In three-quarter time…

In three-quarter time…

(excerpt from Chapter 13 of A New Eden…)

When she came to him, his left hand took her right. His right hand went to the small of her back. As he moved her in a slow circle to the country waltz, she closed her eyes, willing herself to let go.

Would that you could be
Mine then we would be
All that two should be,
Dancing in time. . . .

He had drawn her close, and it was all she could do to keep from leaning in and letting her cheek rest against his, from letting her lips brush his neck, to taste the leather and prairie grass after a thunderstorm. . . .

Though close, I miss you,
Long so to kiss you,
It would be bliss to
Write our own rhyme. . . .

The world had gone away and she didn’t want it back—

*******

 

From Chapter 13 of A NEW EDEN, Part II of IDOLATRY, available to read tomorrow (password required) for those on my “Let Me Know” mailing list. Please sign up here for my latest novel chapters, short stories, flash fiction, poetry, screenplays, audiobook editions…. Thank you for reading!

Copyright 2016, Quent Cordair. All rights reserved.

 

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***

Genesis cover art 100215 w borderEnjoy Genesis, Part I of Idolatry  

In the twilight of the Roman Empire, a sculptor struggles to keep an 800-year dream alive while honoring the love of his life and raising his adopted son. Part I of the epic five-part Idolatry saga, the story of a wealthy young heir and a devout Christian girl who find themselves at the heart of a 2400-year struggle for the soul of Western Civilization.

“Beautifully written, on the order of Ken Follett’s Pillars of the Earth, with the historical insight of James Michener, it brings to life a time of great thought, great art, and its clash with religious fanaticism. Cordair writes with a poet’s sense of scene and nuance and gives us a great deal of insight into the mind of a sculptor; I found this an exciting and easy read.” ~ Alan Nitikman

genesisGenesis, Part I of Idolatry, is now on Amazon in paperback & Kindle editions here…

To be notified of new fiction and new editions,

please click here to join the fiction list.

The audiobook of Genesis, Part I of Idolatry, is now available on Amazon, Audible, and iTunes. Narrated by Robin Field.

ALSO AVAILABLE ~ My short stories, poetry, screenplays and novels are available from my Author’s Page on Amazon here….

please click here to join the fiction list…!

ENJOY THE FINEST IN ROMANTIC REALIST ART

at QUENT CORDAIR FINE ART ….

harmony

Quent Cordair Fine Art

www.cordair.com

Jackson, Wyoming   *    Est. 2006

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Audiobook edition of Genesis, in production (update: now available!)

Audiobook edition of Genesis, in production (update: now available!)
Genesis Audible cover 050416a
Genesis audiobook cover art

Update 5/13/16! The audiobook of Genesis, Part I of Idolatry, is now available on Amazon, Audible, and iTunes.

 

Cover art for the audiobook: check.
Audio files from narrator: check.
Audio editing software: check….

Robin Field medium
Genesis narrator, acclaimed voice actor Robin Field

In the twilight of the Roman Empire, a sculptor struggles to keep an 800-year dream alive while honoring the love of his life and raising his adopted son. Part I of the epic five-part Idolatry series, the story of a wealthy young heir and a devout Christian girl who find themselves at the heart of a 2400-year struggle for the soul of Western Civilization….

disks
Genesis audio files from Robin Field

“Beautifully written, on the order of Ken Follett’s Pillars of the Earth, with the historical insight of James Michener, it brings to life a time of great thought, great art, and its clash with religious fanaticism. Cordair writes with a poet’s sense of scene and nuance and gives us a great deal of insight into the mind of a sculptor; I found this an exciting and easy read.” ~ Alan Nitikman

audacity
Audacity audio-editing software for editing & formatting audio files

UPDATE 5/6/2016: Everything has been formatted and uploaded to Audible.com. If all goes well in review, we should be live with the audiobook edition in 10-14 days. To be notified when the audiobook edition is available on Amazon, Audible & iTunes, please join my mailing list http://eepurl.com/bWoz2T .

Suite Boxes

Suite Boxes

Suite Boxes

(by the grace of J.S. Bach)

Came gift after gift, suite boxes of sixes,
Soft muffle of canon rolled in from the sea,
A fugue led us laughing through harmony hedges,
A maze to a garden delight.

The tumbles of flora, so masterfully petalled,
A founting of blue rising high till it fell.
We left the day’s dress behind waterfall curtain,
Stepped through to wash memory away.

We waded cascades till the river ran deeply,
Surrendered all will to the strength of still flow,
We lay on the shore, souls quiet and shining.
The sun dried us softly to sleep.

Away once again to the place we remember,
To rest from the burden of so far to go.
A secret bridge shared to the call of sweet cello,
Hands held, we close our eyes.

***

From the Lunch Break collection of short stories and poems. Now available on Amazon in paperback and Kindle editions.

Visit my current project, the Idolatry series, Part II of which is currently being published chapter by chapter online.

Copyright 2012, Quent Cordair. All rights reserved.

The Gravity Field

The Gravity Field

She lay naked, face up, head to the north, feet to the south, arms outstretched, hands east and west, eyes full of stars. Beneath her back, the lumped clods of dirt and broken carcasses of last season’s grain, moist from the night’s dew, served well enough for pillow and mattress, meshed with her hair, pressed against her bare skin. The cloudless sky offered no protection. She needed none. She took in the universe until she found her place again in the solar system, in the galaxy, feeling the earth and all its round wholeness—the mountains, the oceans, the molten core—not beneath her but behind, between her body and the sun. She had worked to shift her perception until she experienced the earth’s sphere as it was, tilted, turning on its axis, her body held against its side by gravity alone, its surface curving down and away below her, leaving nothing beneath her feet but the great void. But she wouldn’t fall. She was as attracted to the earth as it was to her, and she was dazzled by the distances the stars had come that night, each and every one, to kiss her body with light.

She lay there until the earth began to chill. When she rose, she brushed the straw and dirt out of her hair, off of her body. She dressed and walked back to the limousine, shoes in hand. Her driver would follow the car’s tracks back out to the road. She might not return for another year, or for three, but she would return, as she always did. Why else, but for this, would she have bought the field?

*          *          *

Copyright 2016, Quent Cordair. All rights reserved.

 

 

Another Dance

Another Dance

She had gone from expecting too much and forgiving too long, to trusting too little and finding all wrong. She sat with her coffee, waiting for her next chance to walk through the door, determined to see him for what he was, appreciate him for what he might be, and should they dance, she would dance, lightly, with her feet on the ground.

 

*      *     *

© 2016, Quent Cordair. All rights reserved.

Off Starboard

Off Starboard

 

“Captain, I think you should come to the bridge, sir.”

“What is it, Mably?”

“Here, look through the glass, sir. At three o’clock. A ship, sir.”

“Where?”

“Closer in, sir.”

“I still don’t see it.”

“Closer, sir.”

“Oh—that. That’s not a ship, Mably. That’s a boat. A dugout canoe.”

“What could they be doing all the way out here, sir? They’re making straight for us. Do you think they need to be rescued?”

“If so, it won’t be by us.”

“But, why not, sir? Their little boat hardly looks seaworthy.”

“They’re attacking us.”

“Are you serious, sir?”

“Am I laughing, Mably?”

“Well, yes, sir. A little bit, sir. But—how can they attack us, sir?”

“See those little blowguns? When they get closer, they’ll try to hit us with poison darts.”

“Poison darts, sir?”

“Don’t fear, Mably. Unless they’ve found a new way to fire them, out of their arses or something, those darts won’t make it halfway up to the gunwales.”

“That’s—a relief, sir.”

“You’re laughing, Mably. Am I funny, Mably?”

“Yes, sir. I mean, no, sir. Sorry, sir. May I ask how you know their, ahem, strategy, sir?”

“It’s the same tribe that came out to us the last time we were by these islands. You can tell by their hair. You weren’t with us then. They’re the Moral Midgets of Microndria. Miserable little excuse of an island. But the inhabitants can be rather annoying if they get close enough that you have to hear them. Rather the opposite of Sirens.”

“Can we use them for target practice, sir? The boys could use some fun.”

“They’re not worth wasting ball and powder on. We have real enemies out there we’ll be meeting soon enough.”

“So, what should we do, sir?”

“Nothing.”

“Nothing?”

“Ignore them. They hate that.”

“But—if they get too annoying, sir?”

“You see that storm front out there to the east?”

“Ah, yes, sir. I apologize for not spotting it earlier.”

“Distracted by the wee ones, weren’t you? Don’t let it happen again.”

“Aye aye, sir. Should we warn them about the storm, sir? Their craft doesn’t look terribly seaworthy.”

“Perhaps you should ask Mr. Darwin, Mably. Anyway, invite him up to the bridge. He’ll want to see these.”

“Aye aye, sir.”

“I’m going below to play the cello. Have the first mate get us underway after Mr. Darwin gets his sketch or two and has a quick gander at them. And tell him, no specimens. The one we took aboard last time was complaining about the food within an hour. We had to throw him over.”

“Aye aye, sir.”

*          *          *

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2015-12-04 14.27.24Readers love Genesis, Part I of Idolatry  In the twilight of the Roman Empire, a sculptor struggles to keep an 800-year dream alive while honoring the love of his life and raising his adoptive son. Part I of the epic five-part Idolatry series, in which a wealthy young heir and a devout Christian girl find themselves at the heart of a 2400-year struggle for the soul of Western Civilization.

“Beautifully written, on the order of Ken Follett’s Pillars of the Earth, with the historical insight of James Michener, it brings to life a time of great thought, great art, and its clash with religious fanaticism. Cordair writes with a poet’s sense of scene and nuance and gives us a great deal of insight into the mind of a sculptor; I found this an exciting and easy read.” ~ Alan Nitikman 

Now on Amazon…

Chapter 1 of A New Eden, Part II of Idolatry, is available to read for free online, here….

My short stories, poetry, screenplays, and novels are available from my Author’s Page on Amazon here….

 

 

ENJOY THE FINEST IN ROMANTIC REALIST ART

at QUENT CORDAIR FINE ART ….

harmony

Copyright 2016, Quent Cordair. All rights reserved.

Seventh Morning

Seventh Morning

 *    *    *

“Every god was invented by an atheist, you know.”

She had said it as casually as one might remind one’s spouse that the post office was closed on Sundays. He lowered his newspaper. She turned from studying the cathedral across the plaza to signal the waiter for more coffee. Her hair was lighter in the morning sun, the highlights in the curls redder.

“Every god, you think?” he asked, his gaze coming to rest on her lips.

“Of course. Don’t you think so?”

“I hadn’t considered the possibility, actually.”

“You will now.” She spooned raspberry jam onto her croissant and spread it liberally. Shifting her bare legs around to catch more of the sun happened to afford him a better view. A hint of her smile and a wink made him remember the night.

He went back to his reading, but found himself obliged to ponder the invention of the gods, and by atheists, no less. He glanced at her again over the paper’s edge. She was absorbed, contently, in her croissant and her coffee, soaking in the sun, watching the world go by.

He still wasn’t sure what he’d gotten himself into, but he was sure he liked it.

*    *    *

Copyright 2016, Quent Cordair. All rights reserved.

Readers love  Genesis, Part I of Idolatry  In the twilight of the Roman Empire, a sculptor struggles to keep an 800-year dream alive while honoring the love of his life and raising his adoptive son. “Reading this story is essential for keeping my soul alive. If you need a tour de force of epically grand storytelling, Idolatry delivers with exceptional skill. I am shaking with anticipation for Part II.”  Now on Amazon…Genesis cover art 100215 w border

COMING SOON! The AUDIOBOOK edition of Genesis, Part I of Idolatry, on Audible.com, narrated by the great Robin Field. To be notified when the audiobook edition is available, please join my “Let Me Know” list.

ALSO AVAILABLE ~ My short stories, poetry, screenplays and novels are available from my Author’s Page on Amazon here….

 

 

ENJOY THE FINEST IN ROMANTIC REALIST ART

at QUENT CORDAIR FINE ART ….

harmony

Happy Monday?

If someone frowns when you wish them a “Happy Monday,” it might not be the “happy” part to which they object.

The English noun Monday is rooted in an old Germanic term, which in turn is an interpretation of the pagan, pre-Christian Latin lunae dies (“day of the moon”).

“Jewish and Christian traditions place Sunday as the first day of the week, and Monday is thus the second day of the week. Quakers traditionally refer to Monday as “Second Day,” eschewing the pagan origin of the English name “Monday.” For similar reasons the official liturgical calendar of the Roman Catholic Church refers to Monday as the second celebration day – Feria secunda. The Portuguese and the Greek (Eastern Orthodox Church) name for Monday reflects this, as do all the days’ names except Saturday and Sunday: the Portuguese word for Monday is segunda-feira and the Greek word is Δευτέρα “devtéra” (second in order). Likewise the Hebrew name for Monday is yom-sheni (יום שני) (“second day”).” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monday