08 December 2025
The thing about fiction and poetry
Decades before I ever wrote a publishable novel or short story, I was writing poems that did the same thing in fewer words. What is “the thing,” you ask?
Some poems tell a story.
on the stage of Carnegie Hall
rich and dark and gleaming
they seem to surround me
each tier’s apex a velvet throat
hidden in the depths, the rows of jaws
yawn wide as if to snap
on this twelve-year old girl
from “Orchestra Class,” first published in Yellow Mama; in my new collection, The Old Lady Shows Her Mettle
Some poems make people think.
I am the daughter of the son of the daughter
of a woman whose name no one remembers
though all the oldest still alive and sane
were there last time I asked
from “I Am the Daughter,” the title poem in
my first collection, I Am the Daughter
Some poems make people laugh.
my mother rejects the unconscious...
her house is clean...
when she visits the optometrist
she peers fiercely at the eye chart
and tries to put her glasses on
she is 20-20 at life
but wants an A in both eyes too.
from “My Mother Rejects the Unconscious,” first published in Sojourner;
in my first collection, I Am the Daughter
Some poems make people cry.
when I sleep in my parents’ house
they make up the bed I traded in my crib for
the pine tree outside my window
still catches stars in its branches
the pine tree is still growing
it frightens me
having so much to lose
from “On Borrowed Time,” in I Am the Daughter
Some poems surprise people.
then there was the day I took them to the zoo
riding the subway up to the Bronx...
we looked as normal as anyone in the car...
three of the paranoid schizophrenics took a ride
on the aerial tram, but I was too scared
of heights to go along
they snapped my picture smiling
from “Outing,” first published in Home Planet News; in my second collection, Gifts and Secrets
Some poems hold up a mirror to our conscious or unconscious selves.
Whether I’m writing a poem, a short story, or a novel, the creative process is the same. Some call it it inspiration or being "in the zone." The process of writing a new short story may begin with what I call “my characters talking in my head.” A novel requires such a long period of sustained effort that it demands a high ratio of slogging to inspiration. But those moments are equally familiar to my inner poet. I wrote about one such moment long before I realized that other writers had the same experience.
it's like The Red Shoes only instead of dancing
I keep getting up to write poems
a dozen times between 3 and 6 AM
I curl back around you in the dark
and pull the blankets up
but then a line tugs at my mind
and I go stumbling through the hall
groping for light and pen
each time I lie back down
the images pop up like frogs
clamoring to be made princes
and you grumble and roll over
as I shuffle into my slippers once again
and go kiss the page
from “Night Poem,” in Gifts and Secrets
For me, the main difference between the two crafts is that, like other fiction writers, I say, “I tell lies for a living,” and I’m only half kidding—well, completely kidding about the “living” part. As a poet, I say, “All of my stories are true.” In my novels and short stories, my goal is to create fictional characters who leap off the page, made-up characters so real that the reader not only believes, but falls in love with them. In my poetry, the ring of authenticity comes from lived experience.
Some poems have something to say.
The poet’s craft is speaking my truth and turning it into art as opposed to hitting you over the head with it. My new book, The Old Lady Shows Her Mettle, took more than two years to write. When I started writing poetry again for the first time in twenty years, I was much too angry at the state of the world to create art rather than polemic. It took everything I’d learned about patience as a novelist and about revision as a short story writer to write good poems that said what I wanted to say. Over that period, as the world got even more chaotic and the future more uncertain, I learned that I also had something to say about hope, connection, love, and peace of mind.
but ah, the whale! there’s a creature of the now
no anxiety, no regret, a vast serenity
in the greater vastness of the sea
singing while we moan about how to fix it all
swimming parallel to our troubled world
from “Afternoon On the Beach,” first published in
Yellow Mama; in The Old Lady Shows Her Mettle
All poems © Elizabeth Zelvin
The Old Lady Shows Her Mettle is available as paperback or e-book.
Liz's other poetry collections, short fiction collections,
and novels are all available as e-books.
Poetry by Elizabeth Zelvin
Bruce Kohler Mysteries
Mendoza Family Saga
07 December 2025
AIn’t Necessarily So
by Leigh Lundin
It’s no secret AI can operate as a powerful research tool, especially when requiring ‘fuzzy’ searches. ‘Fuzzy logic’ is a computer term referring to imprecise inputs or output. Digital computers like exactitude. In practice, ‘approximately’, ‘about’, ‘almost’, and ‘nearly’ are anathema to traditional programming.
Until now.
“Oh please, ChatGPT / Copilot / Gemini / Grok / LLaMA / Claude / Deep Seek, please help me identify a summer television series with a mystery theme broadcast on ABC, CBS, or NBC in the late 1970s or maybe 1980s…”
Google and Bing won’t help much but a well-phrased AI query can give your research a fighting chance. It can process your conservational request, understand what you’re looking for, and relieve you of the burden of searching by year and perhaps by network.
In recent decades, programmers cracked the hard nut of pattern matching, essential for AI in many ways. The front end of many AIs use an LLM, large language model, which not only parses spoken (and written) word, but can now understand it.
Our friend ABA (Hi Cate!), once under contract to the South African government, hired a small bevy of assistants to sort through historical photographs, identifying and labeling their content, e.g, ‘Desmond Tutu and Nelson Mandela. Background: Tabletop Mountain, 10 June 1994’.
At present, an automatic document loader and AI processor can accomplish the same job in moments. AI can understand the contents of a picture. Unfortunately, that sort of thing could put a coterie of girls out of a job.
And yet…
AI can make mistakes, sometimes huge ones. We’ve learned particular AIs can be politically manipulated. An old computing rule states that results can be no more accurate than incoming data– Garbage in, Garbage out. And it’s early days… We’re barely in the Model T stage.
An early bugbear that should be fixed by now came from a simple question: How many Rs are in the word strawberry? A programming quirk would return an answer of 2. Does your AI get it right?
I’ve listened to a number of AI generated stories. Some are ‘okay’ but most fall prey to one problem or another, especially word repetition, i.e, ’smirked’. The phrase a ‘smile didn’t quite reach her eyes’ is a dead giveaway. And plot holes. Lordy, lordy, the plot holes, not to mention failed opportunities to wring drama out of confrontations.
That said, I wish posters would explicitly tag AI generated works. AI dreck shouldn’t drag down the arts.
On the other hand, AI can make a halfway decent editor if you’re having difficulty with a scene that might be overwritten or too flowery with overflowing modifiers. It might stimulate your thinking in a different direction. Be aware, major public-facing AIs have bowdlerizing limitations regarding adult topics, limits ranging in the GP to PG category.
Note: Generally speaking, works created largely or wholly by AIs cannot be copyrighted.
What about…
We’ve heard more than once AIs can write better computer code than professional programmers. For the moment setting aside massive matrix programs, I ordered applications in various procedural and object-oriented languages. The first two attempts suffered bugs even in the simplest code. Once fixed, program efficiency was merely so-so.
Experiments suggests AI might write scripts and program code at an average programmer level, but can’t presently compete with top-tier ‘super-programmers’ (a term coined in the 1970s).
Where AIs can excel are in massive table driven or matrix based programming, where, thanks to incredible processor speed and memory, they can populate many millions of array cells when a human cannot hope to compete.
Armed and Dangerous
Requesting pictures gave me fits, beginning with over-saturated color, and botched eyes and mouths. A photorealistic mother had two and a half arms, a dancer had three legs. Once I thought I’d finally received a perfect rendering with no extra limbs or major body parts. My friend said, “Oh yeah? Count the fingers.”
Examples have been too creepy to keep, but I slipped one example into an article. Turns out my audience was too polite to mention the armed conflict.
The toughest challenge I never did resolve. My query went, “Create a pencil sketch of a father carrying his young teen daughter upstairs.” Once or twice, I suggested a point of view: “From floor level, angle the camera from the side of the stairway.”
Results were a mess. Often, the AI positioned the camera from above rather than below. Sometimes it had a little girl carrying the father. The most bizarre attached the father’s left arm to his right shoulder socket and right arm to his left side, and carrying the girl like a monstrous backpack.
Holy Heavens, Hannah
Recently, I asked an AI a research question: “Kindly give me a list of words where the first letter is a silent H.” Here you see the results.
A couple of years into public release, AIs remain subject to errors and restrictions. Yet with informed practice, they can offer considerable research assistance.
Note: Be impressed how au fait my colleagues are with AI, both good and bad aspects.
Game On … or faster versus smarter?
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| Leigh’s game of senet |
06 December 2025
Where'd THAT Ending Come From?
by John Floyd
One of the things that sometimes bug me, as both a booklover and a movie addict, is watching an adaptation of a novel that I've read and then finding that it has a different ending. Actually, that's not true: It bugs me if the ending is worse. It doesn't bother me at all if the movie ending turns out to be better.
The difference I seem to remember the most--spoiler alert!--happened when I watched the movie The Mist years ago, after reading the Stephen King novella. In the written version, after the survivors of the monster attack at the supermarket escape and manage to also avoid the other creatures in the area, they drive away toward a possible safe zone, still together and alive and hopeful. But in the movie, their getaway car runs out of gas with creatures lurking everywhere, the leader of the survivors kills the four others in the group, including his son, in order to spare them a gruesome death, and--now out of ammunition– he exits the car to be killed himself … when a military team appears out of nowhere and tells him rescuers are on the way. A real downer of an ending, and I've found that many others agree. But in retrospect, it was probably the perfect ending because it created such emotion on the part of the viewer. It was certainly memorable.
Anyhow– you see my line of thinking, here– I have dutifully come up with twenty well-known novels and movie adaptations, all of which I have read and watched, where the endings were changed. There are of course many, many more, but these came to mind.
Here's my list (I'm hoping I've remembered the details correctly)--and, for what it's worth, I've placed an asterisk beside the versions I preferred. Be aware, more spoilers are here, in abundance:
- The Natural — Book version: Baseball star Roy Hobbs strikes out in a crucial game and is disgraced. Movie version*: Hobbs hits a home run that wins the pennant, and is hailed as a hero.
- Cujo — Book: The little boy in the car, Tad Trenton, dies. Movie*: He survives.
- Jaws — Book: Hooper (the young oceanographer) dies. Movie*: Both Chief Brody and Hooper are alive, and swim together to shore.
- The Firm — Book*: Mitch McDeere scams the firm out of millions and escapes to the Caribbean with his family and the money. Movie: Mitch makes a deal with the mafia and with the FBI, destroys the firm, and remains a lawyer, in a different city.
- The Shining — Book*: Jack Torrance blows up the hotel and dies in the explosion, and Dick Hallorann survives. Movie: Jack kills Hallorann and then freezes to death in the maze.
- Double Indemnity — Book: Neff and Phyllis escape together and commit suicide on their way to Mexico. Movie*: Neff and Phyllis shoot each other, and Neff confesses to his boss before dying.
- Breakfast at Tiffany's — Book: The two lovers don't wind up together. Movie*: They do.
- Hannibal — Book: Lecter and Clarice run off together. Movie*: Lecter escapes and leaves Clarice behind.
- The Shawshank Redemption — Book: Red is searching for Andy following their prison break. Movie*: Red finds and joins Andy in Mexico.
- Strangers on a Train — Book: Guy kills Bruno's father and goes to prison. Movie*: Bruno dies at the amusement park and Guy is cleared of his wife's murder.
- Forrest Gump — Book: Jenny marries someone else, and Forrest moves to New Orleans with Lt. Dan. Movie*: Forrest and Jenny get married, she dies, and Forrest raises their son.
- Rebecca — Book*: Manderley burns down and Mrs. Danvers's fate is uncertain. Movie: She dies in the fire.
- Black Sunday — Book*: The blimp carrying the bomb is diverted from the stadium, but the hero dies. Movie: The hero survives.
- The Grapes of Wrath — Book: Sad ending, with the Joad family still suffering. Movie*: Hopeful ending, with the Joads safe for the moment, and pressing on.
- Jurassic Park — Book: The island is destroyed by bombing, and Hammond dies. Movie*: The T-Rex saves everyone from raptors at the welcome center, and Hammond survives.
- The Notebook — Book: The couple reunites and lives. Movie*: The couple reunites and dies peacefully.
- LA Confidential — Book: The villain (Capt. Smith) survives and gets away with his crimes. Movie*: Exley kills Smith in a shootout at the Victory Motel.
- And Then There Were None — Book*: All the guests, and the judge, die. Movie: Vera and Lombard solve the mystery and survive.
- First Blood — Book: John Rambo dies. Movie*: Rambo lives (thus enabling four sequels).
- Planet of the Apes — Book: Hero and his companion escape the planet and go back to Earth. Movie*: Hero discovers that he's been on Earth all along.
I discovered, when I checked the placement of my asterisks, that I seem to prefer either twist endings or happy, neatly-wrapped endings (but not always). My question for you is, do you agree with any of my preferences? What are some novel vs. movie endings that you remember, and which versions did you like, or hate? As I said, I've left out a lot of them.
Okay, back to my books and videos. See you in two weeks.
05 December 2025
Road Tripping: Go Bag for Writers
I can’t believe it’s only a few weeks until Christmas. I’ve been traveling a lot. Between writing retreats, conferences, and vacations with family, my life has been less ho, ho, ho and more go, go, go. On the road, I still try to write whenever I can. So, I created a go bag with the tools I need.
Here is a look at what’s inside:
I love a keyboard. I need it to write. I have tried smaller devices to reduce weight and optimize space. I’ve even tried traveling without my MacBook and always regret it.
At the Austin Film Festival, I heard a writer and busy mother say that she writes between the seams in her schedule. I feel like my life is the same way. I found a budget-friendly lap desk and write during long drives from the passenger seat, in the carpool line waiting to pick up kids, in coffee shops, and in dinky hotel rooms.
I found this Voyager Refillable Journal in Books to Be Red, an independent bookstore, on Ocracoke Island. It holds three notebooks: lined, dot grid, and blank pages. It is great for research notes, sketching diagrams, and jotting down ideas. The notebooks are small and refillable. Until I found this gem, my note-taking system on the road was random scraps of paper and sending emails to myself which was problematic at best.
I hate playing Twister behind furniture searching for outlets. This USB desktop power strip has been a game changer for me. I love the outlets are easy to access, and I can charge multiple devices at one time.
I’m notorious for forgetting to charge my phone. I often use it as a hotspot when I write. This portable charger has saved me countless times. It is also small and easy to carry.
There have been days (I wish more) when the writing has been going well and suddenly, I’m hungry. If I stop to find food, the magic disappears. I keep bags of almonds, dark chocolate, and protein bars with me in a pinch.
[NOTE: All links provided above are solely for your convenience; I have no financial relationship with the brands or retailers.]
Do you have a go bag for writing? Do you have advice on the best way to write on the road? What tools work for you?
Please share your ideas in the comments.
***
04 December 2025
Alexander the Great: Bastard as Exemplar for an Age (356–323 B.C.)
Continuing to excerpt my book The Book of Ancient Bastards. This week, that most terrifying of ancient conquerors, Alexander the Great!
* * *
Alexander ordered all but those who had fled to the temples to be put to death and the buildings to be set on fire… 6,000 fighting-men were slaughtered within the city’s fortifications. It was a sad spectacle that the furious king then provided for the victors: 2,000 Tyrians, who had survived the rage of the tiring Macedonians, now hung nailed to crosses all along the huge expanse of the beach.
— Quintus Curtius Rufus, Historiae Alexandri Magni
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| Alexander the Great |
He was also a homicidal megalomaniac who developed a god complex to go along with a drinking problem, likely had a hand in killing his own father, murdered one of his own generals in a drunken rage, conquered the Persian Empire, and unleashed the Macedonian war machine on an unprepared world, resulting in the deaths of untold numbers of people.
Born to parents who could barely stand the sight of each other by the time he came along, Alexander was in his teens and already trained as a cavalry officer and a leader of men when his father, Macedonian king and bastard Philip II, took a new, young wife, whom he immediately got pregnant. When the girl delivered a boy whom Philip promptly designated his heir, Alexander and his crazy snake-cult-priestess mother Olympias fled Macedonia for her native country of Epirus (modern Albania), where they cooled their heels until Philip was assassinated later that same year. Alexander and his mother probably had a little something to do with that. Within weeks, Philip’s new wife, her opportunistic nobleman father, and her infant son had all been quietly put to death.
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| The destruction of Thebes |
Destroying Thebes' army, Alexander went about making an example of the city so as not to need to worry about further Greek rebellions once he was off in Asia. Six thousand Thebans died in the fighting, and Alexander had a further thirty-thousand sold into slavery.The Greeks never rose against him again.
After this Alexander was finally on to Asia, leading an army that Philip had built, conquering territories left and right. He lived another thirteen years and never again set foot back in Greece.
When Alexander and his army entered Egypt, the priests of Amun there hailed him as a god himself and the son of one of their gods (a syncretic figure that combined aspects of the Greek god Zeus with the of the Egyptian god Amun), a connection that played to both his vanity and his political need to lend legitimacy to his conquests (after all, who can argue with the reasons of a god-on-earth for anything he does?).
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| Alexander kills Cleitus |
The argument began when Cleitus confronted Alexander over comments he was making about his dead father. Cleitus, who had served as a junior officer in Philip's army, objected to Alexander disparaging the dead king, both men were very drunk, and it was all downhill from there. After a heated back and forth, Cleitus opened his tunic, offering his chest as a target, should his king wish to take his life. In the heat of the moment, Alexander snatched a spear from one of his bodyguards and threw it at Cleitus, killing him on the spot.
Overcome with remorse once he sobered up, Alexander contemplated suicide but was talked out of it by his entourage, who convinced him that Cleitus was disloyal and since Alexander was a god, he was therefore infallible.
When he finally died in Babylon of a combination of malaria and exhaustion at the age of thirty-three, Alexander left a changed world behind him. Whether or not it was for the better is up for debate.
03 December 2025
Dear Abi, or the Ultimate Unreliable Narrator
"As for myself, I belong to that delicious subgenre, the self-confessed unreliable narrator." - Matt Coward
02 December 2025
Mining the Files
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| Some of the many publications containing my stories, including those that were mined from the files. |
If you’ve been writing for any length of time, as I have, you likely have a file drawer (or a file folder on your computer) filled with unsold stories.
Likely, some of them are unpublishable under any circumstances. Some, however, are publishable as is or with minor tweaking. Because you were unable to find suitable markets at the time, you disappeared the stories into your files. If enough time has passed, you may have even forgotten writing them.
This is a mistake. Every so often, you should reread your unsold stories and spend time seeking information about markets that have changed or that did not exist when you wrote the stories. You might be sitting on a gold mine (figuratively; you do know how well short stories pay, don’t you?).
This has been one of those years. Though there’re still thirty-one days left (as I write this) and I could receive additional acceptances that will impact the numbers I’m about to share, this has been a good year for mining my unsold stories file.
So, far, I’ve placed eight of those stories. I wrote the oldest—a bit of crime fiction—in 2013; the other seven are short romances I wrote in 2016. I placed them with three different publications, none of which existed at the time I wrote the stories.
Other than correcting typos, misspellings, and grammatical errors I hadn’t caught at the time, I only found it necessary to revise one story. I found a submission call for a winter-themed romance anthology, so I added a few sentences to one story to make it clear the story took place during winter.
UNFINISHED STORIES
I have another, larger, file of unfinished stories, and I frequently mine it as well. I’ve written about this before, but whenever I am not writing to deadline and have no specific project top of mind, I read my unfinished stories until one captures my attention.
Sometimes, I have a burst of inspiration and finish the story. Other times, I add a sentence, a paragraph, or an entire scene. Sometimes I create a rough outline for the balance of the story. If nothing compels me to finish, I move on to other unfinished stories.
Both “Blind Pig” (Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, September/October 2025) and “The Girl in the Shop” (Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, September/October 2025) were stories I had started and which lay dormant for four years (“Blind Pig”) or three years (“The Girl in the Shop”) between the time I started them and the time I finished them.
So, whether you’re mining your files for finished stories and seeking new markets for them or you’re mining for unfinished stories in hopes of inspirational sparks that will propel you through to the end of finished manuscripts, mining your files can prove quite beneficial.
I know it does for me.
* * *
“Forever Family” was published in Micromance Magazine, November 22, 2025.














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