I Smell Sneakers And…And…The Lusty Odors Of Earth And Cattle

I have two options when, as now, the Muse deserts me (and this has so often been the case of late, and over, say, the last dozen years).

Well, actually, I suppose I do have more than two options. I could recognize, for instance, that anyone who uses the phrase “the Muse deserts me,” or even just “the Muse,” deserves his desolation.

I could simply stop.

But I do not like to stop.

Or I could keep going, Muse-less and muddling, which is, of course, the usual routine around here. If there’s one thing I’ve pretty much figured out how to do, it’s how to keep going. I can keep going with the best of them, just so long as we can agree that by ‘keep going’ we really mean ‘keep saying.’

I could also repeat myself, which I’m more than happy to do in a pinch. Sometimes, I swear, I don’t even know I’m doing it. There are words all around me, stuffed in books and in the pockets of jackets and pants, scrawled on index cards, scraps of paper, napkins, ATM receipts, and Post-It notes. There are shelves of black, lined journals that are also full of words, words that stretch back now over a decade. Those books are a loose –very loose– chronicle of my long nights, an inventory of the conscripted words that march across my skull in the wee hours.

Sometimes, out of desperation, and out of that frankly terrifying and inexplicable impulse to keep going, I just grab whatever words are at hand and force them to flee through my fingers a second time. In the process they are occasionally transformed, often (well, not often) in surprising ways. Most commonly, in fact, they are entirely unchanged from the day they were born –homely, in other words, and entirely lacking in sense.

When I’m truly strapped for inspiration, though, I turn to Jean Kent’s The Professional Writer’s Phrase Book, an essential tool for any struggling writer. Don’t be daunted by that title; you don’t have to be a pro to use Kent’s book. Even a fledgling scribe will find “thousands of descriptive tags that put pizzazz in any copy.”

It says so right on the book’s cover, and the professional writer who wrote those words wasn’t kidding. I have no idea anymore where the book is (things tend to get lost and buried around here, or it’s entirely possible I loaned it out to a professional writer colleague and never got it back), but I did, once upon a time, jot down some handy examples in a notebook. I’m sure you’ll agree that just about anybody could write a professional-quality story using almost nothing but these phrases and a few simple words of their own.

Take a crack at it and see if I’m not right.

ANGER

time to bring out the heavy artillery

the words were sudden and raw and very angry

feisty as hell

she gave him a most unladylike dustup

the rage in him was a living thing

their eyes traded strings of malevolence

like an awakening giant

if I hold it in any longer, I’ll blow out my teeth

LIMBS

hooked her thumb in her panties and cocked her hip

he swatted her behind

raising the tea cup to his heavily mustached lips

kissed his bunched up fingers…MNYEH!

a moth-wind flutter of her hand

rotates a finger near his temple

HEAD

he twisted a benzedrine inhaler up a hairy nostril

and took a somewhat beery breath of fresh air

she pushed her hair back, the better to glare at him

BODY IN MOTION

all his gestures were outside and violent

grabbing up her gown for the run to the kitchen

she slapped her sleeves to get rid of the crumbs

grasped his tightly rolled umbrella like a sword

she ditted around past all the channels

he sat on the porch and waved away the flies

a body so supple it twanged

he moved like a slug

the slow-spitting and squatting men watched her covetously

standing at the lip of a hole

she walks like a construction worker

he moved with the sure grace of a forest creature

a nudge here, a hip there, and an occasional light shove

left the room like a scolded hound

still beavering away

taking on that ‘Let’s be reasonable’ slouch

BODY MOTIONLESS

a thin old man, frozen on the edge of the fallow fields forever

huddled in the water

standing there with an indolent, tomcat grace

TRADE TAGS

bronzed and beautiful

the massive chest of a body builder

a tropical tan even where it doesn’t show

foundation training in the iron game

highly visible in an alluring bikini

with great stability in the shoulder girdle

BUILDINGS–EXTERIOR

a small, nasty shed with a furtive look

a security system that had everything but a moat filled with alligators

it wasn’t an ordinary building but a home

a suspect motel named El Ranko

the sort of railroad flat you find in the ghettos

INTERIOR

sat at a table about as big as a diaper

a husky oak table

the walls started to sweat

the room smelled of dust, mildew, and old love

rancid grease hung in the air like a wet sheet

CRIME AND FIGHTING

a man doesn’t become an investigator without a capacity for cruelty

a man who didn’t think but let his sinews rumble him to oblivion

his first foray into thrilldom

and then came a moment of atavistic horror

he was covered with blood and vomit

the pain in the testicles streaked up to his stomach

the velvet trap of easy living and hard drugs

the code of the vendetta was absolute

an animal instinct told him all was not well

no gun racks in the pickup truck

he ran like unleashed hell

my goal is to stay out of the morgue drawer

DEPRESSION

in the twilight world of the half alive

restless, seeking

hoping the wind and rain would take away the brooding hurt

he stood in the burning lake of himself, unable to escape

slumped into morose musings

pain and loneliness walked with him in the dark

a life which daily negated all her dreams

FACES–DESCRIPTIONS

the upper-echelon mafioso type

his nose looked like a wedge of cheddar

perspiration on her forehead, like water beads on good butter

a nose that could slice cheese

he looked something like a hawk with mumps

he had a face like a benediction

HAPPINESS

a few crocuses of hope poked through the surface

the feeling of happiness rising wonderfully inside you

beer commercial joviality

when I feel this delicious, I laugh at practically anything, sometimes nothing at all

Enjoy!

INNER THOUGHTS

he took the world by the nose

I still believe happiness can be worked out. I am a fool.

there’s nothing worse than a hero out of work

you could catch it and kill it and pin it down, but then it wasn’t a butterfly anymore

The world was a jungle. Only the strong survived.

Bastard! she whispered behind his back.

yet deep, deep inside he still burned with his love for her

preoccupied with matters of nomenclature

you can’t fall off the floor

love was a weed that flourished in the dark

as bad as being told God dislikes you


PHILOSOPHY

I live in a silent movie

a satisfying influx of Mexicans

not everything was cotton candy

two nice people made for each other

when you walk among women, do not forget your whip

Who knows where terrific things begin?

SMELLS

I smell sneakers

I could smell her light, warm femininity

the lusty odors of earth and cattle

See what I mean? Wow! What you have here are the raw materials to make a writer out of the drabbest, most tongue-tied closet dreamer. And I haven’t even made it to the phrases related to lovemaking (he took a look down her decollete). I’ll buy lunch for the person who can send me a reasonably coherent story –or, what the hell, an entirely incoherent story– that makes judicious use of the largest number of these helpful phrases, and I’ll also post the story for at least twenty-five other people to see! So start beavering away! And send those entries to zellar at rakemag dot com.


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