Character Sketch: Moon-Princess

She told me she lived on the moon.

“It is the most beautiful planet in the galaxy,” she said.  “It’s all washed in soft silver light and surrounded by darkness on all sides.  There is no sound, no voices.  It’s so quiet you can her the stars singing.  They sing to the world.  It’s empty of life, but oh is it wonderful.  I am the ruler of a beautifully desolate land.”

“All right, moon-princess.”  I would say, then laugh and tell her to lock up her imagination before it ran away.

Amaris was my neighbor.  She lived one door down at number 11, the old white house with the roof garret and two weeping willows in front.  I’m not really sure when she moved in. One day it was empty and the next she was there in her big hat, hanging colored glass bottles in her trees and feeding all the neighborhood cats.  

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Earth

(From last year.  Not my favorite, but it was enjoyable to write.)

 

Set apart from millions 

a world crafted of eons 

stretching into eternity,

a single spark among infinity.

Glittering in the deep 

this waking world never sleeps. 

Ever-dreaming, ever-living,

around a sun ever-burning.

A planet filled with smoke and scars,

listen, listen to the silence of the stars. 

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The Truth About Goats

After being around goats for the majority of my life, I have come to the conclusion that they are quite possibly the most amusing and enjoyable animals to have.  They each have their own unique personality, whether it be grumpy, annoying, quiet, wild, etc., and they are—though it may be a little-known fact—very affectionate, and often think they are lap goats even when they weigh 70 pounds.  This is an account of what I have learned from raising Nigerian Dwarf goats for the past twelve or so years.

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Sketch of the Highlands: Book Excerpt

An excerpt of my in-progress fantasy novel, a sketch of the history of the highlands in my world.

 

It was a land of stone and heather, of misty moors and rocky slopes lost to the archives of indomitable time.  Mist lay upon the murky meres, shaped by cold winds into the fluttering cloths of ghostly robes.  A few raucous birds disturbed the water with their wings, sending ripples wrinkling along the surface as they skimmed across the face of the lake.  Roe deer grazed near the shores, blending with the grasses so that they were nearly invisible but for the twitching of their white-tipped tails, while in the brush rustled a pine marten or mountain hare, searching for food.  No footsteps marked the damp soil.  No smoke rose in the distance.  A strange silence lay upon those highlands, a silence made inscrutable by the roving mists and voiceless heather.  Barred from civilization as it was, bordered by the trees of the forest, this place was cut off from the world as much as if it had been locked in a cage of iron.  Few traveled there, few set eyes upon its expanse, and few hazarded the endlessness of it for fear of never returning.  The highlands were left to the silence of the sun, an unmapped wilderness carved from the beating rains and howling winds of the north.

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