Monday, July 26, 2010
It Doesn't Take Much
A few years ago, my partner took our kids to Florida with her family, and I sat in a meeting, thrilled to be free for a couple days. I noticed a pay phone against a wall. Look at that pay phone, I thought. It's so metallic, and three dimensional, and tactile. It's got corners, some are rounded some are not, some corners are rounded more than others. There is a thick faux wood frame around it, and a rubber cord, and a plastic receiver with bits of food and spit stuck in the speaker holes. It's so there.
There was a bell on the table to call the meeting to order, also so very tactile and ding-y, dying plants and a coffee maker, papers in varying degrees of yellowedness tacked to a bulletin board, dust bunnies on the carpet, folding chairs with people sitting in them, breathing and sipping water from plastic bottles. It all seemed trippy, like I was noticing life for the first time in years.
On Friday my 6-year-old attended a birthday party that ended at 10pm. That's definitely a millimeter outside the child-oriented universe: a children's party that ends at 10pm! Quelle European. Driving our beloved mini-van through the oily late night humidity, the streets shiny with rain, blasting Viva La Vida through the open car windows as if I were going out for the evening rather than picking my daughter and her friend from the birthday party, everything felt so different.
We dropped her friend at her house on an empty and incredibly brightly lit street. Street lamp light reflected against the wet air, creating a diffuse glare under which cicadas raged, hurting my ears. We jumped over huge puddles to get to the friend's front porch, and there we turned her over to her mother in what seemed the middle of the night, but was only 10:15. Back in the car, my daughter and I both spaced out to Because The Night, and when we arrived home, she sang pull me close, try and understand as she climbed out of the car. Turn the clock back only two hours, to 8:15, and it would have been just another humdrum day in the life of small children. Instead, it was so trippy.
Friday, July 16, 2010
Happy Friday, Everyone
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
Vacation!
I’d forgotten the joy of the Laundromat: watching your clothes spin around in the sudsy gray water, knowing unequivocally that all the pee your son soaked his PJs and blankets in during his very prolific overnight peeing activity is being enveloped in and disappeared by soapy suds that will be whisked away and replaced with clean, fresh water. It’s nice also to wash four loads at the same time. And, it reminds me of college when life was simpler and I was thinner.
Monday, July 12, 2010
Random Thoughts
On a related note, I’m trying to read Middlemarch, apparently everybody’s who’s intelligent favorite book. 800 pages! Luckily the introduction is 80 pages, so that pulls it down to 720. The first line of Book I. (of how many, I don’t dare count) did grab me:
Miss Brooke had that kind of beauty which seems to be thrown into relief by poor dress.
I like those types of observations, timeless, just as easily said yesterday.
Miss Brooke had that kind of hair which seems to be thrown into relief by bad color.
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
Ode to Light Fixtures

Still, this fixture would have remained in our dining room until time eternal had we not visited my partner's cousin's new house and spotted this bad boy hanging in her dining room.

"I love your light fixture," I said.
"I hate it," she said.
"How can you hate it?"
"It's ugly, and I've ordered a new one."
"What are you doing with this one?"
"Throwing it in the trash as soon as possible."
"Can we have it?"
"Why would you want that hideous thing?"
And that's how we wound up with this lovely fixture in our dining room. Four bulbs! We can see what we're eating for dinner!

In anticipation of our new light fixture, Sarah went on a Divine Design bender and decided to change our overall downstairs color palette from orange and brown...

Fresh, no? The color transformation took place in throw pillows and afghans. Those curtains behind the couch were replaced with the curtain draped over the couch. Oh, and not shown, we switched the living room rug (reddish) and the play room rug (blue-ish). Cheap and easy.
Monday, July 5, 2010
Thursday, July 1, 2010
Ode to Timelines
6 people (angels) agreed to review the first draft of my novel-in-progress. A chunk of the feedback had to do with the marking and passing of time, which was all too often, as I'd written it, a.) not possible b.) not likely or c.) unclear. The marked-up manuscript below illustrates:

My characters were using technology that didn't exist, talking about wars that had been fought 10 years earlier, and aging at different rates than the roman calendar. One reviewer gently suggested I create timelines of my novel on macro and micro levels: even sometimes, depending on the pace of the action, hour by hour. Here is the first one, the timeline of my character's sweet 19 year life. The timeline is six feet long:

She's in school throughout most of the story, so I had to know how old she was in each grade, and had been computing this (inaccurately) in my head. When l I created the timeline, I remembered how old you are in a certain grade depends on what month you are born. Almost always, you are two different ages per grade level. Additionally, because school starts in September, if you are born between September and December, you are older than most of your peers and if you are born June to August, you are younger than most of your peers.

Life gets pretty busy for my character between 2005 and 2007, so I made a timeline of just those two years:

Just putting in the events in the spring of 2006 makes the timeline smooshy, so I made another timeline of just those months. It's hard to see here, but I have the actual dates and days of the week marked in so no longer will the same action occur on both a Friday AND a Saturday:

There is much more timelining to do, but an unexpected payoff already is the timelines have not only helped organize the action, but the emotional arc of the story as well. For example, I kind of knew a lot happened to my character in a 2-day period; I wrote it that way after all, but when I saw all the events on a timeline, my thought was: this poor kid, she has to be freaking out! Now I have a choice: I can ratchet up her emotional state (also suggested by a reviewer) or parse the events out over a longer time span.





