Friday, November 27, 2015

My short story "House and Garden" is available!

Here's the cover of my short story (novelette), "House and Garden", a para-normal story of a woman who hates gardening and the garden that hates her back. It's available as a Kindle Single, on Amazon.com: http://www.amazon.com/House-Garden-Deb-Victoroff-ebook/dp/B00UDJE9MI/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1461524891&sr=8-1&keywords=victoroff

I hope everyone who loves to read will take a chance on this! It won't take you long to read, and perhaps it will transport you in the way a good story can. That's my hope at least!



Thursday, November 5, 2015

Why Stop at 16 Babies When You Could Have 160? I Don't Get It.

In the light of Nadya Suleman's (The Octomom) delivery of 8 babies, while 6 others waited at home, and the interesting support of her by many with conservative leanings, I offer this satire. (Note that as of 2014, Nadya is on public assistance, her house is in foreclosure, her husband has divorced her and her parents are bankrupt. No one seems to give a shit what happened to the actual children...)

FOX news was first on the scene early this morning to report that a woman in northern Minnesota has given birth to 167 babies, or more accurately, is still actually "in childbirth" with 54 little infants left to recover from her distended uterus.

Apparently (it has not been confirmed) the mother had been ingesting Clomid and injecting progesterone for several months in an attempt to steal the recent record of 96 live births set by Kelly Davis at the Wisconsin State Fair last spring. Ms. Davis herself was the only entry in the widely promoted competition, being the only contestant who fulfilled the minimum qualifications of at least 12 simultaneously delivered children prior to the event. (Apparently this will not be the case next year as several women are in training now for the event and the reported $500 first prize; second prize being a brand new humidifier). Ms. Davis sheepishly told the judges that she originally had wanted to compete in the Apple Pie baking competition but her oven broke down last year and she hadn't had the money to have it repaired so she figured she might as well enter the Live Birth competition.

The as yet unidentified mother of the 167… oh wait, we're getting news that it's not 167… looks like there was a chamber in the cavernous uterus which has just recently been discovered and there are apparently between 20 and 25 additional babies in there, playing jump rope with the mother's lower intestine (along with a treasure chest filled with gold dubloons). This will make the delivery tricky as there were only 116 doctors on call for this event and experts say in a delivery of this size, it would take between 120 and 125 ob/gyns to assure the safety of the mother and her newborns.

Fox News reports however that Mrs. Helene Johnson from the Millstein Middle School has offered her third grade class, who were coincidentally visiting the hospital on a field trip, to help catch the babies as they pop out and carry them to the giant Bouncy House where they are being stored until someone can figure out what to do with them.

It's reported that the new mother's other 45 children are healthy and happy at home with her husband who has converted their garage into something resembling an egg-laying factory, with six stacked rows of box-like structures, each child having their own 3x5 enclosure and watered and fed with a series of hamster water bottles.

The mother, who is in excellent health and enjoying the attention of the press even while she squeezes out her 15th set of triplets, is granting interviews on a selected basis, with Harvey Levin in line just behind Wendy Williams and Barbara Walters, each of whom have come bearing gifts; in Wendy's case, 175 stuffed yellow bears presently stored in an Allied van parked in the hospital loading dock. (The 72 scrub nurses standing by apparently asked Williams if she’d lend a hand changing 41 of the babies who need clean diapers, but Williams demurred, citing journalistic objectivity.)

There were earlier reports this morning of a small group of protesters standing outside the hospital calling the competition despicable, arguing that no one family could possibly handle more than 85 infants at one time, but these naysayers were quickly shouted down by hundreds of fans of the young mother, smiling and waving even more stuffed yellow bears.

When asked what she planned to do once she healed from the grueling ordeal of delivering now what seems at last count, to be 182 premature infants, the young mother smiled and said, "There are a lot of people out there who want children to love and I plan on finding them, either through Craig's list or Ebay."