Actually, Kristin, insent.
I go shower now.
erika, by the way, you just killed me with that piece. It's very clean and pure, and unbelievably crisp.
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
Actually, Kristin, insent.
I go shower now.
erika, by the way, you just killed me with that piece. It's very clean and pure, and unbelievably crisp.
Thanks. Funny, because I didn't write it looking for a response...just to prime the pump.
Deb, backflung. Thanks!
Kristin, back to backflungs.
Challenge 33: The Passage of Time (100 words)
Julia turns six, today. I resisted five with all my might, just last year. Just yesterday.
Where's that pretty newborn—curl atop her head? Where are the thighs with rolls so plump—the chubby cheeks? Long and lean, there's no waddle when she walks, although she will try to wiggle. Where'd the sloppy wet kisses go? Where's the infant who'd gleefully throw herself backwards with all her might, not giving one thought to me failing to hold onto her? Where is my baby? Who's this great, big, beautiful girl? Why am I blessed with ringside seats as she finds out?
Brynn, if Miriam Toews was your CW prof then we must live (or have lived?) in the same city... her Writer-in-Residence office was just down the hall from me last year.
Cindy, nice drabble.
drabbling
It was a high school graduation present, the best in portable typewriters. Where I went, it went. Hundreds of pages, dozens of characters, rolled from under the keys.
"Is that an electric?" people asked, awed at my typing speed.
"Nope."
College, to home, to college, then to Utah. It came west with me before my car did. It was my voice, and I couldn't leave it behind.
The keys became stubborn, ribbons became harder to find, and those new word processors caught my eye.
My left knee is resting against the case. I know how to create typewriter ribbons. The keys just need a little oil. I think I'll have them bury it with me.
Exxxxcellent, connie.
Remington? Royal? Olivetti?
Smith Corona.