Saturday, December 19, 2015

So Serious Saturday #23

Fiction needs a basis in reality. Exercising non-fiction muscles once in a while benefits an active imagination, channeling creative energies as it focuses on a subject. So Serious Saturdays will be an active place for critical essays or writing about reality in the context of real events - even when it is not written on Saturdays.

Type: Philosophical
The Evergreen Season

      Two girls opened their Christmas presents at a KFC. I was watching their excitement as they discovered a "secret" electronic journal and a skipping toy to twirl around their ankles. The older girl kept staring at the stranger staring at her.
       I finally decided to explain myself. "That journal's really cool," I said. "I wanted one of those when I was younger. I'm a bit jealous." 

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Craft Wednesday #27 Writing Again

This blog needed a place for talking about writing. "Craft Wednesday" will be me talking about all things writing: how to write, why to write, and my own craft journey. I hope to learn and to share experiences with you. 
Writing Again


     Picking up a story where you left off is not easy. I started writing an additional chapter to my book and found myself looking through my notes. I probably spent more time staring and rereading what I had written than thinking or writing, although I did a bit of that, too.

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Craft Wednesday #26 Magic Time

This blog needed a place for talking about writing. "Craft Wednesday" will be me talking about all things writing: how to write, why to write, and my own craft journey. I hope to learn and to share experiences with you. 

Magic Time Within and Without

Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows Spoiler Alert!!!!!!!!
Contains Major Plot Movements

  I've heard that the Battle of Hogwarts is canonically supposed to have happened in 1998, about the same time that the first Harry Potter book gained popularity. 

Since this Battle occurs in the last book of the series, the main plot of the series ends where it begins: in 1998 the Battle rages within the pages and about 1998 the first book starts its majorly successful run in the United States after gaining fans in Britain. Readers can essentially go back to 1998 by starting the series or ending the series.

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Small Minstrel Ditty

Perhaps it's selfish
I'm sharing my song,
but maybe the words
just took me too long;
when I tried to choose
between right and wrong
ideas arose
that didn't belong.

Saturday, November 7, 2015

So Serious Saturday #22

Fiction needs a basis in reality. Exercising non-fiction muscles once in a while benefits an active imagination, channeling creative energies as it focuses on a subject. So Serious Saturdays will be an active place for critical essays or writing about reality in the context of real events - even when it is not written on Saturdays.

Type: Commentary
Swift Consequences
     
    The Country Music Awards and organizations related to the country music family have nominated her for many honors, but it is unclear how far Taylor Swift will walk from her country roots.
   Back in September 2014,  a senior contributor to The Federalist created a post about the possible moral consequences of T-Swift's song "Shake It Off". A decent read will review Swift's charms and public direction in these recent years.
   Where the Federalist article really shines is when it speaks about modern day value movements. True, people are more likely to argue that people should not judge, and then turn and be antagonistic to being judged themselves. Also true: the way selfishness is celebrated in the world, in part made possible by ability to post whatever and whenever to whoever.

Saturday, September 26, 2015

So Serious Saturday #21

Fiction needs a basis in reality. Exercising non-fiction muscles once in a while benefits an active imagination, channeling creative energies as it focuses on a subject. So Serious Saturdays will be an active place for critical essays or writing about reality in the context of real events - even when it is not written on Saturdays.

Type: Journal

Fearing Failure
     I've done it.
     Or not done it, depending on your viewpoint. I've failed my mission for this blog; namely, to post something most days. There are a hundred excuses I've tried out, including the fact that this September is hot, there was too much to do, work was taking up my time, family was taking up my time...
    I guess I'm just looking for something else to blame it on, so that I don't have to claim the failure as entirely my own. However, I am afraid what would happen if I owned that failure.

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Cuatro-Cinco Art

The mirror reflects
streaks in the canvas
the painter expressed
battered by sadness.

Monday, August 31, 2015

Darrowwood Part Eighteen

      18.
            Mr. and Mrs. Daniels exchanged glances.  “Your sister is coming for you when her mission ends,” Mr. Daniels said, bounding his son up and down.  The baby cooed.
            “No, my parents,” Monica repeated.  “We made arrangements for meeting them at the port.  Have they come back from their cruise?  Don’t tell me they’ve forgotten.”

Friday, August 28, 2015

Darrowwood Part Seventeen

  17.
This must be some sort of joke, Monica thought. She fiddled with her broken nail.  It really was singing, she could hear it and feel it as well as she could hear the blood rushing in her ears.  “Jenny – you know, my best friend since fourth grade and your eldest child – she convinced me to come to a preview at Darrowwood Preparatory with her.”
            “Darrowwood Prep, huh?”  Mr. Daniels said, taking up an absentminded pacing once more.  “I think I heard one of the boys say something about an old school not too far from here.  Burned down in the great fire twenty years ago, I think he said.”
            Monica clenched a fist.  “That can’t be, I was just there, with your daughter, Jenny, and we’ve been there for two weeks already and we need to get out of here before something really bad happens.”
            Mrs. Daniels had closed one suitcase and now returned to place her hand on Monica’s shoulder, speaking quite gently as she looked into the girl’s face.  “Dear, you must be confused.  We don’t have another daughter, although I have always considered you as one of my own children.  Ever since your family has lived next door to us, I’ve considered it a blessing to have some responsible young women like you and your sister look after my kids.”
            “I’ve never done that except with Jenny, Mrs. Daniels.  Don’t shake your head at me.  You’re joking, right?  Tell me that you’re joking.  My parents, call them.  I know they’re on vacation and all that, and they might be mad, but they’ll know what I’m talking about.  I haven’t been able to reach them on my phone, so we can try yours to see if there’s any difference.”
           She looked right to left at the smooth faces, trying to read the fine lines there.

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Craft Wednesday #24 Disappointed Blogging Dreams

This blog needed a place for talking about writing. "Craft Wednesday" will be me talking about all things writing: how to write, why to write, and my own craft journey. I hope to learn and to share experiences with you. 
Disappointed Blogging Dreams

   I really expected this blog to turn out differently.

Monday, August 24, 2015

Being Seventeen

Seventeen sounds of
sunny slats and lettermans
wrapped around shivers.

Friday, August 21, 2015

Late Instability

Rain gathers
over a waning earth.

Strange
that it took
so long appearing.

Hotter suns stray
through ice, smoke.

Not long now.

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Craft Wednesday #23 Common Spelling Variations

This blog needed a place for talking about writing. "Craft Wednesday" will be me talking about all things writing: how to write, why to write, and my own craft journey. I hope to learn and to share experiences with you. 

Common Spelling Variations in American and British Writing:
A Short Reference

    Reading a Thomas Hardy novel after skimming a book written by an American author raised some questions about when it is appropriate to use certain spellings of words.
    I think I had been wondering about the word toward/towards some months before, when I had been editing some of my own fiction. Something just didn't sound right. Of course, some of it had to do with the inconsistent use of spelling rules, but that was precisely the point on which I needed the clarification.
   So here, for your own short reference, are some of the perceived differences between spelling variations and why you might want to use a particular spelling instead of the other.

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Darrowwood Part Sixteen

16.
            The inn in the town of Darrowdale was two stories, but the narrow wooden staircase leading to the upper floor filled a third of the available space.  Monica pounded on all of the doors until only one remained.  She took a steadying breath and rapped on it, causing green paint bits to fall on the supple floorboards.  “Mr. and Mrs. Daniels?  Are you there?  It’s Monica.”

Monday, August 17, 2015

Darrowwood Part Fifteen

    15.
As she approached the earthen crack, Monica thought she saw a glint in the dirt.  A bit caked over, perhaps, but it was most definitely a shining token that was either guilded or bronzed.  She kicked at it, but it would not loosen. Jenny approached and scratched its outline in the dirt with her hooked toenail.
            “Wow, it’s singing,” Jenny gasped.  The point of her big toenail rested on top of the loosened item, which Monica now saw was not a coin, as she first thought it might be, but some sort of jewelry.
            “Don’t touch it.” Monica kicked Jenny’s toe, scowling. “You don’t know what that is.”

Sunday, August 16, 2015

So Serious Saturday #20

Fiction needs a basis in reality. Exercising non-fiction muscles once in a while benefits an active imagination, channeling creative energies as it focuses on a subject. So Serious Saturdays will be an active place for critical essays or writing about reality in the context of real events - even when it is not written on Saturdays.

Type: Discussion/Exercise

Knowing and Believing

Sometime ago I looked at proof and truth by using illustrations from 1984. Today I fulfill my promise to talk "about knowing and believing and the differences between them".

Thursday, August 13, 2015

Hats On

     "Look, he's just looking at us over there."
     I turned my head where she had pointed, and I nodded.
     He was still staring, with heavy eyes, as we passed his gate.
     Mom and I walked a while longer.
     The molten sunlight ran over our chins, which our broad-rimmed hats did not cover.
     Even the dogs stayed quiet in this heat.

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Craft Wednesday #22 Honestly London Part II

This blog needed a place for talking about writing. "Craft Wednesday" will be me talking about all things writing: how to write, why to write, and my own craft journey. I hope to learn and to share experiences with you. 

Honestly London
Part II


      The fact about modern authors is that they are different than Jack London on several key points:
     Writers are created differently today. American public school students read far more authors writing post-Hemingway than any other kind of writer, heavy on minority and women writers. 
     Reading authors that have been ignored in past centuries is a noble pursuit and raises interesting and unique conglomerations of ideas, but the unity of the old academia, which made for educated discussion among those initiated into structured education, is split by the sparser material read in common by those persons called scholars than in previous eras.

Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Swept Away: London Proser

London Proser
or
Mocking How The Prose of Author Jack London Sounds When Read Aloud
     
     My grip tore loose from the hard siding upon the waves' breaking over the deck. The boat tossed to port, and flung me fast overboard.
     Water entered my body and breath and, through a wondrous chemical process, changed into fire. My extremities burned into my core; my heart struggled to find its natural beat.
     In the twisting and turning of the water I found myself not in fire, but in ice. My thoughts took on a glacial quality; their slow passage chiseled fjords though my conscious isle.
     As I sunk into the fathomless black depths I fancied I saw a glow above me -- whether at the surface or no, I knew not; for I knew not where the sea ended and the sweet air existed -- with a broad halo growing larger and larger until I felt I must be swallowed by what seemed to be a harbinger of death.
    The sea must have seethed with foam and crests, but I felt no tossing or swirling; only a still, but a firm hold caught me under the arms and swung me toward the glow.

Read the Next Part

Saturday, August 8, 2015

So Serious Saturday #19

Fiction needs a basis in reality. Exercising non-fiction muscles once in a while benefits an active imagination, channeling creative energies as it focuses on a subject. So Serious Saturdays will be an active place for critical essays or writing about reality in the context of real events - even when it is not written on Saturdays.

Type: Persuasive


Water, Water Everywhere:
We Use More Than We Think

     How long do we stand in the shower and let the water run? How often do we throw out perfectly good water that someone or something, somewhere, can use? 
     For these and legitimate uses, water and other resources are being used faster than they can be replaced. KABC 7 news reviews the supply of California's water on a weekly basis, or in their online photo galleries.
     The depletion of the reservoirs should be a concern for everyone; forget about not having water for the next generation (but really, please don't forget), the drought-stricken regions of California and Miami need to be concerned about using up all stored water in the next five years. 

     Some ways to start saving water right now are:

Friday, August 7, 2015

Empathizing Incomplete at a Fast Food Counter

We ask for your patience
in letting us speak, on
deciding what to order from the board
filling the width of the room.

Today my mouth is slow
to say what I want; I
know what     I want     to have and see,
     to explore and become.    It takes time,

in processing phrases
and the words that break them.

Thursday, August 6, 2015

Inferno on the Fifteen

Newscasts featured an apocalyptic movie.
People ditched their vehicles
on the freeway in thirsty California.

Drifting embers ignited thirty --
destroyed twenty -- cars.
Fire broke out in patches
unrelated, like middle school fights.
My jaw fell open

when flames leaped onto a car carrier
to claim new purchases.
A semi-truck's engine exploded;
smoke billowed from its hood.
Helicopter cameramen captured
sheer heat methodically melting rubber
and metal from cab to tail lights.

I wondered what
a volunteer was thinking
as he doused heat-scarred cars
with a large garden hose.

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Craft Wednesday #21 Honestly London First Half

This blog needed a place for talking about writing. "Craft Wednesday" will be me talking about all things writing: how to write, why to write, and my own craft journey. I hope to learn and to share experiences with you. 


Honestly London
Part I

     I checked out of my local library an audiobook of The Sea Wolf by Jack London, and two discs in I am struck by the wordiness of his prose.
     Where modern writers and speakers would cut and abbreviate words and explanations, London expands and adds vocabulary native to advanced education. The main character and narrator of The Sea Wolf is a gentleman with a superior education, but to my ears the character-centered explanation did not quite cover all the reasons why Jack London can write in a nearly pedantic manner and get away with it, while modern writers using the same elevated language seem too snobbish for the average reader to want to connect with. 
     Essentially, I was asking: How can Jack London write like that, but modern authors can't?

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

A Unicorn's Tale, Epilogue

13.

Epilogue

     I stayed on with Mikey’s organization for three years. I ran candy across the oceans, helped Spartacus with erasing human memories concerning our kind, and placed bets for Mikey as he trained new superstars. He succeeded in gaining back half of his lost fortune by the time that I left his employment.
     You see, I had a feeling that something was here for me in Los Angeles County. In two years of soul-searching I guess I have discovered some of what I was looking for. I go places I used to frequent as a foal and try to look for lost or orphaned unicorns. If they want, I steer them to Mikey in his new Dubai headquarters, the Monte Carlo of the unicorn economy. Sometimes I teach them how to bounce, like Larry first taught me – well, similarly. I stay away from the bars and concerts. It’s just too painful.

Monday, August 3, 2015

A Unicorn's Tale, Part 12

12.
     Discussion was quick, the decision short and clear. Mikey was allowed to continue training and managing competitive bouncers, but not betting on any of the races. Any candy he earned would have to be proportional to the time he spent earning it. Larry was forbidden from all bouncing events, betting tables, and any cities where Mikey currently resided. The lifetime ban from these items was followed by a solemn dehorning ceremony. Larry was defined as a bad unicorn, an oxymoron none of the authorities wanted to perpetuate. He was ordered to five years living as a petting zoo pony until his horn grew back.
     As for me, I was also banned from the professional bouncing circuit. No one could definitively prove that I was not involved in the betting fraud, especially with some big losses right before my ultimate winning streak. The numbers were not on my side.

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Craft Wednesday #20 Catching Mistakes

This blog needed a place for talking about writing. "Craft Wednesday" will be me talking about all things writing: how to write, why to write, and my own craft journey. I hope to learn and to share experiences with you.  

Catching Mistakes

     One way writing communication is better than verbal communication is that a writer can go back and edit what they have said. If someone tries to go back and edit what they have said in personal, professional, or political conversation conducted by real-time speech, that person can appear -- in the phrasing of some of Charlie Brown's friends -- "wishy-washy."
    This is not to say that a writer can never make mistakes.

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Able

Able

Thank you, athletes 
of the 2015 Special Olympic World Games
for inspiring us all

I, too, am
seen as an obstacle
in our bureaucratic courses;

But I am not a hurdle
to run over or avoid.

Told I can't,
I show that I can
each time I step
over lines and labels,
defying easy filing.

My challenge
becomes our challenge;

My triumph
is mine and yours
in the spirit of human ability.

Sunday, July 26, 2015

So Serious Saturday #18

Fiction needs a basis in reality. Exercising non-fiction muscles once in a while benefits an active imagination, channeling creative energies as it focuses on a subject. So Serious Saturdays will be an active place for critical essays or writing about reality in the context of real events - even when it is not written on Saturdays.

Type: Television Program Review

Special Olympics

     The crowd cheered as the athletes streamed into the L.A. Coliseum, entering by nation but united in purpose: to demonstrate acceptance, bravery and, above all, joy to a world often missing lacking these essentials.

Friday, July 24, 2015

Extended Fortune From a Cookie

Family knew you before,
Friends know your outer know,
You have known your inner being,
God knows you.

Thursday, July 23, 2015

A Unicorn's Tale, Part 11

11.
     We got off at a floor with one room which seemed to run the length and breadth of the whole building. Sound echoed in the tiled room, absorbed only by the floor-to-ceiling gold drapes obscuring the windows. Mikey, Larry, and a hundred other unicorns were already arranged for the court hearing.
     Guards brought me to the front, where I stood to testify. As I was speaking, the other unicorns nodded and murmured amongst themselves. I recognized some of the clean and serious unicorns from the clearing of my first race. Every once and a while some darted harsh glares across the aisle at the defendant.
     I finished my account of my involvement with Larry. It only took a couple of minutes, but by the end of it I was sweating sparkles.

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Craft Wednesday #19 Words As the Frame

This blog needed a place for talking about writing. "Craft Wednesday" will be me talking about all things writing: how to write, why to write, and my own craft journey. I hope to learn and to share experiences with you.  
Words As the Frame
OR
A Word on Wordless Communication Modes in Writing

    Sometimes words do not say everything; that is fine, because words work together with other modes to bring the meaning as close to the surface as possible. Consider words the frame for what is inside.

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Darrowwood Part Fourteen

14.
            Monica caught up to Jenny in the brown yard between the dormitories and the classrooms. She had to jog a bit as Jenny angled towards the stone meeting hall. They just missed the entrance and the sound of Alendro’s voice emanating from its cold breath, and passed the building entirely, instead moving swiftly down a wooded hall formed by massive pine trunks and branches.
            Monica looked at her cellphone display.  It was about two p.m., but it seemed much darker than that.  To her surprise, there were a couple of bars of cellular reception.
            Monica dialed her mother’s number as she trailed a few quick steps behind Jenny.  “Mom?” she asked.  The enthusiastic greeting was only a recording.  “I guess you and Dad are still on vacation.  Mom, when you get this, please call me back.  It’s urgent.  Something’s wrong with Jenny.”

Monday, July 20, 2015

Darrowwood Part Thirteen

13.
            Before she knew what was happening, Monica was lying in bed with Jenny holding a cold compress to her head and Cynthia sitting cross-legged at the foot of the mattress. “She’s starting to cool,” Cynthia said. “I’ll go and tell Alendro.” Monica blinked, and Cynthia was gone.
            “How are you feeling?”  Jenny said.  She took back the compress as Monica sat up.  “Do you think we could go back now, the meeting’s almost –”
            “No, we can’t go back,” Monica cut in.  Her whole body tingled with a pulsing energy well apart from her heartbeat.  She climbed out of bed and pushed past Jenny to the open double window, where a strong gust ran through the forest lines from deep in the green recesses.  It brought a flurry of pine needles soaring into the girls’ room.

Thursday, July 16, 2015

...The Son, the Father, and the Tree

The Son, the Father, and the Tree
Page 3 of 3

     The branches were not kind to him. The leaves were nicer. The birds pecking at the other fruit only turned to glance at the boy tumbling head over heels before returning to their morning harvest.
     On the last branch before the ground the boy landed with his stomach, which knocked the breath out of him. His rope belt caught on the bark, but held together. The boy cast a nervous glance below. He had slowed enough, however, to wrap his arms around the branch and lower himself feet-first to the ground.

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Craft Wednesday #18 Given Enough Time

This blog needed a place for talking about writing. "Craft Wednesday" will be me talking about all things writing: how to write, why to write, and my own craft journey. I hope to learn and to share experiences with you.  

Given Enough Time

      I haven't written new stories or poems in my notebook for about two weeks. I've been busy, or at least that's what I've been telling myself. 

Tuesday, July 14, 2015

...The Son, the Father, and the Tree...

The Son, the Father, and the Tree
Page 2 of 3

     Wings fluttered in the semi-darkness. The boy could see the shapes of the small things, now, and knew he had to act. His arms stretched wide. He used the tree, he used the branch, he used every hold he could touch to ascend the arms of the tree.
     Each outline of fruit hanging on its branch also hung heavy in the air. The boy's mouth watered as his free hand cupped the dense fruit at his eye level. The fruit was perfect, oval and firm. His father would be proud of him. A few good rips and twists freed the fruit. The boy stared at its bumpy green skin as it sat on his palm, holding treasures inside.

Monday, July 13, 2015

The Son, the Father, and the Tree...

The Son, the Father, and the Tree
Page 1 of 3

     Not very far from here a boy and his father stood at the entrance to a forest just before the gray dawn.
     "Take the bag," the father told his son, as the son started toward the nearest tree. "You will need it to carry the fruit."
     "Father," the boy said, "I am old enough to carry the fruit down and climb up again. I do not need a bag."
     "That is not the way to treat the fruit," the father replied. "We want the whole fruit, not fruit that is scarred or pecked at." He looked up the trunk of the nearest tree and the branches loaded down with the first fruit of the season. "Hurry now, the ravens are waking."

Friday, July 10, 2015

IMP: Recurrence in Both Known Times

(An Instructional, Memorable, and Practical poem)

I. Past

Having the sense you see again
the same person, object, or word
also recalls the first moment --
Déjà vu is sometimes certain.

II. Present

Remarkable thoughts or events
occurring at the same moment
are accidental. But sometimes
coincidence marks relation.

Thursday, July 9, 2015

Darrowwood Part Twelve

12.
            The girls turned around to go back up the dock.  There was Cynthia, standing about two feet behind them, not a uniform thread out of place.  “Alendro is waiting for you,” she said.
            “Right.  We’re coming,” Jenny said.  She put a hand on Monica’s back and practically pushed her past Cynthia, as Monica pulled back to try focusing on the small girl, and to find the connection she could not name between Darrowwood, Cynthia, and the pricking in her finger.
            The low stone building was dimmer inside today, lit with candles. But still very, very cold.  Alendro greeted them with a broad smile and a sweeping gesture towards the two remaining seats, one of them next to Cynthia.

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Craft Wednesday #17: The Name of this Blog

This blog needed a place for talking about writing. "Craft Wednesday" will be me talking about all things writing: how to write, why to write, and my own craft journey. I hope to learn and to share experiences with you.  

The Name of this Blog

"This blog is named with two butterflies in mind."


    People have asked me why I named this blog "A Butterfly Goes Free."  Names are beautiful and interesting ways of showing history and hope in the same breath.
   On this blog I have created a permanent tab, "Butterflies", where I tell the story of two separate incidents years apart involving delicate insects and human curiosity. Enjoy, and may this inspire you to write some of the stories only you can tell.

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

A Unicorn's Tale, Part 10

10.
     “You double-bouncing candy blaster,” Mikey snarled. “I gave you another chance and you blew it and all my savings.”
     He launched himself at the blistered glass. The three guards that had incapacitated me held him back. Additional guards trotted in and pressed him down with their horns. His disjointed jaw looked like it was completely unhinged.
     However, Mikey still had enough energy to shout, “I’m pressing charges! You name it, you’re it: thief, swindler, con-crafting liar!”
     I started to say, “Mikey,” but Mikey shot me a glare so forceful that I realized he thought I was a knowledgeable partner of the scheme.
     “It wasn’t me!” I exclaimed.
      The burly unicorns started to drag Mikey out of the door.
     “The kid had nothing to do with it!” Larry yelled through the glass partition.
     “You’re dead to me!” We heard Mikey’s voice echo through the bowels of the building.

Monday, July 6, 2015

A Unicorn's Tale, Part 9

9.
     “Come with us,” the burly unicorn said. He did not question me further to see if I really was this Octavian Silverhorn. Nor was I allowed to ask questions. They took me from my station and into the elevator, down to the street, across the road, and through a door in the side of a building, which was pretty much identical to the previous building except for a height difference of about a dozen stories.
     I was placed in a small white room which was separated from the next room by a glass partition. I suppose I could have bounced, but the burly unicorns were still there, and even then I was pretty sure they had the situation under their complete control. So I stayed and watched as a bleary-eyed Larry limped into the next room.
     “Hey, Eight,” he said. “They told me you were coming.”
     “What is going on?”
     “I messed up.”
     “What did you do?”

Saturday, July 4, 2015

The Great Magical Birthday

     My brother and I were the two bookends of summer. My birthday marked the beginning; he was the end. It worked well for us, except for when I teased him about being two years younger.
     Mom threw us a part every July, midway between us. It wasn't his and it wasn't mine. July was ours to celebrate. There was the year we had an under-the-sea theme, with oceanic party favors to match. Another year we reused the ocean decoration for the pirate adventure birthday. The old wooden swing set was still in the backyard, so we used that for our fearsome ship, wasps and all. While the grown-up ate cake, us kids swung as high as we could and leaped off. It didn't have anything to do with cannonballs.
     Another year I was enamored with Harry Houdini and the concept of performing magic. My brother got involved in card tricks, which -- silly me -- I thought wasn't real magic.  

Friday, July 3, 2015

Dialogue of the Effaced Stone

For the once-named patriot

Soldier
Leader
Friend and Son

Born some while ago
Gone in his prime

"Pa and Ma asked me about the danger
the front lines presented. Over skimpy roast
and smashed potatoes I told them
I was fighting for them and my brothers"

Thursday, July 2, 2015

A Unicorn's Tale, Part 8

8.
     Just at the precipice of my final race I was thinking of my first night in Tokyo with my small room and the blaring speakers, which I realized were actually live time tickers for all the imaginary races rather than, as I had come to believe, a kind of hazing. Mikey had a similar set-up in his headquarters, and during my infrequent visits I had seen him listening and muttering and occasionally jotting down some figures for the gross tons which were won and lost in a matter of minutes.
     Anyway, Mikey and I stood at our stations in the last minute before the race commenced. The crowds on the rooftops had been cleared away to limit distractions. It was only us and the other teams posted along the rows where the sweets tables normally stood.
     “Where’s Larry?” I asked Mikey. He had never been so late before. We used Larry as a third member of our team, a sort of back-up if Mikey completely blew his top, a fancy way of saying that Larry did not care so much, because he did not get any candy out of the deal – only I did, and only enough for a day’s pay. Mostly I was looking for points – we were looking for points – Mikey was pushing for points so that my ranking could reach the top five percentile.
     “He said he isn’t coming,” Mikey told me. He polished his hooves on the tile, trying to be nonchalant, but even through my slight nerves I could see he did not know where to direct his eyes.

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

Craft Wednesday #16 Sitting in Corners

This blog needed a place for talking about writing. "Craft Wednesday" will be me talking about all things writing: how to write, why to write, and my own craft journey. I hope to learn and to share experiences with you.  

Sitting in Corners

     I like finding a nice corner and sitting  cross-legged on the floor. At those times I feel that the world has an anchor in time and place and that I am planted in it; I can see things "better", without distractions from the sides, up, or down. All there is is up.
     Writing a story is kind of like having a quirk of sitting in a corner. Initially, an author enters the room of the story. When they choose where they will sit, an author chooses a perspective from which to tell the story . Sometimes there is not much choice, but a necessity to sit in the only vacant place. 
     Then the author looks up in the room and watches the others, who are the characters of the story. Actions are noted, reactions are followed. Time and energy is not wasted by trying to look down because the author feels the floor beneath them. Understanding of what is happening rests on the intuition of supporting and previous action.
     The author does not speak, but lets others in the room speak to them. They might ask a polite question now and then, but other than that an author sits, watches, and documents until closing time for the room arrives.

Saturday, June 27, 2015

So Serious Saturday #17

Fiction needs a basis in reality. Exercising non-fiction muscles once in a while benefits an active imagination, channeling creative energies as it focuses on a subject. So Serious Saturdays will be an active place for critical essays or writing about reality in the context of real events - even when it is not written on Saturdays.

Type: Journal/Inspirational


More Than My Strength


     I stood before a plastic crate. The nurse placed rounds of metal weights inside: twenty-five pounds, twenty-five more, another . the first had been easy to lift. The second became heavy, but I managed to transfer it to the counter.
     The nurse distributed the weight of seventy-five pounds, over half of my body weight, in the crate on the cart. I did not know how I was going to pass this test. Small strength and mobility exercises between me and full-time employment seemed child's play now.
     My core muscles tightened over the memory of the last round of weights. Surely God would not let me go all this way through a process an let me fail now.
     The nurse nodded. "Now," he said.

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Highway Fifteen

              I had fifteen minutes to get everything Mom wanted from the store.  The low brick building, flat like all other buildings in Barstow, wasn’t too far from our rented house, actually, but in this wind I wasn’t making headway.  Being tall and gangly was my strongest asset, whether it was easy placement on the volleyball team or getting picked first for the point guy, but today my dimensions were an issue.

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

...Grand-Anna

Grand-Anna

Page 3 of 3

I pulled myself up and turned so that my back reflected in the wide mirror. Grand-Anna readjusted her seat, never removing her eyes from mine. My hands gripped the edge of the counter as I placed my weight on them.
“The mist hid the danger. Even if it hadn’t been misting, the darkness of that early hour could have been fatal.” Her eyes left me as she said this. Internally, I breathed relief. My eyes freely wandered over her poofy hair to the window, where the tree drooped and the trunk was lined with creases and carvings, some natural and some from us kids.
As if to contrast my view with that morning’s she said, “At least I had my headlights on; although what good that did I don’t know.”

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

... Grand-Anna ...

Grand-Anna

Page 2 of 3

I saw the thin line running over the length of her thin thigh. “I want to hear how it happened,” I said.
She nodded and put a finger to her chin. Then she smiled and said, “Yes, I think I can tell you.”
I stood and waited. I let the damp towel drop from my fading pink hands, but Grand-Anna stayed quiet.
“Auntie, can I get you anything?” I said. I wondered if she had forgotten where she left off – she could do that as easily as misplacing her house keys.

Monday, June 22, 2015

Grand-Anna ...

Grand-Anna

Page 1 of 3

            Us kids called her Grand-Anna when she was thirty-two. She started walking slower and began to forget her keys in the shower, the sink, and twice in the toaster. She wrote letters to relatives as if they were friends and asked her friends over for weekly bingo night.
I walked in on her one time in the bathroom and she did not object. She only glanced up from her Chicken Soup for the Soul reader and told me not to be embarrassed.
            I started to wash the grit out of the creases in my fingers. My brother Matthew was using the other sink after our foolhardy adventures outside. When I glanced up in the landscape mirror I saw Anna still looking at me over her reading glasses – not bifocals, not yet.

Friday, June 19, 2015

His Father Was

A real swell guy
with an open laugh,
entertaining kids and
other teachers on staff.

In body and spirit
he remained strong,
telling loud stories
both funny and long.

Everyone called him
"Coach" for short,
because he spent hours
with youths of all sport.

Coach lived in
the field, court, and gym.
No wonder Dad rarely
passed time with him.

Thursday, June 18, 2015

Pantoum: Quality of Life

Home is where the heart is,
but what if you can't find your heart?
Mother should be discharged soon, but
you spend days searching for black coffee.

But what if you can't find your heart
at the bottom of the bitter grinds
of the black coffee you spend days searching for
instead of waiting by her bed?

Toward the bottom of the bitter grinds
you remember you left your purse
by her bed -- instead of waiting --
where Samuel and his children have stayed.

You remember: you left. Your purse
sits idly by the ammonia-drenched wall
where Samuel and his children have stayed
and helped the nurse move Mother.

Sitting idly by the ammonia-drenched wall,
you fold your fingers around dissipating warmth,
and the nurse helping move Mother
literally asks you if you want to help.

You fold your fingers around dissipated warmth
the checkered styrofoam cannot give you.
Internally, you ask if you want to help
the ninety-year-old shell learn to come home.

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Craft Wednesday #15 Soup du Langue

This blog needed a place for talking about writing. "Craft Wednesday" will be me talking about all things writing: how to write, why to write, and my own craft journey. I hope to learn and to share experiences with you.  

Soup du Langue

Why is the plural of hoof "hooves", but the plural of roof is not "rooves"*?  If the English language was a person she would say, "Because I said so, that's why."

The history of a language can really be boiled down to who conquered whom. The English language is a mix of German, French, and some Latin for various historical and monarchical reasons. That is probably why it demands a word taken from one language be changed one way and a similar sounding word that is actually from another language asks to be treated a different way. 

Lots of English language words are confusing, but especially when they change tense. Present-tense "take" becomes "took". "All right," a young child often thinks, "Then 'bake' becomes 'book' and 'cake' becomes 'cook.'" Never mind that cake is (usually) a noun, except when speaking about how mud got "caked" onto your favorite sneakers.

And I thought Spanish was difficult in its conjugations -- for many words I wanted to use I have forgotten how to alter their root when they change tense. But every language I can read because of its basic Latin alphabet has its own conjugations. 

The answer for that is to just try to memorize the words that have special conjugations, just as my Spanish teachers urged me to do. For English, with its intermixing of different systems, the task can be daunting. No wonder English is one of the most difficult second languages to learn.

Changing word tense and number in any language may be scary.

Be careful when conjugating!

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

The Crowded House

The city sleeps under the peeling plaster ceiling --
piles upon piles of shoebox tenements and Tupperware garages.
Dustbunnies, spiders, and stale cracker crumbs

Monday, June 15, 2015

A Unicorn's Tale, Part 7

7.
     He skipped from one front hoof to the other, from the front to the back, and from the back to the front again. “Follow me, I know a great place we can practice.”
     I stopped coughing and followed Larry to the street where we would spend most of our remaining months together when he wasn’t gambling with candy and I wasn’t working for Mikey. Yeah, I was a bouncer, but I also did some odd jobs: running candy across the ocean, learning how to teal at the tables, and once being a bodyguard. But that’s another story. I’ll just say I met a lot of strange and interesting unicorns and began to break out of my shell a bit. I started asking for things, and telling some things.
      Anyway, Mikey heard we were practicing in front of human bars in the entertainment district. He approved. He even joined us a couple of times and gave some great pointers.

Saturday, June 13, 2015

So Serious Saturday #16

Fiction needs a basis in reality. Exercising non-fiction muscles once in a while benefits an active imagination, channeling creative energies as it focuses on a subject. So Serious Saturdays will be an active place for critical essays or writing about reality in the context of real events - even when it is not written on Saturdays.

Type: Opinion/Philosophical


Setting an Example (For the Young Ones)


A boy walking in the street tugged on his dad’s hand and pointed at me as I rode by on my shiny steed. “Look! Look! She’s good,” he exclaimed.

My courteous smile at the dad grew larger as my ear caught his child’s comment. I whizzed past on my bicycle as though I were showing off. I thought about what he had seen: a young adult, semi-autonomous, alone, having both excellent control and blurring speed on two wheels. I know a younger me would have been impressed, too.

Friday, June 12, 2015

Candle, Dragon

Mother saw my new eyes
contemplating the candle flame.
You were that once, she said.
 
A candle? I asked.

No, a flame.
Your brother is an ember now.
 
I touched her massive stomach,
where his foot or his fist kicked
at my imprudence. I looked into her
shining eyes -- suddenly damp -- and asked,
Are you a dragon?

Then she was laughing and crying,
sobbing and laughing.
No, she said.
I am the happy candle.

Why aren't you a dragon? I demanded.

She smoothed my hair and said, Sweetie,
a dragon keeps a flame inside,
unless she makes it a weapon.
A candle lets her flame be seen
and even shared.

Thursday, June 11, 2015

Old Laughing Times, Section 4

   “A bundle of tablecloths.  Or that’s what I thought at first.  Underneath the pile of red gingham came a bossy sort of voice: ‘Out of my way!’ The short girl pushed her way past me, into the back seat cramped up between the frame and the front seats.  Her patched coinpurse ripped open, all her hard earned money fell into the gutter with barely a splash.  Time seemed to slow down before a wave – yes, a wave in the street – came and whoosh! There went her hard-earned livelihood.  Oh, she was crying fit to contend with the clouds.

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Craft Wednesday #14 Overflow of the Heart



This blog needed a place for talking about writing. "Craft Wednesday" will be me talking about all things writing: how to write, why to write, and my own craft journey. I hope to learn and to share experiences with you.  

Overflow of the Heart

Writers sometimes have to urge to write about some very specific event or about a strong, sometimes ambiguous, emotion. When writers write these deepest thoughts of their heart they speak to whomever will read their written words.

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

The Disappointment in Purgatory

Other boys snickered at my books
and the way I carried Thoreau in the halls
to cover my eggplant face or to distract my pillbug eyes
from what they saw, both inner and outer.
I answered the questions the Misses put to me
about Du Bois, angles, and prepositional phrases.

Boys like Allen Bradley hated
my guts. At P.E. they roared
as they pelted me with basketballs
I never had a prayer of catching.
It was a new kind of revelation
that wasn't included in the curriculum.

School was okay, though, and mostly
my classes -- even the bad ones -- were a heaven
away from disappointment and being useless,
from a father's belly shouts
as if the sky were breaking in the preamble
to a hailstorm, the thunder before the lightning
and the great flash as it fell.

Monday, June 8, 2015

Old Laughing Times, Section 3

“She sure was.  My dear Cynthia was the best cook there ever was.  Why, did you know that she once prepared a meal for one of the Queen of England’s relatives?  It was some sort of exotic meat, I think, a miniature horse native to some small South Pacific nation.  Though she told me the creature was so thick that at first she thought it was a baby elephant.  Then she realized that it didn’t have a trunk, but instead it had one of those long sorts of noses with white markings just like a horseshoe.  In fact, she declared that it was exactly like my lucky mark.”
Marge rubbed the back of her hands against her lap slowly.  Her companion asked, “Is that true?”

Saturday, June 6, 2015

So Serious Saturday #15

Fiction needs a basis in reality. Exercising non-fiction muscles once in a while benefits an active imagination, channeling creative energies as it focuses on a subject. So Serious Saturdays will be an active place for critical essays or writing about reality in the context of real events - even when it is not written on Saturdays.

Type:News/Informational

I’ve Got a Golden Ticket

My social network brought and interesting piece of news to my attention. Somewhere in Florida a husband and wife duo stand accused of selling “golden tickets to heaven.”

Among their claims is that Jesus gave them the tickets to see so that they could make a profit and pay for transportation to a planet made of drugs. I would say they are already halfway there. Even stranger is that some people actually bought those golden tickets.

Friday, June 5, 2015

A Glance Is A Spark

My mother taught me how babies were formed.
First a man and a woman fall in love, she said.
I imagined that time I fell into a pool
at my cousin Reyna's house and almost drowned.
It sounds painful, I said.
My mother's eyes sagged, but her lips smiled.
It can be, she said.
Then what? I asked.
Well, she said slowly.
Well what?

Her eyes searched for something;
they grabbed onto one of the votives
with which she had dotted the house.
She said, They make a spark.
 
Years later I learned how dangerous
electricity and water were together
and something of fatal passion,
but then her answer awed me
and I could not wait to
ignite a small life into being.

Thursday, June 4, 2015

Old Laughing Times, Section 2

          “Hallo!” he called cheerfully.  “What pretty girls there are today!”
            Marge feigned surprise and looked around.  “What?  I don’t see any girls.  They must be in the bird cage.”
            “Do you mean a couple of chicks?” Mr. Averstand guffawed.  “Sure, sure, they’re cute.  But honestly” – he grinned a grinned that would have fluttered the heart of even a woman a few decades younger – “can you imagine having to put up with all that squawking?  The feathers alone would tickle me baby pink.”

Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Craft Wednesday #13 Different Ways of Learning

This blog needed a place for talking about writing. "Craft Wednesday" will be me talking about all things writing: how to write, why to write, and my own craft journey. I hope to learn and to share experiences with you.  


Different Ways of Learning

A child is systematically taught to read. Adults also take courses that present information step by step.

One can teach knowledge because it follows an order, but one cannot teach intuition, which is instantaneous perception without logical and conscious thought.

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Old Laughing Times, Section 1

     The two old friends sat on the bench in the bright sunshine and laughed.  A bird with brilliant green plumage cocked its head, beating wings against the large mesh metal fence.
            “Ah,” Suzanne sighed, wiping a tear from her sparkling eyes.  Her hunched chest still heaved breathlessly.  “That’s too much.”

Monday, June 1, 2015

None Alone Five, Continued: The Battle

5 1/2.

The Battle

No doubt this was the right place; a wide chasm and rocky cliffs and a sea of bodies. The side rushing forward was our forces pressing forward, and I saw Cameron up ahead, helping someone up, her mouth open and moving and noiseless from the clanging around me, the clash of sword on shield and blade striking blood.
I turned my gaze to see the sky clouded over with black and purple bodies, but a dry crackle beneath my boots caused me to look instead at how the ground lay spread with skulls and ribs. And it wasn't just under me, either. Ten thousand warriors rushing ten thousand strides forward made the same noise as their boots struck the terrain, raising sharp pops like everyone was going through hedges set between the land of the living and the land of the dead.
Flames shot over my head. The person just behind me had blocked it with a shield. Where's mine, I thought, where's my shield. The volley changed directions, and I saw they weren't arrows, not exactly, but more of the living nightmares, as I called them, with the sharp spines and armored stomachs, the pointed teeth and the tails like scorpions. But they didn't kill you when their barbs went into you. They just made you feel as though you deserved to.
And they changed direction again, and I heard the hum, and nothing else mattered. Looming larger and larger they were now near enough that I could see their faces.

Friday, May 29, 2015

Surface, Hamartia

When phones had buttons
the obvious mediation of the machine,
a tool of man,
began conversations with touch and voice
as in a darkened room.

A glossy design
now keeps the conversation
between man and machine
at the surface.

Your fingers skim over messages.
Instant data yield information
without action, without give-and-take.

No wonder online comments are misunderstood
or construed for the maximum feedback --
more comments, shares and likes
without a breath exchanged or
the look in someone's eyes when they tell you
they love you or hate you.

Would the androids who dream of electric sheep
believe that you dream
of being electric, and of always
pushing buttons you cannot feel?

Thursday, May 28, 2015

A Unicorn's Tale, Part 6

6.
     He told me how to bounce there, which was really how to bounce anywhere, which is a large part of finding lost things. I would get into the mathematics of it, but unicorns use a few imaginary terms I am not certain could translate into any of the human languages.
     Upon my bounce into Miamono Tower, Floor Thirty-Seven, Room 3706 I knocked over a table stacked with cupcakes.
    “Watch where you’re going, Tiberius.” Larry happened to glance up from the brightly lit table next to the one I’d plowed into. “Oh, it’s you. Mikey’s mad.”
     “He implied that you didn’t teach me much.”
     He scoffed. “Well, yeah, it takes time to do it properly and stuff.”
     He said it way too fast, which made me ask, “How much sugar have you had today?”

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

A Unicorn's Tale, Part 5

5.
     Somehow I escaped the pandemonium of the clearing and ended up in St. Petersburg. That happened to be a good thing for a little boy who had lost his mother in a crowd. He cried that he wanted his mommy, and I took him straight across the square. Unicorn magic is wonderful for finding lost things. Did I tell you about how I found a bride’s wedding cake? Never mind.
     I could not find anyone else in that latitude who needed a ride, so I bounced on over to Italy and ran the tilted streets of Torino for a while. I ended up taking a sunburned tourist to the hotel lobby he had just vacated. He said he’d vacated; as it turns out he was trying to get into the suite of an ex-girlfriend. I watched her fist make contact with the underside of his jaw.
      Believe me, I bounced out of there, quick.

Saturday, May 23, 2015

So Serious Saturday #14

Fiction needs a basis in reality. Exercising non-fiction muscles once in a while benefits an active imagination, channeling creative energies as it focuses on a subject. So Serious Saturdays will be an active place for critical essays or writing about reality in the context of real events - even when it is not written on Saturdays.

Type: Informational/Opinion


Recommended Books for Young Adults

This week I was approached by a woman seeking to inspire ninth grade students, particularly boys, with fun and appropriate reads for a co-curricular book club.

I was actually recruited because I was the only one in that aisle of the bookstore who had read A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle, a wonderful young adult novel about a girl with two scientist parents who must rescue one of them from the far reaches of darkness and the universe with the aid of three mysterious women, her very gifted brother, and their new friend. After I had explained the basic plot of this timeless story, the woman informed me what she was searching for; the fact that I happened to have an English degree was a bonus.

Friday, May 22, 2015

Darrowwood Part Eleven

    11.
That could not be right.  Monica had never heard of a prep school preview lasting that long, and it did not feel as though it had been two weeks.  Just yesterday – or the day before, whichever – they had eaten the most delicious orange chicken she had ever tasted.
            “I mean, it’s not possible, right?” Monica asked Jenny sometime later.  They sat on the dock, twisting rope together,their assigned task today.
            “I don’t know,” Jenny replied.  She dangled her bare toes in the small lake behind the cafeteria.  Alendro had been generous enough to allow her to wear her flip-flops with her school uniform, the same pairs that were lying behind them on the fragrant pine planks.  Her big toe was still wrapped up in a bandage. Jenny wriggled all of her toes in the water and laughed.
            “What’s so funny?” Monica asked.
            “The water – it’s lapping against my feet.  It wants to play.”

Thursday, May 21, 2015

A Gentle Reminder

Too late my heart gives thanks to Thee
and savors the daily blessing
when I believe my days are free
for old pleasures and carousing.

Before the day begins I should
bow down my knees to pray
that Thy strong and guiding hand would
direct my walk in Thy good way.

Each hour sends Thy gift of life,
a succession of small moments
to test how man can wait in strife
for the joy in unfolding contents.

Thy justice equals thy good grace
to broken spirits far and near
less lost than missing a strong base
on which to hold faith against fear.

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Almost Craft Wednesday

This blog needed a place for talking about writing. "Craft Wednesday" will be me talking about all things writing: how to write, why to write, and my own craft journey. I hope to learn and to share experiences with you.   

Indecision

     The author is having some philosophical difficulties. Please return next week when she will have resolved what, exactly, she wants to say about tone, voice, or point-of-view.

     In the meantime, enjoy a selection of works listed under the Serials tab at the top of the blog.

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Dry on the Cinco del Mayo

For my father

Weeds shove through cracked slabs
of the driveway, where I stand and watch
you walking up the concrete slant
and the lawn gone dry some weeks now

taking the air of firework and formaldehyde fumes
into cells withered by heat and restriction,
the new policy enforced only after
those of your time did not know moderation.

Monday, May 18, 2015

A Unicorn's Tale, Part 4

4.
     We stopped off in Juneau and the North Pole before ending up on a rooftop in downtown Tokyo.        Tokyo carries crazy connotations, for a unicorn. It is our Las Vegas. It is kind of like Vegas, too, in that we take a gamble walking on ground level, what with all the cars that cannot see us and the millions who are too busy fiddling with their technology to notice a sparkling equine trying to get by without goring anyone. I mean, it’s bad enough being this short without having a horn thing between your eyes that you can’t even see half the time, if you can imagine that.
     Anyway, the guy named Ned puked all over the polishing tile of a rooftop Tokyo betting hall. Larry was going to let him down into it and all, but I angled my head so that my horn caught his armpit and only pulled his Converse through the mess.
     “Larry, buddy, can I have that rider when you’re done with him?” One of the unicorns standing in a buffet line strutted up to where Larry was polishing his hoofs against the tile.  He was one of those type who probably think they’re hot stuff, with all that mane-shaking and tail-twitching.

Saturday, May 16, 2015

So Serious Saturday #13

Fiction needs a basis in reality. Exercising non-fiction muscles once in a while benefits an active imagination, channeling creative energies as it focuses on a subject. So Serious Saturdays will be an active place for critical essays or writing about reality in the context of real events - even when it is not written on Saturdays.

This is a rule-bending SSS, as the words are fictionalized, but the conflict was not.

Type: Discussion

The Nature of Art

      Early morning on Mother’s Day the residents of a certain household found themselves awake. They stood between the kitchen and the living area and chatted about this or that, in the manner of philosophical parliaments held at two in the morning.
     Someone brought up the subject of art, using either a painting or another painted medium as an example object. “That’s ugly,” one of the residents said.
     “Well, what do you think art is?” a conversational partner said. “Art is made by people who don’t know what they are doing. It’s totally random.”
     A third conversationalist chimed in. “Then what about all the masters of art? Picasso. Da Vinci. Pollack –”
     “Yes, and look at those soup cans.” The second speaker laughed. “They’re ugly.”
     “He meant for them to be like that,” said the first.
     “It was made on purpose,” the third said. “So is art intentional or unintentional ugliness?” 

Friday, May 15, 2015

Okay

empty word for an empty question
about how I am doing --

how do you think,
being away from everyone
and everything that mattered
to my late adolescent soul

I give the answer as some people fling words:
carelessly, frequently, hopelessly.

a question needs an answer, after all,
unless the asker isn't thinking
but making sound to fill the air and the
gap between my ears used for
collecting electric impulses and dust

if you are very still you can smell something burning

the ash floats apart and condenses in alternating patterns
mimicking the past and foretelling what future remains

Thursday, May 14, 2015

Darrowwood Part Ten

10.
     “Isn’t it great?” Jenny asked Monica at dinner in the cafeteria.  From the smell, dimensions, and general décor, it was reasonable to suppose the building was a converted barn. It even smelled like animals had been inside. “We can go wherever we want, whenever we want.  We don’t even have to go to class.”
     “This is only a preview,” Monica said, shoveling away a thick slice of chocolate cake.  She had to admit, they did know how to cook here. “There won’t actually be classes.”
     There were classes – they began Wednesday evening with Astronomy classes taught by some weedy old man, who gradually impressed with his passion. In general English, the girls had the best discussion of Dante’s Inferno they had ever had.  Chemistry was fascinating.  Trigonometry opened up possibilities. The teachers were funny, charming, and they certainly knew their subjects.
     Jenny adored the look, feel, and sound of the music auditorium, where she spent most of her time these days. Monica did not hear her talk about Ancient History at all. She would have asked, but there hardly seemed to be ten free minutes between classwork and sleep.

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Craft Wednesday #12 Losing Anticipation of the End

This blog needed a place for talking about writing. "Craft Wednesday" will be me talking about all things writing: how to write, why to write, and my own craft journey. I hope to learn and to share experiences with you.   

Losing Anticipation of the End

          A book with physical dimension lets the reader know how many more pages are left by touch and sight. Sometimes a thin right half and a thick left one leads to excited anticipation of the end – or climax – or it warns the reader of the impending conclusion of their favorite series.
         On a logical level, e-books let the reader know how many pages are in the book, but what about the emotional experience of holding the remaining pages and feeling how light they are? A reader trades this upper-dimension awareness – which is almost like precognition – for the convenience of a smartphone or tablet, a device many people carry anyway. The turning of a page is deliberation, while the scrolling of a mouse is speed and efficiency. Gravitas becomes something holding back progress.
         Knowing a book will soon end is a more involved experience than only knowing about the page number of the book. The physical journey through a book unties a mystical connection between audience and book when the book is set as data inside of a screen, as words abstracted from the physical world.
        As the five senses dwindle down to one that counts – sight – readers may see with their eyes, but not truly feel the weight of the work and the effort that went into it.

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Darrowwood Part Nine

9.
     “Welcome, welcome,” said a short man in the center of the crowd.  “Just sign your name and take a chair around the room here.”  Warehouse lighting shone on his dark hair, the only visible part of him.
     Monica approached the podium and its old leather book.  Her finger throbbed as she took the fountain pen, glanced over her shoulder, and then signed her name in red ink.  It glistened briefly on the page.
     “Come, come, we don’t have all day” The short man stepped on a boxy stage, his dark curls bouncing.  Monica took a seat on one of several high-backed chairs in front of a standing row of uniformed students, seats which seemed to be reserved, for the time being, for prospective students like her.  “My name is Alendro Sinclair, and I am the Headmaster and Founder of Darrowwood Preparatory.  I am pleased to see your lovely faces looking back at me at last.”
     Monica glanced around at the other students.  The blonde boy on her left appeared just slightly interested in the founder’s introduction.  On the right the girl with the piggy nose and a nose stud chatted animatedly with a friend.
     “We have many opportunities to expand your talents at Darrowwood,” Alendro said, “but first I should like to go over some rules.”

Monday, May 11, 2015

The Next Chapter of Postmodern Existence

Small innocence --
too slow for hard labor
-- dried up in the recession.

Onto a hansom cab we drive
worm-rotted and age-eaten facts,
a million points of view
echoing on frigid masonry.

One fact brings them together:
Strangle the ad man, they say,
with words not his. Do it
alone. Behold the shaft of light
stinging life with winter's breath,
the expansion of the ages.

Friday, May 8, 2015

A Unicorn's Tale, Part 3

3.
      Now a thing about bouncing – it is a highly technical process when you actually try to do the calculations. Some of the factors involve the interaction of real and imaginary numbers. It is the kind of math that unicorns were born to do.
      I followed his instructions and ended up standing next to Larry on the roof. The humans on the street only continued standing pointing at the spot I had been before my cross-continental adventure.
     “Nice job, kid,” Larry said. He speared a fat pink cake with his horn and tossed his head towards me. I opened my mouth to catch it and the whole thing went straight down my throat, no joke.
      I busied myself with scraping the sugar crystals left behind in my cheeks and teeth for a while. When I finished everything I looked down again and saw the crowd still staring at the spot I had been and talking loudly. I asked Larry why they there.
     “You turned invisible.” When he saw my wide eyes he said, “Hey, relax, it means you’re growing your horn.”
      I asked him what horn. He told me to look in the mirror sometime.

Thursday, May 7, 2015

A Unicorn's Tale, Part 2

2.
One day Larry woke me early. I asked him if we were going to the observatory on the hill. 
“It’s closed today,” he said. “Come on.”
He took me to a bakery where he snatched the cakes out of a display case, while I stood on the sidewalk and looked pretty. Humans on the street thought I was a miniature horse, some sort of gimmick to draw customers to the bakery; I was small and sweet and hornless, despite already getting that silver glisten in my coat. Parents sat their toddlers on my back, while teenagers snickered and waited their turn. I tried my best not to bolt as one of the bigger kids pushed past the younger ones and jumped onto my back. 
“Giddyup,” she cried. She kicked my flanks with her combat boots.

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Craft Wednesday #11 Stories as Summaries

This blog needed a place for talking about writing. "Craft Wednesday" will be me talking about all things writing: how to write, why to write, and my own craft journey. I hope to learn and to share experiences with you.   

Stories as Summaries: Facts Pressed Down

     Last week I voiced the opinion that a story is a collection of highlights which show the best, brightest, and most beautiful moments of a course of events and changes.

     An equally valid view is seeing a story as a summary of necessary and interesting events.

Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Day One

boxes mark unopened lives
along the carpeted rooms and short hallway
stack three high under blinded windows

I am sent to bring an instrument for saving
labor for the worker bees, who dance
in and out of the towers shading our paths,

the margin for error so smll
even my hips bump the sides
and I have to pass through sideways

I consider moving the china
service out of my way and into someone else's
even though we have nowhere else to turn,

but I recall the secret ways
through this city like childhood:

under and over, and over again, until
we find our own fragile space

Monday, May 4, 2015

A Unicorn's Tale, Part 1

1.
        If you ever want me to give you a ride, you’ve got to seem incredibly pure. At least as simple and undeceptive as a human child to get more than a snort and a tossing of the mane before I bolt away.
That’s probably where all those rumors came from about only maidens able to tame an individual of my kind – the Middle Ages, a time when men dressed in kitchen cookware and tried to leap onto our backs. I am aware the men did not want to get hurt from our hooves, horns, or teeth, but our kind is usually gentle. We just do not enjoy something that thinks it is smarter than us digging into our flanks with metal exoskeletons and roaring into our ears every five minutes. If humans wanted to do that, they should have gotten themselves a pony.
I really shouldn’t be telling you all this, but my kind have become incredibly lax in which standards we choose to uphold. I am one of the few old souls trying to keep to the traditions as much as possible. However, being helpless or by yourself might help you get a ride. Flattery also helps, as a feature common to all unicorns is that we are incredibly vain. Any little girl who cries, “Oh, you’re mane’s so pretty!” will immediately turn the head of every unicorn within a kilometer.
      And if you give us sugar, even the processed kind, we will take you to the moon. It has happened before that a small boy got lost in a crater and his ride at the time, a unicorn by the name of J.R. Sussisparkles (embarrassing, but it was a family name) spent over an hour calling, “Jimmy! Come out of the moonlings’ dining rooms! You have to be invited first.” He told me that himself. But that is a different story.
      But you wanted to know about me. Well, there is not much to tell. I grew up without brothers or sisters. My mother ran off with a centaur when I was a foal. I am still in the process of looking for my father. I am supposed to be named after him: Octavian Silverhorn, the Second. Have you heard of that name? Of course you haven’t.
      Yes, I was an orphaned unicorn. Not the best situation, but I made the best of it. Mostly I wandered around Griffith Park. I had not yet learned to be invisible yet, so a couple of times I was almost detained by animal control.
     That’s kind of how I met Larry.
     Oh, Larry’s another unicorn.
     It’s just Larry. I don’t believe he has any other name.
     He leaped off the observatory and kicked some humans as they threw a net over me. They were in the bushes when he did a sort of jig with his hooves to make them forget us entirely. My kind can do that: we make humans forget the last few minutes, or hours, or days. Otherwise every human who has ever ridden a unicorn would tell their friends. The collective magic of our species is weakened by such things.
     I had seen the strange dance done before, but I only knew a few basic things I was too young to use at the time. Anyway, the humans got in their car and drove away afterward. Like I said, unicorns are usually gentle.
     Larry said, “Hey kid, where’s your parents?” And I said I did not have any. He told me that was fine and that I should run with him for a while, if I wasn’t busy.
     A young foal like me did not have any plans. Larry took me down the hill to Pasadena. My kind is built for distances, so it was not that far. The only things that gave us any trouble were the bumper-to-bumper cars pumping exhaust into our nostrils.
     We passed a couple of days at his apartment eating his sweets supply bare. In between binges we explored the observatory. Sometimes kids left food hanging around the exhibits. Larry got his candy that way.
     Or so I thought.

Saturday, May 2, 2015

So Serious Saturday #12

Fiction needs a basis in reality. Exercising non-fiction muscles once in a while benefits an active imagination, channeling creative energies as it focuses on a subject. So Serious Saturdays will be an active place for critical essays or writing about reality in the context of real events - even when it is not written on Saturdays.

Type: Journal/Encouragement/Theology


Hung Up

Derek Hough was injured on "Dancing With the Stars". When I heard the news I wondered if it was his back, or something else that had already given him problems.

It happens quite frequently that an athlete reinjures the same body part, even years after the initial injury. I know a guy who has to be careful with his knee because of an old catcher injury.

Similar recurring pitfalls can catch us, too. Mothers fall back into addiction to pills or alcohol. Young men are drawn back into gambling away their futures. You trust the wrong person, again.

Friday, May 1, 2015

None Alone Five

5.

Cameron entered my tent. "Are you in there?"
"Present," I said. I stuck my hand out of my place behind the folding screen.
I heard her footsteps, her voice, closer. "You're still shaking." She touched my hand. I withdrew. "Is there something you want to talk about?"
"No, I'm fine. Or I'm going to be."
Cameron rapped on the wooden frame. "Okay, well, this regiment's got an assignment."
The last one was about a month ago. Between there's minor assignments for each of us. But they're all important.
 I emerged from the dressing area. "Already?" Cameron looked as baffled as I felt - I was still in sleeping garments. Still, I couldn't let that bother me. "Where? When?"
"He said it wasn't far. You should get dressed now. He's waiting."
"Like, now?"

Thursday, April 30, 2015

Darrowwood Part Eight

8.
      “Hello,” came the high-pitched voice between the girl’s thin lips.
     “Er, hello,” Monica stammered.  Jenny flipped around to look at the newcomer.
     “My name is Cynthia.  I hope you like your new room. You’ll be here for a while.”
     “I wasn’t planning on staying that long, actually,” Monica said.
     “That’s nice." Cynthia smoothed out her pleated black skirt, which Monica recognized as part of the uniform for girls.  “Alendro will be expecting you both to join our town hall meeting shortly.”
     “I wasn’t aware that teachers here go by their first names.  Is that normal?”  Jenny asked.

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Craft Wednesday #10 Glittering Highlights

This blog needed a place for talking about writing. "Craft Wednesday" will be me talking about all things writing: how to write, why to write, and my own craft journey. I hope to learn and to share experiences with you.   


Those Glittering Highlights That Are Not Mine


The Question Poised


In reading books or watching movies the characters lead lives we are envious of, either for their happiness or their adventure, however dark. We flatter ourselves in thinking we would take the same amazing actions the protagonists would take, given their resources and position. Their lives, unlike ours, seem so clear cut, it's dazzling - if our lives are the rough diamonds in the deep, theirs are the mulit-faceted gemstones on lady's fingers.

I have often wondered why my life is not like their fictitious lives, besides not being able to flip to the end to see how many pages remain. If my life is in any way prophetic, like fictitious people's lives are, it reveals the future in a different way. (I plan on examining prophecy in writing soon on this blog.) 

The Short of It

One bibliophilic Monday revealed an answer: sharp distinctions must be made in every story, regardless of the medium. When writing fiction it is necessary to become to follow clues in the plot that has been written out so far at the same moment that the next word is poised in the position of the hand and the pen or key. The act of writing requires a focus on the thoughts and actions of the specific characters in a specific location; otherwise the reflective -- or mimetic -- mirror held up to real-life sources of inspiration would prove too unwield for even a writer like Tolstoy to capture on the page.

Thus art, any art, is inherently selective about what it says or shows. What the audience gets is a highlight reel of all the important information and the clearest, most beautiful images related to the plot.

One Personal Example


I have been writing the part of a novel where every hour is gratingly clear for my heroine, and for about two or three chapters I follow her from conversation to conversation in the aftermath of the traumatic event. I ran across the problem of timing when she can eat or take breaks from the narrative for any normal human function. 

Food was a limited resource in her location, so that was not the issue - she could just suffer through hunger for a couple paragraphs.

But I did not want to follow her into the bathroom. My senses loathed the idea, and it was not relevant to any of the events of the story.

I left it out. It was boring, possibly disgusting, and not important. Instead, there are breaks in the chronological plot alloting time for the characters to use any facilities they wish. 

Think about it: when asking how someone's day went, they usually don't reply with "I ate, went to the restroom, brushed my teeth..."  There are times when such information is relevant, such as describing to some outside party a normal routine.

Conclusion


Stories are often outside of the normal. They are centered around changes set into motion by events. The key for the writer is not only knowing what to select, but in allowing room in the narrative structure for "normal" to happen between the lines.