First, I will point out that I finally updated my Blogger photo. Yes, I know that Blogger crunched it and it's blurry, but I kind of like it like that, so it'll stay that way for at least a little while, haha. I was a senior in high school when my old photo was taken, and I just finished my junior year of undergrad the day before this photo was taken (which also happens to be today!).
It's probably a questionable decision to release so much of my unpublished work at once, through the link which will be following soon, but I feel good about it. I'm willing to give up on the chance of publishing these pieces elsewhere in order to have some excellent content on here.
Without further ado, I present to you my solo magazine that I created for my Digital Magazine Production class this semester: Planetside Literary. The only previously-published written content in the "magazine" is my story "The Last Photo of Humanity," which can be read a few different places on the web, both in its original contest entry form and in its revised Digital Portfolio form.
Since I don't expect anyone to read everything I've published here all at once, I'll be suggesting certain pieces to read every once in a while over the next month or two. The first piece up is my sci-fi flash fiction piece "As Tar and Soot." I don't know that this story ever found its full potential, but it's one of my personal favorites, and I'd love to know what y'all think about it. And by "y'all," of course, I mean the two or so people who currently read my blog, haha. Anyway, peace out, good friends. More suggestions from my web magazine to come. (Though you can read ahead if you really want to.)
Sunday, April 29, 2018
Monday, April 16, 2018
The Cultivation of Relationships
Here's an article I wrote the last week of 2017 about building better relationships with people.
Friday, January 12, 2018
Not a Herald, Just a Boy
[Note: It's been quite a while since I last posted a story here, so I've decided to let this one slip from the slush-pile parade, to reside here forever.]
My
comforter suddenly felt very heavy at my feet. I turned over. By the age of
eighty you have gotten used to such nighttime oddities.
A
chill sprung up on the back of my neck. I tugged my blanket up over it. The
cold came again, penetrating straight to the bone. My body went rigid.
“Wake
up, and face your end.” It was a young voice, but gurgled, as if spoken through
a mouthful of water.
I
burrowed into my pillow. Nighttime oddities.
“Don’t
be afraid,” said the voice. I felt a hand on my back. It was warm, in stark
contrast to the frigid breath pouring down on me.
I
reached up for my spectacles. The moon let a thin pool of light in through my
window, just enough to see the silhouette. Despite the darkness, the form
owning that awful voice was distinct. Its cloak was black, so black it glowed. Its
face was chalky. And familiar.
The
Grim Reaper smiled. He held no weapon, so far as I could see. But his sea-green
eyes sent terror into my heart. “Hello, Grandpa.”
“Thomas.”
I shut my eyes and begged for this dream to end.
“Put
your hand on my chest. Don’t worry, it won’t hurt you. I just want you to feel
something.”
His
breathing did not cease. I placed my shaking hand out to touch his ribs. Then
the bone fell away. My hand went damp.
“I
was so excited to finally go fishing with you grandpa. My parents were worried
at first. What made this time different, that you finally gave in to my
pleading? They were only a little surprised when they received the news that I
had drowned. An accident, of course.”
“Wake
up. Wake up now,” I muttered.
“I
gave you a year grandpa. To atone. To feel a single shred of guilt.” I felt his
hand on my chest.
“You
are the Reaper, Thomas? Herald of the Dead?”
“I
am your Reaper, grandpa. Not a herald, just a boy.”
My
chest softened. I fought to breath. But it did no good. My lungs were sandbags
full of the water.
Wednesday, December 20, 2017
Undergraduate Major Blindness
Ultimately, we can only speak for what we ourselves have studied (and, though I didn't mention this in the article, even within a major, we may not know how certain choices within the major affect the situation).
Tuesday, November 28, 2017
Learning A Foreign Language For Reading Literature
Bonus note: Poetry with a rhyming scheme is best read in its original language. For reasons that should be pretty self-evident. Here's the post.
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