What a summer!

SO THERE goes the summer of 2024, went by in a flash, don’t you think? Tomorrow’s Labor Day, in two weeks it’ll be Thanksgiving. No wonder I never get anything done.

My summer saw its reflection in a basement window and made like this coyote.


Some of the guys out west rode up to Alaska for the solstice in June, I didn’t make it this time. They rode to Colorado in September, didn’t make that either. But I did have a better summer than the CEO of Sore Loser, Inc., so that’s something. For the third time in little more than a year, he sorely lost before a jury able to do something he never will: set its opinions aside and honor the oath.

In our society, the adults in the room seem to rise up from below, isn’t that interesting? The ill-raised children at the top are busy putting on the big show.


Now that summer’s over and I’ve gotten exactly nowhere motor-wise, here was my favorite part of staying local: three or four days a week we were up at the ballfield. It was tee ball for D1D2, she’s 5, softball for her big sister.

Here’s D1D1 swatting a few. She’s a good all-around athlete: gymnastics, swimming… The 9-year-old girls are at the learning stage where their coaches pitch to them. Everybody bats long enough to hit, nobody keeps score, and parents cheer as much for the other team’s girls as they do their own.

D1D1 is like the younger sister in A League of Their Own: can’t lay off the first pitch. Or was it the high ones? Might have been the high ones…


After the game Saturday, she and a couple of her friends watched the high school girls do a batting warm up in the next field over. Those girls can hit! I’ll grab it on video next time. It was fun to see the younger girls flinch when the ball comes at them. The older girls are easily hitting 60 mph in warm up, I would guess.


Here’s our girl two years ago, talking with her cousin, Ava, from Pennsylvania. In a playoff game last week Ava hit a grand slam for Penn State. I’ve got the video on my phone, can’t seem to sync it to my desktop or I would show it to you.


The feline member of our household came to the end of the road last week.


Cats have the right idea: a long middle age followed by about a week of old age, then it’s time to go. She wasn’t in pain or distress, just stopped eating and then finally didn’t want water either, so I took her on the final ride to ease her way out of the world. They go easy, cats, dogs; it’s people who get to suffer to the agonizing end.

This cat was quite the survivor. We adopted her at age 3 or so, dead of winter. We named her Zuzu for It’s a Wonderful Life, then playing on a loop on TV, the Christmas season. She had been mauled by a dog or a coyote and was living under a truck on Cranston Street. It was single-digit temps when we took her home. She was likely a few days from death.

Warmth, food and medical attention soon set her right and she had 17 good years ahead. A wonderful life, indeed. Would Jimmy Stewart ever lie to you?


Got up to Vermont a few weekends ago. It was a cool mid-May, good sleeping weather, overnight temps in the 30s. I turn in early in the country but do like to see the day through until the text goes out of focus.


One of the classics I had missed over the years: the story of a talented guy who marries a disturbed woman for all the wrong reasons, his life turns out to be kind of a failure. It was written by a talented guy who married a disturbed woman for all the wrong reasons and his life… well… you know.

We were in Vermont doing floors.


Which is to say Jonny was doing floors.

Somebody’s got to be the old bastard who upholds standards. Hey, you missed a spot…

For full effect, point with a cane.



After I watched him do floors I watched him cook us breakfast for dinner.


Got my navigation system sorted out on the Arctic bike. I installed a new iPhone mount just under eye level on the windshield. For safety’s sake there’s never a need to look down at the lower mount; I can shift focus momentarily, check for turns then it’s eyes on the road. Heads-up riding all the way.


I soldered longer wires into the circuit on the turn-signal indicator, too; got it mounted up high so I can’t miss it. Again, no looking down, that’s the idea.

The signals aren’t self-canceling on the 650 piglet. Your chances of getting wrecked increase dramatically if you’re riding around with a turn signal you don’t know is blinking. One time in 100 is way too many times to be doing that.


I hope to get out on the MABDR or the NEBDR this summer, but since it’s Thanksgiving in two weeks that probably didn’t happen either.


Oh, well… I’ll just mope around looking at the map.


Jeff Weigel and I are working on a Phantom adventure set in 1590-91. (Do feel free to scroll down if you could hardly care less.)

This one is mainly told through text blocks instead of dialogue. Call it a tip of the hat to Hal Foster: Instead of putting the reader in the story with a simulated present moment, Jeff and I are going to hold up the tale as a tableau, hang it on the wall, as it were.

I didn’t want to use direct quotes in text blocks, Foster’s way in Prince Valiant. Didn’t want to use anonymous narration though, or burn art space continually reestablishing the present. So I’m using a particular kind of textual voice to create an off-narrative space where the 21st Phantom can tell the tale to Diana without us needing to be there.

This sounds more complicated than it is, it’s really quite simple when you have the page in front of you. Look for free indirect speech rather than anonymous narration, with voice serving as a function of time. Syntax alone should always answer the question: Who’s speaking? The answer is almost always cued by the art. What you see will have a lot to do with what you hear.

What I think readers will hear is: This must be something akin to what the 21st Phantom is saying to Diana in sequences we don’t witness.

This must be something like the antiquated vocabulary and syntax the 2nd Phantom used when he recorded the tale for future generations.

And this—this is easy—has to be the 2nd Phantom’s headspace, the syntax and vocabulary of his inner monologue. Why else are we seeing personal pronouns in a text block with no quotation marks?

As in all stories, it’ll work or it won’t. The risky tales are the ones I most love to write. If it can’t fail, why write it? AI can easily write the same safe story over & over & over. (Sometimes I think plenty of readers would be delighted with a dull reliable sameness, but that’s a conversation for another day.)

Jeff’s been running occasional B&W previews of his art on his FB page.

Wonderful artist! We’re lucky to have him.


The Phantom story I did with Bret Blevins will end Saturday. Bret was filling in for my friend Mike Manley while Mike was on the DL.

I had three aims in mind, wrote about the first two here a few months back. I wanted to go on record dismantling a 1953 story by the same title, The Chain: do a demolition job on both its underlying premise and its treatment of race.

What I held back at that time was my third purpose: to have this new take on The Chain show how the Wrack and Ruin series continues; how it’s baked into the lore now but can morph into an entirely new context that raises new narrative issues. This week, the Phantom gains some insight into that evolving context and amends his thinking, or holds it open to amendment anyway.

The Phantom discovers that his son, Kit, has experienced a small part of the Mozz prophecy in a nightmare. The nightmare so disturbed Kit he felt he needed to come home from India, which we saw him do in the concluding chapter of Wrack and Ruin.

In the nightmare now revealed in The Chain, Kit saw himself as a killer at age 30, fighting somewhere on a disputed frontier in Asia. Born to be a Phantom, he builds his life instead around vengeance. He disarms prisoners, marches them behind a building and shoots them to death.

We saw this other Kit in a prophecy sequence in Wrack and Ruin, and here in The Chain we find out Kit has seen it for himself. He doesn’t know the future events that may prompt this transformation for the worse—though we do: Kit and his tutor, Kyabje Dorje, are falsely seen as responsible for Savarna Devi gunning down Chief Constable Jampa. The foreign power Jampa was spying for bombed the mountain city in retaliation. Kyabje Dorje died in the bombing. Kit became obsessed by revenge and that was that.

Here the Phantom finds out Kit has seen this future version of himself.

Kit’s home in East Africa temporarily as far as we know. He intends to go back to India to resume his studies at Nyamjang Chu. We’ll see if Kit’s mother and sister get anywhere in their plan to fix him up with Kadia Sahara and get him to stay. I rather doubt it but you never know. He might fall for Kadia and go back to India nonetheless. Hard to say.


So this is how the story wraps up this week: As always, the point of the writing is to reveal character. In these closing days we see the Phantom’s optimism, his intelligence, his concern for others—his radical unconcern for himself—and his ability to function in the human condition, which is to say he’s prepared to see his way through the unknown, his incomplete knowledge of the twists and turns that await.

What’s behind Kit’s nightmare, you may gather, is the event that started the whole thing three years ago: the intervention of Old Man Mozz a continent away. Mozz perceived the prophecy and intended to thwart it by warning the Phantom off the trail to Gravelines Prison.

This happened in the opening weeks of Wrack and Ruin.

Mozz is sketching an image he’s seen, an image of the unmarked grave that awaits the 21st Phantom in India if Savarna Devi gets out of Gravelines Prison alive.

Now, in The Chain, we see that fate was already moving to counter Mozz. Kit, at that moment, 7,000 kilometers away in India, was asleep and falling into the nightmare.

Later that day, two other events coincide in time: Mozz stops the Phantom on the trail to Gravelines and Kit decides to come home. Again, it’s Mozz fencing with fate: the thrust, the parry, repeat…


Today’s strip…

I think what the Phantom really means to say is he’s not worried about himself. As ever, he’s outwardly directed, that’s his nature. If fate wants to lead him to the mountain pass where Manju will take his life, then that’s the way it must be.

An ordinary man would feel otherwise, certainly, but the premise of the fictional universe Lee Falk created is that the 21st Phantom has, in his care, the custody of a 500-year-old legend and is thus not an ordinary man. Everything we know about the character begins there.

Now this is brilliant, this next image. It wasn’t scripted; it was Bret Blevins thinking about how to drive the sense of the closing narrative into a single image: the snake slithering by Skull Cave at night. Knowing the Phantom’s state of mind, and after spending a little time with the text in that panel, any attentive reader should be able to assign two or three possible meanings to the image.

If Savarna had learned Jampa’s whereabouts through the Phantom, Kit and Kyabje Dorje would have been implicated in Jampa’s killing. Mozz tried to alter that course by revealing the prophecy to the Phantom. Fate counters by revealing a small part of the prophecy to Kit. It’s not unreasonable to think his journey home was about fate using him to reveal Jampa’s whereabouts to Savarna. Mozz had already wrecked its plan to convey the information to Savarna through the Phantom.

So things get to the same place as far as Jampa is concerned. What you think happens next depends on the importance you assign to Jampa’s death. Was his destiny driving the prophecy or was he a cog along the way to some other emerging future? The Phantom will be thinking about that for quite some time.

Way too much Phantom blather…


Moving on, I continue to get out in the woods when I can. Though, to my liking, June is about 60 degrees too warm to work in the woods.

My wood yard behind the kids’ house on the west side of town. I’ve been hauling it home bit by bit in the ’49 truck. I knocked together a plywood box so as not to have to stack the wood and cinch it down on the flatbed.

Won’t need this wood next winter. These are 2026 fires seasoning.

It’s all got to be wheelbarrowed hundreds of feet; wheeled out of the woods to the truck, loaded, transported, then unloaded and wheeled down the hill into our backyard. I like the heft and the motion. It feels good to be a moving target.

Keeping the well-worn gear in good order…


In closing, file this under sez you, Big Tech: A plugin developer in Romania tells me I need to start sending them money because—Congratulations, Tony DePaul! Your site is growing at an unprecedented rate!

The hell you say…

I use a WordPress plugin to optimize the loading speed on the images you see here. The owner says this little sub-routine is working so much overtime on my behalf, so taxing their servers, I need to upgrade. The Romanians say they have this on good authority from all-seeing, all-knowing Google, which has fingered me as an up-and-comer: my scribblings were devoured by thousands of readers last month!

A month in which I posted exactly nothing to read. Color me dubious.

I deactivated the plugin instead of sending them money, of course. It was no small amount they wanted; easily enough to put another motorcycle on the road for the year, insurance-wise.

There are no analytics on my blog, never have been. I couldn’t care less. Analytics are for conning ad buyers, or for vanity’s sake. So many people use VPNs nowadays your reader in so-called China might actually be three streets away, no?

My final communication with the vendor:

Thank you, but I’m all set with this: I’ve deactivated the plugin.

Almost nobody is reading my blog 🙂 Trust me.

Official-looking graphs attested to by Google or Optimole or Bluehost are not about to inspire me to buy a bag full of nothing. There is simply no way that thousands of viewers are reading my blog in a month where there’s nothing new to read. I’m sure I don’t have that many readers in a month where there is something new to read.

Again, this is just for fun, a bit of goofing-off when I probably ought to be working. No ads, nothing to buy, no t-shirts, no mugs, there’s not even a theme fer christsake.


I’m squared away with Vimeo, by the way. When I log onto my account it says: “You don’t have any followers.”

Solid!—let’s work to keep it that way. Breath of fresh air…

Tony DePaul, June 3, 2024, Cranston, Rhode Island, USA

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About Tony

The occasional scribblings of Tony DePaul, father, grandfather, husband, freelance writer in many forms, recovering journalist, long-distance motorcycle rider, blue routes wanderer, topo map bushwhacker, blah blah...
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37 Responses to What a summer!

  1. Wow, what a post! So much going on, and all of it well told. My sympathies for the loss of your cat. That story reminded me of the loss of my office cat several years ago. She was someone we believed accidentally escaped from a nearby assisted living facility, and ended up keeping us going on our more stressed out days. Also made me think of a recent day when I left the office and a deer followed me with her eyes all the way to my car, while I waved at it. Animals do so much more for us than we realize. Then again, given current events, I sometimes wonder who the real animals are.

    And never apologize about your Phantom work; you do a great job at extending the life and value of another man’s work. Your understanding of the character and his universe is dead-on, and I appreciate everything you do to connect its past with its future. I look forward to the Foster-influenced strips. Such an amazing story-teller and artist; I loved the way the narrative was in plain type and the dialogue was in italics.

    Stay healthy, and stay in touch!

    • Tony says:

      Thank you, Stephen. The Phantom’s still nothing but fun as the ever-precarious business model hangs by a thread, but we dance till the music stops, what else?

  2. steve lyon says:

    Much like Robert, above, I keep a second bike ready to go for anyone who wants to come out and visit Yosemite. Got a couple of tough little 250cc dual sports that are perfect for the hundreds of miles of forest service trails just outside Yosemite.

    You are always welcome.

    • Tony says:

      Hey! Glad you’re still out there living the dream.

      I would so like to see the Owens Valley again, the Sierra, all that. A squirrel jihad sounds like just the thing.

  3. Tom S says:

    I love what you’re doing with the Phantom. All kinds of narrative experiment within the constraints that Lee Falk set up. Reminds me that all the good experimental fiction is genre fiction.

  4. Sounds to me like your summer is just fantastic, watching your grandkids having fun. I can’t believe your oldest is 9. Yes, time goes by way too fast.
    That’s a great story about the scammer. It does my heart good to know they didn’t get away with their scheme. Such horrible people.

    My sympathy on the loss of Zuzu. I loved reading her life story. It’s so wonderful that you saved her from a certain and painful death, and that must have cost you a pretty penny. That was a blessed day for Zuzu. You gave her a beautiful life and a peaceful death. We should all be that lucky.

    • Tony says:

      Thanks, Ellie. Adults warned me — I didn’t believe them — now it’s my turn to get that funny look from kids when I tell them: Time accelerates — Don’t miss a minute!

      • Tom Brown says:

        Not sure if I did it right but tried sending you and Ellie a link to a Brian Jones blog piece on the late Tom Mulligan. Sorry, my typing remains spastic since last year’s stroke,

  5. R. ROGER BEDFORD says:

    12.18.23…North Shore Oahu visits the Jersey Shore, a day of once in a lifetime surf.
    The OldSurfBum, in his 8th decade of life, could only sit shoreside and watch.
    Oh well, Tony, I think I understand you.

  6. Ellen Liberman says:

    Hi Tony — I hope you are good health-wise — thinking of you.

  7. Terry Close says:

    Looking forward to a Prince Valiant style story, been a fan of that strip for many years too. It will be nice to see a 2nd Phantom story. I guess I would be one of those that fall into the comfortable reliable sameness, with so much craziness in our lives it’s nice to have that at times, my own craziness withstanding. I hope Kit stays and falls for Kadia Sahara and never returns to the Mountain City, but I have been pulling for a Kit, Kadia falling for each other for many years now, picked up a few followers on that from my posts at times on the daily strip. Hope your health is good, I seem to be doing good with my little burp that I had for a bit, seems to have faded away somewhat, so marching on 🙂 Jeff is one fine artist, he would make a fantastic artist for Tarzan, use to remember in the old Gold Key days in the letter page how many of us would have loved to see The Phantom and Tarzan team-up. Of course we knew it wouldn’t happen, but oh we can dream 🙂 Take care my friend, and be with us for many, many years to come.

    • Tony says:

      Hey, Terry. When I asked Jeff whether he wanted to do a historic Phantom tale in Prince Valiant mode, he said, Are you kidding? Prince Valiant’s my North Star!

      Good to know.

  8. Chris Whitney says:

    Good to read you, and sorry to hear about Zuzu, who looks remarkably like Rocket J. Squirrel, aka Rocky, our rescue cat who is 14, give or take. I will really miss him when he’s gone. Hope you get some miles under your two wheelers, one way or the other!

    • Tony says:

      Thank you, Chris. I kind of need to be around here for something going on just about every 7 to 10 days between now and the end of summer. Pam and I will sneak away in the kids’ travel van anyway, just a few days around the end of the month. Best to you & yours.

  9. Tom Wakelyn, Sr. says:

    I would think that Colonel Worubu, in his musing about the Jungle Patrol, would have thought about a possible association between The Unknown Commander and the Phantom. Certainly, the Phantom is known as a mystery person throughout the jungle and a possible source of good. (I hope that you are in good health.)

    • Tony says:

      Thanks, Tom. Yes, I think so, too, not least of all because the good mark is carved on a post at the gate of many a tribal village. Same mark as the JP.

  10. Robert Freeman says:

    Good to hear you are still vertical and mobile. Sorry about your cat. We picked up an orange kitty in Red Bay, Alabama about 2001. He spent 15 years with us in a motor home and lived to be 18. I miss him every day.
    Summer has finally arrived in the Northwest and we are headed to Dawson on Saturday. Still time for you to join us. I have a backup bike in the shop ready to go.

    • Tony says:

      Aww, killing me… couldn’t possibly. Steve’s flying in to Anchorage and renting a bike there, I hear. Are you guys riding up the Stewart-Cassiar? I don’t know why I think that. Maybe something Steve said.

      • Robert Freeman says:

        We go up the Cassiar and come back on the Alcan. I do keep two VStroms ready to travel if you ever want to fly out. You are welcome to borrow either one. Think Moab in September.

  11. Activist 1234 says:

    Your Phantom tale seemed to be wrapping up so earlier today I said on a CC blog you would probably soon be posting an explanation. Two hours later, here it is! (Mozz loaned me “Prophecy for Dummies”). Thanks for the summary.

    Per you, I foresee that you will be traveling much the next few months, with and without The Bride. Ride on!

  12. Gerrie says:

    You had me going there Tony. I was almost convinced I slept through summer. Kinda like Rip van Winkel. However, a look outside shows me that, although we may not necessarily be in summer, at least the grass is green and the birds are singing. No snow for the next week at least. Although around these parts you never know. Drove through snow last week on the way to my brother’s new place in Kelowna. Or should I say tip toed my way up the mountain and then down. My racing tires on my ST don’t do so well if there’s even a whiff of the white stuff.
    Thanks for the scribbles. Keep them coming.

  13. Bob Weeks says:

    Tony, thanks for the map picture.I will get one.
    Don’t fall off your bike looking at all your gizmos……..Bob

    • Tony says:

      Hey! Over the winter you were thinking of a ride east this season. Is that still on?

      • Bob Weeks says:

        Yes I am heading your way as soon as I redo the roof on my shop.
        My bike is running perfect.I am waiting for a new rear tire before I leave……….Bob

        • Tony says:

          Cool! We’ll make it work, amigo. I’ll be here or will get out to wherever you are. We’ll be out of town on family matters four or five days around the end of the month, then again toward the end of July. Will look forward to more on your itinerary as you work your way east.

  14. brad says:

    Good to hear from you, Tony.

    Down here in Hugetown, we have been dodging derechos (we had an art opening the afternoon it hit, I watched through our bulletproof safety windows as the rain went sideways and tree branches 4″ thick at the attchment were torn from the oak trees out front. NOAA says the wind measure 127.7mph 500 feet above ground about a 1/4 mile from us) and daily rain events (about .5″ in an hour).

    Other than that, nothing much to report.

    • Tony says:

      Wow… do stay under cover when it rolls around again, Brad. You don’t need to get hit by something very big at a wind-driven 127.7 mph.

      CCjon & family were without power overnight. He’s ducking whatever’s next. Today he’s likely on the road to the sidecar rally in Mississippi.

  15. Bob Bethell says:

    I enjoyed your comments and Phantom background, as always!

    • Tony says:

      Thank you, Bob. I hadn’t written anything in six weeks or so. Usually after four I start getting alarmed emails asking about metastasis, motorcycle wrecks, me in the backyard under a spot marked by a brick, like the cat… 🙂 Many thanks for reading.

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