A Poem for NPM: "Elegy for the United States of America" by Tim Lane

It's National Poetry Month. Here’s an old one that would definitely be included in my Selected. The times, and all of the media coverage, affect us internally, until one day you find yourself responding to something in a way that completely surprises you, and you say to yourself, “Where on Earth did that come from?”


Elegy for the United States of America

for Jacqueline & Zachary-Michael


I pulled up & dropped you off, waved & drove away,

late for work, the schoolyard empty, no group of friends for you

to join, & turned around in a driveway less than a hundred yards

later realizing that I hadn’t seen you enter the building, hadn’t seen

you entering the safety of the hallways, couldn’t see you

entering the haven of a school, my hand already covering

my mouth, eyes moist, the imaginary man emerging from the bushes,

from the tree line, sprinting across an empty schoolyard in my

mind, heading for you like a bullet as I turned in the driveway, you

trudging toward the building with your backpack, lunchbox, violin,

all ten years, me knowing as I backed out of the driveway,

the tears wetting my fingers covering my mouth, that this

was completely irrational behavior, a ridiculous leap, a hole

blown wide in logic, that the man could

just as easily have been a woman, some woman crouching in

the bushes for hours waiting to drown my beautiful daughter

in a bathtub with her lime green hat, purple coat, backpack,

lunchbox, violin, all ten years


but what I saw when I turned was a man,

a man, sprinting across the empty schoolyard because I hadn’t

seen her enter the building, hadn’t watched her into

the building, the omission all the more painful because

we’d been talking about the war, about the suicide

bombers, & I thought to myself, naively perhaps, It is

crazy that I have to explain to my ten-year-old

daughter what a suicide bomber is, that I have to provide her

with a definition for suicide bomber to stow within her

backpack of words & ideas, & I realized as I

passed by the schoolyard too late to see her enter the

safety of the building that I had no idea who was in that building,

who was hiding in that building, who was planning things

in that building, that in some small yet deadly way headlines

are like hand grenades, that it was crazy that priests fondled young

boys, that a woman who wanted a baby drove across the state

& cut one out of another woman’s stomach, that young men

& women were blowing themselves up in cars rigged with

bombs, & I told myself as I cried & turned around & drove

back past the school that this was crazy, that everyone was mad,

that the whole world was raving & that I had to accept this because if I

didn’t then I couldn’t explain why I was driving past the school,

why I was seething with irrational fear, why in the hitch of an instant, between

the flash & boom of a detonated bomb, I saw in my mind

the man sprinting across a schoolyard, saw it with my own eyes, as plain as

anything, saw him sprint across the path of my van, saw him

running down the street, saw him emerge from the bushes, saw him sprinting

across the schoolyard with my eyes which immediately started

to blur, & I wasn’t sure if I was all shook up from the thought of this man

attacking my daughter, from the thought of this sick phantom attacking my

daughter, from the thought of men & women so angry & disturbed

they destroy their own children, from the thought of limbs

& lives being torn by bombs like business as usual


& of course the schoolyard was empty, & I cried off & on all the way

to work, angry that I hadn’t stopped, that I hadn’t satisfied my crazy

impulse, & turning off the van I sighed & took off my glasses &

wiped my face & thought, So be it, you are crazy, & I went

in to work & called the school & asked the secretary to let me

speak with my daughter & was transferred to a phone in her

classroom & explained to the teacher that I was Jacqueline’s father—

& I could tell by the tone in the teacher’s voice that she thought

that this was odd, a little unordinary, but she quickly acquiesced.

And when my daughter said hello, I said, Hi, are you okay,

& she said, Yes, & I could tell by the question in her voice

that she, too, wondered, that she would quiz me after school,

if she remembered, then quickly turned around & told her

that I would talk to her later, that I was just checking:

& somehow I manage to resist

the impulse to ask if she, my

country, is sure.

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seen vs. read SOLD by Tim Lane

My newest painting from The Sublime series has sold. I love it when a piece connects with someone, and they decide they want to enfold it into their life. Something is being communicated. Almost seems to me like parallel time lines crisscrossing.

Cheers

Cheers

Timeless Themes #EastSide by Tim Lane

“Lane’s coming-of-age story interrogates timeless themes of class, violence, assimilation, and the rough stumble to adulthood…Readers will enjoy following Stuart’s thought processes, wherever they lead.” —Kirkus Reviews

Always looking for honest reviews which can be left at Amazon, Good Reads, Kirkus Reviews or sent directly to me to be posted on my blog. Please share.

It’s about getting your story out there, having a voice, being heard, helping others to identify their own stories.

Your Silent Face is Available right here in PDF or EPUB format—or at Amazon for Kindles—or Apple Books for iPhones, iPads and notebooks.

Key words: #80smusic #NewWave #GenX #RustBelt #NativeAmerican #graffiti #urbanpoetry #Flint

Get it on Apple Books

Available on Amazon here.

Your Silent Face PDF
$4.99

Fiction

Coming of Age

“The reader will likely be reminded of Nick Hornby’s 1995 novel High Fidelity or possibly Richard Linklater’s 1993 film Dazed and Confused; Lane’s tale is similarly episodic and digressive and more dedicated to re-creating the feeling of a time and place than telling a cohesive story. Even so, the sharp prose and inviting energy help it to succeed where similar novels fail. Readers will enjoy following Stuart’s thought processes, wherever they lead.” —Kirkus Reviews

What lies ahead that doesn’t suck? Summer break forces Stuart Page to return home and wrestle with his fraying ties to the East Side of Flint, his memory an archive of cassettes he would like to erase. His freshman year of college was lame. More early Cure than Spandau Ballet, he might be overheard saying. More Gary Numan than Falco.

Flustered by visits from a stoic viking, fueled by an endless supply of beer, Stu picks apart an obsession with the lead singer of Joy Division and chugs the sour dregs of insecurity as he drunkenly veers through Flint’s blue collar fight culture, summer hook ups, the aftereffects of Old School Catholicism and Reaganomics in Your Silent Face.

Key words; fiction, coming of age, 80s music, New Wave, Gen X, Rust Belt, Native American, graffiti, urban poetry

Your Silent Face EPUB
$4.99

Fiction

Coming of Age

“The reader will likely be reminded of Nick Hornby’s 1995 novel High Fidelity or possibly Richard Linklater’s 1993 film Dazed and Confused; Lane’s tale is similarly episodic and digressive and more dedicated to re-creating the feeling of a time and place than telling a cohesive story. Even so, the sharp prose and inviting energy help it to succeed where similar novels fail. Readers will enjoy following Stuart’s thought processes, wherever they lead.” —Kirkus Reviews

What lies ahead that doesn’t suck? Summer break forces Stuart Page to return home and wrestle with his fraying ties to the East Side of Flint, his memory an archive of cassettes he would like to erase. His freshman year of college was lame. More early Cure than Spandau Ballet, he might be overheard saying. More Gary Numan than Falco.

Flustered by visits from a stoic viking, fueled by an endless supply of beer, Stu picks apart an obsession with the lead singer of Joy Division and chugs the sour dregs of insecurity as he drunkenly veers through Flint’s blue collar fight culture, summer hook ups, the aftereffects of Old School Catholicism and Reaganomics in Your Silent Face.

Key words; fiction, coming of age, 80s music, New Wave, Gen X, Rust Belt, Native American, graffiti, urban poetry

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Seen vs. Read by Tim Lane

There is a new painting in The Sublime series. This one stalled for several weeks while I thought about where I wanted it to go. Eventually, I just needed to stop weighing considerations and push myself to make a choice. After that moment—the moment a decision was made—I was able to get lost in process, lost in time, lost in the moment. Ideas and decisions merged quickly.

I am still thinking about parallel universes, multiple timelines, the bending of time and space. Portals. The virtual. The real. The future.

I just read Daniel H. Wilson’s sci fi novel, Robopocalypse, but that’s a whole other blog post. Coming soon!

This painting is also available in the shop (Art for Sale). See link below.

Thanks for stopping by yoursilentface.

Seen vs. Read, 2021acrylic, house, spray & colored pencil on paper30”x22.5”

Seen vs. Read, 2021

acrylic, house, spray & colored pencil on paper

30”x22.5”

Like Two Mooing Cows on Opposite Sides of a Barbed Wire Fence by Tim Lane

Yes, April is national poetry month, but we aren’t waiting for that anymore. We’re pushing for all the things during all the months to be celebrated all the time, right? We’re trying. Here is a segment from a longer poem titled WTF.

WTF is available on this website. Some of my other poetry collections are here, as well, and my coming-of-age novel, Your Silent Face, is available, too.

And let’s not forget the paintings! Thank you for visiting.

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Thoughts for a Friday Night by Tim Lane

I’ve been stuck, but then January and February have always been my least productive months. There often seems to be premiums on inspiration for which I haven’t budgeted.

In March, my day job exploded. I have been so busy.

In the meantime, I’ve been thinking about old work. Have been looking back at a series that was born out of the anxiety of 9/11 and the Iraq War years.

March Is National Reading Month by Tim Lane

Ah, we love March for so many reasons! There’s March Madness, the Ides of March (beware!), the spring equinox, and, National Reading Month.

Of course, many of you read all the time. You don’t need a designated month. However, some folks do not read. And National Reading Month was created to compel them to discover the joys of reading!

So we approve.

Feeling daring? Fine with digital reading formats? Why not make my self-published novel, Your Silent Face, one of your National Reading Month reads?

Read it. Review it. Love it. Hate it. Laugh. Cry. Think. There is a free companion playlist on Spotify, too!

You can read an objective review of Your Silent Face at Kirkus Reviews dot com or here.

Purchasing the digital book or learning more about it is simple. Check out more links below.

#fiction #comingofage #80smusic #NewWave #GenX #RustBelt #NativeAmerican #graffiti #urbanpoetry #Flint

Your Silent Face PDF
$4.99

Fiction

Coming of Age

“The reader will likely be reminded of Nick Hornby’s 1995 novel High Fidelity or possibly Richard Linklater’s 1993 film Dazed and Confused; Lane’s tale is similarly episodic and digressive and more dedicated to re-creating the feeling of a time and place than telling a cohesive story. Even so, the sharp prose and inviting energy help it to succeed where similar novels fail. Readers will enjoy following Stuart’s thought processes, wherever they lead.” —Kirkus Reviews

What lies ahead that doesn’t suck? Summer break forces Stuart Page to return home and wrestle with his fraying ties to the East Side of Flint, his memory an archive of cassettes he would like to erase. His freshman year of college was lame. More early Cure than Spandau Ballet, he might be overheard saying. More Gary Numan than Falco.

Flustered by visits from a stoic viking, fueled by an endless supply of beer, Stu picks apart an obsession with the lead singer of Joy Division and chugs the sour dregs of insecurity as he drunkenly veers through Flint’s blue collar fight culture, summer hook ups, the aftereffects of Old School Catholicism and Reaganomics in Your Silent Face.

Key words; fiction, coming of age, 80s music, New Wave, Gen X, Rust Belt, Native American, graffiti, urban poetry

Your Silent Face EPUB
$4.99

Fiction

Coming of Age

“The reader will likely be reminded of Nick Hornby’s 1995 novel High Fidelity or possibly Richard Linklater’s 1993 film Dazed and Confused; Lane’s tale is similarly episodic and digressive and more dedicated to re-creating the feeling of a time and place than telling a cohesive story. Even so, the sharp prose and inviting energy help it to succeed where similar novels fail. Readers will enjoy following Stuart’s thought processes, wherever they lead.” —Kirkus Reviews

What lies ahead that doesn’t suck? Summer break forces Stuart Page to return home and wrestle with his fraying ties to the East Side of Flint, his memory an archive of cassettes he would like to erase. His freshman year of college was lame. More early Cure than Spandau Ballet, he might be overheard saying. More Gary Numan than Falco.

Flustered by visits from a stoic viking, fueled by an endless supply of beer, Stu picks apart an obsession with the lead singer of Joy Division and chugs the sour dregs of insecurity as he drunkenly veers through Flint’s blue collar fight culture, summer hook ups, the aftereffects of Old School Catholicism and Reaganomics in Your Silent Face.

Key words; fiction, coming of age, 80s music, New Wave, Gen X, Rust Belt, Native American, graffiti, urban poetry

Get it on Apple Books

Listen on Spotify: Today I'm excited to be releasing a Spotify playlist as a companion to my soon-to-be-self-published novel, Your Silent Face. My hope is that readers will not only be able to enjoy the playlist, but will also be able to use it as 1.)

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The Zoom Background by Tim Lane

Some people have been asking about my Zoom background. It’s actually a large painting (Instant Crush, 2019, 8.5’x5’) on loose canvas which is hanging sideways in our dining room. It’s the painting that kicked off The Sublime series which has captivated me for the past two years.

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