I went to a concert at the Curtis Institute, the model for the Kearney music school. Some kids did absolutely the best possible performance of Mendelssohn's String Quartet #2.
During intermission, I went down to the men's room. There was hard bass case down there in the hallway. It's about 8 feet tall and could easily hide a body. Aha. So for some as yet undetermined reason, somebody kills one of the students and stuffs him in the base case and it sits there. My wife says, wouldn't they smell it? I said, not if he put the body in a bag and sealed it up and then got the case out of there. Hmmm. I'll have to let that one percolate. Who was the victim. Why did he or she get killed? Who was the killer? How did it happen? When did it occur? How did the killer get the case out of there before the body smelled? I smell another musical mystery coming out of me.
What do you think? Post a comment.
Writing to me is an entrepreneurial activity. For my entrepreneurship blog, go to www.hatman2.blogspot.com and for entrepreneurial real estate go to www.yourstopforrealestate.com/blog.
Sunday, November 2, 2008
Getting story ideas
Labels:
Curtis Institute,
Story ideas
Synopsis:
Author Profile:
Tim was a market and survey research consultant from 1983 to 2000 and a smoking cessation researcher from 2000 to 2003. His consulting practice focused primarily on conducting community health needs assessment. He authored hundreds of market research reports and published a number of his assessments in Community Health Needs Assessment published by McGraw Hill in 1996 and in a revised volume published in 1999. In 2000 he joined the staff of the Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention of the University of Wisconsin-Madison where he conducted smoking cessation research. He published several articles in peer-reviewed journals and spoke at national smoking cessation conferences.
In 2003 he moved to Philadelphia and earned his real estate license. He now practices real estate, works on publishing his novels, and studies and teaches entrepreneurship.Tim has written a dozen novel-length stories, a volume of short stories, and about a 3-foot stack of pages poetry. He is currently working on earning his 4th million in real estate sales, publishing his novels, and working on an entrepreneurish handbook as a support for his students.
Tim is a trained violist and an experienced string quartet player. He is an avid listener to classical music and regularly attends classical music concerts. He has two grown children by his first wife and a stepdaughter with his second wife. He likes to cook, read, write, entertain, develop relationships, and help other people. Formerly Tim used to travel frequently. He doesn't so much anymore. Now he regards the combination of real estate practice, writing and publishing, and the teaching and studying of entrepreneurship as enough of a trip.