US Represented

US Represented

Habitually Distracted

Absorbing Criticism, or Looking for a Happy Place Between Confidence and Self-Doubt

Many years ago, a navy chief warrant officer said to me, “Walker, all it takes to erase a thousand ‘attaboys’ is one ‘Aw, shit.’” What he was telling me in his gruff, salty way was that no matter how much good someone does, a single poor performance can wipe it all away, at least in […]

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Holding Out for Acceptance: Submission, Rejection, Submission, Repetition

Quite a few years ago, when I first read Stephen King’s excellent book On Writing, I thought about how cool it would be to have as many rejection slips as King, the ones he talks about collecting in a desk drawer. Submit a story, get a refusal, into the drawer it goes, out with another submission.

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Visitation

The visitation line queues all the way to the parking lot, meandering its way through cologne, cigarettes, wet August heat, and the stink of starched mourners on their best funeral behavior. We wait to pay respect. You, being experienced in these rituals, scribble our names in a journal, proof we care and came here. It’s

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Room 237: Navigating the Maze of Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining

Stanley Kubrick’s film The Shining is tricky to describe, much less to pin down to a genre. Notice that I don’t just say “The Shining” or even “Stephen King’s The Shining,” mostly because, although King’s novel is unusual, effective, worthy of discussion in itself, and one of the scariest books I’ve ever read, Kubrick’s film version of it is possibly even

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