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Tag Archives: children
A Warm Vacation
Posted in flash fiction, photos of strangers, Typography
Tagged 1940s, art, beauty, childhood, children, family, fiction, flash fiction, found art, found photograph, friends, friendship, humor, kitsch, life, people, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, pools, retro, snow, swimming, typewriter, typography, vacation, vintage, writing
Flash Fiction Published!
I’m proud to announce a collection of my stories was published in a lovely publication called The Fifteenth Dame Lisbet Throckmorton Anthology:
Click the image to order the book on Amazon. It was an honor to be selected with such beautiful stories and talented writers.
My collection are a bunch of short flash fiction pieces that take place in a coffee shop. There are two sections, Despair and Hope, some of the stories continuing from the Despair section to the Hope section. I’m really excited! Here are a few example flashes:
She removes her hood, as directed. He wants to see her eyes as she ends it. She sighs and takes a sip of tea. He spins his mug of coffee on the saucer, noticing the tiny cracks in the glaze.
~
From above, all that could be seen was two people calmly reading.
From below, all that could be seen was a serious, ongoing foot war.
~
It was their first date, blind at that, and conversation was fairly smooth. But he knew it would all work out because as she ate her giant marshmallow square, she broke a piece off, rolled it into a bite-sized, mouth-appropriate ball in the palms of her hands, and carefully regarded it between her finger and thumb before popping it into her mouth.
~
She loved sipping the hot rooibos tea but regretted her decision to sit inside on such a nice, clear night. She looked out the window with an air of regret, but lacked the initiative to move.
Posted in flash fiction
Tagged Amazon, art, authors, beauty, Candace Leigh Coulombe, Carla Brownlee, childhood, children, coffee, coffee shop, couples, dating, dennis finocchiaro, entertainment, family, fiction, Fifteenth Dame Lisbet Throckmorton, flash fiction, friends, friendship, hipster, humor, kitsch, life, love, marriage, music, people, people watching, poetry, published, Rachel Scandarion, reading, relationships, retro, romance, sad, Sally Whitknee, Sheila Romano, Sherri Cook, tea, writers, writing
Vintage Kermit
“When did our bookshelf become all Rainbow Connection?”
She looked up from her copy of Dave Egger’s You Shall Know Our Velocity and shifted her weight in her favorite reading spot, the moon chair they’d bought at Urban a few years before.
“I found it in my parents’ attic! Can you believe it? Really brings me back.”
He picked up the vintage Kermit and made it wave at her. She smiled.
Kermit’s hand got stuck on his sweater and he had to pull it off. “What the…he has Velcro on his hands!”
“And feet!” she added. “Neat huh? He used to hang from my doorknob as a kid. He guarded it so monsters wouldn’t get me.”
He laughed and started propping the doll on the shelf with his back blocking her view.
“Don’t make him do anything perverted!”
After a quick dirty look, he went back to work. “Come on, I have the utmost respect for Muppets.”
She relaxed a bit in the chair. “You don’t understand, Kermit was my favorite. My dad gave him to me before he…left. I cried more tears into that toy than anything else I own. My dad used to sing Muppet songs to me. The show theme song or Mahna-Mahna when I was down, Rainbow Connection before bed.”
He turned and joined her in the chair for a hug.
“Thanks.”
“Check him out!” he said with a huge smile, clearly proud of himself.
She looked over to see Kermit sitting with his legs crossed and his hands folded on his lap.
“I love it.”
Posted in flash fiction, Zoey and Xander
Tagged 1980s, beauty, childhood, children, couples, dating, divorce, entertainment, family, fiction, flash fiction, frogs, hipster, humor, Kermit, Kermit the Frog, kitsch, life, love, Muppets, music, people, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, puppets, relationships, retro, The Muppet Show, vintage, writing
Asking Permission
Available on my ETSY.
Posted in flash fiction, photos of strangers, Typography
Tagged 1940s, 1950s, art, beauty, childhood, children, couples, dating, dating in the 50s, entertainment, family, fiction, flash fiction, found art, found photograph, gaining approval, humor, kitsch, life, love, marriage, parental approval, people, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, relationships, retro, romance, typewriter, typography, vintage, writing
When Grandpa Was a Kid
This, along with many others, is available for sale on my Etsy.
Posted in flash fiction, photos of strangers, Typography
Tagged 1940s, 1950s, art, beauty, childhood, children, entertainment, family, fiction, flash fiction, found art, found photograph, friends, friendship, kitsch, life, love, people, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, playground, poetry, recess, typewriter, typography, video games, vintage, writing
A Halloween Princess
HAPPY HALLOWEEN!!!
Created using vintage film strips converted into digital video. This footage is so cool that it alone is worth watching! Check it out!
Posted in films of strangers, Typography
Tagged 1960s, art, beauty, childhood, children, costumes, entertainment, family, fiction, film, film strip, flash fiction, found art, friends, friendship, halloween, kitsch, life, love, people, princess, relationships, retro, typography, vintage, writing
A Paradox and a Balloon
Sometimes it was difficult for me to remember Susie was twelve, especially when I noticed her scrunching her nose; this was always a sign she was deep in thought.
She looked up at the orange balloon tied to her wrist and after much deliberation pulled the loose end of the string. The newly-released balloon floated up and momentarily became stuck in a branch until a gentle breeze freed it from a leafy prison and it continued on a heavenly journey.
“What goes up must come down,” she whispered. I wasn’t sure if she was talking to me or thinking out loud.
“What hun?” I asked. I could see a hypothesis forming in her mind; I blame her scientist mother for moments like these. Well, maybe blame isn’t the right word since I adore our after-school hangouts in the park. Sometimes being a writer has its perks.
“I was just thinking about something Miss Rivers said in class today. We were doing a lab with eggs and she said that everything that goes up comes down. Do you know the saying?”
I nodded.
“Well, what about my balloon? It went up and won’t come down.” We both looked skyward at the small orange dot that was once leashed to her small wrist.
“Well, the balloon is going up now, but it won’t necessarily continue to go up, right? What happens to a balloon when you bring it home?”
She shifted her weight on the bench. “It floats for a day or two and then starts to shrivel, like a raisin. As the helium wears out it stops floating. So you’re right, the balloon will eventually come down. I guess Miss Rivers knows what she’s talking about.”
She looked at her chucks. “The statement doesn’t provide any kind of specific timeline. I thought of our eggs going up and coming down immediately after she said it, because it was directly in front of me when she made the comment. But I guess it doesn’t specify when objects come down. Maybe the saying should be ‘What goes up eventually comes down,’ hmm?” She sat staring at the balloon until she could no longer see it.
She reached out a small hand, her signal that she was ready to start the walk home. I got up and took her hand as we began the walk home. Her nose was scrunched again.
“Airplanes land, or they’d run out of fuel and crash.” I nodded to her. “What about satellites? Or other things we launch into orbit?”
I had no answer to that, and a simple “Ask your mother,” seemed inappropriate. “I’m not sure,” is all I came up with.
“It would seem I found a paradox,” she said, and I nodded. Again, I can’t believe she’s twelve. At that, the man who originally gave her the balloon appeared again.
“Did you lose your balloon? I probably didn’t tie it tight enough. Would you like another?”
Her eyes opened wide and innocent as she looked up at the bunch and chose a color.
“Red, please,” she said with a colossal smile.
*Inspired by the word Paradox shared by Ashley Smolnik
Posted in flash fiction, Inspired by a word...
Tagged balloon, beauty, childhood, children, entertainment, fiction, flash fiction, humor, kids, life, love, marriage, paradox, people, relationships, smart kid, writing
Change the World
For sale on my Etsy along with many other works!
Posted in flash fiction, photos of strangers, Typography
Tagged 1940s, art, childhood, children, entertainment, family, fiction, flash fiction, found art, found photograph, friends, friendship, kitsch, life, people, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, typewriter, typography, vintage, writing
Her Little Boy

This work, along with many others, is available on my Etsy.
Posted in flash fiction, photos of strangers, Typography
Tagged 1940s, art, beauty, childhood, children, entertainment, family, fiction, flash fiction, found art, found photograph, Her Little Boy, kitsch, life, love, mother, people, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, son, typewriter, typography, vintage, writing
A Jealous Sibling
This pring, along with many others, can be purchased on my Etsy.
Posted in flash fiction, photos of strangers, Typography
Tagged 1940s, art, beauty, childhood, children, couples, dating, entertainment, family, fiction, flash fiction, found art, found photograph, jealousy, juxtaposed, kitsch, life, love, old maid, people, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, relationships, retro, romance, sad, sibling rivalry, typewriter, typography, vintage, writing




