Always Reading /// Always Writing
Always Reading /// Always Writing
The work below is absolute and undeniable proof that I occasionally write for love and not for money <3
Where the time went
Margot James.
April + May Roundup
Dawdling around a self-imposed deadline.
Piano Prodigy Laney Booker’s Big Night
Laney’s public debut as a piano prodigy was a point of serious contention between her mother and father. Marilyn’s misgivings about it were palpable even before any serious argument arose, having guarded her girl’s gifts for years like they were precious, delicate jewels.
March Roundup
The Mountain Lion, Lanark, and 2001 made March a pretty wonderful reading month.
February Roundup
Several shorties, one behemoth, and a handful of what I’d somewhat arbitrarily regard as “normal” novels.
The Spoils of Corinth
I do love it here. In here. Out here. Where the elevation reaches equilibrium again, this small stretch of woods just wide enough to obscure all intrusions of neighborly indiscretion. Four acres—not so much in Vermont—but four acres bordered by at least as many on the left and right sides and bound at the far end by the creek, a good one, a small river really, a walking path astride to link the properties, far from any buildings, where in one year of daily wanderings I’d never seen another soul, at least not dog or man, and bears only twice.
Montreal Secrets, Révélés
If any sort of shopping is in the pipeline, I recommend Drawn and Quarterly, which also takes you smack dab to the middle of the Mtl hipster district (Mile End). It's not as bad as Williamsburg. There's plenty to do, just look around. You don't need my help over there.
La Cabra, VT
Edward, not quite knowing how to hide or to sneak, dressed himself in his father's mighty black bear coat, which felt to Edward like an invisibility cloak, but looked to most like a black bear. And so Edward was nine years old the first time he took a bullet, though thankfully the hunter that nicked him wasn't too good of a shot.
Gertrude
Gertrude’s routine has been without deviation every single day since the world ended. This is not to say, however, that it bears any resemblance to her pre-apocalyptic routine, which was filled with amorous pleasantries and gastronomical curiosities and plenty of exercise. Hers was a certain springtime, always and everywhere, a vignette upon itself in soft sinking brushstrokes until Armageddon tore it apart.
Charizard, Patrick Ewing, and the Fickle Meaning of a Moment
I was a kid of the late 90's and early 00's. For most of my peers, Pokemon was this period’s pinnacle of entertainment, creating that vicarious adventure that kids crave. In ways both refreshing and weird, basketball filled that niche for me, card collecting and all.