Archive for SJ Rozan

I Love New York

Duke Riley, an artist, has trained 2,000 pigeons to fly with lights on their ankles (did you know pigeons had ankles?) as an art event at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. Click on the link; it’s very cool. I love New York.

Nineteenth Saturday

Across the river
Streetlamps glow into gray day.
Single red light blinks.

Ferry churns thick wake
Passing before sharp white tents
Against green hillside.

Water laps seawall.
Runners’ feet slap stone pathway.
Fog melts towers’ tops.

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Nominations, nominations

I already mentioned that the anthology HANZAI JAPAN, edited by the redoubtable Nick Mamatas, has been nominated for a Locus Award. Well, now comes news that PROTECTORS 2, edited by the impressive Thomas Pluck, and JEWISH NOIR, edited by the unstoppable Kenneth Wishnia, have both been nominated for Anthony Awards. I have stories in all three books. Thank you, Nick, Thom, and Ken, for the chance to work with you and so many great writers. Good luck to all!

Career Day

Spent yesterday morning at PS 124 in Chinatown, the Yung Wing school, at Career Day. This is the invention of the school’s unstoppable principal, Alice Hom, and boy, all schools should only have principals like her. Lots of great creative things go on down there. For Career Day she’s managed to strongarm fifty or so grownups — most, like me, not parents at the school but only peripherally connected (I have a friend whose daughter goes there) to show up at 7:30 in the morning, march in and sit in rows of chairs on the auditorium stage and be introduced, including our professions, one by one to cheers from the 4th and 5th grades (that’s where the photo comes from, while I was up there) and then listen to a keynote speaker tells the kids about his/her journey and deliver the day’s message: kids can grow up to be anything they want to be. Then it’s off to a classroom, two or three grownups per, where three groups of kids cycle in and each grownup does a presentation about what she/he does for a living and the kids ask questions. When they go back to their classrooms they share what they’ve heard, so they see and hear about lots of different career paths by the end of the day. I’ve done this for the past couple of years and I have a whole song and dance by now. I bring a book, and they’re impressed enough that there’s a book with my name on the cover. Then I whip out the scribbled-on, marked-up, 600 page manuscript it came from. 600 pages! OMG! I tell them how I do research by eavesdropping and interviewing people — chefs, doctors, prisoners — and their eyes get wide. I always figure, if I reach that one kid who wants to write, my job is done. After the presentations, our reward is a Chinese lunch. Long live Career Day!

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Bella the Cat

Bella packs herself into the knapsack, in case there’s someplace to go.

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Sixteenth Saturday, two days late

Brant geese at pilings
Fattening for the trip north
Speed-eating that moss.

Sharp contrail in sky
Cuts across thin smudgy clouds —
Chalk line on blackboard.

Construction cranes still
Scattered on far shore’s skyline
At resting angles.

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Fifteenth Saturday, six days late

Small swells lift water.
No ships disturb smooth surface.
High tide hides pilings.

Gray sky, gray river.
Flat light coaxes colors out.
Red brick, yellow stone.

Cormorant flies off
Leaving fishing ground behind,
Belly full, wings dry.

cormorant, early morning

Fourteenth Saturday, two days late, from LA

White hillside homes,
Long green columnar cedars,
Sharp in morning sun.

Tiny Tonka cars
Racing west, chasing shadows,
Vanish around curve.

Giant round-mouthed koi
Kaleidoscope through water
Turtle stares from rock.

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The Wizarding World of Harry Potter…

…from my hotel room window at sunrise.

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Turtle and giant carp, LA

Just thought you might like to see what’s in the pool at the Hilton.

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