Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Chapter 3 Excerpt: Confessional



SAMREN
***
     There was no time to waste. I went down the stairs closely behind Faden. In my father's house, it was dinner with the family or no dinner at all. And it was usually simple. That night it was some smoked salmon, a potpourri of cut vegetables in a salade composee, and some bread and cheeses sliced and served. All the parlor's lights were on and cast a golden ambience to the room, my father's face was pinker than usual and the edges of his mouth turned up rather than down. And still, somehow, I felt oppressed by the entire situation.
    Arnaud folded his hands and closed his eyes in prayer. We followed. He tended to keep it brief and impersonal, and usually about the food. Only heaven knew what went on in his head. His expression was positive, as was Faden's. I felt trapped, but worked hard to maintain composure. I considered the speed and the angle at which I brought bites of food to my mouth as well as my mouth's tension: whether or not there was any. What I failed to consider was the speed, and I finished far before the rest of the family.
    "Excuse me." I said, as soon as I was finished, then burst out of the living room into the hall, down the stairs, and out on the street just as Elliott had, what seemed just seconds before.
   Night had already fallen. Rooms lit up in checkered pattern in the buildings and apartments all down the street, and the air heavier with dew. I looked all around, hoping Elliott was still there, somewhere, perhaps on my own street. Crumpled paper from a wrapper made a crumpled sound as a breeze wound down the street. A cat darted across the way, which was carless by dusk. What a quiet town it had been. Then, I ran. I ran down the street which wound around and down one of the prominent hills of the town. No sounds, no leads. Groups of elders huddled together, cheeks kissed pink by the drink, stumbled out of bars and ambled down the narrow ways, on foot.
   Nothing at all, even as I jogged down the main road. So maybe more than a jog, it became a sprint. Eventually I stopped, leaning over, weight over my knees, catching my breath in heaves which burned. The farther I strayed, the less the lights became. Only the moonlight cast a silver-blue glow over the town. I began to accept that I wouldn't find him, but my feet still guided me until I stood before Notre-Dame de Lourdes, a graceful thing of a church which resembled a chateau to the father, or power above. I crossed the wide treeless grounds which stretched before the church and walked along its stone walls until slipping in through a wooden door with a heavy iron handle.
   I crossed the back of the church, behind the very last rows of pews, to a dark wooden confession box and slid onto its bench. At that time in the evening, the church was empty save for a few altar assistants who lit the candles as well some of the most urgent stories in town-- people came desperate for insight or assistance in their life's most unravel-able problems.
   As did I. I jerked the curtain of the confessional closed at my side and leaned my forehead against the wooden wall. No words came to mind, but I suppose it was comforting all the same.
   Whether there was a God, or not, there's something divine about going to a place and being forced to sit alone with your thoughts, reflect, and feel truly healed when problems dissolve with time.
   I pounded my fist against the interior of the booth and closed my eyes tightly.
   "I don't know what I've done." I choked out, and buried my face in my hands. The moving, the change in father's airs, the new stranger: and my own actions of the evening whirled in my mind. I turned my eyes up to the space above the the tightly slatted window: to a crucifix, and slipped some francs from my perspiring palm into a small receiving box.
   Taking a deep breath, I emerged into the church, its wide expanses and domed ceiling sharply contrasting the atmosphere of the narrow confessional. Candles flickered at the front altar and I saw the backs of two or three heads bowed in prayer. And one, toward the front, struck me as somehow familiar. A mop of decently attended to brown hair and a Lycee Peyramale jacket gave him away.


 Forgive me father, for I have sinned, and I dont care. 

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Sketch for Lourdes, France

Sketch for my W.I.P. Lourdes France.
Looking good Elliott, looking good.

Enjoy this post? Visit my sketchbook at http://maliaautiovirtualsketch.blogspot.com

Monday, July 2, 2012

(Untitled 1) Work in Progress

Untitled Work in Progress: Plot Synopsis



Genre: Young - Adult - Fiction - Realistic - Coming of Age 

Samren Trouillefou is living contently in his French town of Lourdes with his withdrawn widower father with the feeling that nothing will ever change when he enters his last year of high school. He soon finds himself jerked out of comfort and complacency with his village life when his brother introduces him to a British-French near his age named Elliott Thomas. Samren is immediately drawn to the stranger's intensity and disregard for the rigid tradition so revered by the town. What's more, due a business decision his father declares that the family will move to Paris. Additionally, his father promises that they will host an American exchange student for the year as a condition of the buisiness promotion.

What results is a story that explores the role of memory, coming-of-age, as well as identity as Samren is wrenched forever from his quiet country life in Lourdes and faced with growing up quickly among new and exciting: but at times challenging and dangerous influences and people.

Using this work without recognition of the author, especially without express permission, or using any part of this plots or character names is stealing and a violation of intellectual property rights. 

____

I'm so excited to be working on this story! Right now in my mind I usually refer to it as "Lourdes, August" but I'm not sure if by the time I finish the work that I'll feel the title is representative of the book. 

Friday, June 29, 2012

E-Published: Pity Smacked- Unedited 1st Ed.

Hello Blogspot World:

I have released my first ever full length novel's first edition. I wrote and edited this book during the time between eighth grade and sophomore year of high school. And I've chosen to e-publish this edition for kindle. Perhaps I will do print-on-demand available through Amazon once I've done a complete edit and overhaul. This will require getting back in touch with the characters to the point I feel I can accurately explore them on the written page. You really have to know your characters, even better than you know your friends. Hell, you have to feel and imagine for them. It's hard freaking work when you work a full time job. I can see why there's the stereotype that writers have to be holed up by themselves, and I'm just not that solitary of a person. Although I'm rediscovering passion for my projects. 


This is available at Amazon.com kindle store. Kindle is functional on PCs, Kindles, iPads, and Macs once you download the software. http://www.amazon.com/Pity-Smacked-ebook/dp/B008CXL0TC/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1340989605&sr=8-1&keywords=pity+smacked

About This Blog

Yes, I know I have a lot of blogs. Yes, I know I haven't been keeping up with them as well as I should, but I think that this blog should be something I can maintain, if not very well from day to day and week to week, perhaps quite well from month to month, season to season, or year to year. At least it may provide some motivation to create content, explore characters, and perhaps interact with a interwebs community of writers, readers, and bored anglophones worldwide.

Writing is something I began very early on in my life. My favorite thing to collect as a child was notebooks, pens, and pencils. When I got my allowance the first place I went was Barnes and Noble and Office Depot. I would buy journals, notebooks... and for a time I actually filled them up. Then I went to college and got a bit distracted meeting deadlines and fulfilling research to meet the expectations and content as guided by professors. Now that I graduated college my intellectual palate has had some time to be cleared although I continued to study biology and medical sciences online. Even if I may never enter a medical school, I find myself growing enormously through everything I study.

And yet there used to be a carefree and intense part of myself where I knew these characters better than I knew my best friends, and maybe even myself. Rather, it seems the potentiality I felt in high school exploded into all these characters of what I imagined could have been for myself during high school and even after high school and in adult life. It fascinated me, it enveloped me, it was my life. And I thank any friends and family who were that to me. I don't know if other writers out there feel this way. I haven't felt this desire to talk about their lives so intensely as I did in middle school and high school. It seems some part of that faded when homework became more copious than free-time. But it's something I would like to get back to.

At this blog I aim to:
-generate written content, about my characters, and maybe discover new characters and stories yet untold
most content generated for the blog will be short works, prompt-inspired pieces, and many of them may involve my original characters
-promote the sale of longer, more polished or complete works through self-publishing venues (Kindle Direct Publishing)
-interact with a community of online writers, online or electronic readers and receive feedback, offer feedback, grow together

I specialize in:
-risque, a bit off the beaten path, GBLTQ Fiction (but not erotica) -
-love stories, realistic fiction from the first person
-fictional commentaries on social issues of our times: global warming, problems with food subsidization (A book which I find inspirational to where I want to go in the future with my writings is My Year of Meats by Ruth Ozeki: great for anyone who is critical of the American food industry or modern industrial agriculture as well as anyone interested in Japan)

Thanks and Enjoy the Blog!

Creative Writing Exercise Day 1


Just a couple of old birds out at a bar, somewhere in New York. I stirred my cocktail slowly, ran my finger around the rim of its glass, stared ahead at the rows of spirits and syrups—none of them particularly expensive, unique, or noteworthy. Just your typical bar. The bell tied around the door handle jingles, and my old buddy Sam walks in. He's barely greyed, only if I look really hard can I spot a few hairs that are no longer black. It's still long and tied back in a half ponytail and he's wearing a long leather jacket.
He sits and orders something hard.
“Elliott, you shouldn't be here.” He says.
Mon ami, it's been a while. Your posh suburbs life got you down?”
“Actually, I only come here for business anymore. Mine a bit, mostly my son's. We're still living on the other side of the country.”
“Yeah, I know.” By we he referred to his wife.
He scooted toward me, weight leaning over one of his long and still elegant legs which hung over the bar stool. My hand grasped the drink glass, however, rather than the glass at my lips, I found his lips come toward mine.
I'd been under the impression we would sit and chat it up: not of our tangled past but of the present: which I had no idea was so equally tangled. I felt weak, tired. It wasn't just the alcohol.

-Written Spring, 2012-
This work is copyright Malia Autio, 2012
This work was written from a Writer's Digest prompt: a night at a bar, something unexpected happens and a memorable night ensues. Thoughts? Comments? Be my guest.