Thursday, July 25, 2013
Shoot the Moon by Billie Letts
And like carriers of a virus, those who heard passed it on to others, causing an epidemic of gossip to spread from neighbor to neighbor, child to parent, doctor to patient, friend to friend.
Sweeping Up Glass
Lead: The long howl of a wolf rolls over me like a toothache.
While I love that boy more than life, Ida's a hole in another sock.
While I love that boy more than life, Ida's a hole in another sock.
Saturday, July 13, 2013
Belong to Me by Marisa de los Santos
Lead: My fall from suburban grace, or, more accurately, my failure to achieve the merest molehill of suburban grace from which to fall, began with a dinner party and a perfectly innocent, modestly clever, and only faintly quirky remark about Armand Assante.
Ending: I stand here on this spring day in the center of my life. Chaos, din, and beauty. For a moment, I am still. Then "Cornelia" cuts across the noise, and because one of them is calling me, I go.
What Dev would figure out very soon thereafter was that all that bluster and drama, that bad imitation of Robin Williams in one of his inspiring-mentor rolls stemmed from the fact that Mr. Trip was a self-important, histrionic, humorless jerk. A class A windbag.
It was Saturday, the kind of tricky October Saturday that contains equal parts hot sun and cool air, so that you keep taking off your sweatshirt and putting it back on, taking off, putting on until, pretty soon laughing at yourself.
"Hospice," a strangely delicate, weightless word, Piper noticed, one that could be either whisper or hiss.
He could see how you could get used to the not-thinking, the haphazard floating through days, your brain lounging around like a tourist in a loud shirt, grasping nothing heavier that a magazine and a drink (umbrellaed, water beaded, pineapple hanging off its rim like an elephant ear), lulled by the sound of seagulls and ocean waves.
Ending: I stand here on this spring day in the center of my life. Chaos, din, and beauty. For a moment, I am still. Then "Cornelia" cuts across the noise, and because one of them is calling me, I go.
What Dev would figure out very soon thereafter was that all that bluster and drama, that bad imitation of Robin Williams in one of his inspiring-mentor rolls stemmed from the fact that Mr. Trip was a self-important, histrionic, humorless jerk. A class A windbag.
It was Saturday, the kind of tricky October Saturday that contains equal parts hot sun and cool air, so that you keep taking off your sweatshirt and putting it back on, taking off, putting on until, pretty soon laughing at yourself.
"Hospice," a strangely delicate, weightless word, Piper noticed, one that could be either whisper or hiss.
He could see how you could get used to the not-thinking, the haphazard floating through days, your brain lounging around like a tourist in a loud shirt, grasping nothing heavier that a magazine and a drink (umbrellaed, water beaded, pineapple hanging off its rim like an elephant ear), lulled by the sound of seagulls and ocean waves.
Thursday, February 21, 2013
I Had Seen Castles by Cynthia Rylant
The bombs that dropped on Hawaii sent a shock wave straight into the outraged soul of every man in American, and like Neanderthals, we had a primitive, fearless, screaming desire to kill.
After the Nazis decimated our pitiful army a few times with their monstrous panzer tanks and eighty-millimeter guns, it occurred to us that we were--as we had known from the start, but not until now so cruelly--in very serious trouble.
In the window of the barbershop a few blocks from our house was a crudely lettered sign that read, No Yellow Bellies, Skunks, or COs Allowed, and that sums up pretty well the sentiment of most people toward any able-bodied young men who had no stomach for killing.
After the Nazis decimated our pitiful army a few times with their monstrous panzer tanks and eighty-millimeter guns, it occurred to us that we were--as we had known from the start, but not until now so cruelly--in very serious trouble.
In the window of the barbershop a few blocks from our house was a crudely lettered sign that read, No Yellow Bellies, Skunks, or COs Allowed, and that sums up pretty well the sentiment of most people toward any able-bodied young men who had no stomach for killing.
The Red Pony by John Steinbeck
In the gray quiet mornings when the land and the brush and the houses and the trees were silver-grey and black like a photograph negative, he stole toward the barn, past the sleeping stones and the sleeping cypress tree.
The pony's tracks were plain enough, dragging through the frostlike dew on the young grass, tired tracks with little lines between them where the hoofs had dragged.
When the peaks were pink in the morning they invited him among them: and when the sun had gone over the edge in the evening and the mountains were a purple-like despair, then Jody was afraid of them; then they were so impersonal and aloof that their very imperturbability was a threat.
The pony's tracks were plain enough, dragging through the frostlike dew on the young grass, tired tracks with little lines between them where the hoofs had dragged.
When the peaks were pink in the morning they invited him among them: and when the sun had gone over the edge in the evening and the mountains were a purple-like despair, then Jody was afraid of them; then they were so impersonal and aloof that their very imperturbability was a threat.
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Purple Hibiscus by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Sentences that make you wonder:
She had not learned the art of silent crying; she had not needed to.
There is not only a shabbiness about it all, but it is a resigned shabbiness--there is no attempt to conceal, to plant bright hibiscuses to draw the eyes away from the moldy walls.
She had not learned the art of silent crying; she had not needed to.
There is not only a shabbiness about it all, but it is a resigned shabbiness--there is no attempt to conceal, to plant bright hibiscuses to draw the eyes away from the moldy walls.
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
First Poison Ivy Award
John Sanford's Rough Coutry may be popular in the adult easy-reading mystery set, but this man knows how to misuse a colon. I kept coming to a standstill when reading his book. Here are two examples. How do you think they could have been written better?
Virgil did: like it.
But: she was deep with Wendy.
Virgil did: like it.
But: she was deep with Wendy.
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