Friday Fictioneers – June 6, 2013 — ‘Fable Abel’

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Copyright: http://elappleby.wordpress.com/

FABLE ABEL

Hello!” Dickey Hendricks greeted the curious animal in the forest.

Hello.”

Boy, you’re funny looking!  Who are you?”

I’m Fable Abel.”

Who’s that?”

The main character in a fable about just being yourself.”

Tell me.”

Well, my author created me to be a zebra. He gave me these hind legs. But then I saw a tiger and insisted on becoming a tiger instead. But when I saw a giraffe, I begged my author to make me a giraffe. But just as he was drawing my head, I saw an elephant and shouted, ‘No, I want to be an elephant with a looooong trunk!’”

Oh my!  So what are you now?”

A lesson for boys and girls like you.”

~

 

( I confess I’m 19 words over, but I like it the way it is, so I’m posting it anyway.)

Join the fun over at Rochelle’s Place:
http://rochellewisofffields.wordpress.com/2013/06/05/6-june-2013/

100-Word Challenge for Grown Ups – Week 92

CLIP ART SUNSET

YELLOW

Yellow sun, yellow moon,
Yellow ribbon on yellow balloon;

Yellow crayons for coloring,
Yellow bird that chirps and sings.

Yellow squash ripe on the vine,
Yellow daffodils — all mine. 

Yellow hair, with cheeks so pink,
Yellow lemonade to drink;

Yellow duckies, yellow chicks,
Yellow grapefruit freshly picked;

Yellow butter drips and drops
From tender, yellow corn-on-cob. 

Yellow curtains, crisp and bright,
Yellow anti-bug porch light; 

But yellow has its ugly side:
Yellow fever; could have died;

Yellow-bellied, yellow streak,
Yellow-livered, backbone weak.

And sometimes yellow can’t be seen:
It hides in blue and turns to green.

~~~

I have to admit I sort of cheated, because I originally wrote this poem a few weeks ago as part of the National Poetry Writing Month challenge. But it just seemed to fit this prompt from Julia so perfectly that I thought it would be a shame not to use it. And with 97 words, what more could I ask for?

Join the fun by going to Julias site for the details.100 WORD CHALLENGE LOGO

June Writing Challenge: More Graphic Art From Terry

Terry Valley had such a great time reading all of your stories from the last writing challenge based on his graphic art that he has sent me another picture – the result of further graphic art work by him. But he wants me to make it clear that he did not actually draw this picture. Rather, he took portions of other works and put them together to create this composite picture. One of his favorite artists is Gustave Dore, whose work is now in public domain in the U. S., and the main characters in this picture come from Dore’s work.

Terry also shared his original intent for the picture and explained what it means to him, but I have posted that well below the picture itself. That way, any of you who want to try your hand at responding to the writing challenge can be free to process what the picture inspires in you and write your story before you read Terry’s purpose and meaning behind it. Or – feel free to read his explanation first.

 If you’d like to accept the challenge and write a story, just post it on your blog, come over here, and post your link in the “Comments” section below.

Word Limit is 100-500 words.

No time limit: Write when you feel inspired.

Take your liberty with ideas, but please remember this is a “G” rated blog, so all stories must adhere to that rating. I hope we have a lot of response, and I’m eager to read all the stories. Also, I guess I’d better try to write one as well.

Here’s Terry’s artwork:

TERRY'S GATES OF HELL - CREDITS - LARGER

~

Terry’s Explanation of What the Picture Means to Him:

“The picture is meant to portray the seriousness of our existence. We are not our own, despite the human pride that says otherwise. We belong to God who created us. If we do not realize this in this life, it will become terrifyingly clear to us at death. The scene shows a human being after his death at the portal to his eternal destiny, represented by a gate set in the unbounded vastness of eternity.

He is on his knees, hands raised in desperate terror, pleading with the giant spiritual being before him who guards the gate to eternity and is pointing at the formerly complacent human being who now realizes – too late –that his complacency has doomed him to eternal fire – which is perilously close and licks all around him and the Angel of the Gate, the Death Angel.

To make the man’s grief and predicament all the worse, in the far distance, behind him, can be seen a single bright star, which represents the glorious and joyous destiny that could have been his. The star is behind him, as is his life on earth; he turned his back on the glorious future that could have been his, if he had not wasted his life on himself instead of living for the One — Jesus — who created him for Himself.

This is the moment of moments in his entire life, the one, last moment that decides his destiny for all eternity. But in truth, that destiny was decided long before, while he was still alive on earth. Now it is too late. Judgment has been set – and it cannot be changed.

That may sound like a lot to see in a single picture, but that is why it was created and what I hope it portrays and communicates.”

~~~

‘Sarge, Will You Tell Us About God?’ – The Story of God’s Miraculous Protection of an Entire U. S. Marine Unit

This post is the true story of my dad’s miraculous experiences of God’s protection during World War II.

 

 

A Walk in the Word's avatarA Walk In The Word

DADMARINEJPG - ED.In celebration of Memorial Day, I am re-posting this story. I have several new readers and followers who were not with me when I originally posted “Sarge, Will You Tell Us About God,” and a number of Marine veterans have now discovered that the book is available. So I’d like to share the story again in the hope that many more people may be blessed by what the Lord did for an entire Marine unit during World War II.

The story itself makes up a small book, published by St. Ellen Press and is available on their website as well. Although it’s my story, and that of the other 321 men in my squadron, it is primarily HIS story.

In the past few years I have shared free copies of the book with hundreds of soldiers who were in the midst of horrible combat overseas. In response, I have received…

View original post 2,401 more words

Jake Sprinters’ Sunday Post Challenge: Perspective

Just some interesting perspectives I thought I’d share:

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To join in the fun, visit Jake’s site: http://jakesprinters.wordpress.com/2013/05/27/sunday-post-perspective/

 

100-Word Challenge For Grown Ups – Week 90 — ‘The Written Word’

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The prompt this week:   “… the points were sharp …”

 

 

The Written Word

The quills were ancient. She’d found them locked in a closet of the abby. But the points were sharp, the monks having taken great care of them.

Mara sighed.  Remember, Robert? … Computers and photocopiers?  It was all so easy?”

Yeah … life before the E-bombs. Who would have dreamed our electronic infrastructure was so unprotected!”

If the new dictator hadn’t confiscated all the manual typewriters and pencils as well, we could at least communicate to some extent!”

Picking up a quill, Robert replied: “Well, this is how our ancestors printed letters and books. We come from the same stock. So –” dipping his quill into the ink – “let’s get started.”

~

Julia’s 100-Word Challenge For Grown Ups is a lot of fun. Hop over to her site to get the instructions for how to take part:
http://jfb57.wordpress.com/2013/05/20/100-word-challenge-for-grown-ups-week84/

Friday Fictioneers – 5/24/13 — ‘Candid Camera’ or ‘The Twilight Zone’?

Copyright: Danny Bowman

Candid Camera or The Twilight Zone?

How long ’til the bus,Ted?”
“Soon.”
Rrrring.
Hey, Ted, that payphone’s ringin’”
Who cares?”
Well …”

Five minutes later.

Hey, Ted, that’s the phone again.”
Don’t bother me.”
But 10 rings! Maybe it’s important!”
You wanta answer it? Answer it!”
Yeah … I will.”

Reaching for the receiver: “Hey!  What the …? … Hey, Ted, look at this!”

Ted snatched the earpiece from Freddy. “Somebody’s talkin’ on here!”

There ain’t no way to answer ’em, Ted!  What’ll we do?”

Ted looked around suspiciously. “I know what this is … one of them hidden camera shows.”  Squaring his shoulders: “Stand up straight, Freddy. I think we’re on TV.”

~

Friday Fictioneers. Join the fun and write a 100-word story prompted by this picture. Visit Rochelle’s site to get the rules:
http://rochellewisofffields.wordpress.com/

 

 

An Excellent Article on the Importance of Reading Fiction

DR. MOORE


I came across this article today by Dr. Russell D. Moore: “Why Christians Should Read Fiction.”  I could not get the article to re-post onto WordPress, so I’m just sharing the link to the post on his own website.

http://www.russellmoore.com/2013/03/25/why-christians-should-read-fiction/#comment-289374

Friday Fictioneers – 5/17/13 — ‘Albert’s Wife’

aqueduct-sarah-ann-hallPhoto by Sarah Hall

 

Albert’s Wife

The estate still boasted its artistic iron fence and stone posts, although the grasses were encroaching. Trevor smiled. How the old lady would chastise that gardener.

Feisty, courageous old girl! Living alone in the home Albert had built her. Married here on a Sunday, by Tuesday, she’d kissed her soldier husband goodbye.

Next year, a scruffy teen hired to paint the fence, Trevor had won her heart – and she’d won his. He’d been there (the son she’d never have) to hold her hand as she’d read the black-edged telegram and cried. She’d refused to live in mourning, but seventy years she never loved but one man.

Today, at last, she was with Albert.

~~~

To join in and write your own 100-word story inspired by this picture, visit Rochelle’s site for the ‘how-to’ details.