Ole Miss Rebel
07-16-2011, 08:12 AM
OK. Next fall, I will be taking my first creative writing class. I do not creatively write. :banghead: I decided I better begin practicing!
This is my first attempt. What do you think? (it is not completed)
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Forgotten, open, Venetian blinds allow sunlight to rouse him out of a very deep sleep. The crack of dawn. Pure melancholy. His weary blue eyes reveal a dusty room whose uncleanliness is vague at night but blatant at this first blush of morning light. As he lies gloomily in bed, the reticent ceiling fan above him seems to whisper a message of despair as it clacks and crackles, dust-covered, circulating putrid perfumes of decrepid old oak. His sensitive sinuses succumb to a brutal barrage of fan-spun whirling tiny granules of ‘God knows what.’ A battlecry first, his ferocious cough, and then the battle commences, a cannonade of wheezing. Violent hacking. He questions if his friends are casualties of the war and imagines them suffering a rude awakening as he smothers his head, the artillery, into his pillow.
The answer, a blitz from the adjacent bedroom, comes bombing.
‘What the **** are you doing James!’ James immediately recognizes the profane assailant. Harrison’s stern manly voice is very distinctive. It is too early in the morning for him to start *****ing. Startled, his fragile vocal cords manage to exclaim ‘Nothing!’ boldly. James realizes that even his loudest outburst cannot approach Harrison’s brutish scream.
Sunstruck silence.
The pungent residue of alcohol still left in his mouth jolts memories of Yesterday and an electric sensation captures his body. A rainstorm of memory floods his head; he feels ecstatic! James begins to recap the events of Yesterday chronologically as he sluggishly lifts his head off the pillow but everything is rushing through his mind so quickly. Cars speeding on the turbulent final lap of a NASCAR showdown, euphoric vibes, Yesterday night was life in the fast lane. He plays a jigsaw puzzle in his mind, the pieces of Yesterday become grandiose and more reminiscent of last night’s rapturous dream than his now hungover reality. Let's see.
Yesterday was a torrid Independence Day; the humidity coupled with the ultraviolet waves from the malignant sun somehow exceeded even his most fantastic expectations. Yesterday he stayed at his grandparents’ empty lake house accompanied by both his best friends as well as Harrison and his boat. Yesterday the sultry weather was bearable; the fiery day was definitely doused out by his aquatic adventures. Yesterday he grimaced when Harrison made the snide remark of claiming that his boat was worth more than his truck and thankfully had packed enough beer necessary to not only get along with Harrison but also to quench his thirst in a very fun way. Yesterday, in fact, he drank from the surplus of beer before they had even left the city. Yesterday he finished an entire case of Bud Light before both noon and his scrumptious lunch: a cornucopia of fresh lake bream and catfish which, luckily for him, was already prepared in his grandparents’ fridge with a note on top of the container urging him to have a blessed Independence Day. Yesterday had consisted of tubing using Harrison’s boat and playing drinking games and watching the annual fireworks display during a normally imperturbable and stolid black summer night. Yesterday, just as he imagined it, the heavens became voluptuous; the petulant lightning of a distant thunderstorm and a continuous cascade of pastels screamed their way across the night sky-- illuminating everything. Yesterday his heart had exploded just like the sky above him when he spotted a gal wearing an all white dress made interesting with rhinestones like diamond sparkles whose scintillating light radiated across the lake’s fragile aquamarine waves like a lighthouse to his shipwreck heart. Yesterday there were two victims of theft, the first of which was her all white dress which had stolen all of the moonlight and the second of which was his own conflagrant heart. Yesterday all he needed to fall in love was just one crucial glance which had developed into more of a studied gaze like that which he gave his school books on the eve of an important test. Yesterday, he concluded, was a *****in' American day.
This is my first attempt. What do you think? (it is not completed)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Forgotten, open, Venetian blinds allow sunlight to rouse him out of a very deep sleep. The crack of dawn. Pure melancholy. His weary blue eyes reveal a dusty room whose uncleanliness is vague at night but blatant at this first blush of morning light. As he lies gloomily in bed, the reticent ceiling fan above him seems to whisper a message of despair as it clacks and crackles, dust-covered, circulating putrid perfumes of decrepid old oak. His sensitive sinuses succumb to a brutal barrage of fan-spun whirling tiny granules of ‘God knows what.’ A battlecry first, his ferocious cough, and then the battle commences, a cannonade of wheezing. Violent hacking. He questions if his friends are casualties of the war and imagines them suffering a rude awakening as he smothers his head, the artillery, into his pillow.
The answer, a blitz from the adjacent bedroom, comes bombing.
‘What the **** are you doing James!’ James immediately recognizes the profane assailant. Harrison’s stern manly voice is very distinctive. It is too early in the morning for him to start *****ing. Startled, his fragile vocal cords manage to exclaim ‘Nothing!’ boldly. James realizes that even his loudest outburst cannot approach Harrison’s brutish scream.
Sunstruck silence.
The pungent residue of alcohol still left in his mouth jolts memories of Yesterday and an electric sensation captures his body. A rainstorm of memory floods his head; he feels ecstatic! James begins to recap the events of Yesterday chronologically as he sluggishly lifts his head off the pillow but everything is rushing through his mind so quickly. Cars speeding on the turbulent final lap of a NASCAR showdown, euphoric vibes, Yesterday night was life in the fast lane. He plays a jigsaw puzzle in his mind, the pieces of Yesterday become grandiose and more reminiscent of last night’s rapturous dream than his now hungover reality. Let's see.
Yesterday was a torrid Independence Day; the humidity coupled with the ultraviolet waves from the malignant sun somehow exceeded even his most fantastic expectations. Yesterday he stayed at his grandparents’ empty lake house accompanied by both his best friends as well as Harrison and his boat. Yesterday the sultry weather was bearable; the fiery day was definitely doused out by his aquatic adventures. Yesterday he grimaced when Harrison made the snide remark of claiming that his boat was worth more than his truck and thankfully had packed enough beer necessary to not only get along with Harrison but also to quench his thirst in a very fun way. Yesterday, in fact, he drank from the surplus of beer before they had even left the city. Yesterday he finished an entire case of Bud Light before both noon and his scrumptious lunch: a cornucopia of fresh lake bream and catfish which, luckily for him, was already prepared in his grandparents’ fridge with a note on top of the container urging him to have a blessed Independence Day. Yesterday had consisted of tubing using Harrison’s boat and playing drinking games and watching the annual fireworks display during a normally imperturbable and stolid black summer night. Yesterday, just as he imagined it, the heavens became voluptuous; the petulant lightning of a distant thunderstorm and a continuous cascade of pastels screamed their way across the night sky-- illuminating everything. Yesterday his heart had exploded just like the sky above him when he spotted a gal wearing an all white dress made interesting with rhinestones like diamond sparkles whose scintillating light radiated across the lake’s fragile aquamarine waves like a lighthouse to his shipwreck heart. Yesterday there were two victims of theft, the first of which was her all white dress which had stolen all of the moonlight and the second of which was his own conflagrant heart. Yesterday all he needed to fall in love was just one crucial glance which had developed into more of a studied gaze like that which he gave his school books on the eve of an important test. Yesterday, he concluded, was a *****in' American day.