We invited the participants to submit their stories and poems to the blog.
Here is a sample of their creativity:
Writing Exercise # 1.
Participants produced and then exchanged lists of random words. They were then asked to write a story or poem incorporating those words. Five minutes was the maximum amount of time to compete the exercise.
Random
words provided to PT DeBlois:
Dad, dog, forty, building,
gnome, piano, empty, ape, fire, water, eighty, dead, black.
His
composition:
Dad took our dog for a walk.
While they walked, they noticed an ape run down the opposite side of the
street. The ape stopped at forty Branch Street that used to be a warehouse. The
ape started to climb up the warehouse fire-escape. When he arrived at the
seventh floor, there through the window, sat a live gnome, playing a piano.
Beside the elf was an old man. He had to be close to eighty.
The ape never came down the
escape route. Instead, he looked as if he was changing into Cinderella. At the
same time, it started to rain. The water made the beautiful lady turn dead-black
in color.
Dad noticed the ugly thing fly
away into the sky.
-------
Random
words provided to Cheryl Palmer:
unknown...
unknown...
Her
composition:
Ommmm
Om,
Om, Om
“I am
calm”
Go
inside the body
Set
off the bomb
Release
the torrent
Flood
cells to their edge
Disrupting
stasis
“I’m
on a ledge”
Quiet
turns noisy
Says,
“Don’t meditate”
Think
of a message
Your
cells won’t berate
---------
Random words provided to Miriam E. Waters:
dreary, rain, spring, headache, thirsty,
mud, rushed, blank, quiet
Her
composition:
The muddy quiet born from a spring rain
rushed through my thirsty soul.
The dreary rain washed the darkness from my
heart,
leaving a blank beginning in its wake.
Exercise
(2)- 200-250 words describing an OBJECT
using all 5 senses.
Raoul Sanchez lit a blowtorch and adjusted the nozzle for
a sharp blue flame. He waved the flame back and forth over the head of the
branding iron, soon painting it orange. Ceremoniously, he carried the iron over
to a cot perched in one corner of his basement. On that cot lay his latest
victim. She was naked, face down, and unconscious from the knock-out drug he’d
slipped in her drink earlier in the evening. His heart burned with sadistic
elation as he pressed the hot metal upon one of her buttocks.
White wisps curled up for a moment and the brief sizzle
of seared flesh sifted into the quiet of the sound-proofed basement. The wisps
vanished, replaced by odors reminiscent of fried bacon and burnt hair. He
withdrew the iron. Delicate black flakes clung to its corners. After the iron
cooled, he carefully wiped it down and placed it back in its special case. The
heavy head nestled within, landing with a gentle thunk.
It was a custom-crafted tool; the Spanish word for whore
-- Puta -- was wrought in the head. Raoul had paid a friend of a friend
of a cousin for such a creation. Six hundred dollars exchanged hands: two
hundred for the labor and four hundred for the artisan’s silence, because
Raoul’s worst fear was that the branding iron’s ownership might be traced to
him…
-HT Longale
The Rocker
Maw-Maw’s gnarled hand
clutched the worn knobs on the oak rocker where they had rested so often over
her life. The wood, smooth as her aged
palms, was familiar and soothed her mind.
The rocker, a wedding gift
from her father, had been carved with great care from an oak that had towered
over her during her childhood. The
chair’s proportions were generous enough to bear the weight of a man as large as
her massive husband while cradling a child in his lap. The seat was so wide it could hold two of her
great-grandchildren as they played in the rocker.
Maw-Maw passed her hand along
the arms of the chair, tracing the grain of the wood as if reading the memories
guarded by the rocker. So many children
had been loved, and some lost, while she held them close to her breast and
rocked away endless moments.
She relaxed back into the
chair and rested her head on the companion that had carried her through births,
sorrows, and evenings’ rest. Maw-Maw studied the grooves etched into the rocker
by anxious fingers. Once reminders of a
dark time, they had evolved into a space sought out by familiar fingers for
distraction or comfort.
Maw-Maw pulled the patchwork
throw from between the twin acorns adorning the back of the chair and wrapped
it around her small frame. She began a
slow, gentle rocking to take her away, and away, and away into the beloved
past.
- Miriam E. Waters
The Christmas Cup
As I sit at my desk, I notice
my Christmas cup, even though Christmas is gone. This cup means so much when I
write. It was given to me by a dear friend, also a writer, as a gift for the
season. I always keep this cup full of coffee or hot chocolate on my desk when
I write. I call it my “writer’s cup.” I drink five to six cups of coffee a day,
then I switch to hot chocolate in the afternoons. I also use it for wine now and
then in the evening hours. So, you can see, I use my cup all day long.
I’m not superstitious, but when I am having a
bad day at editing, I feel I need to refill my cup. This makes me feel as if my
“writing cup” will increase my brain power, to help with my work.
My “writing cup” is ceramic and only holds ten
ounces of fluids, but it serves the purpose. There is a Christmas scene on the
front. It shows a beautiful red cardinal sitting on a pine branch. Red
represents Christmas. With the long needles, it must be a pine tree. Two brown
pinecones sit just above the cardinal. In the background, the color is light
grey, representing snow. It has a red lid to prevent spills.
I will always have my cup on
my desk. If it happens to break, I have an identical twin.
- P.T. DeBlois
2 comments:
Given the specific nature of the words, and the time constraint, you all did a wonderful job! Great imaginations on paper. Was fun to read each one.
Quite interesting and varied: from a revered vessel holding a muse to a seared buttock. I enjoyed all the pieces and wish I could have participated.
Post a Comment