Entries Tagged 'reading' ↓
May 8th, 2008 — poetry, podcast, blogtipping
…and Children, Television, Recreation, Relatives, Food, Pets, Automobiles, Bugs, and Bibles
You see, Robert Hruzek is hosting a group writing project where people write about a mash-up of 18 fun topics. I added bugs and Bibles to his list just for good measure and polished up a poem for his group. He says it’s the first ever poetry entry. Yea, me!
First, the poem itself. You can hear me read it on the Evoca recording, but you’ll have to skip ahead to 1:20 remaining because I get long winded in my intro. (Be sure to check out my sweet musical intro/outro. Royalty free audio is fun!)
Welcoming Summer
Two love bugs mate on my leg
Until I draw them off with this
#2 pencil. The pair crawls past
my thumb as I write—then up
to the pink eraser which must taste
funny to tongue buds on their feet.
They fly away, black-legged snow-
flakes. We think of Christmas specials
where painted children catch snow
on tongues to welcome winter.
“Open wide, kids,” I say. “There’s
never snow in South Texas.”
My son plays along and we run
up and down the blacktop lot—
heat rising in waves around us—
we must look a pair of Baptist Johns,
prophesying protein in the desert.
A voice of two calling between
parked cars: “Prepare the way
for summer bugs. Make straight
your tongues for them.” Push that
play too far and bugs become God.
All mankind finds salvation in bugs.
And why not? God can raise up
children from rocks and bugs—
even cars with bug-splattered bumpers.
Second, here’s how the poem fits the mash-up rules.
A few weeks ago, we drove (automobiles) to a family reunion (relatives) where my children and I found ourselves surrounded by bugs on our little vacation (recreation) to decorate the graveyard at the Hebron Baptist Church. In fact, the bugs were so thick, we talked about how it was like a blizzard of black snowflakes with legs. My son loved this because he keeps bugs as pets (which means he puts them in bug cages over-night and holds a daily funeral for the ones who don’t make it). You can see from the picture above what so many bugs do to a white car (automobile—again). The snowstorm made me think of the peanuts gang catching snow on their tongues (like food) in the television Christmas special. At that point, my mind took off, and I started writing this poem.
I have to ask, though. Who uses the word automobile anymore, Bob?
Also, Gordon, you asked about W. P. and decoration. I provide a long answer in the audio file above. And you can see W. P.’s grave there on the right. He is my kid’s great-great-great-great granddad. Or maybe just great-great-great, I can never remember.
One last thing about poetry. Bob’s project “What I Learned From…” suggests that I’ll have answers for you here. But poetry isn’t very good at providing answers in the traditional sense. Nevertheless, I hope you’ve found some things to think about in my mash-up of mashed-up of bibles, bugs on my windshield, the subsequent discussions that followed us that weekend, and Writing, Children, Television, Recreation, Relatives, Food, Pets, Automobiles.
April 18th, 2008 — poetry
Here’s something for poetry Friday. Hat tip to Steve McCoy one of our authors at TheHighCalling.org for pointing me to Billy Collins on YouTube. (Here’s a link to Steve’s articles at THC.org.)
February 25th, 2008 — speculative fiction, podcast, CSFF, inspiring
Yesterday after we had our new pastor over for an old-fashioned pot roast lunch, complete with my wife’s to-die-for homemade chocolate pie, I found myself weeping while I did the dishes.
The pie really was that good, but it didn’t make me weep. And the pastor wasn’t picking on me. Or at least, he didn’t make me cry.
Stephen Eley, Ken Scholes, and Edward Bear did that.
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February 20th, 2008 — writing, CSFF
It’s time for another blog tour experience.
I presented on blog tours last week, and I’ve been working hard with L.L. on her presentation at Mt. Hermon (which Becky will hopefully have small role in as well) . Now, it’s time to set aside the numbers and research and fancy quotes from famous people, and get to work on a real tour.
This month, CSFF is featuring Chris Walley’s The Shadow and Night from Tyndale. (You may remember them as the little press that exploded in the 1990s with a series called Left Behind.) You can read more about Chris Walley on his site and his blog. Frankly, I’m excited about this one. So without further ado, here’s page one. Review to follow.
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February 12th, 2008 — poetry, christianity
Here’s a little poem since I haven’t posted one in awhile. Comments to follow.
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February 6th, 2008 — christianity, reading, meme
L. L. Barkat tagged me for an interesting meme that reminds me of the Oulipo group (especially N+7 poems). Yes, their site is in French. No, I don’t speak French, and you don’t have to either to appreciate the 1-2-3 meme.
Here’s what I had to do.
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February 1st, 2008 — poetry
Here’s a happy little poem to commiserate with folks who find themselves away from family on travel. Travel has slowed down for me a bit lately, but last year I learned I don’t travel well.
Without further ado:
Ode on Business Travel
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January 23rd, 2008 — blogging, CSFF
Ok, not really. And I don’t want folks to think this is some kind of weird self-promotion, branding thing. But really, if you are part of the Christian Science Fiction and Fantasy blog tour by all means grab the widget for your sidebar or for a permanent page on your blog.
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January 21st, 2008 — fantasy, CSFF, blogtour, page one review
Several months ago, I began book critiques that I call Page One Reviews.
Here’s the premise: I look at a book as if I’m an acquisitions editor and ask, “What if I got this first page as an unsolicited manuscript? What works? What questions does it raise?”
Today, as part of the CSFF blog tour, I’ll be looking at Jeffrey Overstreet’s fantasy Auralia’s Colors. You may already know Jeffrey from his nonfiction work, Through a Screen Darkly. He also blogs at The Looking Closer Journal, which has the wonderful tagline “the truth must dazzle gradually” from one of my favorite Emily Dickinson poems: Tell All the Truth but Tell It Slant.
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January 17th, 2008 — writing, faith and work, poetry
I love Randy Ingermanson. Let me just start there. I’m very excited to be presenting at Mt. Hermon with L. L. Barkat in part because it means I also get to participate in Randy’s fiction workshop. In fact, I finally went and got Oxygen, a book I’ve been meaning to read for sometime.
That said, I found myself resisting Randy’s latest post at Advanced Fiction Writing…
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