• Books
  • Stories
  • Awards
  • Press & Events
  • Thunder
  • About
  • Contact
Menu

Karin Cecile Davidson

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number

Your Custom Text Here

Karin Cecile Davidson

  • Books
  • Stories
  • Awards
  • Press & Events
  • Thunder
  • About
  • Contact
IMG_0524.jpg

Thunder on a Thursday

Writing, Reading, Far to Go

Brain, Hands, Breath – Reverie 2011 – Days 14-16

December 18, 2011 Karin C. Davidson

Brain.  Flying forward – the first draft.  Mindless wandering around in circles, going nowhere but around and around and around – the endless revisions.  Hitting the ground like glass falling from the sky – knowing the writing is almost there.  Searching the darkness for another planet – understanding that the story is never complete, but sending it out anyway, one final Apollo mission. 

Hands.  Clapping, crossed at the wrists, reaching for the sky, opening another door, fingers wrapped around the thin stem of a daisy-a wineglass-a pen leaking blue ink-Atticus’ leash-a pale pink ribbon, resting on this keyboard, pulling laces tight, playing against a washboard, stirring another roux, signing a birthday card, crossing knitting needles and T’s and hearts.

Breath.  Holding it.  Running out of it.  Catching it.  Forgetting it.  Waiting for a.  Breathless with expectation.  Deep – the ocean.  Shallow – the lake.  Hold your nose and jump!  Sinking to the turquoise bottom of the pool.  Drinking tea, finding a thin silver dime.  Weightless.  Bursting.  Nearly out of.  Remembering to come to the surface for another and then heading back under again. 

In Inspiration, Reverie, Writing Tags Apollo, Breathless, hands, minds, understanding, washboards, writing
Comment

Best of 2011/The List – Reverie 2011 – Day 9

December 11, 2011 Karin C. Davidson

Snow-encrusted walks

Reading

Plane ride over the Sierra Nevadas

Bittersweet goodbyes to The White Stripes

Sun over Alcatraz

Writing

Wintertime workers’ rights demonstrations before the Ohio Statehouse

Revision, revision, revision

Hannah's 21st!

Paul Simon’s “Rewrite”

Nancy Zafris on Flannery O’Connor

Kentucky Derby

Roses

Heat

Stop ‘n’ Go

Friends

Maine, Massachusetts, Vermont

Writing alone and together and at dusk when the hummingbirds are searching the wide-open flowers for some answers

Secrets

Wide-plank floors

Sex with a one-armed man

Surprises

Concessions

Patience

Live Fast, Die Young

Hunkering

Lighting candles

Giving thanks

Jeni's ice cream

Walks with Atticus

Wrapping

Hannah - all grown up and saving China!

Zak's 18th!

Thinking

Considering

Congratulating

Sleeping

In Memory, Music, Writing, Gratitude, Celebration, Travel, Reading, Inspiration, Reverie Tags Flannery O'Connor, Kentucky Derby, Nancy Zafris, Paul Simon, The White Stripes, birthdays, celebrations, family, friends, goodbyes, gratitude, life, snow, summer, with respect to the past, writing
Comment

Meaningful Mentors - Reverie 2011 - Day 6

December 7, 2011 Karin C. Davidson

Writing mentors in 2011—enough to fill an entire house!  Lee K. Abbott, Laurie Foos, Tom Jenks, Connie May Fowler, Lee Martin, and Nancy Zafris.  And I must include my fellow writers—Seth Borgen, Mark Fabiano, and Lauren Inness Norton—for their words and wisdom, their thoughtful remarks, and generosity of time and space.  Whether in workshop or in casual conversation, in person or over email, all of these souls have been honest and well-intentioned, sometimes hard-edged or even-keeled, humorous and teasing, munificent above all, for the sake of the written word. 

The bricks and mortar, the balustrades and spandrels of writing, collected from these teachers and peers into notebooks, scrawled onto manuscript pages, are equal to those of brownstones.  They include dramatic action, coincidence, the art of true suspense, the “two boom” effect, character arcs, compassion, circular narrative structures, inspiration, pushing characters into uncomfortable places, presence, cause and effect, and earned endings.  Memory, patterns, perspective, doubt, progression, found words, top and bottom stories, prompts, donnée, and the spiraling downfall of Billy Joe McAllister.

That I don’t easily sit down to watch television sports, that I sometimes ask the impossible, that I don’t expect an easy way out (especially in revision), that tenacity is one of my worst traits, and that, most days, I care about literature more than anything else—for these things, I hope my mentors forgive me.  For their love of all things literary, I clap my hands like a kid on Christmas morning.  For the way they’ve passed along that fierce love through honest edits and reference letters and exuberant recommendations of reading in terms of writing—from Dorothy Parker’s The Big Blond to Richard Yates Eleven Kinds of Loneliness—I thank them all from the basements, balconies, and the uneven corridors of my mind and heart.

In Gratitude, Writing, the Literary Life, Reverie Tags Connie May Fowler, Laurie Foos, Lee K. Abbott, Lee Martin, Nancy Zafris, Tom Jenks, mentors, with respect to the past, writing
Comment

An Observed Moment - Out There in the World - Reverie 2011 - Day 2

December 5, 2011 Karin C. Davidson

An observed moment in 2011 that we were all witness to, one that affected so many of us: the earthquake in Sendai, Japan.

Here are my thoughts from an earlier post on this moment.

In Disaster, Writing, Reverie, the World Tags Japan, earthquakes, with respect to the past, writing
Comment

Snow Day - Reverie 2011 - Day 1

December 5, 2011 Karin C. Davidson

February 14, 1972.  Valentine’s Day.  New Orleans.  Seventh Grade. 

The day started out with rain, like so many days in New Orleans.  Cold, consistent, and coming down.  That was the bus ride to school.  Later it turned to sleet.  That was in history class.  I think we were studying the Civil War.  Before lunch the sleet turned to wet, heavy dollops of snow.  No one paid attention in math class. We gathered around the one window, a tall thin affair in our modern new 1970’s building, and shouted about the white stuff.  Some of us had never seen snow.

The first snowfall I’d ever seen was on New Year’s Day, 1968.  I was eight years old, staring out the window of our Volkswagen Beetle at the snow-dusted fields and woodlands outside Tallahassee, Florida.  I remember how cold it looked, how distant, and how I didn’t want to get out of the car.

By the end of lunch period, my best friend, Amelie, and I figured out a way (how I have no recollection) for our parents to break through the already jammed office phone lines and give us permission to leave school early. Meanwhile, the headmaster announced over the intercom that what we were seeing outside wasn’t really snow.  I thought of how distressed he would be to walk the ten steps to his car, his fancy leather shoes covered in the unmistakable frozen white snow.

Waiting for the streetcar, jumping in the small white mounds, catching snowflakes on our tongues and in our eyelashes, our corduroy jumpers and thin tights barely keeping us warm.  Amelie and me.  All smiles.  The streetcar driver.  All smiles.  Slipping along the icy tracks for miles, all the way from Carrollton and St. Charles to Washington Avenue.  Running upstairs, yelling for my mother to find us the ice bucket, throwing off our jumpers and throwing on jeans, flying out the door to the little yard.  Nearly three in the afternoon, the daylight already diminishing.  At twilight, our first snowman ever.

The distant feeling I’d had in Tallahassee was cancelled out by the wild banshee yells that Amelie and I threw around the neighborhood.  We’d made a snowman no bigger than a baby, then torn it apart and reconstructed it on the hood of a neighbor’s car.  Short and round and full of dead oak leaves, our snow baby wore a smile of red string, Amelie’s pink scarf, and my striped mittens.  Its unmatched pebble eyes seemed to stare in wonder at the passing traffic on St. Charles Avenue.  Eventually, the streetlights came on and the neighbor drove off with the snow baby hood ornament.

If ever I had another snow day, I’d wish for this same one, with all the exuberance of still being a kid, yelling and freezing, and then realizing the next morning that the frozen snow in the ice bucket had melted.  The joy of all that comes down and then disappears.

In Memory, Winter, Writing, Reverie Tags snow, with respect to the past, writing
Comment
← Newer Posts Older Posts →
Thunder on a Thursday RSS
  • Book Events (1)
  • Bookshops (1)
  • Collaboration (1)
  • Libraries (1)
  • Miracles (1)
  • Parades (1)
  • Saints (1)
  • the Plains (1)
  • Race (2)
  • Writing Workshops (2)
  • the Pacific Northwest (2)
  • Equality (3)
  • Summer (3)
  • Tradition (3)
  • the Caribbean (3)
  • the Northeast (3)
  • AWP (4)
  • Photography (4)
  • Thunder (4)
  • Dance (5)
  • Hurricanes (5)
  • Recovery (5)
  • Spring (5)
  • Disaster (6)
  • Farewells (6)
  • the Midwest (6)
  • Environment (7)
  • Forthcoming (7)
  • Memoriam (7)
  • Debuts (8)
  • Dreams (8)
  • Essays (8)
  • Winter (8)
  • Book Reviews (9)
  • Travel (9)
  • War (9)
  • Film (10)
  • Art (12)
  • Family (12)
  • Awards (13)
  • Life (13)
  • Love (13)
  • Story Collection (13)
  • Books (14)
  • Passion (14)
  • Language (15)
  • Music (15)
  • Voice (17)
  • the South (17)
  • Reverie (19)
  • the World (21)
  • Celebration (22)
  • Memory (22)
  • Poetry (25)
  • the Gulf Coast (25)
  • Novels (27)
  • Literary Reviews (29)
  • Prose (29)
  • Reading (33)
  • Gratitude (34)
  • Place (36)
  • Stories (43)
  • Inspiration (45)
  • the Literary Life (47)
  • Interviews (48)
  • Writing (92)

Featured Photo

Thunder & Lightning - Flora - Kauai, 2008 - by Karin Cecile Davidson

 

 

Return to Top of Page


©2023 Karin Cecile Davidson. All Rights Reserved.