Protected: Nicole’s Kyle Story
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Continue reading →I am saddened to report that Open Mic Nyte, which I have attended since June 2017, has suspended performances. We saw this coming when its long-time home, Mojo’s Coffee, closed in October 2018. The Grandview hosted us for a while, which was unassailably generous, but the space wasn’t quite conducive to our scene. Another factor…
Continue reading →“You can bend my ear We can talk all day Just make sure that I’m near When you’ve really got something to say…” ~Toad the Wet Sprocket I admit to writing a lot. I don’t claim much of it is great. I think this is common to writing, moreso even than photography. How many times,…
Continue reading →Short Story: The Crying Girl by Richard R. Barron “A kitchen light at midnight, all her flatmates are asleep Before she makes me go, it’s about to go deep You’re going to miss us when we grow up I miss your sweetness and your grief I may be a mystery but you were beyond belief…”…
Continue reading →I’ve always had a soft spot for the café culture. Artists and Bohemians like Henry Miller and Jack Kerouac seemed to lead lives of densely-layered creativity. For similar reasons, I’ve always been interested in getting together with fellow writers and poets, to share and compare and express. One result of these interests is the formation…
Continue reading →She hears my steps from behind her As she sorts the mail She lifts her head slightly Knowing what is next The slight movement Tells me that even though I couldn’t see it She was starting to smile I reach her and reach out She tilts her head And knows who and what I want…
Continue reading →Notes, 1983 Somewhere in the distance, so far and separate that it shouldn’t matter, the horn of a freight train sounds as it crosses slowly through the city. They go slower now to avoid limbs and things. …and on nights like tonight, it’s nice to walk. Still, there can’t be a way to replace the…
Continue reading →In February 2005, David Martin decided to write a poem every day for 100 days. (Photos by Richard R. Barron) * * * poem 001 02/07/05 I find it perplexing, this corn god How can it be so clever? it makes us think we have progressed so far but really we are just like its…
Continue reading →Love Letters by Richard R. Barron I stood in the same spot in the wind for what seemed like 30 minutes. It was very cold. Maybe it was the wind and the cold that kept me from moving. That was my excuse, anyway. I had those six letters in my hand, six identical white envelopes,…
Continue reading →Wallpaper by Richard R. Barron “This wall is so plain,” she muttered to herself, staring at the blank, grey facade. “What can I do, what can I do?” she continued, trailing off to a whisper by the last word. She felt a strange, urgent, crushing tension inside her, a need, an overwhelming desire. As quickly…
Continue reading →Walking Away by Richard R. Barron Goodbye is a good cry. There is something about the turn of autumn that hurts us inside. It’s an insane time, when anyone with any artistic or poetic heart feels a sense of loss, or remembrance, or hunger. The hunger is this: when the primary weave of our lives…
Continue reading →Bolt by Richard R. Barron I sat on a folding chair on my balcony, waiting. The black sky all around me was momentarily quiet. A few seconds before, a flash of lightning hit the ground to the south, tripping the breaker on my air conditioner, silencing it as well. I relaxed in the momentary lull. My camera pointed…
Continue reading →Sangre de Christo by Richard R. Barron Sunday As usual, her hands smelled like gasoline. It was unavoidable. To her, though, it was a good smell. It meant that soon she’d be flying again. Standing before her bright white and blue Cessna Skyhawk 172, she pulled on the center of the propeller and the airplane…
Continue reading →Shamrock by Richard R. Barron “Life is like a really expensive cut of beef that you’ve just overcooked.” At 9:30 p.m. Greg was just finishing his shift, and Shelly was about to start hers. He removed his grubby red polyester smock and tossed it in a ball on the floor under the cash register. As it was most nights,…
Continue reading →Wild Horses by Richard R. Barron My tears fall in her hair. She says she’s 5’4″ tall, but in my arms, she felt smaller. We pull away from each other and look at each other through our tears. I smile, and more tears come. This is goodbye. I thought about those tears as I made…
Continue reading →In 1992, some co-worker friends and I created my second iteration of a writing club, a template I used again and again to try, often without success, to get creative minds together. In 1992, the group consisted of Pam Young (later Hudspeth), Frank Rodriguez, Melissa Price (later Davis) and me. I still have contact with…
Continue reading →– Preface – As of the initial publication of this story on October 24, 2013, I have been in Ada, Oklahoma, working at The Ada News, for 25 years. In some ways, this short story, Acme Road Bridge, is the story of how I landed here. This turned into one of the hardest short stories I’ve…
Continue reading →Ice by Richard R. Barron Also see: The Rain Comes Down Long underwear, hiking boots, a wool sweater, a big coat, a yellow rain jacket, and a black ball cap gave me the look of an all weather photographer. I toted a duck-taped, garbage-bag-wrapped 600mm lens as well. Feeling like the emblem of a working professional photographer, I stepped onto the…
Continue reading →Southbound 63 by Richard R. Barron Weary from eight hours on the road but excited to see her, I followed her up the stairs of her non-air-conditioned dorm room at the University of Missouri. Once in her third-floor room, baking in the lingering warmth of campus concrete, I looked out over campus. For a moment…
Continue reading →The Road By Richard R. Barron A gentle August rain fell on us as we drove nowhere for an hour or more, saying nothing. In the distance, lightning danced, decorating the horizon with the shadows of cool grey clouds. Thinking without words in my heart, I listened to the faint complaints of a distant clap of…
Continue reading →Short Story: Agua Fria by Richard R. Barron Click. Whir. Click. The song started again. I was going to wear out this cassette tape. I sat there in the cold, listening to this same song again and again. As I did, I wrote and rewrote a script for it in my head. Script. Sure. It…
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