst of all that death are the "seeds" of a lost civilization. 
*****



Here's where you can buy it worldwide in both paperback and Kindle editions:

U.S. .............................................France
United Kingdom ...........................Spain
Canada ........................................ Italy
Germany ..................................... Japan
Brazil .......................................... India

TALES OF THE BLUE MEANIE
NOW AN AUDIOBOOK!

Venice Boardwalk Circa 1969
In the depths of the Sixties and The Days Of Rage, a young newsman, accompanied by his pregnant wife and orphaned teenage brother, creates a Paradise of sorts in a sprawling Venice Beach community of apartments, populated by students, artists, budding scientists and engineers lifeguards, poets, bikers with  a few junkies thrown in for good measure. The inhabitants come to call the place “Pepperland,” after the Beatles movie, “Yellow Submarine.” Threatening this paradise is  "The Blue Meanie,"  a crazy giant of a man so frightening that he eventually even scares himself. 
*****