The Meteoric Rise of Simon Burchwood

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by Scott Semegran




  The Meteoric Rise of Simon Burchwood

  A Novel

  by

  Scott Semegran

  Copyright © 2008 Scott Semegran

  All Rights Reserved

  Smashwords Edition, License Notes

  This eBook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. The publisher requests that this eBook not be resold or given away to other people by you although the publisher realizes that the world doesn’t work that way; sometimes people are kind and generous and sometimes people are selfish and shitty. If you purchased this eBook, then the publisher thanks you profusely. We worked very hard on it and it took the author a long time to write. If you "found" this eBook and it "magically" appeared on your eReader, then good for you. You are very lucky. Most likely, no one will come looking for you. But if you do enjoy this eBook after reading it, then please consider purchasing your own copy or purchasing other eBooks by this publisher and this fine author. The author is a good man and has a family to support. All of his eBooks are cheaper than a fancy cup of coffee which is awesome. Thank you for taking the time to read this legal stuff. Thank you again. Good luck. Enjoy!

  Mutt Press

  Austin, Texas

  http://www.muttpress.com

  [email protected]

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  Photo of Scott Semegran by Lori Hoadley

  Cover by Alchemy Book Covers and Design

  Illustrations by Scott Semegran

  Edited by Brandon R. Wood

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  Books by Scott Semegran:

  Sammie & Budgie

  Boys

  The Spectacular Simon Burchwood

  The Meteoric Rise of Simon Burchwood

  Modicum

  Mr. Grieves

  Discover other titles by Scott Semegran at Smashwords.com:

  http://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/scottsemegran

  Find Scott Semegran Online:

  https://www.scottsemegran.com

  https://www.goodreads.com/scottsemegran

  https://www.twitter.com/scottsemegran

  https://www.facebook.com/scottsemegran.writer

  https://www.instagram.com/scott_semegran

  Mutt Press:

  https://www.muttpress.com

  What Reviewers Are Saying About Simon Burchwood:

  "A clever and surprising twist... cutting observations of the writerly demeanor."

  -- Kirkus Reviews

  "Simon is such a character that I couldn't wait to find what he did next."

  -- 5 Stars / Great Books Under $5

  "A very good novel that was humorous throughout."

  -- 4 1/2 Stars / Red Adept Reviews

  "Simon Burchwood Is A Genius, It's True!"

  -- 4 Stars / Bitsy Bling Books

  "Cracked me up! Overall a very good and funny read."

  -- 4 Stars / Ashton the Book Blogger

  "Verdict: An ambitious, enjoyable read with a superb ending that changed my interpretation of the entire text."

  -- IndieReader

  "This book will have you rolling in laughter at a man who cannot or will not realize who and what he is. Nonstop laughing from beginning to end."

  -- 5 Stars / Free Book Reviews

  "Strong, funny, and very well executed."

  –- 4 Stars / Book Stack Reviews

  Table of Contents

  1.

  2.

  3.

  4.

  5.

  6.

  7.

  8.

  9.

  10.

  11.

  12.

  13.

  14.

  15.

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  18.

  19.

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  21.

  22.

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  25.

  About the Author

  Books by Scott Semegran

  To my wife and kids - my inspiration, my everything

  1.

  "I have become wildly more successful than I ever could have dreamed." Listen to me blab my goddamn head off. That sounds pretty stupid but it's true. The cabbie kept looking at me in the rearview mirror like I was crazy or something, the bastard. "My new novel, THE RISE AND FALL OF A TITAN, will be published in the next few weeks, barring any printing glitches of course. But I am already receiving unbelievable press. The hype mill is churning. According to a source at the New York Times, I am the new Kurt Vonnegut. And according to another source at the Los Angeles Times, I will dethrone Charles Bukowski as the torch bearer of the lowly and disenfranchised." Listen to that. I was just blabbing away. Sometimes I just need to be slapped in the face because I just blab too goddamn much.

  The cabbie kept staring at me in the rearview mirror. He was one of those cabbies (you know the ones?), the ones that scare the shit out of you when you give them a good look once they start to drive you to where you want to go. The ones that could be crazy with the strange last names and the cabs that smell like vomit and cigarettes and exhaust and body odor. The ones that constantly eyeball you from the rearview mirror and don't watch the road. He wouldn't watch the goddamn road. He was too busy looking me up and down to watch where he was going. For a minute, I thought he was going to crash and kill us both. He kept swerving in and out of our lane. But he never did crash. I guess he was used to driving that way, what, staring at his passengers and not watching the goddamn road, the crazy cocksucker.

  "Vonnegut? Didn't he write that Slaughterhouse book?" the cabbie asked. Man, his eyes were really red and bloodshot. He must have been on crack or something. Most of those cabbies are on something. It's true. Something to kill the pain, something to make the dreary day go by easily, something to help them forget how terrible they got it. And this guy had it bad.

  "Yes, of course," I said, trying not to sound too snooty. "Now, I know what you are thinking. That is an odd pairing of sorts, mixing the time-twisting tale-telling of Vonnegut with the in-your-face simplicity of Bukowski. But that is exactly what I did, using my two heroes' styles as a blueprint for my own. I took the best of both worlds and rammed them together, creating something utterly original and new and very post-modern; a stylistic pastiche, you could say." I found myself pressing my hands together as if I was really ramming those two ideas into one. I hate when I talk with my hands. It really gets on my nerves but I do it all the time. I have to work on not doing that so much. "That's what you have to do these days to come up with something original, borrow from the masters, because everything has already been done. Every angle of every idea has already been examined and explored and expounded." The cabby's red eyes were glazing over, like I was talking about astrophysics or macroeconomics or some shit like that. I kept trying to think of something he could relate to, some kind of simple analogy. I thought of a good one. "It's like hip hop music and sampling. I'm like a DJ taking bits and pieces of music and making it my own, my very own, but with words and phrases instead. You'll get to read my new novel in due time and make your own judgments."

  "I look forward to it," the cabbie said. "I like to read when I'm on the crapper. That's the best time to read. You got a good twenty, maybe thirty minutes of down time." A big smile slid across his face when he started talking about taking a crap. I guess he really liked taking a shit because I hadn't seen a smile that big on his face the whole time I was in the cab. Henry Miller liked to read on the toilet too. He felt that was the best way to express how he felt about what he was reading. I like to read in the can, except I like to read gossip magazines and shit like that. I don't like to think too much in the can; it interrupts what I'm trying to do in there in the first
place, which is to take a crap and get the hell out. If I get all riled up, then the turd won't come out. And there is nothing worse than being all riled up in the bathroom with a turd that won't come out. It's true. He kept staring at me though, with his blazing bloodshot eyes. He kept looking at my backpack on my lap, I could tell. And for the love of God, he kept talking about the crapper. "The reading helps me relax. I need to relax to ... you know? I get constipated easily. Sounds like your book would be a good one for the crapper."

  "That's interesting. Anyway, in the meantime, I've generated most of my buzz through the internet. I have a web site where I have posted samples of my work and snippets of reviews and letters I've received from publishers and editors. I have garnered a small following of rabid, devoted fans who read everything I write and support me artistically as well as financially. They give me gratuities and buy small chapbooks printed by my publisher. You can read my work too by going to www.simonburchwood.com."

  I was really tearing it up, blabbing as if he was the last fucking person on earth. Man, wouldn't that be my luck, stuck on earth alone with that red-eyed cocksucker. But I knew the cabbie was listening. He couldn't keep his goddamn bloodshot eyes off me. He kept staring at me and my backpack. It made me a little nervous, especially when he almost hit an old lady walking across the street. Man, I've never seen an old woman move so fast. She about started sprinting when she saw our cab heading for her. I bet she hadn't moved like that in decades. But I think I got him interested in my book. Maybe that was why he was looking at me so intently. Or maybe he was just crazy. I'll bet you a hundred dollars that he was both.

  "There I go again, always the shameless self-promoter. But go and check it out and enjoy my work, give me a gratuity, and support the arts. There is not a nobler endeavor than to lend a supportive hand to an artist!"

  "I don't have a computer. Can't afford one," the cabbie said. Can you believe that? Who the fuck doesn't have a computer? That's like saying you don't have a TV or a microwave or a fucking telephone? Who the hell doesn't have a computer? I'll tell you who doesn't have a computer; those crazy cabbies, that's who. They're too busy staring at you and shit to be a part of a modern society, a society of TVs and microwaves and computers. That's pretty sad.

  "That's too bad. Because I am very grateful for all the support and notoriety I receive from my fans. My life's dream is to become somebody known and read. I don't think that there is anything more important than making your name in this world. Otherwise, who are you? A schmuck who works from eight to five and brings home a check that will last until the end of next week? What kind of existence is that, you tell me?" I could tell what I said really got to him. For once, he stopped staring at me. He kind of looked off into the distance, contemplating something. I bet he hated his job. I bet he had really bad hemorrhoids. I bet they stung his ass all day long and made him crazy. "That was my life for ten years, a hard life at the grind; a thankless job that beat me down. I would wake up an hour early every morning and write until I had to go to work. Then I would write some more on my lunch breaks. The rest of my daylight hours were owned by my wretched employer."

  "I know how that feels, buddy. My boss is a real dick!" he said. I knew it! He hated his job. That must have been it, why he stared at me all fucking day long. He must've been wishing he was somebody else right then, what, with his burning hemorrhoids and his stinking cab driving him mad. He eventually turned on Airport Boulevard, obviously in la-la land. He made the turn fast and hard, sending me into the door. I wasn't ready for that so I kind of fell over and shit. I felt pretty stupid for falling down but I wasn't ready for him to do that. He caught me off guard, you know, with his looking away from the rearview for once. I mean, he was staring at me the whole time and then he looked away and made that crazy turn. I almost broke my neck with that turn and the way I fell over. But I caught myself and propped myself up with my elbow. He started staring at me again but I wasn't going to let him know that I was caught off guard by his turn. My elbow was planted steady and hard. No turn was going to knock me down this time. I started blabbing again like I had never stopped.

  "Now, the night time was my precious time, time owned by my family. My loving wife and doting children deserved all they could get from me. So I didn't dare write in the evenings. Instead, I would play with my children and spend quality time with my wife. But my life's dream always called to me and I desperately wanted to be a famous writer. So five o'clock every morning, my typer would be rapping and my fingers would be tapping furiously. Thankfully, it all paid off. Thankfully, my dreams will be realized soon, really soon." I started to feel like I was talking to myself. I was hoping that he would understand what I was saying but I don't think he did. He was too busy staring at me to care. I would've stuck him in the eyes with a red-hot poker, if I could. That would've really given him something to stare at.

  "What's your name again?" the cabbie asked. He pulled up to the curb in front of the airport terminal and stopped the car. He turned around and really gave me a stare. Man, his eyes looked like they were going to start bleeding, they were so goddamn red. He was freaking me out. "I'll look out for your book."

  "My name is Simon Burchwood. Here's my business card."

  I had a small stack of business cards in my shirt pocket so I gave him one. I had them made up the other day. They say: Simon Burchwood, best-selling author. I am not a best-selling author yet but I expect to be soon. The feedback I'm getting from my publisher is really positive and they expect me to move hundreds of thousands of units. Can you believe that? That's quite a lot of eyes reading my work. Anyway, he seemed quite impressed with my card. There's something about a nice looking business card; people really seem to be impressed by them. Don't ask me why, they just do. Especially ones like mine. I mean, I paid extra attention to the type of paper and the particular font the print shop used. They say people who use the font called Verdana show a strong sense of character. So that's the font I chose. And I selected a nice off-white, sturdy card stock. Pretty fucking fancy if you ask me.

  "I packed a case of these business cards for my trip along with as many pens and pads of paper as I could, in case I have the urge to write on the flight. I will be flying first class to New York for my literary debut at the Barnes & Noble flagship store. But first, I will stop in Montgomery, Alabama for a brief visit to an old friend. His name is Jason. I haven't seen him in sixteen years."

  The cabbie quit staring at me long enough to get out of the cab and unpack my luggage from the trunk. I stood behind him, holding my backpack, and placed my foot on the rear bumper. But it was a little wet from a drizzle earlier in the day and my foot slipped off and I almost fell smack on my face. That would have been pretty impressive, huh? I could see the headlines in the newspapers: Simon Burchwood, best-selling author, maims himself with wet bumper; career and intellect in jeopardy. I'm glad he didn't see that slip. That would have been pretty embarrassing. And I bet he would have laughed to, the crazy cab-driving cocksucker.

  "Jason knows all the success I've come upon even though I moved away after the eighth grade. He and I remained in contact through letters and later e-mails. He followed my entire career through clippings I sent him in the mail and then in more detail through my web site. I'm looking forward to finally seeing him again face to face. And I'm looking forward to hearing his kind words of support in person. Undoubtedly, he is my biggest fan."

  Without warning, as if immediately possessed by a demon, the cab driver turned around and gave me the evil eye. His bloodshot eyes were flaring. He kind of started to freak me out. It's true.

  "Wha'cha got in the backpack, Simon? That is your name, right?" the cabbie asked. His demeanor was quickly upgraded from scary cab driver to really scary cab driver. I thought for a second that his head was going to explode, his eyes and cheeks as red as they were. He was pretty scary looking. It's true. "You're holding on to it like you have something illegal in there, like a bomb or drugs or something. Wha'cha got in the bag?"


  "What do you mean?" I asked. I guess I was holding onto it pretty tight. I hadn't really thought about it. Who thinks about that kind of stuff anyway? Do you think about stuff you hold onto and how tight you hold onto it? Most people with any sanity don't think about that kind of shit. But this cabbie was crazy, I tell you. He was a crazy cocksucker. He was really starting to scare the shit out of me.

  "It's a simple question. You been holding onto that bag with your life. Care to tell me what's inside? In a way, I have a right to know. You could be endangering lives or something."

  "How could I be endangering lives?" I asked.

  "Like I said, you could have a bomb or a weapon in there. You're holding onto it like your life depended on it."

  I was holding onto my backpack pretty tight but I think that was because I was nervous about flying. I really hated to fly. I wasn't looking forward to it at all. I have a really deep fear of being in the air in that plane, especially when the plane hits those air pockets and it drops suddenly, sending my stomach right into my throat. God, I really hate that! It scares the shit out of me. I think what scares me the most is that I'm not in control of the plane, you know, because I'm not actually flying it myself. I think if I was flying the plane that I wouldn't be so nervous. I asked the publishing company to send me to New York by train but they refused. They said it would take too long. I guess they are right. Trains are pretty fucking slow. And they go off the tracks all the time. I always see news stories about trains that go off the tracks, at least once a week. It's true.

 

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