Sorts

Here we are again at another Friday.  The week has been quiet, with just a couple of interesting writing related blips.  One, I received a check for $219 from Readers’ Books for my commission on sales of Pearls My Mother Wore.  It may be tacky to share such info, but enough friends are curious about the money end of self-publishing, and that’s where it’s at.  Pearls has been on their shelves for over a year.  The math is not impressive.  What excites me is that my novel sold at all, and that the folks who bought it have come back and said how much they enjoyed it.  That’s golden.

Another writing point of interest, more probably to me than anyone else, is that I responded to a topic posed in The Sun magazine.  The section of the magazine is called “Readers Write.”  They throw out a topic that’s broad enough to encourage writers to tell their personal experience, and if what you wrote gets printed, then you get a free one-year subscription…and your words in print.  The topic I wrote on was “Warning Signs.”  I’ll know by Aug. 2nd if my 300 word essay will be used, and then I’ll tell you about it here.

For several weeks now, I’ve been mulling over a short story that I’d like to try and write.  I’ve started it this week, but it’s going slow.   How I wish that they would spring forth fully formed, but that is not the way. This is the first creative fiction writing project that I’ve done in over a year and a half.  As much as I’ve enjoyed writing this weekly blog, it has been the place where I have put all of my writing energy, and it’s time for me to change that.  If I’m ever going to write another novel, I need to get back into the creative writing grove.  I’m not a speed reader, and I’m not a speed writer; therefore, I’m struggling to find time to get it all done.  I’m not abandoning this little blog, but I will be shortening the subsequent post to the bare minimum.  Unless, of course, I have some kind of big news.

Before sidling up to my short story, I enjoyed the mind numbing task of organizing and sorting out all of my Word Docs into their own folders.  It took hours, and I was able to discard several megabits of duplicate and unwanted material.  When I was done, I felt that I had accomplished something significant.  I had that satisfied clean-house feeling, but honestly, it was mostly a procrastination tactic.  It’s amazing how clean the house gets when I’m avoiding something.

While sorting, I finally put all of the writing I did in another blog format into one folder.  That blog writing group was called, “A Writer is Someone Who Writes.”  I’m still friends with several of the folks from that group, who live all around the country, but alas, we drifted and our little on-line community disbanded.

Here is a flash fiction piece I wrote from a prompt thrown out in “A Writer is Someone Who Writes:”

Compelled

The doorway didn’t appear until after I had reached the end of a long, whitewashed, adobe corridor and was forced to turn right.  The grey-stone pavers were cool and rang out with my every footfall.  I slowed at the right-angle bend in the passageway to peer around the corner.  Straight ahead, molded into the thick clay walls, was a stout, ornately carved, closed door.  It couldn’t have been more than five feet high for I was taller than that opening.  I waited and examined the aged wood with its intricate carvings that seemed to expand and multiply with every passing minute.  Depicted were all varieties of plants and animal – birds in flight, swirling fish, sleeping cougars, butterflies and caterpillars, trumpet-vines, swaying cypress, lilies and cat-tails; there were snakes and beetles, monkeys and alligators, kangaroos and cockatoos.  The longer I looked the more I saw.  I was captivated by its beauty and wanted to gaze upon the wonders indefinitely, but yet, something compelled me forward.

To open the door required all of my strength.  I had to push down with all my might on its ancient, spring-loaded, cast-iron lever.  It refused to give way.  My palm blistered and stung from the urgent pressure I exerted.  I held my breath and bared-down with one final immense effort, and it released, sprang wide open, into heaven.

Frightened, I turned and ran the other way.

Have a great week, and I’ll post a little something again next Friday.

 

 

4 Responses to “Sorts”

  1. Rita says:

    I can’t believe that I forgot to say that I really like your little story. That’s an idea I think I need to try. I have no confidence that I can write fiction, but surely a few paragraphs a day could be possible, however terrible at first. Last year I tried the NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) and made it 11 days and then got stuck. I was winging it and then I did not know what the characters were going to do next. I still like those guys and still wish I could figure out a plot. Maybe it would work as a short story.

    It has been 100 degrees or close to it for many days now. I don’t have air conditioning in the house or the car. I am ok though. It cools down at night, and I am practicing for how to live without electricity. It’s not that hard once you learn a system. It’s the stuff I write about for the blog I will launch soon.

    • Terry Sue says:

      No electricity? You are such a rugged individualist. But if anyone could do it, you could.
      I’m glad you liked the little “Compelled” piece. Writing fiction is terribly daunting for me. If you can get a couple of paragraphs a day written, you’d be doing really well. Some days, I’m grateful if I can get one new sentence crafted per hour. My self talk encourages me to show up at the computer, what or how much gets produced while I’m there is none of my business. I show up for my part, and leave the rest to the forces of creativity that I can not control. :)

  2. Rita says:

    Terry Sue – I just finished reading Steven Pressfields latest little book, “Do The Work” and it fired me up. I recommend it, and his website, too.

    Now I am reading fiction (I usually just read reference material) and thinking about plots. I also did the sorting out of stored writing yesterday. And I am nearly finished with working on the house, too. I guess you could say that soon I will have no excuses left!

    • Terry Sue says:

      Good to hear from you Rita! I suspect you’re in the midst of that intense summer heat and humidity – down there in Arkansas. I feel for you. “Do The Work” sounds good as both a read and a practice.
      Here’s to running out of excuses, cheers!

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