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Timothy M. Leonard's books on Goodreads
A Century Is Nothing A Century Is Nothing
ratings: 4 (avg rating 4.50)

The Language Company The Language Company
ratings: 2 (avg rating 5.00)

Subject to Change Subject to Change
ratings: 2 (avg rating 4.50)

Ice girl in Banlung Ice girl in Banlung
ratings: 2 (avg rating 4.50)

Finch's Cage Finch's Cage
ratings: 2 (avg rating 3.50)

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Friday
Jun132008

Apparition

Greetings,

So I am eating salmon off a side street in Bursa, Turkey watching people pass by looking at the fish, carrying their plastic bags of vegetables and fruit and I saw a real ghost.

It was my father. The man had the age - about 65, face lines, perfectly parted hair, glasses - a nervous twitch around his lower lip when he stopped nearby at a shop to inquire about tools or batteries.

He wore clean well styled black dress shoes. Retired. Casual slacks, button downed dress shirt and light blue jacket.

It was his height, thin frame, upright posture, severe serious eyes. The striking resemblance was his face, especially along his narrow cheek, aged yet mature - old yet spry like a fox - a careful astute yet kind man.

Bearing, attitude, manner, his personality this inherent hard won wisdom. Then he disappeared into a shop with green door as the fish seller tossed a silver mackerel to a black and white cat. The quick cat dragged it into cover.

Vision's memory.

Sunday
Jun082008

Dive Master

Greetings,

Welcome to Earth, hot in the summer and cold in the winter. It's round, wet and crowded, etc.

It is a spinning rock and perhaps, an immediate place of fear, trembling, loathing and absolute joy.

I practice diving, sitting and eating. I mean, when I am not complaining about something like life, work, my outlaw in-laws, the rising price of bread, my spoiled crying children or lack of clarity I sit and I eat. I have a lot of practice sitting and eating.

My kids think I am good at reading and writing, but I say forget it. I am good at doing two things simultaneously - sitting and eating.

So, when the kids begin whining I straighten them out quick - "Here, eat this," and I cram bread and sugar into their yapping orifice.

When they grow up they will always live at home and feed me. We'll take turns sitting. We'll take turns eating. Life is just one delicious meal after another they tell me. Please pass the bread.

Here is a recent self-portrait. Another world below this one is astonishing. It is quiet and peaceful. You spin and float and sink and swim and blow bubbles toward the surface where they fly to form clouds above mountains creating rain which develops rivers and lakes and oceans and so on. Flow.

l1000742.jpg

Here is a picture of someone's mother. She is everywhere. She is a colorful character along life's little road and she keeps her black purse snug against her thin frame to prevent robbers from stealing her identity papers. She knows who she is but carries the papers in case someone very important questions her identity.

She is eating a small cucumber slumber in the shade of a mosque on a Sunday. She is relaxed and staring at some alien holding a photographic machine. Her smile is disguised. Her name is Super Serious and she has both feet off planet Earth. It's a kind of magic.

MK 58 audio adventure is up and floating. Ear's material.

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Peace.

Friday
Jun062008

Pacemaker Kid

Greetings,

You are on the green metro sitting across from a young boy, maybe 10, his mother and father. His father's hands are hard calloused. They are simple working people from outside the city. The boy smiles. He is fascinated by the whirling prisms of light and color flashing past the window.

During the ride, his father reaches over and pulls up the boy's shirt.

On his little chest are two plastic suction cups and a small machine the size of a deck of cards. It is a heart monitor. It is measuring his beats, his life rhythm, his regularity. His father checks the display, sees the cups are secure and drops the shirt.

"It is a machine for my son. It helps him," said the man looking at me with tired eyes. "We got it at Hospital A, where the doctors said it was essential for his life."

After the shirt covers his chest the boy and I see each other. We smile, we cup our hands around our eyes and scan the big world like explorers using magnifying glasses.

He is a happy kid. He isn't afraid of a thing. We should all be so fortunate.
Especially all the "tired" adults streaming their life tales, "Oh pity me, I am so, so tired."

Talk to the kid. He'll tell you how "tired" really feels.

Peace.

l1000807.jpg

Thursday
Jun052008

Built on dust

Greetings,

Captain Tremor the tremendous here again with an update from the zone of grieving Chinese parents and lost lives. Kinda like one of them there reality shows where Big Brother wraps barb wire around piles of collapsed dusty schools to prevent parents from getting their kids out.

So much for educational corruption in a brave new world.

If you want to play you gotta pay. We know so much, ha! and understand so little.

l1000782.jpg Roman wall, roaming cloud.

Ah, new brighter lighter images for your visual feast.
Visit the young master and intensity.

Peace.

l1000766.jpg

Tuesday
Jun032008

Bo Diddley 1929-2008

Greetings,

Rock n' Roll, nothing but the blues, get down and shake your thing baby.

The Big Bo has passed on.

His name came from "diddley bow" an original instrument developed in the South by using a single strand of wire between two nails on a board.

Here's a fine NYT tribute to the man who played his guitar like a violin.

"His original style of rhythm and blues influenced generations of musicians. And his Bo Diddley syncopated beat ā€” three strokes/rest/two strokes ā€” became a stock rhythm of rock ā€™nā€™ roll."

The Rolling Stones, The Who, Bruce Springsteen, U2, learned from a legend.

Peace.

color lion 1.jpg

Bo