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Writers
Notes Magazine Issue #3: The Independence issue includes:Words from Shelly Culbertson, Margo Dill, Stephen Donaldson, Frank Finale, C. Duane Hague, Tom Jenkins, Christopher Klim, Nina Lavander, Joe Quinn, Jason Rice, Matt Ryan, Dale T. Stuckey, Victor Walsh, and Lou Wollin Graphic story by Rich Hedden. Interview with Tim O’Brien, author of The Things They Carried. The 2005 Book Award Winners Read excerpts below! |
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“Readable, thought provoking, and
organized in an interesting way. … Emerging writers will especially appreciate
the non-snobbish approach.” – The Compulsive Reader |
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He raised both of his arms to their side, shaking his head when he noted the loose, slightly wrinkled skin around his biceps. He clinched his fists and flexed. “Yeah,” he said, smiling. The looseness disappeared, and he liked what he saw. Orville leaned his head to the side, kissing his bicep. “The guns are still here, baby. Fifty-three years old and still built like a bad ass.” Orville pointed upward, “Thank you, Jesus.” It was now time to get clean. - Born Again
Again by Matt Ryan |
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“There were a set of social morals that really changed in the late 1960’s and early 70’s where you never knew what to say, or that you had to be careful as a woman or a man, incredibly careful. This story is about what it is like to be a man or a woman.” - Tim O’ Brien, National Book Award-winning author |
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Though they never spoke to her, she made them
goddesses – serene beings that
fountained over her, living equally in worlds
of earth and sky. - Tree Woman by Frank Finale |
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Farouk filled a blue plastic bucket with warm water and soap. Bridget sat on a chair in the kitchen. She removed her shoes and socks. Her feet were pale and sweaty with the pattern of the socks impressed into her skin. Farouk placed the bucket at her feet and knelt on the blue ceramic tiles before her. He lifted one foot and placed it in the soapy water, and then the other, concentrating with bowed head and an expression of deep reverence. He placed both hands around her right ankle and massaged, slowly and firmly. He worked his way down her foot, rubbing in circles. He focused special attention on her toes, kneading in between each one in sensual pressure. As he did his magic, his breathing quickened and deepened. - A Foot Fetish in Cairo by Shelly Culbertson |
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Manmade lakes in this part of the country give greater license to the extreme air movement already encouraged by a lack of trees. El Dorado Reservoir lies on the fringe of the Flint Hills, an area of rolling range blessed with a dearth of topsoil and a plethora of root-hating chert. When wind that merely feels breezy in Wichita hits the open expanse of the Flint Hills and, beyond that, glissades for miles on the smooth lake, it turns into something bestial. It becomes a dictator whose voracious appetite swells with conflict and pity, an invisible and battering Caligula. - Boating Tips by Dale
T. Stuckey |
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Your infant moon flung, Umbilicus burned from you,
she-god sun, Stooped
low at dawn birth. - Letting Go by Nina Lavander |
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Then comes the rub. Maharaji offers “knowledge,” but we need to come forward to seek it. I can’t obtain knowledge by standing in the back. Now, Maharaji is pissing me off. If I want to work to acquire knowledge, I can return to Brooklyn and do my chemistry homework. - My Razor’s Edge by Lou Wollin |
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Having lived in the country all of our lives, many things in the city were beyond our experience, some of which were unbelievable. - Hicks by C. Duane Hague |
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on the surface he appears calm the gravity slows movement to a long perceived crawl - The Astronaut’s Suicide by Joe Quinn |
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I pretended to eat while they played their favorite game with the clipboard—Guess When So-And-So Died? My stomach felt like a jar full of fireflies had been let loose inside. - The Way It Work by Margo Dill |
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The
place reminds me of the film, The
Mission. Water cascades off knife-edge cliffs, trickles down the trellis
of branches, gushes off moss-encrusted rocks. The rock walls are sheer and
sleek. - Las Cascadas de Tamasopo by Victor Walsh |
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As
your writing proceeds, your draft work gets marred with the wounds of false
starts and changes. A mess to anyone else's eyes or brain, your thoughts
transmute into the visual product that will eventually become your finished
article. - Write by Rewriting by Tom Jenkins |
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I
think now, perhaps I reminded him of himself while demonstrating none of his
skill, a failed legacy. My father excelled in a crowd, best at acquaintances.
People were his business, his clay to mold. I was unworkable, to be
overlooked. I suffered in crowds, even threesomes, but my passion burned in
other ways, better in one-on-one meetings, unearthing the details, best alone
with women, not the son of a wife-beater who triumphs in humiliation as well,
yet I made women comfortable with their words, thoughts, and nakedness
expressed. - The Dog by Christopher Klim |
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