Haiku: Winter in MN

birches at day’s end: the sun chooses at random several to keepsprightly chickadee
sticks beak in snow. emerges.
with frosty goatee.

birches at day’s end:
the sun chooses at random
several to keep

sage lichen dabbled
on a gray and white canvas
a subtle beauty

two lonesome brothers kept each other company for a centuryrainy December.
a red flag slices the drab:
northern cardinal

two lonesome brothers
kept each other company
for a century

four open perches;
nuthatches and chickadees
take turns on just one

eaglenestred-breasted nuthatch
throws out several black seeds
before taking one

high above the trees
eagle nest waits silently
for coming spring brood

A wasps’ paper orb
hangs fragilely on a branch
over the river.

Haiku from a Deer Stand

Though it ended with no venison in the freezer, the weekend was not lost. Two amazing days in Creation are medicine for any soul. While I sat awaiting my quarry, I filled my notebook with the inspirations and the experience of basking in God’s handiwork– even if man did interrupt the tranquility with distant traffic noise and low-flying planes. And so… a few haikus from a tree stand:

My body shivers.
I see my breath in brisk air.
Sun’s rising warms me.

A nuthatch of Payne’s,IMG_3126
enters his cozy knot hole.
Then re-emerges.

three pink ribbons dance
tied to small trees marking lines
that men imagine

Breaking winter grays:
green moss, lichens sage and gold.
The trees are still dressed.

Five clean, white birches
stand neatly in a straight row.
One leans in to kiss.

I hear ‘swish’ above.
look to see, just over trees,
an eagle fly low

IMG_3127a blue jay clamors.
he leaps branch to branch squawking
oddly musical

A lonely, charred stump
recalls a forest fire
a century past.

squir’l scampers through leaves.
stops to devour a feast:
a cupcake I tossed

Long strings of black pearls
adorn the tall, gray lady
with green, bristled hair

IMG_3128

I came for the deer
but now I’m hunting for words
to write my haiku.

among the drab hues
a sudden flash of azure
wings flourishing white

invisible thread
catches the sun, glints silver
and then disappears

Tree shadows lengthen
reaching to end a short day
and silence the woods.

 

 

The Sinking Ship Sailor

“Aye! Ahoy! but never Avast!” The sinking ship sailor would call.
From port to port and ship to ship his feet would step from deck to deck
to ride the waves and raise the mast and set the sails on many a vessel.
But never upon a brig with speed,
Never a schooner that caught a breeze.
Never a barque that sailed with ease.
Nay!

The ships he chose were filled with holes, the sails were limp, the oars were rot.
The hulls were holed so water flowed and filled the hold
and so the ships were slowed …
at best.
Not all was bust, I must confess! The anchors worked! Or so I jest.

Always in a state of sinking, whatever was this sailor thinking?
Did he find it cause to gloat to sail on ships that barely float?
Or did he find it better yet to walk in trousers always wet?
If he sought to sail unseen, he could have sailed a submarine.
Always in a state of sinking, whatever was this sailor thinking?

“Aye! Ahoy! but never Avast!” The sinking ship sailor would call.
To run aground or slowly sink he’d choose a ship as if a plank
to walk. And not just one, nay always more, he’d hop across a whole armada.
But always upon a failing fleet,
Always flotillas that wet his feet.
Always a navy too easily beat.
Aye!

His shanghaied self was far from help, the self-slaved whelp, the soggy salt.
The galley slave of volunteer was without fear,
Or so it would appear…
to most.
He was not brave, I would object! He was a fool! So I suspect.

Always in a state of sinking, whatever was this sailor thinking?
Did he aim to be a captain saving ships whose death was certain?
Or did he find a great adventure serving ships of wet indenture?
If he sought to lead a crew, a proven ship would surely do.
Always in a state of sinking, whatever was this sailor thinking?

“Aye! Ahoy! but never Avast!” The sinking ship sailor would call.
Every ship the swab would pick was moments from a deathly quick,
and every choice, non-buoyant hunks of Chinese junk that were not fit for cargo.
But maybe he wasn’t just a knave.
Maybe there’s cause for time he gave.
Maybe he found them ships to save.
Maybe?

Some ships he chose were treasures still, the sails had soul, their pasts were rich.
The ships were bold when tales were told of legends old
and so the ships were gold …
to some.
There’s no logic, I would conclude! To his in drench’ed servitude! Or so I shrug.
Until he’d find one long at last
whose glory wasn’t in the past;
Until one day he’d climb a mast
and for the first time shout, ‘Avast!’

Published in Inkwell Spring 2017 Bethany Lutheran College

Closure: a veteran’s inner skirmish (a novella)

Project: Write a novel. (i.e. convert my stage play into a novel)

Status: In progress. (writing complete. edits and illustrations in progress)

Narrative:

February 10, 2013

After completing Closure: a veteran’s inner skirmish and seeing it produced on stage, I imagined a novel format would be a way to reach a larger audience and tell the story in ways that are not possible on stage. Therefore, NaNoWriMo gave me the push I needed to get started in November 2012. I didn’t complete the goal of 50,000 words in a month, but I got it up to about 23,000 words and from here I continue writing efforts. The research and brainstorming of the play started in December 2011, and here over a year later I have found myself again returning to research to fill in details of the depicted Civil War battle scenes. Finding that most novels are 70,000-100,000 words, I’m not sure at this point if I’ll reach that number. I have other ideas of  adding a number of illustrations equal to or greater than the number of chapters. These illustrations will be done in the style of battlefield illustrators of the time.

March 6, 2013

Conceding that I will not reach a novel length of 70,000 with the current content, I decided to make this a novella with illustrations. I have been particularly inspired by the book The Invention of Hugo Cabret. Edits on the text are in progress and some illustrations have begun. Using a light brown paper, the illustrations are done in pencil and charcoal with white charcoal highlights to simulate many of the Civil War era illustrators that depicted battle scenes on site.

April 9, 2013

I have a half dozen sketches of Joseph Hall as I develop the style for the book. I hadn’t touched it for a while, but I decided to have at it again and I am happy with the progressed style. Sketching it on brown paper and adding white charcoal highlights, I scanned it in and did some composition realignments and added a ink wash background and framing in Photoshop. Now just 50 more to go.