Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts

Thursday, June 9, 2011

The 100 Most Beautiful Words

 

According to some, these are the 100 most beautiful words in the English language. I have considered this and decided to craft a story including each one . . .

Ailurophile A cat-lover.
Assemblage A gathering.
Becoming Attractive.
Beleaguer To exhaust with attacks.
Brood To think alone.
Bucolic In a lovely rural setting.
Bungalow A small, cozy cottage.
Chatoyant Like a cat’s eye.
Comely Attractive.
Conflate To blend together.
Cynosure A focal point of admiration.
Dalliance A brief love affair.
Demesne Dominion, territory.
Demure Shy and reserved.
Denouement The resolution of a mystery.
Desuetude Disuse.
Desultory Slow, sluggish.
Diaphanous Filmy.
Dissemble Deceive.
Dulcet Sweet, sugary.
Ebullience Bubbling enthusiasm.
Effervescent Bubbly.
Efflorescence Flowering, blooming.
Elision Dropping a sound or syllable in a word.
Elixir A good potion.
Eloquence Beauty and persuasion in speech.
Embrocation Rubbing on a lotion.
Emollient A softener.
Ephemeral Short-lived.
Epiphany A sudden revelation.
Erstwhile At one time, for a time.
Ethereal Gaseous, invisible but detectable.
Evanescent Vanishing quickly, lasting a very short time.
Evocative Suggestive.
Fetching Pretty.
Felicity Pleasantness.
Forbearance Withholding response to provocation.
Fugacious Fleeting.
Furtive Shifty, sneaky.
Gambol To skip or leap about joyfully.
Glamour Beauty.
Gossamer The finest piece of thread, a spider’s silk.
Halcyon Happy, sunny, care-free.
Harbinger Messenger with news of the future.
Imbrication Overlapping and forming a regular pattern.
Imbroglio An altercation or complicated situation.
Imbue To infuse, instill.
Incipient Beginning, in an early stage.
Ineffable Unutterable, inexpressible.
Ingénue A naïve young woman.
Inglenook A cozy nook by the hearth.
Insouciance Blithe nonchalance.
Inure To become jaded.
Labyrinthine Twisting and turning.
Lagniappe A special kind of gift.
Lagoon A small gulf or inlet.
Languor Listlessness, inactivity.
Lassitude Weariness, listlessness.
Leisure Free time.
Lilt To move musically or lively.
Lissome Slender and graceful.
Lithe Slender and flexible.
Love Deep affection.
Mellifluous Sweet sounding.
Moiety One of two equal parts.
Mondegreen A slip of the ear.
Murmurous Murmuring.
Nemesis An unconquerable archenemy.
Offing The sea between the horizon and the offshore.
Onomatopoeia A word that sounds like its meaning.
Opulent Lush, luxuriant.
Palimpsest A manuscript written over earlier ones.
Panacea A solution for all problems
Panoply A complete set.
Pastiche An art work combining materials from various sources.
Penumbra A half-shadow.
Petrichor The smell of earth after rain.
Plethora A large quantity.
Propinquity Proximity; Nearness
Pyrrhic Successful with heavy losses.
Quintessential Most essential.
Ratatouille A spicy French stew.
Ravel To knit or unknit.
Redolent Fragrant.
Riparian By the bank of a stream.
Ripple A very small wave.
Scintilla A spark or very small thing.
Sempiternal Eternal.
Seraglio Rich, luxurious oriental palace or harem.
Serendipity Finding something nice while looking for something else.
Summery Light, delicate or warm and sunny.
Sumptuous Lush, luxurious.
Surreptitious Secretive, sneaky.
Susquehanna A river in Pennsylvania.
Susurrous Whispering, hissing.
Talisman A good luck charm.
Tintinnabulation Tinkling.
Umbrella Protection from sun or rain.
Untoward Unseemly, inappropriate.
Vestigial In trace amounts.
Wafture Waving.
Wherewithal The means.
Woebegone Sorrowful, downcast.


     Aurora was a dedicated ailurophile. She attended a monthly cat-fan assemblage in her bucolic town, where she was well known for her ebullience and effervescent personality. Since tonight’s meeting was sure to include her old flame Richard, she donned her most becoming and comely diaphanous little black dress. They’d had an erstwhile dalliance years ago, though it was evanescent in light of his betrothal to another local girl, Felicity.


     Felicity was fetching in her own way and had a certain glamour, mostly because her father owned Halcyon’s largest bank. In the incipient days of their affair, Aurora was a mere seventeen-year-old ingénue with an unmatched insouciance. Lissome and lithe, she would rest in his arms on the banks of the Susquehanna on summery days, inhaling the petrichor with fugacious pleasure. Richard found this evocative.

     “Aurora, you have ineffable pulchritude,” he would whisper in dulcet tones. 

     She was demure in their verdant demesne. Sometimes they’d walk to the lagoon because the plethora of riparian ripples where the river entered there were alive with tintinnabulation as they crossed the rocks. It was a sumptuous setting. The efflorescence of the redolent daisies, the gossamer wings of the dragonflies in their finery . . . they would remain in her heart forever. What she remembered best was the abandoned bungalow they stumbled upon. There Richard began to beleaguer her with increasingly awkward advances, his cynosure fixated about three inches below her dainty chin. 

     In an effort to dissemble Aurora’s mother, he’d said he was taking her to gambol in the fields near the river. His true intent was to “discover” the bungalow’s inglenook and give fair Aurora a special lagniappe there. He settled her on the bearskin rug and made the labyrinthine walk around the dusty furniture to light a fire. “It’s summer, Darling, but it’s cool this afternoon,” he told her in a mellifluous voice. As he returned to her side he began to lilt in a most untoward way. 

     “Richard,” she said, “There’s no music. Why are you dancing like that?” His wafture disturbed her, but she didn’t have the wherewithal to get home. He’d chosen this place for its propinquity to his seraglio, not her humble abode. It was the sempiternal story of surreptitious seduction, quintessential twenty-year-old male behavior. 

     “Aurora,” his voice was susurrous now, “come closer to me.” 

     “Richard,” she’d responded, “I haven’t one more scintilla of time to spend here today. I have to get home to make ratatouille and ravel booties for orphan babies.” 

     Richard settled for a quick kiss that day, a Pyrrhic victory. He had planned to entice her into the bedroom, promising a view of his panoply of pastiches. “Darling,” he asked in a murmurous voice with a furtive glance, “Is it Kevin, my nemesis? I thought I heard you say his name, though perhaps it was a mondegreen.”

     “Richard,” she said as she stood in a desultory fashion because of her legs’ desuetude, “I need to go and brood about this. Frankly, your eyes are chatoyant, which is attractive to me. Maybe someday we can conflate, but not today. I have had an epiphany. My own denouement. I know why you brought me here. My forbearance is limited at this point.”

     “Aurora, you’re sunburned. Calm down and let me apply this emollient to your fair shoulders. It’s the perfect elixir.” His eloquence persuaded her, though the romantic moment of embrocation was ephemeral. The ethereal coconut and aloe vera smell would imbue and forever haunt her.

     Summer’s languor and lassitude led them back to the bungalow eventually in their leisure. Nothing could inure Aurora’s adoring view of Richard until she found out about Felicity. She sought her woebegone panacea in poetry, written in the penumbra of her umbrella as she clutched a talisman in her left hand. It was a sparkling river pebble with imbrications of blue and green, a moiety from a rock Richard had found through serendipity while wading one day. Her magnum opus was called Imbroglio: A Love Story, penned in the offing near Long Island as she relaxed on her new lover’s opulent yacht. Filled with onomatopoeia, it became the title of her first best-selling novel when she reached her late twenties. Her only problem was a vestigial tendency toward elision, the result of a car accident when she swerved to miss a cat in the road at nineteen. Mr. Fluffball was a harbinger—the first of her twenty cats, all of which surrounded her with feline attention in her lonely Victorian mansion.

     She placed her palimpsest on her vanity table, waving Mr. Fluffball and Heathcliff away. She hoped Richard would like the dress.








Love from Delta.





Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Chicken Pools, Revisions & Silk . . .

You know it's getting warm outside when . . .


. . . this happens.

I went to town the other day and came home to find a cluster of thirsty hens gathered around their newly installed oasis in the back yard. This was our daughter's idea; we have a resident duck who thinks she's a chicken living in the coop, so she bought her a swimming pool. My husband built a wooden ramp up to the edge, and now it looks like we have five or six feathered Greg Louganises.


This is Chuck. Get it? She's a chicken-duck.


Chuck has not yet taken to the pool like a duck-to-you-know-what, but I bet she will.
It's good to be fowl at the Duke Poultry Farm. Things are going swimmingly.
My wonderful son thinks maybe we should make it an in-ground pool, and Jay seems to consider that a cool idea. In that case, I'll be sorely tempted to add goldfish. I'm not just being koi.
(sorry)
At the moment, it's functioning as a lagoon for the dogs, Pepper the cat, the chickens and Chuck.

 Ah, Spring.


Chapters one and two of Delaney's People are now fully edited and revised. The work is progressing very smoothly. I have discovered things about my writing, such as: the word "just" creeps in sometimes.

In "Jewels" (the opener), for instance, my editor allowed me only one precious "just". I just had no idea I'd typed that word so often. It's completely unjustified. I just used it about four times. Just got carried away. If there's any justice in the world, I've learned my just lesson.

I've adjusted nicely.

If your name is Justin, Justinian or Justus, you may not come to my house. Just kidding.

Chapter two was not plagued with "justs". I just had to add some dialog and change some verb tenses, and it was just peachy.

The truth is, I'm having a great deal of fun with the revisions, and grateful to have a good editor to go over my work. I just hope the next eighteen chapters go as easily as these did.


For those who are feeling artistic, or simply want to play with something fun, I present "Silk - a magical interactive artwork". It's Yuri Vishnevsky's experiment in generative art. I love this thing . . . it's like a Spirograph on steroids. Try it. Click and drag, then watch the amazing designs fill your screen.
Silk - a magical interactive artwork
Thank you, Yuri. Beautifully done.





Love from Delta.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Fontal Madness and Deep Thoughts

I have a thing for fonts. Scrolly, simple, clear, serif-ed and san-serif-ed, classy, silly, junky . . . I collect them.

My cousin and I refer to this fanatical font fondness as 'fontal madness'.

I also love a pithy quotation, and still treasure my twelve pound Bartlett's. These days, though, the internet

provides a plethora of material.

Today's blog combines Fontal Madness and Deep Thoughts for your consideration:




Fonts are fun.

Nice job, Billy.

You can find this font and many more on this terrific site:


It's a good font to have in your hip pocket.
Have a flourishy fun Sunday.




Love from Delta.

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Word.






I am a dedicated logophile.
If that sounds unfamiliar, please click here.
Words just plain make me happy.

Part of this, I am sure, is rooted in my high school Latin education. (Thank you, Mr. Joe Gilpin. Amo, amas, amat . . . * You're right. I've never forgotten them.) I fell in love with derivatives, and competed at State Forum in Miami.
Believe it or not, this required wearing pseudo-togas and participating in a slave auction. I am not kidding. I think I fetched a quarter.
Good times.

The demise of the English language troubles lots of people. My dad, for instance, has lately been complaining that you cannot "text" someone. Well, of course you can. You can also blog all day long. I have no problem with what I call the verbalization of nouns. I'm pretty sure Dad "phoned" people when he was younger.

My issues are more like these:

Rampant Apostrophitis
Please do not try to entice me to purchase "Rug's".
If you want to name your child D'On'te, that is your business, but I have a hard time understanding why.
It's really annoying when you make its description into it's description, but I'll ignore it and read on anyway. Especially if it is really interesting.

Ecspecially. Expresso.
Nope.

There They're Their
Enough said.

Me
"Joe gave that car to Doodlebug and I."
This makes my brain shriek, "ME ME ME".

My friends are already expecting this one:
It is spelled "y'all". It is a contraction of "you" and "all". It is NOT ya'll. (I have seen this done by an uber-successful Southern author. Shame on him.)
"Y'all" is always plural. If there is a big group, it can be "all y'all."

(All y'all please let me continue for just one more moment. I really am going somewhere with this, and not trying to be your English teacher.)

I have discovered a website that thrills me, and I want you to know about it. Courtesy of Oxford Dictionaries, it is called "Save the Words".
This is soooooo cool.
The words cry out, "Pick me!" as you guide the cursor around the page. When you select one by clicking on it, you are asked to "adopt" that word. In doing so, you solemnly promise to perpetuate your word's life by using it in conversation and correspondence to the best of your ability.
You are then asked to purchase a $25 t-shirt with your "adoptee" on it, but you can ignore that.
I am pretty sure your word will not write you each month and beg for money. Nor will it send you cute pictures of itself.
It will just live on happily in the lexicon of the Queen's English, American English, The Correct Way to Speak, or whatever you want to call it.
I think that is a wonderful thing.
Save the Words


*Your Latin lesson for the day:
amo = I love
amas = you (singular) love
amat = he, she or it loves
amamus = we love
amatis = you (plural) love
amant = they love


Te amamus from Delta.

Friday, March 4, 2011

House on Fire

 "You can write," the beautiful and charming authoress proclaimed, eyebrow arched dramatically. "You can write like a house on fire."

So, I came home from Atlanta at the end of January and started writing like a you-know-what.

Now that my book is being edited by a bona fide literary tigress, I am mostly having fun with this blog. I have learned a lot along the way, possibly featured my publicity-shy daughter too much*, and made some new friends.

*(This is intended as a joke.)

Today is Friday, and I am very much looking forward to having Number One Son come home from The University of Alabama. I have made remarkably delicious spaghetti sauce, apple-cinnamon-streusel muffins, and there are some leftover chocolate cupcakes around. I'm not sure what we'll do this weekend, but it will probably involve testosterone-fueled television. (Jace and his dad tend to focus on wrestling and movies where guys get blown up.)


These are movies my son has made me watch: Children of Men and No Country for Old Men. If you are a woman, do not watch them.
Children of Men
No Country for Old Men

Personally, I wish there were a Pawn Stars marathon. I LOVE Pawn Stars.
Pawn Stars
But it looks like maybe we could come to an agreement on this.
Ancient Aliens
Or I can hide the remote.

I think the weather is going to be gorgeous, so I'm planning some walks to the lake. Maybe I'll take some pictures to share. (It's really looking like Spring around here.) At the very least, I'll Run with the Chickens (my friend Marietta has suggested a video featuring the theme from Chariots of Fire. Not happening.)

Speaking of chickens: for those of you who don't Facebook, here is Marietta's photo album from the Rubonia Mardi Gras chicken train in Rubonia, Florida. It is not to be missed.
Rubonia Mardi Gras chicken train by Marietta Sophie Loudon

Here's an old Talking Heads song to kick off your Friday:
Aww, come on - you've already guessed the title...





Love from Delta.

Friday, February 18, 2011

Meanwhile Back at the (Chicken) Ranch...


This "Poultry in Motion" rooster is called Deviled Eggs. A combined love for puns and bright shiny things inspired me to start collecting these years ago in Florida. This guy is currently decorating the kitchen, standing next to a fancy cake stand full of bon bons. The goodies are there to welcome Precious Son and Precious Daughter and her roommate home from college this weekend.
(As I write this, Precious Son and his dad are watching wrestling on TV. Need I say more?) Savannah and Jenny will be here soon. I hope.
Look closely at yon rooster. See the top of his bright yellow comb?

That is a ladybug.
A lucky, lovely ladybug dropped into my kitchen earlier today. Sometimes, they take refuge during the cold winter months (we've had ladybug invasions that would've inspired Hitchcock) - but this little lady seemed to portend Spring. It's warm and beautiful outside. The jonquils are blooming. The birds are singing. It's really gorgeous here right now. The chickens happily explored the yard all day, dreaming of worms and whatever disgusting things they find out there (I took them crackers and carrots and strawberry bits and cheese. This is some very pampered poultry).
I worked on editing my book* and cleaning house all day.

The ladybug is an interesting hybrid we encountered when we moved to Alabama. Seems that some university I shall not name released a ladybug with PINCHERS into the environment. I did not believe this, but it is apparently true. I have suffered a ladybug attack or two. Seriously.
I still think they're lucky, though.
Tomorrow we're off to Montgomery for the Confederate Heritage Rally. It's a lovely, historic city and has an amazing riverfront district, as I recall. I'm really looking forward to it.
City of Montgomery, Alabama

Before deserting this blog, I want to mention something that really touches me. A group of alumni from The University of Alabama has joined forces to raise money for Auburn University to rehabilitate or replace the poisoned trees I mentioned yesterday. They've already had a huge outpouring of support, and I am proud of their efforts.

Tide for Toomer's

May your weekend be filled with sunshine and (innocuous) ladybugs.

Love from Delta.

*Shameless plug. Delaney's People. Soon to grace a fortunate bookshelf somewhere. The good Lord willing and the creek don't rise.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Happy Valentine's Day, Y'all.

"In Milton, someone plugs in their electric shaver and the street lights dim!!"
That early attempt at literary humor was written at the tender age of twelve or so. It was part of a dispatch from the frozen tundra of Pennsylvania to my grandparents in Delta, Alabama. Milton is a perfectly nice town (though very small), and I made some wonderful friends there. At the time it was home to Chef Boyardee, and it still is.
Chef Boyardee
Before Milton, there was the unfortunately named "Turbotville".
(I have an uncle who jokingly refused to address letters to my mother there, because Turbotville sounds...well...less than poetic.)
I found this tiny letter in some papers while searching for information for my husband last night. It was written on Holly Hobbie stationery in my very precise script. (The only bad grades I ever received in elementary school were for penmanship that was a wee bit too scrolly.)
Holly Hobbie

(Note the purely coincidental Valentine's Day reference.)

The letter is a great illustration of how much I've loved to write throughout my entire life. Song parodies, guest editorials, ad copy, political rhetoric, letters to friends and family, birthday tributes, poetry...you name it. If it's crafting images with words, I love to do it.
(I once considered starting a business called "GHOST WRITERS IN THE SKY". It never quite took off. Pun fully intended.)

As I've written recently, my husband and I went to see author Chris Bohjalian in Atlanta. One of the things Chris talked about was "finding [his] voice" in Vermont. Now, I am no Chris Bohjalian. He is brilliant and witty and has written some of my very favorite books ever.
But...
After years in Pennsylvania and many many more in Florida, I have been fortunate to return to my beloved Alabama for good. And I think I have found my voice.
It has a strong Southern drawl, and it wishes y'all a Happy Valentine's Day.

Love from Delta.

Friday, February 4, 2011

Ice Ice Baby/Miscellaneous Musings

(You can click on each photo to enlarge)

It is cold here today. Jay (my husband) and I took this photo from the porch last night...look closely and you'll see the berries encased in ice, and a few icicles, too.
On a day like today, when only the brave have to venture out and drive, I am grateful to be at home writing. Since I'm mostly waiting for responses to literary agent query letters now, I'm digging around for new inspirations. Here are a few of my favorites:

CHEAHA MOUNTAIN, circa 1900 - 1910
That photo at the top of my blog? That's Cheaha Mountain in the distance. It's very special to me, as it has been a part of my family since the 1800's. Here you see my great-grandparents, William Oscar and Eva Lou Ingram Dial (I think my great-uncles Heston and Veston are in there, too). Oscar is the dapper guy in the foreground.



 





Here's another picture of Oscar. See what I mean?










This was his place of business in Delta, Alabama - and I believe, his father's before him. The building has been dated to 1851 or so. It's pretty darned special to me!






One last pic: I love this ad from the 1917 Lineville Headlight. Jay and I unearthed it while looking through county archives awhile back.

 









As you can see, I'm reveling in my Alabamaness today. My love for my home state and its people inspired me to write DELANEY'S PEOPLE, which I hope you'll see on your favorite bookshelf soon.
At any rate -  I am truly grateful to authors Joshilyn Jackson, Karen Bence Yoder and Lucinda Hathaway for their invaluable help with my literary career. The fine people I've met through the Atlanta Writers' Club...particularly Michael Keith Brown and Barbara E. Connor...have been so encouraging. So has author Haywood Smith, who generously offered to read my first chapter.
Love and thanks from Delta.