Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Aroma

meminso (sic) and I uploaded our experimental short "Aroma" to Vimeo. meminso directed and edited the film, shot entirely on his Android cell phone. I am the leading lady and author of the voice-over poem.



Growing up in this neighborhood
is like frantic conversations with flowers
and roses rushing in.

Children are tiny scarecrows
stitched for protection from superstitions.
The hallways creak,
haunted by arguing dollmakers
who think their kids are asleep.
Someday the little bodies of hay
will hear the wicked and spectacular histories
of what happened to their heroes.

The neighborhood is a trap
of walls and invisible wolves.
She’s stung by bees if she tries to leave.
As she stares up,
she feels the formidable pulse
of the thing that’s waiting for her.

She cuts the colors out of her fingers:
the yellow from her sunny attic prison
and the red, scorching red
that chokes the right words.

The rich red beckoned her
out the window.
She has never known such a color before,
and it tells her of all its shades:
burning tantrums that end in backhands;
the touch of two pounding hearts,
one big, one small;
worms caught in the blushing apples of a face;
the fever crawling in the trees after a kiss.

She holds her childhood to the sun
and remembers that she’s young;
and because of youth
she can go as high as she wants
until the hearts drift from her body
into hot air balloons.

She passes her room
and the hairs stand on her neck,
moving dinosaur bones in her back.
She’s not scared, she is transcending.

She fits like a spoon
into the dark, dark, dark,
and emerges a message on burning paper
that reads,

“When the mountains part in the distance
like shoulder blades,
and the violet silhouette takes my breath
like warm wine,
remember me for my energy in the air,
and how you wrung me from your hair
like saltwater.”



Due to an audio disaster, "Aroma" premiered as a silent film at Denver's first ever Open Screen Night. It took runner-up, and that tasted delicious.

At October's OSN, Mayonai$$e's newest music video premiered, in which I play the exasperated "Dr. Mary Jane." I have no qualms with this song getting stuck in my head!



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meminso is the laughing chick in red tights. Wait, that's me.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Cordelia

My story "Cordelia in 220" leads the ninth issue of Title Goes Here:. It is flooring to see your work depicted by a really talented artist (Chris Orapello) on the front cover of a magazine. I can't play it cool with this one: I'm really excited. Available in print or .pdf, mkay?

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Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Mayo, Milk, and Honey

Mayonai$$e and Milkman are super fly musicians here in Denver. Their music video for "Natural Hater" premiered at August's Open Screen Night. Makes my punk ass laugh every time I watch it. They let me make a cameo and roll my eyes in a few scenes.




The Summer 2011 Issue of Moon Milk Review has arrived. My story "Honey" is featured, a flash fiction weirdo that I wrote a couple years ago. Fun to read it after the elaborate novellas I've been flame-torching from my heart over the past two years, and especially in such a cool publication.

I have one more story in line for publication next month, and then the leaves will start falling from the trees, and my mind will become winter-worn and without drive. Or I'll keep writing stories and making short films for Open Screen Night -- who maintain a great Twitter account, @OpenScreenNight.

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Open Screen Night

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meminso and I made a short film, and it will be playing on the big screen TONIGHT, July 26th, at Denver's Oriental Theater. It's the very first Open Screen Night. Check out local Colorado shorts every month and submit one of your own. There's a bar, you drunks.

I wrote and acted in the film, and meminso is a smashing local filmmaker; he wrote, directed, edited, inebriated, and delegated dreams. I don't capitalize his first name because I don't respect him as a person, but he is one hell of a filmmaker. Also, he doesn't capitalize it.

Open Screen Night
Last Tuesday of every month, starting tonight at 8pm!
Oriental Theater on 44th and Tennyson in Denver


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 The above photos were taken behind the scenes while we were shooting. Here are some actual film stills:



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Saturday, June 18, 2011

Mountain Mama

Hi! You can find me on the Twitter these days- @melissafiction. I post pictures and talk about life.

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2011 has been a social year. I'm getting a lot of sun, meeting a ton of people, and much much much writing. My flash story "Honey" is coming to Moon Milk Review this summer, and I am honored!

Back in April, my buddy made a video from our Rocky Mountain wanderings. Not to be mistaken for hiking. We were in the foothills, roaming and curious with cameras in our hands. The piano music you hear really was falling from the storm clouds.



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Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Melissa Blue

First the bubbles float up from the sea in this new world of mine. All the butterflies are blue and cover the trees.





The Melissa Blue are a haunting family of butterflies. They belong in an ice forest. They're bluetiful and look cold to the touch. I like the guys with the teardrop-black eyes, grey fur like a wolf-fly.

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Deep in my heart they're pitching oil in buckets, and little blue butterflies are haunting up here and there, one at a time, breaking for the sunlight. Someone's big fucking hand is in the way, I think it's mine, closing over the well. But I have to get that oil out of there.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Winter

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First snow in Denver! It's bringing out the ghouls. Nightmares are heightened in the one-bedrooms, and last night I felt a warm hand holding mine, putting me to sleep.

At Victoria's Secret, I caught a little boy lying under the dressing room door, staring as I tried on lingerie. When I told him to leave, he didn't react right away.

I just wanted to feel attractive. The holidays make me all weird. I crave ice cream and frozen yogurt shops. Cold comfort foods. I want to wear petticoats and expose my throat with something pretty hanging from it, a necklace, inexpensive quartz. In the winter I want to dress up every day and dance, strapless silver dresses. It all feels so melancholy this time around, except in those first few moments when the snow starts falling.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Peeping

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I looked out the peephole in my door today, which I find to be a very creepy thing - I try not to use it. My neighbor's door was wide open. She and a man swayed arm in arm. I walked back to the couch and placed my hands in my lap, thoughtfully considering the couple in the tiny tunnel with their arms wrapped around each other.

Then suddenly "OW" and "PICK IT UP" and the door roared shut. How do I describe the sound? It was like. "I'M FUCKIN' SERIOUS." She isn't nasal; it's piercing and flat at the same time. While they're tearing at one another and storming in the hall - and she is pissed off, her voice is a cat with its hair raised - I'm on my couch, wondering if anyone's parents dance together anymore.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Wonder

Oh hello.
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My story "Movie Man" is featured in A cappella Zoo's print journal, Issue 5. You can read it online for free here. The story was a present to a filmmaker friend: a magic homage to some of the best directors in the world.

Yesterday I received an acceptance letter for a much darker story. Publication is slated for October 2011, lead story. A gangster and his prey in a hospital room of creatures. I was furious with the world when I wrote it.

My computer finally died the other night, and as I read the letter, the power went out. I opened the shades in the living room and flipped the blank pages of a paper journal. I want to write letters, I want a pen pal. I wonder if Kerouac's is the most current diary in existence worth the bother. I didn't write a thing.

I'm glad the good is coming with the shitty. It's so much good, it's so bad, it will get better as long as I keep writing. People should know what's really happening in the wells; we've run out of water and someone broke the only lantern in the night, and we all cut ourselves on the pieces. We need a ladder and clean clothes. I'll pen the letter.



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Sunday, July 18, 2010

High School Reunions

Last night, I worked the registration table for a 20-year high school reunion. It was a time bomb. Mother figures with hot pink bangs. Bangle bracelets. Orange skin. Suited in body glitter like space cadets. One classmate gave us her breast pump for the night.

The men fished out their old wallets with the condom rings. They pulled their wives into domestically violent bear hugs -- those couples aren't ever having more children after the husbands collapsed the fucking birth canals.

The popular crowd crept into the event for free. They duped some clown to steal name tags. ("I only went to this school for eight months," he told me. "I'm just here to check out all the old people smirk.")

I watched the prom queen, at the start of the night, grab her man's collar and drag him away from the registration table. They didn't check in, but I wasn't sure until it was too late. They are the ones who started the whole operation, ushering a total of twenty or so big babies through the back elevator. I'm not starting a confrontation with a 38 year old dressed like a video hoe.

Myself, I was an embarrassment in high school. But I didn't know the extent of my damage then, so I felt all right. For one thing, I was pretentious about my writing. I studied the thesaurus for fun and came into high school puking adjectives down the front of my shirt. "In Lord of the Flies, everything is turned upside-down by the noxious smashed coconuts of sex drives-"

They published my gaudy book reviews in the school newspaper, and I bet my peers cringed. I would believe it if somebody told me my teachers were making fun of me to their friends at the bar and their spouses. I would now if I were them; I would root against myself as the student.

In the ninth grade, there is no benefit to the habitual mispronunciation of words like welkin, facade, cerulean. "Her eyes were orbs, ebony wood." Nor the repetition of "verboten" in a single P.E.A paragraph. I used "sanguine" on a regular basis, and it is a fact that I opened my freshman Lord of the Flies paper with the phrase "their humble tropical abode."

I'm not blaming the teachers. I take responsibility for my shit writing. Why would they want to discourage me? They expected me to get fixed in college.



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