Design for a Christmas card by Gabriel Schachinger, 1888

Chromolithograph.  L. Prang & Co.

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Knickknack paddy wack, give a box to Nolan.

So my super-cool best friend sent me a big box of knickknacks as an early Christmas present, and its contents easily double as inspirations or writing prompts.

What you see up front in the first two photos is petrified wood, an obsidian arrowhead (dragonglass for defeating white walkers!!) and selenite crystal.  The selenite will come in handy, as it promotes peace and calm — my 2022 New Year’s resolution is to chill the #@$% out before this world finally drives me to full on supervillainy.  (I started picking out a costume on Friday after doomscrolling Twitter.)

The pottery she made herself.  And the cigar box corral with its contestants is perfect for plotting out my planned western epic.  Dammit, I hope I’m not giving away too many plot points here.  (You’ve heard the expression, “Not my first rodeo?”  It WAS the center guy’s first rodeo.)



crystals

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quill and cup

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“Thanksgiving Greetings” card, circa 1900

Happy Thanksgiving all!!  I hope that you enjoy the holiday.  Stay safe.

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Pop quiz — Q: Why is this ring-shaped?

A: BECAUSE IT’S ONE OF THE NINE CIRCLES OF HELL.


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“La Emperatriz Theodora,” Jean-Joseph Benjamin-Constant, 1887

“Empress Theodora.”  Oil on canvas.

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“I came to myself, in a dark wood, where the direct way was lost.”

In the middle of the journey of our life, I came to myself, in a dark wood, where the direct way was lost. It is a hard thing to speak of, how wild, harsh and impenetrable that wood was, so that thinking of it recreates the fear. It is scarcely less bitter than death: but, in order to tell of the good that I found there, I must tell of the other things I saw there.

I cannot rightly say how I entered it. I was so full of sleep, at that point where I abandoned the true way. But when I reached the foot of a hill, where the valley, that had pierced my heart with fear, came to an end, I looked up and saw its shoulders brightened with the rays of that sun that leads men rightly on every road. Then the fear, that had settled in the lake of my heart, through the night that I had spent so miserably, became a little calmer. And as a man, who, with panting breath, has escaped from the deep sea to the shore, turns back towards the perilous waters and stares, so my mind, still fugitive, turned back to see that pass again …

— from Dante Alighieri’s The Divine Comedy, 1321 (Canto I)



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Gustave Dore, 1857

“Zamboanga,” Franklin Booth, 1912

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Dancin’ with the Star.

I am endlessly trying to get juuuuuust the right photo of St. John’s Episcopal Church with the Mill Mountain Star in the background.  I’ll probably never get there, but sometimes the results are fun.

As I’ve noted in the past, this is at the corner of Elm Avenue and Jefferson Street in Roanoke, Virginia.



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Album cover for Blue Oyster Cult’s “Agents of Fortune,” 1976

Columbia.

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Check out “Wondering” by Vincent Smith!

My friend Vincent Smith is a newly published author.  Please enjoy his short poem “Wondering” over at Spillwords Press.