Home now from two glorious weeks at the Writers
Colony at Dairy Hollow in Eureka Springs.
Oh,
the new chapters I wrote. Oh, the books I read and reviewed. And the poems I penned.
I also contacted the poets who’d
submitted to “CALLIOPE: A Writer’s Workshop,” for which I’m the newly-appointed
editor.
What else? I learned to operate
the digital camera bought two months ago, and while doing so, discovered the
company had been out of business for eight years! Why were their products still
being sold?
I made notes from the books I
read. I brainstormed scenarios for the sequel.
Talya and Dorothy were housemates. We visited over
wine-thirty and at dinner.
The
last few days, others moved in, either for Crescent Dragonwagon’s Fearless
Writing Weekend or for the Colony’s board meeting on Saturday.
Checking
my journal, I realized I hadn’t told anyone about the elk head I saw at
Marshall on the way up. I’d stopped for gas. Four or five fellows were gathered
around a pickup bed. I saw antlers and—nosy, uh, curious me--went over to look.
A young man had just killed the beast near Woolem. He described it as “3.5
points.” Woolem was fairly close to Marshall; I passed a sign a little north of
there.
For
you who like to read about local folks and their “doings,” I have an idea. Dr.
Pat Adcock, professor emeritus at Henderson State University, has written two
novels, both of which I read while at the Colony. Bill White of Hot Springs AR especially will
enjoy Dr. Adcock’s Muggsbottom stories, for they are set in the
Arkadelphia-like town of Arcady. Confession: I loved the books, but I should
have had a dictionary at hand. Instead, I listed the unknown-to-me words (I
love to find new words.) and later, looked them up.
Some
words I knew, thank goodness, from other readings: reprobate, sodomite,
debauched, hirsute and reconnoiter. I knew conundrum, cryptic and caveat, contretemps,
lachrymose, intimations and histrionics.
But
back to the stories: they involve four British gentlemen who do not like the
government of Mrs. Thatcher. Therefore, they decide to find another country in
which to retire. They butt up against some of the local Arkansas people, their customs
and attitudes. The narrator (the thinly disguised author) becomes a friend,
observes and reports all their shenanigans. Therein lies the fun.
2 comments:
I want to read that book! Good post. I so enjoyed being with you and Talya at DH and got lots done.
It's a good one--and funny/clever. Have reserved WCDH for Ap. 21 - May 2: Lucidity plus a few days.
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