Cynthia Hawkins
  • Biography
  • Select Work
  • Teaching
    • Links on Craft
    • Books on Craft
    • Screenwriting
    • Publishing
    • Inspiration
  • Writer By Day Designs
    • Art
    • Furniture

Day 14: Healthy on Purpose

Posted on December 2, 2013

When I was around six, my mom’s good friend was a writer of cookbooks.  Health-food cookbooks.  Seventies-era health food.  Fructose.  Carob.  Maple leaves and bark.  There was a photo on the back cover of one of these books with the cook, Mary Ann, and her two children, a little younger than me, licking their fingers over a mixing bowl, all smiles.  I envied these children, these rosy-cheeked cherubs who loved food that was good for you while I was folding my little hands on my green gingham bedspread in my room, praying for a box of chocolates so big I could sit inside of it when I was done.

+Read more

Categories: Box of Monsters Blog, Uncategorized

Tagged: breast cancer, carob, diet, health food, peanut butter, recipe, Schweddy Balls, seventies

Day 11: Port Authority

Posted on November 29, 2013

chalkboard turkey

How was your Thanksgiving, everyone?  Mine was splendid.  My little sister Alicia prepared the entire Thanksgiving meal because she is made of magic and not the sea monkeys, beet juice, and cow patties I’d always thought she was made of when I was ten.  At some point, pleasantly bloated, post-feast, we all sat down, and the words that should not be spoken fled en masse from my mouth.  All of them.

+Read more

Categories: Box of Monsters Blog

Tagged: Black Friday, breast cancer, five point palm exploding heart technique, Kill Bill 2, mediport, Star Wars, Thanksgiving

Day 7: Free Dive

Posted on November 27, 2013

Day seven and I’m beginning to think the big guy upstairs wasn’t too happy with the joke I told three weeks ago about my church’s gluten-free communion bread and the Body of Christ being worth half a Weight Watchers point because now Joe and I are sitting in the oncologist’s office listening to descriptions of a port to be surgically inserted under my skin for a sixteen-week round of chemo that will cause my hair to fall out. Then the oncologist excuses herself to take a call. The door falls shut. Joe and I look at each other.

“What do you think? Eighties big-hair wig?” he asks.

+Read more

Categories: Box of Monsters Blog

Tagged: breast cancer, diving, Lieutenant Ilia, Star Trek

Day 5: Papercraft

Posted on November 24, 2013

Sometime around four a.m. my eyes flutter open and I decide I need to organize.  I need to make lists and email people back and grade manuscripts and maybe shower.  And ingest some antioxidants.  I spent the last year as a fairly successful vegetarian, if you don’t count not eating meat as a measure of success, and as I push up from the crumpled bed covers I resolve to try harder.  Right here.  Right now.  I am the master of my fate.  I drink this in one go:

berryoxidant

+Read more

Categories: Box of Monsters Blog

Tagged: antioxidants, baby sloth, breast cancer, flash nonfiction, papercraft monster, puppies, Rocky

Day 3: The Rodeo

Posted on November 22, 2013

I put on my prettiest dress to go have a PET scan done at the radiologist’s office.  Partly because I have to teach a class afterwards, but mostly because last time I went to a radiologist’s office I was wearing a sweater over a pajama top and jeans.  And nothing says “I’m a sad sack with cancer” like wearing pajama layers in public.  So I’m wearing the dress.

dress 2

+Read more

Categories: Box of Monsters Blog, Uncategorized

Tagged: breast cancer, Darth Vader, the Jim Rose Circus, The Raven

Day One

Posted on November 20, 2013

Meanwhile, I still have breast cancer. So something has to be done. Joe suggested I start making meth, and my friend Andrea suggested I make it pink, instead of Heisenberg blue, for breast cancer awareness. But after a little research, I decide a trip to Whole Foods is the answer.

+Read more

Categories: Box of Monsters Blog

Tagged: antioxidants, Breaking Bad, breast cancer, Jean-Claude Van Damme, monsters, Whole Foods

Debris Field

Posted on November 2, 2013

New short story in the latest issue of the Tampa Review Online:

The day the tornado hit, Gladys and her partner Emma had lived in the screened-in back porch of the Sumner House on Mulberry Street for three weeks, their bed a camper mattress, their nightstand a moving box marked “museum catalogues” in red ink.  Pressing further into the house—a 1905 two-story craftsman with a basement and eight bedrooms and two staircases—wore them to the bone, as Emma would say, so progress had been slow.  Emma was eighty-two.  Gladys, seventy-nine.

Read the rest here.

Categories: Fiction

Monster Bisque: Hawkins and Haney Talk Frankenstein

Posted on October 26, 2013

Last Halloween, I’d asked a few Nervous Breakdown contributors to share their favorite terrifying movie scenes, and D. R. Haney was among them with his contribution from Rouben Mamoulian’s 1931 Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. I, on the other hand, had picked the tunnel scene from Willy Wonka, which I explain so you understand why I like collaborating with Duke. My brain grows three sizes bigger by association. He’s like a cinematic moral compass for which true north is James Dean. And this year for Halloween, Duke and I decided to discuss the classic tale that produced another old-school Hollywood icon.

Read the rest here.

Categories: On Movies

Tagged: Boris Karloff, D. R. Haney, film, Frankenstein, James Whale, Kenneth Branagh, Mary Shelley, Young Frankenstein

At the Edge of the Damage Zone

Posted on April 14, 2013

Ah, here’s something brand new for you I’ve been meaning to share, now up at New World Writing. The beginning:

Built on the cat­a­combs of old zinc mines, the tor­nado licked the ribs of this town clean. Look at this, my grand­mother says, her lawn pocked, pit­ted. It was level before. The low heel of her san­dal twists in a divot. She twines her arm with mine. Overhead, ends of rib­boned VHS tape trail from a knot in the gum tree stripped down to cru­ci­fix limbs, its rus­tle whis­per thin. The birds are gone. The hum of elec­tri­cal wires, silenced. Pulp of pul­ver­ized homes dries on the truck-bed, blue and white Ford, ’71, pushed out of its ruts just so. This town is a turned-out coat.

The rest: here.

Categories: Uncategorized

The Way We Sleep Has Arrived!

Posted on January 16, 2013

And it is indeed a lovely thing to behold. Below is a peek at my contribution, an odd little illustrated flash-fiction piece, “Melon.” Get your copy here.

melon pic
Categories: Fiction

« Older entries    Newer entries »

Categories

  • Box of Monsters Blog (41)
  • Creative Non-Fiction (16)
  • Fiction (7)
  • Humor (2)
  • On Literature (5)
  • On Movies (26)
  • On Writing (3)
  • Random Acts of Austen (2)
  • Team Monster (4)
  • Uncategorized (25)
  • Writer By Day (2)

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.org

Return to top

© Copyright 2011

Duet Theme by The Theme Foundry