Mark Gilroy

Bringing Books to Life!

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Mark Gilroy August 13, 2012

10 Signs Football Is Upon Us

10. every morning at 6:30 your house’s windows shudder and shake unevenly from the percussion section of local high school marching band practice – six miles away.

9. coverage of the US presidential election and European bailouts drop to pages four and five respectively when the USA Today NFL preview edition hits newsstands.

8. ESPN begins advertising the two-hour pre preseason special guide to new fall beer commercials.

7. a stack of decade-old-plus t-shirts your spouse, girlfriend or mom has been asking you to get rid of is carefully boxed and carried to the crawl space – and replaced by a box of decade-old-plus sweatshirts your spouse, girlfriend or mom had been asking you to get rid of that was carefully stored in the crawl space.

6. you are momentarily overcome by a light-headed giddy sense of euphoria that you won’t have to watch any more baseball games to get a sports fix until the World Series is played sometime during football season in what appears to be blizzard conditions.

5. colleges and universities allow young people that are are into extracurricular activities like “pursuing a degree”and “hitting the library” back on campus in time for the first football game of the year.

4. you realize you know the first and middle names of every member of the offensive line of your alma mater even if you can’t get first names of your own kids right every time.

3. ignoring pain from bunions and planter fasciitis you have your youngest child hold a football vertically on the ground so you can see if you can still kick a game-winning field goal as measured by the back of your garage roof.

2. you call your niece – at her father’s and fiance’s request – to see if you can talk her out of that Saturday afternoon wedding date that falls at the same time as the big rivalry game she is considering.

1. as you stretch out the inflamed rotator cuff and extend the half-locked knee joint, you think back fondly on all your old football injuries – even if you never played the sport.

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Filed Under: Sports Tagged With: football

Mark Gilroy August 2, 2012

The Long Goodbye – to Say Goodbye Is to Die a Little

First Edition cover of The Long Goodbye

First Edition

Once a decade I get an irresistible urge to revisit the hardboiled crime noir classics I was introduced to in high school but didn’t appreciate at the time.

My latest binge included Jim Thompson’s The Killer Inside Me, Kenneth Fearing’s The Big Clock, James Ellroy’s LA Confidential, James M. Cain’s The Postman Always Rings Twice, Dashiell Hammett’s The Maltese Falcon, and two books from Raymond Chandler.

Particularly with Ellroy, Hammett, and Chandler, their anti-hero heroes are troubled, rebellious, and cynical – but can’t ever escape from that ember of honor and hope smoldering deep inside. The authors paint a dark, bleak picture of the underbelly of society – usually LA. Why LA? Why not LA? Where the lights shine brightest the shadows cast deep and wide.

Their outlook was shocking when they wrote their novels – especially Thompson when he wrote from the killer’s perspective – but is standard fare today. (Today, you might need to write with a positive buoyancy to shock people!)

I still love to read crime novels, but I’m not sure anyone has really bested the patron saints, Hammett and Chandler. That begs the question, who had the greatest character? Was it Sam Spade or Philip Marlowe?

I like both characters – but Marlowe is my favorite and I believe he was at his best in The Long Goodbye – which just edged The Lady in the Lake in my mind.

Marlowe befriends Terry Lennox – wealthy but haunted by his demons from serving in war and by the escapades of his nymphomaniac wife. No good deed goes unpunished and soon both the cops and the gangsters are after Marlowe when he begins to investigate the death of Lennox’s wife after being told to back off. Telling Marlowe to back off is like pouring gasoline on a fire.

The Long Goodbye by Raymond Chandler cover image

Current Edition

But don’t blame the cops and gangsters for all of Marlowe’s problems. It is he, after all, who says: “There is no trap so deadly as the trap you set for yourself.”

And he knows the life he has chosen:

The other part of me wanted to get out and stay out, but this was the part I never listened to. Because if I ever had I would have stayed in the town where I was born and worked in the hardware store and married the boss’s daughter and had five kids and read them the funny paper on Sunday morning and smacked their heads when they got out of line and squabbled with the wife about how much spending money they were to get and what programs they could have on the radio or TV set. I might even get rich – small-town rich, an eight-room house, two cars in the garage, chicken every Sunday and the Reader’s Digest on the living room table, the wife with a cast-iron permanent and me with a brain like a sack of Portland cement. You take it, friend. I’ll take the big sordid dirty crooked city.

Rereading Chandler is a graphic reminder that California has always had problems – but I digress. The Long Goodbye stands the test of time and is still a guilty pleasure from an era of tough guys, dames in distress, partnerships between the gangsters and dirty cops, and the discovery that even heroes have flaws.

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Filed Under: Book Reviews, Books Tagged With: Philip Marlowe, Raymond Chandler

Mark Gilroy July 24, 2012

Distractions and Focus

Since we are surrounded by so many examples of faith, we must get rid of everything that slows us down, especially sin that distracts us. We must run the race that lies ahead of us and never give up. We must focus on Jesus, the source and goal of our faith. He saw the joy ahead of him, so he endured death on the cross and ignored the disgrace it brought him. Then he received the highest position in heaven, the one next to the throne of God. (Hebrews 12:1-3, God’s Word)

Hebrews chapter 11 is known as the “Faith Hall of Fame”. It provides a cast of characters that walked by faith and endured incredible challenges and disappointments, despite never receiving the full measure of reward they were expecting.

How did they do it? How did they overcome?

They kept their eyes on the prize. Their faith was empowered by an unwavering hope.

These first three verses of Hebrews 12 continue that theme. For Christians, keeping the faith in tough times happens by focusing on Jesus. He is the “source and goal of our faith”—he modeled the very same focus in His life. When going through the agony of His death, “he saw the joy ahead of him, so he endured.”

In addition to a call to focus in these verses, there is also the command to get rid of the distractions that take our attention from what matters most. We live in a culture that is filled with distractions. Many of us have lost sight of what really matters chasing after things that are meaningless at best and destructive at worst.

What a great paradigm for walking in faith. But the twin commands to get rid of distractions and stay focused on what matters are great for almost every area of life, from business success in tough times to family unity when there are areas of disagreement.

What is slowing you down? What do you need to get rid of? What do you need to focus on? It will make all the difference in your life, no matter what you are enduring right now.

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Filed Under: Faith, Inspiration, Motivation

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Mark is a publisher, author, consultant, blogger, positive thinker, believer, encourager, and family guy. A resident of Brentwood, Tennessee, he has six kids, with one in college and five out in the "real world." Read More…

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