Other Work

A Summer Note from Luanne

A Summer Note from Luanne

Summer was the closest we came to pure joy when we were young.  Freedom from school, being set loose on the beach, with adventures so plentiful we didn’t even have to go looking for them.  We had a group of close “summer friends” who we’d see every year from June till September, and we’d be together from first light till we were too exhausted to do anymore.

We’d swim to Gull Island, hike to Uncle Lote’s grave deep in the woods, ride our bikes to Hallmark for peach ice cream.  Once we sailed across the Sound and ran aground on Plum Island, a government facility known mainly for it’s secrecy, and were escorted off the island after promising not to go near farms, circuses, or anywhere there might be hoofed animals for at least ninety days.

We were curious and daring, and we did everything together.  So many of us have stayed close over the years.  We meet when we can—at the beach, in the city, on boats on the water.

Lately I’ve been thinking about those adventures, and realizing it’s time to have some new ones.  Walk on the beach, but maybe a different beach.  Hike a mountain trail to watch stars come out in the velvet sky.  Go somewhere new, take a path you’ve never taken before, see what’s around the bend.

Nothing stays the same, that’s a given.  Other things remain constant: the joy of summer, fresh tomatoes and basil, lemon ice, being together, walking with bare feet along the tideline, looking for starfish.  And especially, being ready for the next adventure.

What do you have planned?  Any trips, vacations?  Visits to long lost friends?  The chance to learn something new?  Kayaking, celestial navigation, electric guitar, fly fishing?

Whatever it is, I  hope you have a great summer and have the best adventure of your life.

 

The Vineyard as creative muse

The Vineyard as creative muse

Below is an excerpt from a recent article in Martha’s Vineyard Magazine.

One foggy July day at Lucy Vincent Beach, my four baby-sitting charges and I built a sand castle. It was my first summer on the Island. Salty chill, clay bluff curving above, black rocks jutting up, echo of a distant bell buoy – it was a deliciously moody day. Sifting for pebbles and bits of quahaug shell to decorate our drawbridge sent me dreaming.

Nearby, a young man surfed out of the fog. He walked over and crouched down to drizzle sand turrets onto our castle, then disappeared back into the pea soup without saying a word. Out of these elements, a short story was born – and my first brush with the Island’s creative muse. I was fourteen.

Read the full article here.

A Summer’s Note

A Summer’s Note

 

I’m writing this in a beach house with doors open to the sea, listening to the waves and feeling the salt air. A pod of pilot whales swam by a little while ago; I watched their glossy black backs lift just before they sounded, and felt strong love for them and all creatures in our beautiful oceans.

Read more …

The Selkie and the Man

The Selkie and the Man

A short story, exclusive to this website.  Illustration by Amelia Onorato.

The Selkie and the Man

by Luanne Rice

I knew right from the beginning that I would kill for him.  A life for a life; the one he had saved was mine.  Gray-green waves curling into themselves, wind blowing the tops off, trails of dirty foam across the sea.  He saw me struggling, perhaps even heard the crunch of my bones.  I know he saw the blood.

Read more …

Night Neighbors

Night Neighbors

[Essay written for the catalogue of Linden Frederick's November 2011 exhibition at the Forum Gallery, New York.] Read more …

The Rocks at High Tide

The Rocks at High Tide

The Rocks at High Tide is one of my first published short stories.  It is one of many three sisters stories I wrote early on, and a predecessor to my first novel, Angels All Over Town.  It came out in ASCENT.   Read more …

It couldn’t happen to me

It couldn’t happen to me

I have added to this piece and am reposting it during holiday week because domestic abuse rises at this time of year.  We dream of the season of love, giving, and good cheer.  Hopes run high, but so do tensions, and I know from experience how they can explode and crush a loving soul. Read more …

An Autumn Note

An Autumn Note

Wild geese fly overhead.  Raptors soar a level above, dots in the high sky, moving south.  The gardens give way to chrysanthemums, and it’s goodbye to tomatoes, wildflowers, roses.   Hello to orchards, gnarled apple trees heavy with fruit, slow bees drunk on nectar, dancing in figure-eights above bushels of Macouns. Whole flocks of dusky, crested, masked Cedar waxwings descend on the crabapple tree just outside my professor friend’s window.

The days grow shorter, and darkness comes early.  Sunsets are vivid and brilliant.  The stars and planets seem brighter without summer’s haze.   Night walks bring the smells of fallen leaves and sweet fruit.  The trees are bright with eyes: a raccoon family huddled on a high branch, a screech owl with its crazy call, a “backwards whinny” in the words of a poet friend.

Autumn turns the cats sleepy and cozy.  I buy stacks of books and read with cats all around me.  Fall makes me want to write letters.  Not emails or facebook messages: real letters on stationary, pages and pages.  The desire dates back to childhood’s summer’s end, when our beach friends would go back home for the winter, and nothing seemed more important than staying in touch—keeping the connection and closeness going.

New York City seems made for fall.   New exhibits open at museums and galleries.  Abstract Expressionism at MOMA includes paintings of one of my great favorites, Agnes Martin.  In November, another favorite, Linden Frederick, will have a show at the Forum Gallery.  The theater season begins, and I have a list of plays I want to see.

Walks in Central Park, my favorite haunts: the Ramble, Poets’ Walk, the North End, Pinetum.  The leaves change color, reflecting in the Reservoir, the Lake, Conservatory Water.  When they fall, the bare branches turn smoky black and you know Thanksgiving isn’t far off.

When I was a young New Yorker, the Halloween parade was a ragtag collection of incredibly creative, homemade spooky and hilarious costumes.  It took a different path, through the Village’s narrow side streets, rather than the highly publicized wide-swath it cuts down the Avenue today.

My favorite long-ago New York Halloween moment: standing on West Tenth Street, between Fifth and Sixth Avenues, watching the townhouses on the street’s south side.   Several brownstones share a single ornate wrought iron balcony.  Those years, the houses were occupied by young families.  The mothers and daughters put on a pageant that still gives me shivers when I think of it.

The mothers dressed up as mediums and fortune tellers, wearing jewel-colored long skirts, scarves, and turbans.  They’d stand on the balcony calling out to the spirits: “Summoning Miss Interpretation!” they’d intone, and a little girl fairy-child would come pirouetting out a door onto the balcony.  “I’m Miss Interpretation!” she’d sing.

The fortune teller-mothers would call “Miss Apprehension,” “Miss Understood,” “Miss Aligned,” and many more.  And one by one the little girls would come twirling out, trailing scarves, announcing her arrival.

Orchards, owls, bright eyes in the night, a bevy of spirits, the city coming back to life, the countryside vibrant with change.  Those are my autumn wishes for you.  And if you pick up a new book to read and tumble into a letter-writing binge, so much the better.

Offshore Drilling Redux

Offshore Drilling Redux

I wrote this in 2009.

Offshore Drilling Redux

by Luanne Rice

1977 seems a long time ago.  I was 21, a research assistant at the National Academy of Sciences.  One job was to attend Senate Hearings on the impact of offshore drilling.   Read more …

up in the sky

up in the sky

Written on a random flight, who knows when, on one book tour or another.

up in the sky

by Luanne Rice

when i fly, i go up in the sky. Read more …

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Links

  • Cornerstone Theater An inspiring multi-ethnic, ensemble-based theater company in Los Angeles.
  • Kevin Boyles Kevin is a great friend and favorite photographer. I’m lucky enough to have several of his photos gracing my walls, including the luminous “Point Loma.”
  • Motherhood Out Loud MOTHERHOOD OUT LOUD was performed Off-Broadway. I wrote the stepmother piece, “My Almost Family.”
  • National Domestic Violence Hotline There is help here.
  • Natural Resources Defense Council The Earth’s Best Defense. I traveled with NRDC to Laguna San Ignacio on the Baja Peninsula, to see the pristine winter home of Gray Whales, an area protected due to NRDC’s efforts.
  • Phases of the Moon Because you want to know when it’s going to be full…
  • Sea Education Association I love SEA! I did sea semester when I was 19 and it has influenced my whole life…
  • Surfrider Catch a wave, save a beach.

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