Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Adventure of Summertime

Hello!

The season for days blanketed by the intense sun, and sapphire nights dancing with stars is here! And of course my favorite thing about this season is the abundant time I have to read and write!

I have created quite the summer reading list. One I kept dreaming about during the last few weeks of school.

First up on my Summer Reading List is none other than '"Juliet" by Anne Fortier. I have read this book a couple times before, but it's enchanting world of Romeo and Juliet still has an affect on me. There's nothing quite like warm, golden Tuscany to kickstart Summer. Of course it also helps that the most romantic of all couples are the center of this novel.

Here's a book trailer for this romantic tale.


And if you also want to get reading for the summer you can start with my short story that was recently published in an art journal if you would like.


                                 The Hushed Tone of a Symphony

She had fingers designed to romance piano keys, the woman whom my father had loved. Occasionally, when dusk would drift in through the windows of our home, father would sit at the family piano and trace the instruments black and white teeth. No one in our family had the talent that is needed to entice a piano to sing, and yet in every childhood memory there the piano was, guarded in the background. Father was the only member who was allowed to sit at the piano bench. At times when I was supposed to have been tucked away in my bed, I would sneak down to watch father’s hands fall over the forgotten keys, his fingers like kisses upon the worn ivory.
When dusk made way for the moon father would get up from his spot and join my mother on the porch, their hands blended into one flesh. My mother never questioned the reason for a piano that no one played and took up such valuable space in her parlor. She dutifully dusted it, and made sure us children only grabbed it with our eyes.
Once when I was seven and had entered into the phase of life where curiosity filled my mind more than playground games, I opened the lid on top of the piano bench and met the matured photograph of the woman whom my father had loved. She was posed by the very piano I was standing next to, her classic hands draped over the keys, sharing secrets. My seven year old brain didn’t understand the heart’s melancholy memory. That evening when father came home he was at a loss for why I handed him a picture of my mother and told him I liked this one better.
Father didn’t realize I had found the picture of the woman from his youth, who had married his soul until I was sixteen and had tried to sneak out to meet a boy. We sat across from one another at the kitchen table etched with devoted dinner conversations. He slid a cup of coffee to me, “You want to tell me why you were out whispering on the front porch when you should be sleeping?” I gulped down the coffee in reply, my cheeks still burnt with the fever that afflicts young hearts when the moon was entirely too silver. Father looked down into his own cup, his smile reflecting off the dark liquid. “Love is always the strongest at the most inconvenient times isn’t it?”
“Maybe we are the inconvenient ones.” I prodded the coffee mug back to him.
Father nodded. “We can be.”
“Were you ever?”
He clinked our mugs together. “Fathers are never inconvenient.”
I thought of the woman in the photograph, her eyes the shade of promise. “You weren’t always a father.”
He looked over the mugs, the photograph mirrored in his aging face. His eyes dropped with remembrance as he stood. “That was a long time ago, sweetheart.” He moved past me to the stairs angled near the piano. “Go to bed now.”
My eyes followed his leather shoes up to the room he shared with my slumbering mother. When the door clicked close I tip toed to the piano. I hovered my hand over the reserved keys, my fingers too unholy to graze something so sacred. It was a long time ago, father had said, and yet it could have been yesterday. A moment gone but still treasured in memory.
I didn’t learn to sympathize with the piano until I walked around with a tarnished engagement ring hung around a chain on my neck. It was my constant companion along with the empty echo of vows never declared. My siblings had all spread their roots from the house of our childhood, but I had returned much like the way a horse finds home when abandoned in the forest. I learned to spend my days in a delicate manner, not leaving my room until dusk wrapped its arms around the world in a quiet goodbye. When the orange light strolled in through the windows I would sit by my father on the piano bench, which had now made room for two.
“You never learned to play.” I told him.
“Never.”
I watched his hand comfort the sad smile of the piano. “She—She didn’t teach you?”
Father played a note. My ears buzzed at the piano’s peaceful voice. “No. She didn’t need to. Watching her play was the point.” He hit another note that mingled in with the dusky air, rising until it wasn’t a part of us anymore.
“Why do you remember?” The engagement ring fell across my chest.
“Why would I forget?” He picked up my hand and laid it on the keys, the recollections of a protected antique love that dreamed inside the piano rippled through my fingers.
“But she only lives in your memory.” The engagement ring sighed against my skin.
Father pressed my hand down, sending up a melody, “Then she still lives.”
That night I laid to rest my engagement ring next to the photograph of the woman my father had loved, not in a grave but in an eternal treasure. The lid closed not with a sound of finality that I had expected but with the hushed tone of a symphony.



Thursday, March 20, 2014

The Adventure of the Romantic Hero



Nearly everybody gets twitterpated in the springtime.

But, this feeling of floating on clouds isn't just around in the spring for those who read.

Love at first sight? More like, love at first paragraph.

There is a fever known to many readers as "Fictionalitis". It is a sickness that has no cure. Yes, this is the condition in where people are in love with fictional characters. Every reader is guilty of this. These characters float right out of the black and white pages of our favorite books and right into our hearts where they refuse to leave. Not that we mind.

You never forget your first love.

Mine was none other than Gilbert Blythe, the hero from one of the best books known to literature, Anne of Green Gables. Anne might not have liked when he called her "carrots", but I certainly found it charming.


But even as bad as it may be to carry torch for a fictional character, the fall is even harder when you go head over heels for a character you wrote for your own story.

Of this I am quite guilty.

In fact, in the novel I'm writing right now (on page 82) I just introduced the romantic hero. I know, I'm already on page 82 and am just now introducing the romantic hero? Trust me, he's worth the wait.  There's nothing like a handsome fictional character to get your inspiration tank to full.

Now, it might be those blossoms that are hugging tree branches in the spring sunshine that is making my sentimental heart want to write about a romantic hero. For a hopeless romantic such as myself, writing about the leading man and how he settles in the heart of the main character is always my favorite part. It's also the part I work the hardest at. The romance is the heart of the story and therefore the beat needs to be strong and true.

I had my writing partner read the first part where I introduce the romantic hero and judging by her giggles, I'm guessing he had the same effect on her as he does on me.

Hopefully one day you will read my novel and fall in love with the romantic hero as well!

Enough rambling for now!




Wednesday, March 5, 2014

The Adventure of Peter Pan

I'm back! 

And it's only been a week!

Be proud!

As before mentioned I have been writing every day and I said I would put some different short stories on here. So here we go!

I might be a fairy tale believer, and some of you already know this. 

So it probably won't be a shock about the subject of this next story!


                                           Never Grow Up

            “ ‘All of this has happened before, and it will all happen again’.” I breathed, mustering up every ounce of enchantment in my voice.
            “I’m pretty sure this has never happened before.” My friend, Julie scoffed, her sarcasm covering my darkened backyard.
            “Now, missy, is that any kind of attitude to have?” I demanded as I closed my well-worn copy of Peter Pan and put away my story-telling voice.
            Her sigh winged its way over to me through the darkness. “And what exactly is the attitude I’m supposed to have? Why did you even bring that old book out here? It’s too dark to read.”
            I snuggled deeper inside the blanket covering my shoulders, “Yeah, because that’s what I was doing…reading it…not reciting it from memory.”           
            “You have Peter Pan memorized?” Her disbelief covered me more than my blanket.
            I reached for my binoculars. “You say that like it’s a bad thing.”
            “It’s not…if you’re ten! It’s the eve of your eighteenth birthday!”
            I looked through the binoculars, searching behind every star. “Your point? And, where are your binoculars? You’re supposed to be watching the roof!”
            With a groan, I heard Julie fidget with her own binoculars before she continued. “We should be doing something adventurous. But no, we are out here sitting in the cold, catching pneumonia like two old ninnies.”
            I dropped my binoculars in my lap. “Hey! Don’t make me any older than I already am.”
            Julie looked over at me, her binoculars reflecting off the moonlight, her eyes taking on the glow of fairy dust. “Speaking of ‘older’, don’t you think you are just a bit too old for this?”
            I leaned back and took in the show of the night sky, complete with shooting stars. “ ‘This’ being?”
            “Jane! You are turning eighteen tomorrow, and we are looking for Peter Pan!”
            I smiled at the sparkling night, “I fail to see the problem here.”
            “And that’s what scares me.”
            I tucked my arm behind me, turning it into a pillow. “The only thing scaring me is the possibility of missing Peter, because you keep forgetting to watch the roof!”
            “Jane!”
            “And as for you, the only thing you should be scared about are pirates, especially Captain Hook.”
            Julie threw herself down on the ground by me and peered over me, her face blocking my view. “Jane, listen to me. Peter Pan and Captain Hook aren’t real.”
            I shoved her away. “Excuse me please. You are blocking my view. Sounds to me that you need a little more faith, trust and…”
            “No! Don’t even say it!” She completely collapsed onto the ground and rolled over onto her back.
            “Pixie dust!” I finished, my storyteller voice in full effect.
            “I can just see us now. We are going to be old ninnies with pneumonia in wheelchairs still looking for Peter Pan.”
            I blinked the stars from my vision and sat up. “No…no that won’t be us.”
            Julie sat up, her binoculars still glued to her face. “Why not?”
            My sigh shot across my backyard like the shooting stars in the sky. “Because, by then we will be grown up.”
            Julie put her binoculars down. “Oh.”
            “Yep. Once you’re grown up, you can’t ever go to Never land.”
            “Is that what this is all about?”
            I hid behind my binoculars. “I turn eighteen tomorrow. It’s my last chance to go to Never land and not grow up.”
            “What’s so bad about growing up?”
            “I forgot. You’re already eighteen.” I threw my head back searching for the second star to the right.
            “What does that have to do with anything?” Julie joined me in looking, following my gaze.
            “Because you’ve already forgotten!”
            “Forgotten what?”
            I threw my binoculars down. “What its like to be young! To have dreams. Not get caught up in the way the rest of the world is.”
            Julie picked up my binoculars. “What are you talking about Jane?”
            “Every one always has dreams. But they all end up settling and then the next thing they know, life has passed them by and everything they wanted is out of their reach. People forget what it’s like to have a young and hopeful heart.”
            “You think that’s going to happen to you?”
            “It’s what happens to everyone.” I played with the unraveling fabric on my blanket.
            Julie handed me back my binoculars. “I don’t think that’s going to happen to you.”
            “How?”
            “Because you won’t ever be like those people.”
            I looked back at the sky. “How do you know that?”
            “Because I don’t think any of those other people have the faith like you do.”
            I smiled at the moon. “Really?”
            “Would anyone else be sitting outside waiting for Peter Pan?”
            I replied with picking my binoculars back up and searching the skies.
            Julie laughed as she followed pursuit. “You know, if Peter Pan does indeed show up tonight, I have a bone to pick with him?”
            “And what would that be?”
            “He didn’t come to take me away to Never land.”
            I almost dropped my binoculars again. “Is that right?”
            Julie tightened her grip on her binoculars. “You’re not the only one who has Peter Pan memorized.”
            I shrugged. “Well just keep thinking happy thoughts. He will show up.”
            “How can you be so sure?”
            I cleared my throat. “ ‘All of this has happened before and it will happen again.’”

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

The Adventure of Getting the Ball Rolling



My name is Robyn, and I am a horrible blogger.

If it helps, I do think about you all the time my dear little blog. But, I do believe that is no excuse for not writing a blog in four months. Four months!

Again, if it helps, I have hardly written anything in these last four months.

In my defense, school is a bully and doesn't like to share me with my writing world. Does writing essays count as 'writing'?

Have no fear! That is all about to change.

You see, one of the main reasons I have taken a "vacation" from writing, is not only has Inspiration refused to come visit me, but his evil twin Discouragement has decided to move in. For about a month I have shied away from anything that was story related, feeling every drop of doubt.

Battling such feelings of doubt and fear of being a horrible writer is probably all a part of the job. But, I won't let it conquer me.

I have heard multiple times that an author should write every day. And I am now taking this to heart. I decided to go back to my roots of writing with a smooth pen on a fresh piece of paper, rather than typing the days away. Seeing blue ink smudged on my hand, might be one of the homiest feelings I could muster. I am reminded of the days when I was a little girl and would lug around a Hello Kitty binder jammed with random papers with my unreadable writing scrawled over every inch of every page. This new method is already healing my wounds of doubt and bringing me back to the reason I write anyway. I am hopelessly, head over heels in love with the way words flow from my heart and onto the page.

So, every day I find a new writing prompt and jot down a small story in my little writing journal. And I will upload some of those stories onto here.

I know what you're thinking. Uh-huh, sure, we've heard that before. We won't hear from you again in another 7 months!

I don't blame you for the lack of faith.

But, I feel like I have learned a lesson in my aspiring author career. Nothing will keep me from writing again, especially something as silly as doubt. When something is your heart's desire, it was probably put there for a reason and you should hold onto it and cherish it.

See you soon!

Enough rambling for now!