The Words for Wednesday is a movable feast, celebrating writing.
And this is a The more, the merrier kind of endeavour, so Please,
remember to follow the links, go and read other peoples'
stories.
And please leave a comment after reading. Challenges like this
one thrives on interaction, feedback and encouragement.
We ALL need
encouragement.
In April you'll find the Words for Wednesday at Messymimi's blog. Today she has given us:
Opinion
Shell
Clue
Seed
Attention
Sit
and/or
Story
Makeup
Corn
Emotion
Mess
CircleThis turned into a re-write of a bit of one of the first chapters of Unicorn Farm; my magical autobiography, and
once again I took up the additional challenge of using the prompts in
the order they were given. "In my
opinion," Susan said, "it is not possible to make
shells into plates. Not nice plates, anyhow.
"Susan," Heidi said, "you really haven't got a
clue how transformation works, do you?"
"Oh yes! Of course I have. You swish your wand just so," Susan said and suited action to words, swinging her wand impatiently through the correct move, "and the you tell those stupid shells to turn into plates. Only they don't!"
"Listen, Susan. Inside every thing, every shell, button, or whatever, there's a tiny
seed of being. A thing that makes a plate a plate and a shell a shell. You have to sort of push this seed into wanting to be a plate, then the rest will follow."
Heidi had Susan's
attention now, her anger at Heidi's lecturing gave way to puzzlement. "Say what?" she said. "Can you say that once again in normal Danish?"
"
Sit down," Heidi said and sat down at a big stone herself. Susan followed suit, and Heidi picked up a shell."Look at this shell, every scar and imperfection tells a bit of its story. It is not totally alike to any other shell on the whole beach."
"Just like snowflakes?" Susan interrupted
"Uh-huh," Heidi said nodding, "something like it. Every grain of sand it ever met, every wave, is a part of its
makeup. Pick up another one."
Susan picked up a shell. "Look at it," Heidi said. "Look at the shell-nes of it. Now imagine a cob of
corn, all those small shallow holes where the corns have sat. Can you see the similarities?"
Susan nodded.
"If you notice the details of what make a shell a shell and a corn cob a corn cob," Heidi said, "you can change one into another much easier than by forcing the change."
Different
emotions cursed through Susan. Frustration that she was not able to do even the simplest transformation. Envy at Heidi, who could transform shells into plates or corn cobs or anything not alive. Gratitude that Heidi always willingly and patiently shared her knowledge - Susan never realized that she shared just as generously when she was in the know.
Susan said: "I'm tired of trying. My brain has turned to mush. Everything inside my poor skull is one
mess. I can't even tell you if the plate I was supposed to think of, is a
circle, an octagon or whatever."
"You need an ice cream cone!" Heidi said. "Let's walk up to the bridge and have one."
"Yes!" Susan said. "Doctor Heidi is right. Ice cream cones, and those from the parlour at the bridge in particular, are the medicine of choice to all evils."
Laughing and singing and skipping along the two apprentice witches went along the summery paths leading to the far away bridge with its famed ice cream parlour.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
April 6 question: Have any of your books been made into audio books? If so, what is the main challenge in producing an audio book?
MotherOwl's answer: Nope. None of my books have ever been made into audio books. And as I love reading books on paper, and never ever have even tried an audio book, I would not know how or where to start doing this.