Dear Cyndy, From your, letter, for which I thank you, I infer that you are holding your own again the onslaughts of the profession. Please keep me informed, and keep in mind FDR's words about fear. Yesterday I published the fourth volume in my novel series, this one entitled "Vier Freunde 2". (256 pages) I feel somewhat sheepish about this project in self-aggrandizement and would never pursue it if it entailed any significant expenses. However, all that I've been paying is $25 per volume for a service peddled as "extended distribution". Whatever that means, at this juncture, it's been totally ineffectual. There has been no distribution at all , extended or otherwise. In March, no books were sold at all, notwithstanding the circumstance that in addition to Amazon itself, there are 10 on-line booksellers offering e.g. Vol 1, whose nominal price is $17, in a range priced from $13.43 to $22.96. It's irrational, and I don't know how to interpret what's going on. It may be blamable obtuseness on my part, that I intend to proceed, and at minimum publish the two remaining volumes (aggregative 550 pages) which are (almost) ready for printing. Whether thereafter I will be in the mood to publish more only time will tell. Some day before April 3, I expect to receive Mr. Pucci's "Opposition" to my Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings. The arrangement made with the view to reducing the work of the Clerk of the Court is specified in Sperior Court Rule 9A, which requires me to send in due time to the Clerk in a single "package". my Motion together with any responses I have received. The closing date is April 2. I'm curious what arguments Mr. Pucci will make. I feel sorry for him and wish that I could help. But it isn't practical for me to argue both sides of the case, however much I would like to. Now that I have the consent both of George X Pucci, the Nantucket lawyer and of Anapurna Balakrishna, the Asst attorney general, lawyer for the Plumbing Board, for moving the hearing to a later date, I've decided to defer seeking a postponement, if at all, until the Court has set a date. It's quite possible that the Court will be quite dilatory about the hearing, especially once it reviews the record and realizes that the Board of State Examiners of Plumbers is a dysfunctional regulatory agency whose failures they must try to sweep under the rug... Plans for our trip to Konnarock are still in limbo. On checking his calendar, Klemens finds he doesn't have time to go until the end of May. Margaret and I wouldn't want to wait that long. My concerns have shifted. Originally I worried about the embarrassing/catastrophic situation if on the trip or in Konnarock, I suddenly became disabled, then I worried about Margaret's tolerance for the trip, then I calculated the costs of two (3400 mi) or even three (5100 mi) roundtrips which might be required if I found it necessary to return for the hearing, and to return a second time again to draft an appeal. Of late my thoughts have dwelled on the sheer effort entailed in establishing house-keeping in a remote location where many of the Belmont conveniences, among which high-speed internet access is not the least, are lacking. I expect to procrastinate and decide in about two weeks whether and when and for how long to go. Much can happen between now and then. From Nathaniel I haven't heard since he left last Saturday. I suspect that he is fretting over his academic work, which he had neglected in favor of more flamboyant pursuits. He told me before he left that he had also applied for an assistant conductor's position with the Portland (ME) Symphony, but thought his chances were slim if only because he lacked the master's degree which they purported to require. If he's received answers to any of his other applications he hasn't told me. My thoughts and best wishess, as always, are with you and Ned. Jochen