Influences

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My Favorite Author: Annie Proulx

 Proulx spent her childhood traipsing outside and reading, especially science fiction and books by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings. As an adolescent, she was devoted to William Faulkner, S.J. Perelman, and Dante. She said, “Almost every book I’ve read has left its mark.”

“I only backed into writing in order to make a living. And then I discovered that I could actually do it.”

She wrote mostly about rural life and the men who worked farms, mills, and oil rigs. Her writing style was spare and poetic. She once described a female character as “thin as a folded dollar bill, her hand as narrow and cold as a trout.”

The Shipping News (1993), about a sad man named Quoyle who moves to a small fishing village in Newfoundland. The novel wasn’t hard to write. She says, “I wrote that one because I was madly in love with Newfoundland, so for me it was a joy.” Proulx was inspired to write the book after finding an old copy of The Ashley Book of Knots (1944) at a yard sale. She bought it for a dollar and was fascinated by the illustrations and quotes, which she ended up using for chapter headings in the book. The Shipping News won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction and was a best-seller. It was made into a film in (1992), as was her short story Brokeback Mountain (1997), about two cowboys who fall in love and experience homophobia. Her success enabled Proulx to buy a 640-acre farm in Wyoming called Bird Cloud, where she lived for several years.

“You should write because you love the shape of stories and sentences and the creation of different worlds on a page. Writing comes from reading, and reading is the finest teacher of how to write.”

Male Pattern Blindness

DonBatmanGlasses

Don in his batman glasses

Can’t see the stains on the runner on stairs

Or dried drops on kitchen and counters;

Can’t smell the barbeque sauce  in trashcan

Or spills on the white wall behind.

Fantasies, warriors, scantily clad

Cartoons and photos and videos pink;

On these I can focus mid rumpus and riot

No blindness where breath takes wing!

Alfred Hitchcock Profile (Master of Fear)

Annex - Hitchcock, Alfred_05

 He liked to say, “I’m not a heavy eater. I’m just heavy, and I eat.”

 “There is as much anticipation in confronting good food as there is in going on a holiday or seeing a good show. There are two kinds of eating — eating to sustain and eating for pleasure. I eat for pleasure.”

“The length of a film should be directly related to the endurance of the human bladder.”

We Don’t Have to Live Great Lives…

CatsAreWeirdHeidiStemple

photo by Heidi Stemple

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Oppressed by pillows:

held down by fluff, snuggles from

above and below

.

I understand weight-

survive to slither forward,

arch my back and reach

.

Andre Dubus

born in Lake Charles, Louisiana (1936) wrote stories about regular people like bartenders, mechanics, and waitresses in collections such as The Cage Keeper and Other Stories (1989) and Dancing After Hours (1996). In 1986, after publishing several books of short stories, Dubus stopped to help a woman and a man stranded on the side of the highway, and he was hit by a passing car. He saved the woman’s life by throwing her out of the way, but he lost one of his legs and spent the rest of his life in a wheelchair. He said, “Some of my characters now feel more grateful about simple things — breathing, buying groceries, sunlight — because I do.” He also said, “We don’t have to live great lives, we just have to understand and survive the ones we’ve got.”

A Creative Life

LakeMiciganCraigGardiner

Lake Michigan by Craig Gardener

A creative life

is any life governed more

by curiosity

than by fear

Woodchuck

byLoriMcElrath-Eslick

illustrated by Lori McElrath-Eslick

Every woodchuck lives

with graves, trees, ponds and seeds-spies

squirrels’ lairs at dawn

.

Jonathan Kellerman has collaborated on books with his wife and his son. “Every family speaks its own language,” Jesse Kellerman says. “For us, it was stories.”

Snow Owl

Snowy Owl Lift-off

Snowy Owl lift-off, Falcon, Colorado

How can one white fly

high yet sheltered by those wings

ineffably flourished?

Make-up

byLoustration

by Loustration

Do you know the face?

Johnny wears them each-with hair

from world-wide wretches

Through blue shades

OwearsHisBlueSuit

photo by Frank Scotti

.

earth red from copper

rider blue from mother’s gifts

ridge ride from daring

Opossum Plays Dead

OpossumPlays Dead

Photo by Don Tate

.

Opossum Plays Dead

.

thirty years ago

opossum came and hung on door

by tail-awaiting-

.

would I open to

admit her young and their tails

hanging out with me?

.

’til then she hung still

breathed still-watched the sill until

the window spoke: “I will!”

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