This photograph/story, along with many others, is available on my Etsy here.
Follow Me!
Follow my blog!
-
Join 280 other subscribers
Categories
Blogroll
Click Here for my RSS FeedCountry of Origin
This photograph/story, along with many others, is available on my Etsy here.
Posted in flash fiction, photos of strangers, Typography
Tagged 1940s, art, beauty, childhood, children, city girl, city romance, entertainment, family, fiction, flash fiction, found art, found photograph, friends, friendship, kitsch, life, love, people, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, poetry, sad, skyscrapers, the country, typewriter, typography, vintage, writing
Photograph by Christina Molholm, whose blog can be found here.
As she went through her wallet checking on funds she absentmindedly went for a basket and out of the corner of her eye realized something was wrong; there was a small child sitting in the top one. After a moment of thought and a quick look around for a nearby frantic parent she grabbed the last basket from the other stack and turned to walk away. After a few feet she stopped and looked back at the child, who gave her such a melancholy stare that she couldn’t just leave him there.
“Is anyone looking for a rogue child?” she said to her surroundings. Nobody surfaced with a look of calming insanity so she said it again, louder. “Did anyone lose a kid?” He rested his head on the side of the blue basket and sighed. She walked over to the manager’s desk and reported the little boy as missing, and went about her shopping, proud of her triumph, as she heard the loudspeaker say, “Would the owner of the rogue child sitting in the pile of baskets please report to the manager.”
Posted in flash fiction
Tagged art, beauty, childhood, children, entertainment, family, fiction, flash fiction, food shopping, humor, life, lost children, love, market, people, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, supermarkets, writing
This original print, along with many others, is now for sale on my Etsy.
Posted in flash fiction, photos of strangers, Typography
Tagged 1940s, art, beauty, broom, childhood, children, dance, dancer, dancing, entertainment, family, fiction, flash fiction, found art, found photograph, friends, friendship, humor, kitsch, life, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, typewriter, typography, vintage, writing
“The kids would have loved these guys,” she said to her husband, drawing his attention to the two gorillas sunning in their habitat. He walked up and snapped a shot with his Ansco Color Clipper.
“So would your father!” he added.
She gave him a nasty look. “That’s not funny.”
“What?”
“Comparing mother to a gorilla. It’s not funny.” She frowned but he smiled.
“I wasn’t, I just thought he’d enjoy them,” he replied with a sinister smile.
“Mother is not a gorilla.”
“Of course not, dear,” he said, pulling her toward him and holding her.
She pouted a bit and stepped out of his embrace.
“It says here,” he read to her from the placard in a lame attempt to change the subject, “Gorillas are the largest and most powerful of the manlike apes.”
“Are you going to say something about my mother’s size and power?”
“Of course not, dear. I adore your mother.” She crossed her arms and continued to look away from him and in the direction of the animals. He pulled out a list.
“So, do we continue from here to the campgrounds like your folks did? I know you want to keep with their itinerary. Says we go from here to camping near Disney World. I packed the tent…”
He walked up behind her and put his arms under hers, squeezing a bit until she giggled. He took that as a sign of forgiveness.
“Sure. First let’s stop by the souvenir shop. I want to find a post card to send the kids.”
“Deal. Lead the way, beautiful,” he said as he offered his arm.
Posted in flash fiction
Tagged 1960s, beauty, camping, childhood, children, couples, Disney World, entertainment, family, fiction, fight, flash fiction, found art, found postcard, gorilla, humor, kids, kitsch, life, love, marriage, mother in laws, people, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, postcard, relationships, romance, vintage, vintage postcard, Walt Disney World, writing, zoo
Available with many other prints on my Etsy here.
Posted in flash fiction, photos of strangers, Typography
Tagged art, beauty, childhood, children, couples, entertainment, family, fiction, flash fiction, found art, found photograph, humor, kitsch, life, love, marriage, people, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, relationships, typewriter, typography, vintage, writing

This is something new I’m starting, a series of flashes typed onto photographs that tell a continuation of a story. This set and many others are now being sold on my Etsy.
Posted in flash fiction, photos of strangers, Typography
Tagged 1960s, alone, art, beauty, birthday, children, family, fiction, flash fiction, found art, friends, fun, happy ending, kids, kitsch, life, lonely, love, moving, parenting, people, photo, photography, photos, pictures, relationships, sad, typewriter, typography, vintage, writing
Posted in flash fiction, photos of strangers, Typography
Tagged 1940s, childhood, children, despair, disappearance, life, love, missing child, photo, photograph, sad, typography
The caavy, commonly known and often mistaken as a tooth fairy, lives in the mouths of human beings, finding nourishment from small chunks of tooth (usually slathered in sugar) that they dig out using their small claws, of which they have one on each hand. Caavies are known for violent territoriality and an obsession with sugar.
Tandfe awoke from his slumber and emerged from behind the tonsil, stretching his arms as far as they would go and performing his evening breathing exercises. He knew from the breathing patterns of his host that it was asleep and the growl of Tandfe’s stomach reminded him it was time to eat. He sharpened the single claw on each hand against his pointy teeth and climbed up the soft cave to the mouth of his home.
Tonight would be a feast! Once again Tandfe’s host skipped the evening cleaning ritual of his oral cavity that it’s parental figure was always complaining about (Tandfe often woke up early enough to see his host simply wet his cleaning utensil, called a ‘toothbrush’, under a faucet and then place it on the counter). Tonight there was sugar a-plenty covering the chewing mechanisms that he feasted upon every evening. He smiled, showing off his full set of incisors as he scraped a tiny piece of enamel off a nearby tooth, tasted it and smiled with delight.
He scraped a bit more and sat down to reminisce, as he always did over dinner. He remembered growing up in the piles of crystallized sugar, being hatched and raised by his mama. He was taught to fend for himself and then was whisked off on a stick when the sugar was made into rock candy. Tandfe ended up going from there to this child’s mouth, where he made his home.
He got up and walked over to the nearest tooth and cut another chunk out, noticing that this one was starting to turn a little black around the edges. He knew this meant to leave it alone, or that horrible human they called dentist would come with all of the loud machinery and scraping tools, forcing Tandfe into hiding in that dark smelly spot to the south of the tonsil.
He also noticed another tooth was loose, and knew to dig into that one as much as possible. Humans, unlike caavies, lost some of their teeth as children; it wouldn’t matter how much he ate, so he attacked it. Soon, it would fall out, and he would eat the whole tooth in a night. He always loved those nights, stealing the baby tooth from under his host’s pillow – the only downside being that he had no pockets and always lost any loose change he was carrying.
As he reminisced and planned for his next out-of-body adventure, he noticed the breathing patterns of the host start to change, and knew it was time to go back into hiding, so he jumped up, scraped a little more food and shoved it into his mouth. He ran back to the tonsil, climbing back up into his hiding place and closing his eyes for another day of rest.
Artwork by the amazing Christina Mølholm, whose blog can be seen here.
Posted in A Mønster!
Tagged andthemonsters, art, cavity, children, Christina Mølholm, collaboration, dentist, eating, fantasy, fiction, I hate the dentist, life, monster, mystery, photography, photoshop, tandfe, tooth fairy