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Postcards Day 6

2 Dec

MooseMy inspiration postcard today pictures two young bull moose by the water, sparring. I couldn’t find a picture of two moose online that I like as well as the picture here (photo credit below) so a picture of one will have to do for this post. I have yet to see a moose in my 6+ years in Maine, mostly because I’m unlikely to see one from the couch. I would be delighted to see one of these goofy gus animals in person, but NOT, I sincerely hope, and thank you very much, in my headlights.


Working Title: Moose Wedding
1st Sentence: My sister was to be married at the Moose Lodge.
Favorite Sentence: We also both believed that my sister should not be marrying this guy, but the truth of that was so obvious, so poke-your-eye-with-a-stick unavoidable, that it didn’t count as agreement.
Word Length: 542


Photo by Walter Ezell 6/2010.

Aside

7 months!

1 Dec

Chocolate Fudge CakeOh, this glorious cake. It makes me giddy just to look at it. This beauty marks 7 months, my friends. I have been writing a story every single day for 7 months. That’s… insane. It is also, at this point, habit. Not easy habit, no. But even when I’m exhausted, when I’ve been forced to pay attention to something else all day, I’m telling myself, in the back of my mind, don’t forget your story, your story, your story, you have to write your story…! I will admit that I haven’t been writing winners, lately. When I devote a lot time and attention to something else, the writing definitely suffers. Which seems like something I really need to pay attention to when I go back to a normal life. Anyway, celebrate 7 months with me (that little piece of cake on the plate is for you) and wish me luck for… tomorrow. Just tomorrow. I never know if I’ll make it beyond tomorrow.


Photo by Tracy Hunter, Kabul, Afghanistan, 11/2005.

Postcards Day 5

1 Dec

O'Keeffe PaintingI really like the idea for this one but the execution… not so much. Hopefully I’ll work some magic in revision. As for my inspiration, I honestly have no clue how a postcard with the O’Keeffe painting pictured here (see photo credit below) led me to the story I wrote, which appears to have absolutely no connection to the painting. But after a meditation on the image and some note-taking, well, I wrote a story, and that’s that.


Working Title: Slow-Motion Sendoff
1st Sentence: She had been writing her own obituary for years, updating it on each birthday not with the things she’d done in the previous year but all the things she wanted to do in the next, or anyway before she died.
Favorite Sentence: If “Marge was a master seamstress” seemed a bit excessive, it was only because she hadn’t learned to sew yet.
Word Length: 467


Photo of Georgia O’Keeffe’s Jack-in-the-Pulpit No. IV, 1930, National Gallery of Art.

Postcards Day 4

30 Nov

Pissarro PaintingToday’s shorty was inspired by a postcard showing the Pissarro painting pictured here (photo credit below). It reminded me of Colonial Williamsburg, VA, on a blurry winter day, which in turn sparked the story.


Working Title: Tourons
1st Sentence: Tourons, they called them, because crossing the words “tourist” and “moron” is so clever, and college kids are nothing if not clever.
Favorite Sentence: It was a really funny story, crafted with care and including plenty of vulgar words applied to the SUV-ful of docile lambs from Michigan.
Word Length: 569


Photo of Camille Pissarro’s Boulevard des Italiens, Morning, Sunlight, 1897, National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC.

Postcards Day 3

29 Nov

Isabella Gardner Scrapbook PgOnce again I find myself catching up on posts (I’m writing this on December 3). I’ve been working hard on polishing some of these shorties to submit to a chapbook contest—yeehaw! Wish me luck. In the meantime, my third postcard, which inspired my November 29 shortie, is one showing two pages from a scrapbook Isabella Gardner made to document a trip to Japan. Pictured here is one of the pages shown on the postcard (photo credit below). I’m slightly embarrassed to say that my plodding brain produced a story about… a scrapbooker. But what can you do. Next!


Working Title: Saving Memory
1st Sentence: In her hands she cradles the wrapper from the Snicker’s bar she just bolted.
Favorite Sentence: At night sometimes she lies in bed rigid with failure as frail mental-memory cycles through all the things she should have scrapbooked.
Word Length: 1,116


Photo of a page from Isabella Stewart Gardner’s scrapbook of her visit to Japan in 1883.

Postcards Day 2

28 Nov

I have a postcard with the image shown here (see photo credit below) of Barry Flanagan’s sculpture “Thinker on a Rock.” I meditated on this wonderful man-like hare for quite some time and then landed on a certain famous manlike bunny we all know well…. So the day’s shorty turned out to be my first fan fiction!


Working Title: Psycho Bunny
1st Sentence: Ilsa had worked her hand through the crisscrossed rope that bound her, retrieved her Swiss Army knife from her jeans pocket, and was sawing away, thinking bitter, bitter thoughts about that talking rabbit they had all believed was going to be such a godsend.
Favorite Sentence: No knock, no preamble, just a furry waltz across the floor and he threw himself into a chair, put his huge feet on her desk, looked at her narrow-eyed and asked his favorite question—wassup?
Word Length: 1,793


Photo of “Thinker on a Rock” by Barry Flanagan (1997), in the National Gallery of Art’s sculpture garden in Washington, DC.

A week of postcards!

27 Nov

I buy pretty postcards wherever I go just so they can sit on a shelf. Today I gathered a pile and went through them, selecting the most intriguing as I went. I kept whittling the pile until I had seven to use for story prompts this week. The first, chosen randomly from the seven, was imprinted with the photo you see here of an Edward Steichen painting (see photo credit below). Isn’t it stunning? It took most of the day for me to get a story out of this image because I was so enchanted with it all I could think of were more colors and shapes. Gorgeous.


Working Title: When I Get Up
1st Sentence: Van Gogh ate paint because he wanted to be yellow, he wanted to be red.
Favorite Sentence: When I get up from this chair I will say to this woman with the thick calves, the heavy shoulders, the stringy hair, that I should never have asked her, thirty-seven years ago, if she wanted to get a coffee.
Word Length: 323


Photo of Edward Steichen’s “Le Tournesol” (The Sunflower), c. 1920, tempera and oil on canvas, National Gallery of Art, Washington, Gift of the Collectors Committee 1999.43.1.

A character returns!

26 Nov

People keep asking me if I bring back characters created for these shorties and I keep saying no while thinking that I should. Today I thought about previous stories with that idea in mind and one character came to me immediately, Yessiree Bob from the story of the same name written on June 20. Yessiree Bob is not the protagonist of that first story, but he is the protagonist of this one. Good to visit with him again.


Working Title: Nosiree Bob
1st Sentence: What do you do when you are a wildly successful motivational speaker who has written a book entitled A Life of Yes, a celebrity, at this point, who, just to nail down your gold-winning identity, legally changed your name to Yessiree Bob, and one day, one fine morning of buttery sunshine, a sweet summer breeze, the scent of bacon wafting into your bedroom because your trophy wife has decided to surprise you with breakfast, you find that you can say only one thing, over and over: No.
Favorite Sentence: With your agent, calling to discuss the next book, the one that’s supposed to be called, Bitches, I Said, Yes!
Word Length: 285


Photo by Brady Willette, 2010.

Aside

Goodbye Week 30!

26 Nov

Macarons with Lemon Curd
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Don’t these look wonderful? And like just the right treat to celebrate the completion of Week 30 of the Daily Shorty challenge? Of course!


Strawberry macarons parisiens with lemon curd filling, photo by Flickr user zaimoku_woodpile, 5/2011.

Dental Tales II

25 Nov

In the second shorty inspired by my tenure in a dental office, my protagonist is a thwarted woman. My friends keep asking me if I’m seeing the same themes emerge in these shorties. Yes. Thwarted women. And thwarted men. All kinds of thwarting.


Working Title: Stuck at the Gate
1st Sentence: All dentists are sadists, so goes the joke, who have found a safe way to indulge their perversion.
Favorite Sentence: When I was a small child I pressed hard on my crayon or pencil, drawing teeth in various shapes and sizes hanging from the lopsided mouths of barely rendered, slap-dash faces.
Word Length: 620


Photo of Paul Revere’s dental tools by Otis Historical Archives National Museum of Health & Medicine.

Dental Tales

24 Nov

Once I jumped off the corporate train and decided to learn how to be a writer, I took various jobs to bring in a decent paycheck while the husband went back to school for his much more obvious and lucrative career-change path. One of the jobs I fell into during those years was at a dental office. In the 18 months or so I was there, I amassed enough material for several novels, if I could manage to move through those mental files without shivering. The other day I made myself take some notes on that experience and what I came up with inspired shorties two days in a row (I’m writing this story post on Monday the 26th). The shorty for the day happens to mark a “first” for me: I am almost certain that I have never used the word “pussy” in a story before. In fact I can’t remember ever having mentioned lady parts before at all, but if I did, I wouldn’t have used that word, as I tend to be priggish about crude words for lady parts (though I can talk like a sailor in every other way). Anyway, I used the word SEVEN times in this very short story. So I’m thinking I can go another 10 years of writing without using it again, yes?


Working Title: In the Chair
1st Sentence: The boy who made her miserable in middle school, who labeled her “Tammi Tuna” because, supposedly, her “pussy stank like fish,” has grown into a man who just swung himself into her dental chair and is telling her about the pain he’s been feeling in his right lower molar, the one in the very back.
Favorite Sentence: I would kill for such a powerful pussy, she wants to say now, a pussy like that could win the war on terror, negotiate peace between Israel and Palestine, orchestrate a world-wide nuclear freeze, a pussy like that could win the goddamned Nobel fucking Peace Prize you gigantic pimple-faced PRICK.
Word Length: 550


Photo of a dental chair in the University of Michigan School of Dentistry 3/2010.

Again, a story from nothing.

23 Nov

UPDATE. This shorty is forthcoming at Hermeneutic Chaos Journal in March 2017 as “Where She Began.” I never thought I’d find a match until I discovered HCJ. A perfect home! Many thanks to Editor-in-Chief Shinjini Bhattacharjee.

Huh. Well, this is one of those shorties that just… happens. I’m tired, I’m empty, I wonder why the hell I’m still staring at my monitor, why the hell I’m writing another story. I think, shit. I’m done. I’m just done. And then a sentence comes to me—nothing special but it holds. And then that sentence gives birth to another one and I find myself firmly in this strange, associative place, writing a story about something I don’t fully understand (again, as I said in my October 30 post, I’m not in Barthelme’s house but I’m on the street outside, waving at his lit window). Then the sentences just fly from my fingers, writing themselves according to the confused logic of this “story” while I half-doze. Sometimes I can wake up, wrestle a story like that into something that has a clear meaning. Sometimes I can’t. Sometimes I just know when it’s done and I’m grateful I can check off another day. This is one of those times. Sometimes I love that story anyway. And this is also one of those times.


Working Title: Purple
1st Sentence: For more than a week she had been trying to get a handle on purple.
Favorite Sentence: Purple Prayerful Plumply Pimpley Peppermint Pots.
Word Length: 626


Photo by Booyabazooka 7/2006.

Random Conversation

22 Nov

This time a physical description from a conversation with a friend about someone she had met recently inspired the shorty. This challenge is teaching me how to find story in just about anything.


Working Title:
The Scar
1st Sentence: Sergei’s scar started just below his hairline over the left eyebrow and cut across his face on an almost perfect diagonal, slashing his nose and barely missing his mouth.
Favorite Sentence: And then those moments were no longer about the simple perfection of an arithmetic equation or the way the morning sun in deepest winter glazes the sky over a frozen river, no longer about the color and scent of inspiration.
Word Length: 1,017


Photo is a screenshot of Paul Muni as Scarface in the 1932 film Scarface: The Shame of the Nation.

Putting a tidbit to use.

21 Nov

So, writer friends, you know how people tell you these outrageous things about their family members and every time you hear one of these stories you get a half-thought that truly you’re going to have to use that batshit-crazy tidbit in a story someday and so you just keep it tucked away, waiting…? The day’s shorty was inspired by one of those tidbits.


Working Title: Old Soul
1st Sentence: When she first began to make the dolls, we were encouraging.
Favorite Sentence: It’s been a whole life of shrugging with that guy.
Word Length: 475


Photo by Somals of a doll exhibit in Budapest 2006.

Still going!

20 Nov

The handful of you subscribed to this blog know that I missed a few days of posts (I’m writing this on Sunday, November 25). The Thanksgiving holiday overtook me, I’m afraid, but not entirely—I have kept up with my story-a-day commitment, and today I’ll catch up with my posts, backdating as usual so that the date I wrote the story matches the date of the post. I’m not using prompts this week, just letting inspiration come from wherever. This shorty was inspired by grocery shopping, though that doesn’t show in what I have here.


Working Title: Pop Quiz
1st Sentence: Jonathan, a med student who could eat fish tacos for dinner every single day of his life and never get tired of them, is smitten with Katie, a former competitive swimmer who works the front desk at the art museum and is thinking seriously about going to library school.
Favorite Sentence: All four names are associated with white, Anglo-Saxon-ish, Christian-ey people who grew up with back yards and placemats and bed skirts.
Word Length: 781


Photo by KF 6/2005.

Last Fragrance Day

19 Nov

This challenge more and more shakes up my notion of what makes a story. I love this but just like all good educational experiences, the more I learn the more I discover my own cluelessness. Today’s shorty took hold once I settled on a playful conversation between a woman and her father, sitting at a dining table, waiting for dessert. And I found I wanted to stay firmly in that conversation—the story begins with the mother walking away from the dining table and ends when she returns. There is nothing approaching a traditional beginning, middle, and end, and there’s no story arc to speak of. I tried to develop an unspoken conversation beneath the surface of the exchanges, but I don’t know that I was terribly successful. And is this a story? It is a fiction and I was very conscious of my own decision about how to begin it and how to end it. But does that make it a story? All I know is that for the purposes of my Daily Shorty challenge, it is. And the photo today is pulling double-duty. The dessert our protagonists await is an apple pie. Let’s enjoy this gorgeous pie, too, as a celebration for completing Week 29. Yahoo!


Working Title: Apple Pie
1st Sentence: “I wish I could live in an apple pie,” my father said, as we stared at the two-crust wonder my mother had placed in the center of the table before leaving to fetch the pie server.
Favorite Sentence: “If a person has to ask herself—is this a pie, or is this my father—then you have a profound pie-definition problem.”
Word Length: 839


Photo by Dan Parsons 11/2004.

Fragrance Day 6

18 Nov

This morning’s fragrance was… Worcestershire sauce. Nothing smells quite like it, yes? A big whiff of it made me think of my mother preparing the kind of food you take to a party—dips, sauces. Which in turn made me think of deviled eggs. Which in turn made me think of family reunions.


Working Title: Family Reunion
1st Sentence: When Aunt Edna got to be too tired to bully us, we stopped having family reunions.
Favorite Sentence: Jittery cousin Maura, eyeing her pony-tailed husband, wondering, like the rest of us, if the rumors were true.
Word Length: 500


Photo by Qurren 11/2011.

Fragrance Day 5

17 Nov

Oy, another tough one. The husband had trouble coming up with a scent for the day so when we went out this morning he drove to the gas station to fill up and I rolled down the window to get a whiff. Doesn’t show itself much in the shorty but the smell of gasoline was indeed its inspiration.


Working Title: Word Game
1st Sentence: The doctor pushed his glasses up his nose and shifted from one hip to the other, his pants straining from an obviously recent weight gain.
Favorite Sentence: I like that, when I soften my effect on the world.
Word Length: 635


Photo by Derek Jensen (Tysto), 9/2005.

Fragrance Day 4

16 Nov

Having a really tough week because I’ve got other commitments that are taking a lot of time. I pulled this one out, inspired by the fragrance of a burning match, but only just. I think I’ve got something that could come good in revision, so okay. Onward!


Working Title: Burning Dreams
1st Sentence: A fire.
Favorite Sentence: First a parakeet, then a hooting owl—ooh, a sage with its warning call—and then a raven, surely Poe’s raven, quoth the raggedy, blue-black pest, and never say never, mom will you shut up.
Word Length: 435


Photo by Fir0002.

Fragrance Day 3

15 Nov

My husband enjoys few things more than a huge bowl of Cheerios. Whenever he eats Cheerios, which is almost every day and often twice a day, I am struck by the very specific scent of that cereal and I have commented on it. So no surprise when I woke up to discover a giant box of Cheerios as the fragrance prompt the husband chose for my day. I opened the box and sniffed the cereal multiple times but in the end I couldn’t come up with a story until he came home and fixed a bowl for himself. And there it was, the smell I know so well. Maybe there’s something about his eating pleasure that adds to the scent.


Working Title: Today’s Menu
1st Sentence: For breakfast, you will feast on a generous bowl of Cheerios, served in a sturdy, delightfully lopsided old margarine tub, with skim milk, and, BONUS, the fresh, local blueberries your neighbor brought over yesterday!
Favorite Sentence: Whatever your choice, enjoy as you return from the snack room a cool slice of fuck-you, flung as you pass her cubicle by Jenny, who is still totally pissed off that you got the Hennicker account.
Word Length: 679


Photo by Conrad Irwin 2008.

Fragrance Day 2

14 Nov

Today’s fragrance was a “Christmas Cookie” scented candle from Yankee Candle that was hanging around our apartment somewhere. The husband left it at my bedside this morning. I smelled it. I smelled it again. And I was stumped. I smelled it once more. Still stumped. So I filled my day with other things and then very, very late, thoughts about baking cookies led to thoughts about candy led to a childhood memory led to a complete story. Ergh. Next.


Working Title: Candy Man
1st Sentence: Supposedly his only child, a daughter, had died as a teenager—a car accident, said some, no, no, it was tuberculosis, said others—and then his wife died of cancer (or possibly heartbreak over the girl) not long after.
Favorite Sentence: “I don’t know what’s going to happen to these kids,” he said to my mother as he left, and he sounded so anguished that I stopped making wolf-eyes at the candy boxes and focused on their talk.
Word Length: 677


Photo by Adam Zivner 4/2008.

Fragrance

13 Nov

Today marks the start of a week of shorties inspired by fragrance. This morning’s fragrance: freshly sliced orange. I also wave goodbye to Week 28, so I need to post a virtual treat. This lovely orange cake will do very well, yes?


Working Title: Sitting Tangerine
1st Sentence: She held the tangerine in her right palm and looked at it, turning her hand this way and that, so as to see it from all angles.
Favorite Sentence: Each tiny segment was a clean, unmarked slice of tangerine, birthed and scrubbed and whole and perfect.
Word Length: 794


Photo by LG1991 3/2998.

Veterans Day

12 Nov

At the gym, today, I sat on a mat and thought about all the grieving mothers and fathers. Later I wrote a story based on the notes I took.


Working Title: Veterans Day
1st Sentence: When he was a baby, he smelled yeasty and faintly sweet, like dough on its second rise.
Favorite Sentence: Occasionally the scent of a burning candlewick comes through, spikes the tea roses and gladiolas with a bracing fragrance that takes her straight back to her childhood, to mornings by the wood fire, which is where she doesn’t want to be because that was pre-David.
Word Length: 487


Photo by Flickr user Marlon E from USA, 6/2010.

An All-Day Struggle

11 Nov

You’d think that after 6 months of this I’d have so many tricks up my sleeve that I could just sling a story to the page and then waltz off to do whatever moves me. You’d be wrong. I still have days now and again where I work and work and work, all day long, taking food and small entertainment breaks, on getting one simple story to the page. But I did it, dammit, and I sort of like the story, too.


Working Title: That Kid Thing
1st Sentence: True, she shouldn’t have stopped taking the pill without telling him.
Favorite Sentence: If you want to throw a knuckle ball—that’s a good one, Sam, because the ball will do strange things, take the batter totally off guard—you put your fingers on the ball like so, you use your thumb for balance, and you let the ball roll of your fingernails.
Word Length: 602


Photo by Schyler at en.wikipedia.

More Stuff of Childhood

10 Nov

Nothing like writing a story every day for more than 6 months to make you find gewgaws in your childhood worth talking about. And that makes the very first time in my life I’ve ever used the word “gewgaws.”


Working Title: Dear Mother
1st Sentence: I don’t mind so much the lies you told.
Favorite Sentence: You were, you said, the Little Golden-Haired Miss, a cause célèbre, a vision burned into paper by the hot light of a camera’s flashbulb, and in my mind’s enthralled eye, I saw you-me, I saw little Polly Pepper, I saw blind Mary Ingalls.
Word Length: 538


Photo of painting “Mother” by Mikuláš Galanda.

Family Photos

9 Nov

Mine is not a family with a photographed history. My parents had a hard enough time keeping their kids clothed and fed—there was no money for reams of photos and no money, anyway, for the kinds of things people documented in those days, family trips and birthday parties and fancy Halloween costumes. Of course this marks my age, too. For quite some time, now, taking photos has been easy and cheap. People document a trip to Taco Bell, memorialize a hangnail. Not so when I was a kid, even less so when my parents were young adults. All to say that growing up I almost obsessively studied the very few, the precious photos taken of my parents, my brother, my sister, and myself before we were… us. I knew who we were as we lived and breathed, but who were these characters in the photographs? Today’s shorty was inspired by a few of those photos.


Working Title: Dad and Me
1st Sentence: In the picture, he’s holding a little girl in his arms, sort of draped over his shoulder, and what amazes me, what I can’t accept, is that I am not that little girl.
Favorite Sentence: I ate a thousand bowls of Cheerios at this table, I worked out long division, here, I brooded through over-cooked spaghetti and chopped broccoli into ever smaller bits.
Word Length: 561


Photo by Berthold Werner 8/2008.

Painful Inspiration

8 Nov

Yesterday I got whacked in the face by a badminton racquet. I play four times a week with faculty and staff at the local college and I’m the least athletic, so I am often where I shouldn’t be. Fortunately, it was a glancing blow because my playing partner saw my stupid face at the last second and did his best to pull back. Unfortunately, I was playing with our best player who is by far our hardest hitter. So today I woke up with a welt under my right eye, a tender bruise across the bridge of my nose, and a small, painful knot on my left eyebrow. And a headache centered around my eyes and nose. Story fodder!


Working Title: Advice for Today
1st Sentence: When you wake up in your drunk girlfriend’s arms, still a little drunk yourself, and you realize that you forgot to set the alarm an hour early so you’d have time to run home for fresh clothes—because, don’t forget, you’ve got that important meeting first thing—please, please, don’t even try to persuade yourself that yesterday’s clothes will do.
Favorite Sentence: When, on the badminton court, you are minimally skilled but maximally passionate, when you have never been even a little bit athletic but you happen to be in the shape of your life and like to show it with manic chases and wild leaps, when everyone knows that you dearly love hitting a birdie just as hard as you possibly can—even if that means hitting it out or into the net—it’s easy enough to make an intentional racquet swing look like a mistake.
Word Length: 974


Photo of Thorsten Hukriede und Nadieżda Kostiuczyk (beide im Hintergrund) im Mixed gegen den 1. BC Bischmisheim, by Cologne Sharky 11/2006.

Another Ghost Story

7 Nov

The Halloween candy is long gone but the holiday’s imagery and themes linger. The phone pictured here looks a lot like the very first phone I can remember, back when I was about 3 years old. I loved the way that handle felt in my hand, and the noise the rotary dial made.


Working Title: Land Line
1st Sentence: I’d like to cut down on my bills but I can’t get rid of my land line telephone because it would mean getting rid of my mother.
Favorite Sentence: Much, much worse is when she just hangs on the line and breathes long, ragged, cigarette-cured death-rattles, just like her last days in the hospice.
Word Length: 760


Photo by Holger.Ellgaard 2007.

Welcome Week 28!

6 Nov

With all the election excitement, I clean forgot to celebrate my completion of another week of the Daily Shorty challenge yesterday. Doesn’t this cocoa look wonderful? Let’s drink a fond farewell to Week 27! And hello, week 28. Not starting the week with a barn burner, but… glad to be starting the week.


Working Title: We Win
1st Sentence: Please spare me your justifications and just do it.
Favorite Sentence: Yeah, there’s nothing so inspiring as a bunch of red-faced white guys stuffed into their made-in-China suits, sweating into their limp collars, eyes bulging, hands clapping, leaping around on their fat feet pinched by those shiny, black-beetle shoes, chanting like they know the rap, like they’ve got the shizzle in the hizzle.
Word Length: 347


Photo by 4028mdk09 10/2009.

Texture Last Day

5 Nov

Election fever has set in with a vengeance. I’ve done a pretty good job avoiding the news for some time now but the energy of the Big Day is pouring over me, now, and I’m finding it very difficult to focus. No surprise that the day’s shorty is lackluster. It was inspired by my last texture prompt, a small die (as in one of a pair of dice) that the husband handed me this morning. For some reason after pressing my thumb into each side of it I began to tap my fingernails on it. That reminded me of the sound of high heels on a hard floor, so that wound up prompting the story. Yes, I know, a sound, not a texture. What can you do.


Working Title: Phyllis Power
1st Sentence: We always know when Phyllis is on a tear, because we can hear the frantic clip-clopping of those heels from a mile away, like a horse galloping on marble.
Favorite Sentence: She says this frightens her but she doesn’t seem frightened when she talks about the probing.
Word Length: 906


Photo of Egyptian dice (600-800 BC) by Swiss Museum of Games.

Texture Day 6

4 Nov

I put something over four hard hours into this one. I had three starts that refused to grow, so then I just made myself try to blend them. I cut one and made a story out of the other two. Didn’t really work—get comfortable on that hard drive, story # 188—but I always hope the sweat equity counts for something. The texture, today, came from one of those small, air-filled plastic pillow thingies used to cushion shipped goods. I was trying to get a good picture of it when someone came along to make enquiries. Don’t know what Maria thought of it, but holding this thing made me think of tearing into a bag of chips.


Working Title: Snack Time
1st Sentence: When I’m squeezing the plastic bag, fat with air, with both hands, my fingers clawing for purchase, and at the same time pulling the two sides of the bag away from each other, desperate to break that fused seam at the top so I can get at those greasy, crispy, salty, cheese crackers that I can already smell and taste, yes, I do realize that this could end badly.
Favorite Sentence: I’d wake up at 3:00 in the morning, feeling like I was lying in a Jello-ey sling, my butt skimming the floor, the rest of me upslope from that center of gravity.
Word Length: 771