Rolling On One
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. Suppose your novel really had to start on a dark and stormy night. You know you cant just come out and say it was one, so probably youd do something like this: That last crack wasnt thunder. It sounded as though it came from right by the curb. Rats, thought Dean, that maple already lost a branch the size of a Corolla in the April Fools Day storm. The power was out to the streetlight, and no way was he going out in that slop to check. Hed be busy with the Sandvik saw in the morning. I might still be booed out of the writers group, but dont we both feel better since you figured out the dark and stormy bit yourself? Well, fans, thats how its gonna be. If a six-word summary were going to tell you about me, I wouldnt have a whole web site. You can put the pieces together yourself and decide whether or not this is interesting before you realize we have nothing in common. Oh. Yes, it had split right down the middle. The top branches were brushing the house, and they made the storm door a little springy when I opened it. I lied about the April Fools Day storm, though; it was just in 1997. The maple had split maybe fifteen years earlier. What? When? Where? Why? I started out with the name Dean's List but never liked it. I ride a unicycle once in a while (and am inordinately proud of myself for having learned), and that's me rolling on one wheel. Even though my life is comparatively stable, it feels a lot as though I'm always trying to keep up and stay on top of things. On a unicycle you're always falling and trying to keep the support under you. I like that metaphor. BTW, if this sounds like Charley, I got it from him, not vice-versa. If Im the wrong generation, maybe youd rather read his Symbol Factory
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