Metafiction/Humor/Mystery
Date Published: April 20th, 2021
Publisher: Zither Studios
A nutty religious cult abducts a herd of prime gazebos (huh?) and it’s up to bumbling P.I. Mars Candiotti to rescue them. Mars, aspiring author, chronicles his quest in Jeffrey Hanlon's comic mystery Zither.
Guided by his magically prescient IHOP waitress, Mars strives to mitigate the shocking global consequences of the gazebo heist, even though he has no idea what the word mitigate means. Mars has five Important clues with which to solve his confounding mystery: Butterscotch, John Travolta, Trombones Venetian Blinds, and Wind Chimes.
As Zither swallows its own tale, Mars finds it increasingly tricky to distinguish between real people and his rambunctious fictional characters. Zither becomes the romper room where his reality meets fantasy - and get frisky with each other.
Using his (odd) clues, Mars’ international odyssey leads to an explosive conclusion in Panama. TVs around the world tune in to watch live coverage of “Carnage in the Canal”.
Amid the lunatic havoc that is Zither there is (of course!) an epic love story as Mars meets Marian, the brainy librarian he had dreamed of. Marian says his books are "slapstick existentialism with subjective reality couched in parable". (This is news to Mars). But is Marian real?
Is any of it real?
"Hanlon’s humor shines bright and will leave fans of such madness wanting more." Publishers Weekly
"This zany, rollicking mystery adventure is as compelling as it is hilarious." Independent Book Review
Nominated for the prestigious Audie Award, Best Fiction 2021
Excerpt
I walked up the stairs
toward the third floor Venetian Blinds section.
I heard a woman's voice
as I approached.
She spoke in dulcimer
tones as enchanting as a Siren's song. She was reading Poe.
". . . with the bells
Silver bells!
What a world of merriment their melody
foretells!
How they tinkle, tinkle, tinkle,
In the icy air of night.
While the stars that oversprinkle
All the heavens seem to twinkle . . ."
Their melody foretells! Tinkle
tinkle tinkle!
Mesmerized, I followed
the sound of her voice.
She stood in front of
the librarian's desk, reading to a group of schoolchildren.
She wore a
Butterscotch-colored tartan plaid skirt, a white cardigan sweater over a white
blouse with lacy collar, and a smart looking glengarry bonnet. And fabulously quaint reading glasses.
And get a load of this:
her long auburn hair was in a single braid!
. . . as she frolics in the sapphire sea . . .
The girl in my dream!
One of the
schoolchildren sneezed, and she paused her reading to reach into her pocket and
retrieve a tissue for him.
Then a library janitor
came up to her and whispered. She extracted a small screwdriver from her pocket
and handed it to him.
I edged closer.
A co-worker approached
her and asked for keys to the Rare Books Section. She pulled the keys out of
her pocket.
The whole world seemed
to revolve around her!
She was so well
prepared!
She finished reading
Poe's "The Bells," folded the paper, placed the poem in her pocket,
and pulled out another.
I saw she had
accidentally pulled something else from her pocket, and it had fallen to the
floor, so I rushed to her, elbowing aside the little kids, finishing with a
flourish, a nice twenty-foot Gene Kelly knee slide, the children toppling like
bowling pins.
I glided to a stop and
knelt at her feet.
She wore tenny-runners
with ankle socks, each with a small Butterscotch-colored pom-pom sewn on.
I saw what she had
dropped on the floor.
It was a wooden nickel.
I picked it up and
placed it in the palm of her lovely hand.
"Thank you,"
she said.
She thanked me!
I was king of the world!
And I wanted to impress
her. So I picked up the little kids who were strewn across the floor.
After I'd propped the
last of them up, I turned to her, and she thanked me again.
She thanked me again!
I said, "You're
welcome."
Then I ran away, bowling
over more children as I beat a hasty retreat.
❖
I've never been real
good with girls.
About the Author
I was born in a Southern California beach town.
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