Archive for Eve Kotyk

Friends

Dear L.,

Did I ever tell you about my friend Jackson? We met about a year or so ago. I was in a really grumpy mood and sometimes when I’m grumpy it is a really good time to pull out my drawing book and art materials to draw. Drawing is funny that way. One minute your, happy, or grumpy or just neutral, but when you start to draw you forget all about those things, and you only notice how your pen or crayon feels moving on the paper. It’s a very good feeling. This time a little boy — smaller than you, showed up on my paper. He was outside and he was look through a window into a room with at a toy train in it. I could tell he really wanted to play with that train and I felt kind of sad for him. But he wasn’t sad. He told me that sometimes you just get left out of things, and that’s okay. He told me his name was Jackson and that he liked to think. “Sometimes,” he said, “other people don’t understand quiet people who like to think.” I told him that I knew all about that and then we just smiled at each other and we knew we were friends.

I guess you could say Jackson was an imaginary friend, and isn’t that just the best thing about imagination? You can make any friends you want.

XOXO

Grandma

Voice

Opera Diva Strikes Again

Opera Diva

David Corbett over at Murderati has got me thinking about voice in fiction writing. Below I’ve got 5 story openings. I haven’t put down the authors because it is interesting to read them without having the author’s prestige, or lack thereof tied to the quotes. Even in these few opening lines, each voice is quite distinct. Who do you read because their voice is just so compelling?

1.In his seventeenth year of life, Jai gained an empire and lost everything he valued.

Stately buildings faced a plaza tiled in white and grey stone. clouds hung low in the sky, their drizzle saturating the air. Evening had come, a time when the heat of the sixty-two-hour day on the world Delos called enough to make the temperature tolerable for its human colonists

2. The world is full of broken people. splints, casts, miracle drugs, and time can’t mend fractured hearts, wounded minds, torn spirits.

Currently, sunshine was Micky Bellsong’s medication of choice, and southern California in late August was an apothecary with a deep supply of this prescription.

3. The ministry of State Security had been positively shocked when they found that a Nazi agent, more heroic than prudent, had almost reached N. Rogov.

Rogov was worth more to the Soviet armed forces than any two air armies, more than three motorized divisions. His brain was a weapon, a weapon fo the Soviet power.

4. Clayton Sparrow lay in bed, head propped on a hand. His gaze traveled the length of Anna Wassar’s back, muscled like a swimmers, it flowed to a deep curve just before it melded into the opulent rise of her buttocks. With his forefinger he traced the line of his gaze.

“So you see how important it is to go. There is so much to be learned.”

“Hmmm,” murmured Clay. He hadn’t a clue what she was talking about, and now was no time to ask and risk putting her off.

5. This is Lexie Madison’s story, not mine. I’d love to tell you one without getting into the other, but it doesn’t work that way. I used to think I sewed us together at the edges with my own hands, pulled the stitches tight and I could unpick them anytime I wanted. Now I think it always ran deeper than that and farther, underground; out of sight and way beyond control.