Jules Just Likes: Volume II

Posted: February 23, 2012 in Uncategorized

Things I am liking this month include…

 fun.

The new fun. CD – Some Nights.

Their sophomore album is ah-mazing. The lead singer Nate Ruess is from the now-defunct band The Format. This new album has a great beat to it. A little bit of waltzy, beatboxing, choir-y goodness. As you can tell I am not a music critic, however, the main reason I love this band is because of their lyrics. As a writer, I find them very inspiring and the emotion that comes through is great late-night writing motivation.

I mean, how can you beat this?

And that’s alright; I found a martyr in my bed tonight/She stops my bones from wondering just who I am, who I am, who I am

Plus, his voice. Oh his voice.

To quote my cousin: “I want to have sex with his voice. If this ever becomes scientifically possible, count me in.”

Ditto, cousin. Ditto.

You can stream the album here before you buy. You’re welcome.

 

Connotation Press

Sandy Ebner’s piece at Connotation Press. Meg Tuite turned me onto this and wow.

Just wow.

It takes a brave one to write it. And a brave one to read it.

 

Creepy Horse Mask

Can you believe that this plastic horse face is a mere $25? I expected $50, maybe even $200 to be paid for an item such as this. At a bargain steal of $25, you can bet your sweet horse mane that I snapped one up ASAP.

Why you ask?

To take photos like this.

 

I only play Crosby, Stills and Nash, so shut the fuck up.

 

 

My goal in life is to borrow someone’s Mustang and drive it while wearing this mask. Because HOWAWESOMEWOULDTHATBE?            

 

Just in time for Valentine’s Day, comes a lovely guest blogger I like to call HM. But really, she’s Harley May.  Friend. Writer. Mutant Pervert. Ahem.  Here, let me pimp her for you.

Harley and I decided to write not-typical-smoochy-cutesy Valentine’s related flash and swap stories as guest bloggers. To make them semi-relatable she and I both chose two words we had to incorporate. Harley chose: BEEF JERKY and REGRET; I chose: CANDY HEARTS and HOSPITAL.

There. I think that’s all you need to know about us.

And now, HM.

~~~

A Contender Lost by Harley May

You probably won’t read this, but I need to put it out there. I’m leaving it where we met – in the study room at the library. You were so different back then, your bangs hanging in your face like a set of bars between you and the rest of the world.

I went to the hospital last week after I heard about your motorcycle accident. Your mom found me outside the waiting room where I still hadn’t worked up the nerve to walk in. She told me you were going to be okay, and asked if I wanted to see you. I felt like I was about to cry, so left.

We never said ‘I love you.’ I wish I had, but didn’t want to be the one to say it first. It was more than implied a few times, especially on the couch. Our couch. Those were honestly my favorite kind of days – with your head on one pillow, my head on the other, reading to each other.

Do you remember when we read The Human Stain? That’s when I wanted to say it most. I’d just read, “The pleasure isn’t in owning the person. The pleasure is this. Having another contender in the room with you.” You stopped rubbing your knuckle against the sole of my foot and said, “That’s what you are – my contender.”

I had to give the couch away.

You’ve moved on and she seems lovely. Younger and more glamorous and perfectly nice and I kind of hate her and want her shoes at the same time. It’s wrong of me to resent her since I’m the one who ended it. You stayed away from me so much better than I did from you afterward. That’s why it wasn’t healthy. I was just tired. Tired of fighting, tired of loving you so much, tired of wondering, tired of hurting, tired of feeling like we might explode.

It’s almost been ten months and I’m still not over you. Ten months. That’s so depressing to write on paper. So…I’m leaving town. I need to. After I left your mother at the hospital, I bought beef jerky and a box of candy hearts at the gas station. I hate those things, but wanted them because they were two of your favorite things and a part of you.

I’ll get over this, but for now, to quote our Vincent, who we read so often on the couch, “Where you used to be, there is a hole in the world, which I find myself constantly walking around in the daytime, and falling in at night. I miss you like hell.”

Several years down the road, we’ll run into each other, and I’ll be fine. We’ll pull out pictures of our kids, exchange stories, and laugh. Only deep down I’ll know that no one was ever as great a contender as you. So I’m saying it now – I love you.

~~~

I can’t explain how much I really adore the above piece. I adore HM too.

Harley May is a reader and writer of many things. She rocks the humor (and a guitar), yet has a tender heart. I am one lucky chick for getting to know her and cannot wait to read her future pieces.

Like what you hear? Like what you read? Then visit Harley’s blog or follow her on twitter @harleymaywrites. In the words of Harley, “THIS WILL BE AWESOME.”

Read my un-Valentine’s piece, An Ordinary Broken Heart, with the same prompts here.

Batten Down the Escape Latch, bitches.

I discovered this little ditty on/underneath? the lid of my trunk as I was unloading groceries. I immediately was stunned and then proceeded to snap a photo and plot my escape route should I ever find myself in my own trunk.

I felt this photo deserved its own quick blog post.

Really, Billy, don't be a hero.

Things that are amazing about this:

1. This release latch may be in other cars, but I have not seen it…so I am assuming my car is badass enough to warrant kidnapping someone. Future profession noted.

2. Then again, who would ever know about the escape latch other than me, so is it expected that my car will be hijacked and I’ll be the one in the trunk? This is disconcerting at best.

3. Again, the expected kidnapping situation going on here.

4. The mere fact that it shows the person leaping—nay fleeing—from the trunk of the car.

5. The whole kidnapping factor.

 That is all. Check your trunks for escape latches and practice your stick-man run.

January’s Pure Slush Counterpoint Story features Berit Ellingsen and I with complimenting pieces. Berit’s main piece The Punishment is a unique tale, and when asked, I jumped at the chance to write a counterpoint story.

It was a fun ride. Let’s just say I dove deep for this one. Pretty damn deep.

Here’s an excerpt from The Plan.

~~~

She flicks her hair. “I hate you.”

“I know. I’m sorry.”

“Why’d do have to do it?” she asks. “Why on my birthday?” My sister wrinkles her nose. Her face looks wavy in the plastic wall that separates us. “That’s all they’ll remember now,” she says. “Not me. Just you and that gun.”

“I’m sorry.”

“You said that already.” She crosses her arms. Exhales. “He came by the house the other day.”

“Who?”

“That guy…the guy who keeps poking his nose into our business. Doing research on you or whatever for the court.” My sister laughs, a little chirping sound. “I think he thinks mom used to beat you or something. It’s pretty funny.”

I put a hand to my temple and watch the light. “Hilarious.”

~~~

Visit Pure Slush to read the entire story and Berit’s piece The Punishment. Special thanks to Editor Matt Potter and Ms. Ellingsen.

Jules Just Likes…

Posted: January 15, 2012 in Uncategorized
Tags: , , ,

Here is a little bit of everything that I am enjoying at the moment and would like to share in commanding overtones.

Write It Sideways – http://writeitsideways.com/

Written by Susannah Windsor, and often guest authored, this blog gives writing tips that are actually helpful. It’s probably one of the best blogs that when read I sit-up and pay attention . She also links to great resources and references.

I subscribe and about once a week enjoy a newsletter delivered to my in-box full of frothy writerly goodness.

Great. Now I want a cappuccino.

 

The Hunger Games

"There's murder inside me."

I finished this book in about 4 days and it is as great as everyone is raving about. Typically, I try to steer clear of book trends or fads just because I’m a scoundrel that way and hate giving into the norm but I did. I gave into this. And it was well worth it. A great female character, riveting writing, and a few murder sprees thrown in, what more could a girl (or guy) want?

 

Fennel Salad

from the recipe book that curses more than I do: What The Fuck Should I Make for Dinner?

 

If the photo doesn’t spur you to make this delicious salad, than I will. I’ll stand behind you in the kitchen and poke you in the kidneys with a fork until you do.

It’s easy. Here’s how.

You will need:

1 fennel bulb, thinly sliced

3 ribs celery, thinly sliced

¼ cup pumpkin seeds

2 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil

1 tbsp honey

1 tbsp Dijon mustard

1 tbsp lemon juice

Salt & pepper (not the musical group)

¾ cup grated parmesan cheese

Combine fennel and celery in large bowl. Toast and salt the pumpkin seeds. Add those too. In a small bowl, whisk the oil, mustard, honey and lemon juice and season with the salt and pepper. Toss all that shit together. I grilled some chicken and then sliced that up and added it to the salad, so do this too if you’re a protein fiend or just like the aroma of poultry. Then top with grated parmesan.

BOOM. Done. Eat.

Now, this salad is addicting. The dressing is amazing and it’s got a great crunch because since I didn’t follow the directions, I hacked the fennel into huge chunks. But that’s how I roll.

 

Metazen

I keep having a love affair with Metazen. I really do. It’s my favorite online lit mag. The ballsy quirkiness of it keeps me coming back again and again. It’s not pretentious or too serious, it’s just good. And that’s what matters.

A recent piece on Metazen gave me the warm fuzzies: “I’m Your Boyfriend Dot Com” by Shaun Gannon. It’s different. Read it.

 

 

Perv Alert! Refractory Reading

Posted: January 8, 2012 in Uncategorized

Refractory Period. I love this phrase. But not for reasons you may think, you little pervs. 

Refractory Period is a term commonly used to refer to the cooling off time (mostly for guys, ahem) after knocking boots. First introduced to this in my Sexuality 101 class in college, I now use it in another uncommon sense.

I’ve coined refractory reading for myself whenever I finish a book. The moment I’m done, I set the book on my nightstand, stare into space and light a cigarette.

No, not really. But I like to pretend. I pretend so hard.

"You're welcome, Book."

 I want to focus on the end – the finished product of reading a book. How you digest a book. Mental processes at work.

For me, I have to have a refractory period after any book I read. It takes me between 1-2 weeks to pick up another, which definitely cuts into precious reading time…I can’t cram as many books down my gullet with that little break but it must be done. I need time to absorb, to have a break from a big book.

 In between the refractory period I usually read lit mags and my token Playboy to cool off a little bit. I plot my next book carefully, standing in front of my bookshelves agonizing over what-shall-I-read?.

Then, I think about what I’ve read. Analyze it. I’m not a scholar but I generally like to understand what I’ve just consumed. Wikipedia-it if I don’t get the theme. Discuss it with others who have read it.

 I’m not sure why I do this. It’s almost as if I feel the need to have a moment (or a week) of appreciative, contemplative silence for the book I’ve just read.

Does anyone else do this? Or are you those dastardly jumpers? The lucky folk who can jump right into another book the moment after you finish the last one? (Yes, I said folk.)

I think there's a book down there. Somewhere...

 No matter what way I put it, one thing cannot be denied. I end all my books just like my ex-boyfriends.

With paper cuts and tears.

No, as the title suggests, I did not have some type of mental/nervous/experimental breakdown over books. In June 2011, I did a 6-month book recap, bemoaning the fact that Stephen King reads 80 books a year (80!) and I apparently can’t keep up like the Slacker McSlackerson that I am.

Since 2012 is approaching very soon I figured I’d post my final tally — ahem, breakdown – for 2011. Prepare the drum roll…

17 books. Maybe 16.5 if you want to get all technical about it, ya frickin heathens.

"READ US ALL OR PREPARE FOR DESTRUCTION."

Not bad. I am pleased with this figure. I’d render the verdict that my favorite from this list has been Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas by HST. Nothing can quite compare to the goldmine of quotes in this gem of a novel (as I dissected in a prior post).  That’s followed by The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test (I sense a pattern developing here, don’t you?), then Cunt (changed my life), rounding out my top three.

The three main things I have gleaned from this list are that: I have an affinity for Stephen King, an obsession with Rob Lowe and I say the word cunt a lot.

And so we go—

The List – In Order of Having Been Read:

  1. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas by Hunter S Thompson
  2. Doomed Queens by Kris Waldherr
  3. The Lady in the Tower – The Fall of Anne Boleyn by Alison Weir
  4. Damn Sure Right by Meg Pokrass
  5. Sweet Valley Confidential by Francine Pascal et al
  6. Light in August by William Faulker – I quit this book on page 50 so it doesn’t really count. As painful as it was to quit I couldn’t do it.
  7. The Glass Castle by Jeanette Walls
  8. What May Have Been by Gary Percesepe and Susan Tepper
  9. Stories I Only Tell My Friends by ROB LOWE
  10. The Electric Acid Kool-Aid Test by Tom Wolfe
  11. Go Ask Alice by Anonymous
  12. The Dome by Stephen King
  13. Howl and Other Poems by Allen Ginsberg
  14. Full Dark No Stars by Stephen King
  15. Cunt by Inga Muscio
  16. Ayiti by Roxane Gay
  17. American Gods by Neil Gaiman

This is how I pretty much read all my books. Minus the pre-teen adolescent boy and stoic glare.

How did everyone else do? What was your number? Your list, your faves? Your rejections?

Am I the only nerd who keeps a book journal and names it Jeeves?

Only time will tell.