Good News on the Writing Front

I just got word that my play “Movie Time” has been chosen as a finalist in the National 10 Minute Play Contest. According to the letter, there were over a 1000 plays submitted. Unfortunately, they don’t mention how many made it to finalist stage, but still, it’s good news:

All ten-minute plays will be considered for the Heideman Award ($1000), the Humana Festival of New American Plays, City Theatre’s Summer Shorts Festival and the Short Cuts Tour. Plays that meet the following criteria will also be considered for the annual Actors Theatre Apprentice Showcase: age range 18-28; minimal sets, minimal props, minimal costume requirements. Link

Considering that I haven’t had much luck with my writing lately (I didn’t mention it, but I received a second rejection for my story “Birds on a Wire”), this news definitely put a smile on my face.

The winner won’t be announced until January of 2010, but in the meantime, “Movie Time” could be picked up for production by any of the companies involved with the contest. If I hear any more news, you’ll be the first to know.

On 39

selfportrait1-070909

Yesterday I turned 39 years old. I was about to write “I’m not quite sure how I feel about that,” but in all honesty I can say I’m not terribly thrilled with my age, at least this year. Partly due to circumstances and partly due to my own choices, I am struggling with myself and my place in the world rather more than I’d like at this age. I may expand a bit on this over the next few days, but I may not. We’ll see.

In the meantime, however, I have chosen to begin two new project that I’d like to share with you. The first is my Project 365. If you are unfamiliar with the concept, the idea is to take and post a picture every day for a year. You’ll see that I’ve added a page for the project where you will see a slideshow of my pictures to date. Last fall, I did a weeks worth of photos while I was doing a temp job in Providence and quite enjoyed the idea of trying, each day, to find something new to appreciate around me, or finding a new way to see the things I see each and every day. I am hoping that this project will focus my attention, at least a little, on the here and now, and on my surroundings in ways that help me see more of the beautiful, interesting, disturbing, wondrous, and profound aspects of life that are all around me.

The other project, which I’m starting on Monday, is a riff on a challenge I made to myself when in New Mexico last year. I never managed to rise to the challenge of writing 500 words for 50 consecutive days. This time around, I am scaling back and will challenge myself to write at least 250 words of fiction for 25 consecutive days. One of the reasons for the less ambitious goal is that its important for me to challenge myself, but also learn how to do so in a realistic way, one that allows for the possibility of success. Once I finish the 25 days, I plan to take a week off and then challenge myself with 300 words for 30 days, give myself another week off, then 400 words for 40, a week off, then get back to 500 words for 50 days.

I will probably post some of my writing here, but only if I’ve written really short flash fiction of 500 words or less. Any stories that are in development won’t go up on the site, but I will be giving updates and letting you know how that challenge is proceeding.

Despite my current emotional and mental uneasiness, I do look forward to the coming year as well as the challenges and opportunities (really two sides of the same coin, but I often forget that fact), the future brings.

Finally, I’d like to take a moment to thank all of my regular readers. There may not be a whole lot of you, but what you lack in quantity you make up for in quality. Thanks for putting up with my sometimes maudlin and pretentious ramblings.

Amazon Links & Radio Paradise

Since I can no longer be an Amazon Affiliate because of a recent law passed by the RI General Assembly, I’ve decided to use the Radio Paradise Affiliate link whenever I post links to Amazon because I feel like someone should be able to take advantage of the few dollars this website generates and because, if you haven’t noticed by now, Radio Paradise is my favorite internet radio station. So, if you are interested in any of the books, movies, or music I mention or review, I hope you will consider buying through the links I provide in order to help support a truly eclectic and independent radio station.

For those of you who aren’t familiar with Radio Paradise, here’s a recent set list to show just how inclusive and wide-ranging the music is: Continue reading

Music You May Have Missed – Mazzy Star

Mazzy Star

Hope Sandoval & David Roback
w/ contributions by Jill Emery, Keith Mitchell, Suki Ewers, Will Glenn, Kurt Elzner
Links: Wikipedia, Last.Fm, Fan Site
Albums: She Hangs Brightly, So Tonight That I Might See, Among My Swan

“Into Dust”
Still falling
Breathless and on again
Inside today
Inside me today
Around broken in two
Til your eyes share into dust
Like two strangers turning into dust
Til my hand shook with the weight of fear
I could possibly be fading
Or have something more to gain
I could feel myself growing colder
I could feel myself under your fate
Under your fate
It was you, breathless and torn
I could feel my eyes turning into dust
Into strangers, turning into dust
Turning into dust
Turning into dust


When I lived in Berkeley, CA I was the night manager at a place called Gramma’s Rose Garden Inn. I was in my mid-twenties and while I spent a considerable amount of time thinking about the books and movies I was going to write, I spent an equally considerable amount of time not writing and instead, kinda just . . . well, hung out on and around Telegraph Ave, doing my night manager gig, dealing with the occasional crazy guest (remind me to tell you about Charlotte Butterwing someday), and working part time at the local Waldenbooks. It was not a particularly good time, but neither was it particularly bad. Berkeley was a very in-between place and time for me.

One day, the cleaning staff came across a cd that had been left in a room. I don’t remember if the staff asked if I wanted it or if they merely put it with other lost items and I “claimed” it. The album was Mazzy Star’s So Tonight That I Might See. I still have that cd and, while I enjoy Mazzy Star’s other albums, this is the music I most associate with the band and the album I will listen to the most.

I could talk about Hope Sandoval’s strangely distant but intimate voice, I could talk about Roback’s guitar burrowing beneath the lyrics and exposing the harsh dissonance that lies within our experiences of loss and love and pain. And yes, there are influences of The Doors and Velvet Underground in this music, but there is sadness to much of Mazzy Star’s music that threatens to reveal the listener’s own emotions in ways that Jim Morrison’s machismo and Velvet Underground’s drug-fueled intellectualism often failed to achieve. But what I most want to talk about is the perfect setting to listen to So Tonight That I Might See.


Imagine you are in a dark bar. The light is gritty and the air is thick with smoke. It’s late, closing in 3:00 am and you’ve spent the night with a woman you met only six hours ago. Introduced by a friend of a friend kind of thing. Her green eyes have already swallowed up your heart and the taste of lip-gloss and whiskey sours will forever bring you back to this night in memory of her kiss. You are tired, but electrified by her touch. You hold her on the dance floor, your slow dancing slowing to barely more than breathing and embracing. Bodies tight. You can feel her heartbeat and smell the dark, almost cinnamon scent of her neck.

Mazzy Star is playing in the background.


Fade Into You Official Video Link

Flowers in December Video:

Blue Flower Live:

So Tonight That I Might See Live in Paris 1993:

Roseblood:

Thank You, Rhode Island General Assembly, Thank You So Very Much

I received this email from the Amazon Associates Program earlier this week:

We are writing from the Amazon Associates Program to notify you that your Associates account has been closed as of June 29, 2009. This is a direct result of the unconstitutional tax collection scheme passed by the Rhode Island General Assembly with a veto-proof majority. As a result, we will no longer pay any referral fees for customers referred to Amazon.com or Endless.com after June 29. We were forced to take this unfortunate action in anticipation of actual enactment because of uncertainties surrounding the legislation’s effective date. The governor could sign the bill — or have his veto overridden — any day now.

Please be assured that all qualifying referral fees earned prior to June 29, 2009 will be processed and paid in full in accordance with our regular referral fee schedule. Based on your account closure date of June 29, 2009, any final payments will be paid by September 1, 2009.

In the event that Rhode Island repeals this tax collection scheme, we would certainly be happy to re-open our Associates program to Rhode Island residents.

The Rhode Island General Assembly’s website is http://www.rilin.state.ri.us/, the governor’s website is http://www.governor.ri.gov/, and additional information may be obtained from the Performance Marketing Alliance at http://www.performancemarketingalliance.com/.

We have enjoyed working with you and other Rhode Island-based participants in the Amazon Associates Program, and wish you all the best in your future.


Best Regards,

The Amazon Associates Team

I made a couple of bucks off of my Amazon Associate’s account, nothing substantial at all. But those few dollars were a nice extra and would occasionally let me get a cd or a book. In a state with one of the highest unemployment rates in the country, our government officials are seemingly bent on figuring new and different ways to screw over RI residence.

Good going there, Gentleman and Ladies. I appreciate just how much you are “working” for the people of this state.