A Captive Heart (‘Oy, Rodney’)

a gripping page-turner headed for the top of the NY Times bestseller list | Romance novels, Funny romance, Book parody

Introducing Chapter DIV (pronounced “div”) of her epic romance, Oy, Rodney, Violet Crepuscular continues to describe the extensive preparations made by Willis Twombley, the American adventurer who thinks he’s Sargon of Akkad, for a safari which, in all likelihood, will never venture out of sight of the vicar’s back yard.

He has forgotten why he’s organizing the safari in the first place. Lady Margo reminds him, “It’s to get rid of that rhinoceros that burrows under the vicar’s wading pool.”

“Better hire us some cavalry, too, then,” he replies.

Some of you surely noticed that the title of this chapter was supposed to be “A Captive Heart.” This refers to Lord Jeremy Coldsore, held as a “prisoner of love” (Oh, great scott!) by Constable Chumley’s mother, who leads a double life as Thir Lanthelot, the Lithping Knight. “I am getting better!” she confides in the reader. “Last year it was a triple life! But I am no longer Bomba the Jungle Boy.”

Jeremy would love to escape, but his cell is way high up in a tower that wobbles dangerously whenever there’s a wind. To keep his will to live, he writes poetry on his dinner plates and tosses them out the window to the River Rhine.

Here I sit in this miserable dungeon,

Waiting for someone to bring my lunch in.

Here Ms. Crepuscular indulges in an aside to the reader. “I have been blamed for the defects in Lord Jeremy’s poetry,” she writes. “Ignorant readers consistently scaphanize these verses. Well, pshaw on them!”

Doing It Right (‘Oy, Rodney’)

a gripping page-turner headed for the top of the NY Times bestseller list | Romance  novels, Funny romance, Book parody

 

Introducing Chapter DIII of her epic romance, Oy, Rodney, Violet Crepuscular (“The Queen of Suspense”!) writes, “Introducing Chapter DIII of my epic romance, Oy, Rodney, I can’t help mentioning that in writing an epic romance one is apt to encounter crabs and nay-sayers among the readership. They send me catty letters. They beshrewvinate me with nasty emails. You’d be amazed, how many so-called readers don’t think anybody in Scurveyshire needs a properly equipped safari! But let us join the American adventurer, Willis Twombley, as he organizes a safari to deal with the rhinoceros that burrows under the wading pool in the vicar’s back yard.”

[Editor’s note: Aaaaaaghhh!]

Twombley asks to borrow a considerable sum of money from Lady Margo Cargo.

“What for?” she preguntalates. [Grrrrr!]

“Askaris,” he explains. “Don’t go anywhere in Africa without ’em. You never know when your safari’s gonna be attacked by cannibals, slave-traders, ivory poachers, or just plain unfriendly natives. Gotta have plenty of armed askaris.”

“But Jeremy–we’re not in Africa!”

Yes, you read that right: she called him Jeremy. Sometimes she calls Jeremy “Willis.” She continues to labor under the impression that they are one and the same person.

“Tell the rhino that!”

“Oh, Willis! You’ve got an answer for everything!”

[Editor tries to escape out the window. Sill is smeared with toothpaste. He is unable to identify its brand or flavor. Tune in next week for a resumption of the story.]