Sunday, June 15, 2008

Playing in Colors

Red berries
Cold with morning dew
Quench my thirst

-
- Aaron Paul Lazar 2008

Good morning! I hope your day has dawned as sunny as our Sunday has here in upstate New York. Af ter a few days of drenching rain, it's rather welcome.

Let's try something new today, okay?

Frankly, I'm tired of editing for months on end. Sure, it's the natural extension of writing a dozen books - and every new book I write means there's another editing job looming on the horizon. Seems like there's not nearly enough time for just fun writing anymore. You know what I mean: that wonderful experience where the story gushes from you in dazzles of color and bursts into glorious action. Mmm. That's the best.

I just want to soak in some brilliant hues and write something fresh and new. I'm craving it, badly, and I think this morning we all deserve a few moments to stop, think, and write something deeply satisfying.

How about you? Ready for a break? Would you like to participate?

Above is a haiku I wrote last year, with an accompanying photo. Do any of the following images inspire your writer's soul?

If Haiku is your thing, try your hand at it. Post your work anytime this week, and I'll add it to this article, beneath the photo that inspired it. We'll all bask in the beauty of your words. Or something like that! ;o)

I'll post your work beneath the photos when you either send it to me via email at aaron dot lazar at yahoo.com, or simply type it into the comments box. Be sure to let me know what image inspired you.

Let us know which image inspired your poem. Remember, if you want to try a haiku, use either of the following formats (in syllables):


three


five


three

or

five


seven


five
-
One final note - if poetry isn't your thing, feel free to whip up a flash fiction piece, or perhaps the first chapter in your next novel. Or maybe you'll delve into a lovely dialogue based on someone in or near the scene of the above images.

By the way - Marta inspired me yesterday to play a bit with flash fiction through inspiration, after I'd written the above haiku/imagery piece. Funny, I guess June 14th was the day for inspiration all around. Well, it was flag day, wasn't it? Maybe there's something in that! I've posted my piece written in 15 minutes below - not very elegant or "edited," by any means, but it was fun. I based it on the challenge by Donna Sundblad's Pumping Your Muse writing prompt blog to write about a crime that takes place while hiking. Sorry it makes this blog a little long today, but most of it is just pictures!
-
Are you ready to write? Okay, good. Now get busy!

-Aaron

Sky reflected in stream

Perfect inversion

A blameless sky at my feet

Today, I'll touch it

- SW Vaughn

Still morning water

Reflecting glorious sun

Also stills my soul


- Rhetta A.


Salmon poppies in early morning

Fluttery and pink

Lifting flirty twirling skirts

Dancing a can can
- Patricia F.


Ah, the wild glory

A field of salmon poppies

So extravagent!
- Rhetta A


Like pink tissue bowls

Holding berried cabernet

Raising us a toast
- Patricia F.


Salmon poppies sing

Delicate pink and black songs

Refreshed I am now
- Cori Anders



Light through windows, courtesy of grandson, Gordie (4)


Johnson's blue geranium




Foggy field at dawn



Roses in afternoon sun


Day has come and gone

Her roses swallow the light

Hold it there for me


- Patricia F.

Winter sunrise

Feathered sky

Hills gilded in pink

Wake my soul


- Patricia F




Abandoned doorway

Come home soon

Wayward family.

I wait here.


- Patricia F.


"He went out to get some kindling," Mary said, looking through the clouded window at a robin on a branch. "Never came back. Just left the barrel there on the stoop." Her knarled hands lay in her lap like nesting birds."But he'll come home again. I'll just wait here. He can't be too much longer.""Miss Mary?" A voice rattled the windows of her mind. "It's about time you got out of bed. Breakfast is getting cold. And there's Bingo today down in the Rec Room."Mary closed her eyes against the light. The robin tapped at her window, begging to be let in.


- Patricia F.,

***

Here's the flash fiction I wrote based on Donna Sunblad's prompt. Just for fun!

She saw it all in slow motion again, sitting there on the rocks high above the Letchworth Gorge. She saw the blood pool in the dirt on the trail and the calm hand that pulled the pocketknife out of her boyfriend’s back.

The musty smell of wet leaves coated the inside of her mouth. She ran her tongue over her lips, noticing for the first time a warm salty wound where she’d bit through the skin. Somehow, it tasted good. And the distraction felt welcome.

This way, she wouldn’t have to think about him. The way his dull brown eyes had dimmed and gone dark when she’d turned him over. She banged her fist against her head over and over again.

“Stupid! Stupid! Stupid!”

The attack had been unexpected, out of the blue. She turned her attention to the rock on which she perched, ready to fly into the abyss. Mica sparkled from its crevices. She picked at a large piece, dislodging it and looking at her spooky eye in the reflection.

She wanted to cry. She wanted to scream. But her brain clamped down on her so hard she had to squirm in place rather than give in.

Squinting at the crows that cackled overhead in the beech tree, she shouted up to them.

“Shut up!” They responded, and one flew in lazy circles, close to her.

She felt the panic rise again. Pictured Fred’s eyes when he told her about Lucy. Pictured the calm red surf that had filled her heart and had made her reach for the knife, oh so slowly.

Oh yes. He’d deserved to die. He’d really had it coming.

She stood, brushed her bloody hands on her jeans, and leapt from the cliffs to the glistening river water that curved in a metallic ribbon below.


***


Aaron Paul Lazar writes to soothe his soul. The author of LeGarde Mysteries and Moore Mysteries enjoys the Genesee Valley countryside in upstate New York, where his characters embrace life, play with their dogs and grandkids, grow sumptuous gardens, and chase bad guys. Visit his websites at http://www.legardemysteries.com/ and http://www.mooremysteries.com/ and watch for his upcoming release, MAZURKA, coming in 2008.

5 comments:

Mayra Calvani said...

Hi there!

HI there, haikus aren't my thing and I'm not in a flash fiction mood, but I was wondering... how many books do you write a year and how long does it take you to write a whole novel? Do you write a minimum set amount of pages a day?

You've written many books is a short time, so I was wondering.

Thanks! :-)
Mayra

Aaron Paul Lazar said...

Hi, Mayra. How sweet of you to ask. ;o) Well, in the beginning, when I didn't think about agents or publishing houses or promotion or blog tours or networking emails or.... all of the accompanying "stuff," I used to write a chapter a day toward a new book. I would create one in about 2-3 months, then put it aside and start on the next one. That went on for a few years, then of course I decided I ought to actually pay attention to trying to get published. LOL. Once that started, and the need to promote came about, it slowed me down. Some years I do two new books a year, other years one book. It all depends on the timing of published works. This year is going to be crazy, because after Tremolo, which came out last November, I have two more ready to go to print, Mazurka, and Healey's Cave. Sigh. I wrote these books years ago, but now they are all tumbling out into print and it's a crazy, crazy time. Thanks for asking, Mayra, and good luck on your new book, The Slippery Art of Book Reviewing.

s.w. vaughn said...

Yay! Haiku! :-)

-------

Perfect inversion
A blameless sky at my feet
Today, I'll touch it

s.w. vaughn said...

Ooh - and what a cool, creepy little story you've written here! :-)

(I stopped to write my haiku after the first image, so I had to go back and read the rest of the post. LOL)

Aaron Paul Lazar said...

Oh, SW, what a wonderful haiku! I knew you'd come through for me. Thank you!