Showing posts with label George Orwell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George Orwell. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 1, 2020

When Pigs Fly

 

"When pigs fly" is an adynaton, an absurd figure of speech to describe an action or event that will never happen. But in literature, there are several examples of pigs that take action or participate in events, and a few indeed fly.

In real life in 2020, pigs are flying…on commercial airlines!

A consequence of less people on flights is that airline companies are repurposing their planes to take pigs around the globe. That’s right – the cargo bays of jets are transporting more animals than ever before, especially hogs to China. In addition to the flight crew, animal handlers are on board to monitor the pigs’ temperaments and to fill the porcine sipper bottles. The only drawback, according to handlers, is the distasteful aroma of even the cleanest and most scrubbed-down porcine.

Returning to the idea of pigs in literature, most western kids grow up reading or at least hearing about The Three Little Pigs. In recent years, children may have read The Three Little Javelinas, where the story is recast with wild boars of the Southwestern US. They build their home using tumbleweed, saguaro ribs, and adobe. A coyote huffs and puffs to blow the house down instead of a wolf. And there’s The Three Ninja Pigs intended to take literary swine to ninja fans. And in Today I Will Fly, Piggie is determined to fly.


But the best example of pigs in literature is perhaps Animal Farm.

If George Orwell were writing Animal Farm today, would he have Napoleon and Snowball argue about taking over the future of aviation, placing pigs in the cockpit, having flight attendants take alcoholic drinks to the passengers in first class? Would it be Mr. Jones who would be in the cargo bay?

Would Orwell have the common animals in coach peering into first class and the cockpit, and realize they could no longer differentiate the swine from the humans?

Leaving Orwell aside, I can see Noah’s Ark becoming Noah’s Jet. Instead of embarking on a boat, the giraffes, elephants, chipmunks, bears, antelopes, horses, birds, and remaining critters could simply board a Boing 777 or an Airbus A330, and fly off to higher ground until the flood waters recede.

Personally, I will never get on another jet without wondering if unpleasant odors will rise from the cargo
bay. For that, I already have my mask ready!

Do you have your mask?

                                                                    ***




The Nikki Garcia Mystery Series  -  https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08GZNF17G

Kathryn Lane started out as a starving artist. To earn a living, she became a certified public accountant and embarked on a career in international finance with a major multinational corporation. After two decades, she left the corporate world to plunge into writing mystery and suspense thrillers. In her stories, Kathryn draws deeply from her Mexican background as well as her travels in over ninety countries.

https://www.kathryn-lane.com

Book Credits:

The Three Little Pigs by Joseph Jacobs, first published on June 19, 1890

The Three Little Javelinas by Susan Lowell/Illustrated by Jim Harris

The Three Ninja Pigs by Corey Rosen Schwartz/Illustrated by Dan Santat

Today I Will Fly by author/illustrator Mo Willems

Photo Credits:

Flying Pigs by BugMan50 – licensed under CC BY-NC 2.0

Animal Farm book cover – Public Domain

Flying Pig Mask – Public Domain

Kathryn’s books – designs by Bobbye Marrs



Thursday, October 1, 2015

Refilling the Well

 by Sparkle Abbey

It is finished! We turned in book 8, Raiders of the Lost Bark. Yay!

Once we turn in a book, the question we get asked most often is, “What’s next?”

Besides getting more than five hours of sleep a night?

We refill the creative well.

Writing is exhausting and primarily a solitary occupation. It’s easy to become isolated, spending months thinking, planning, plotting, writing, and rewriting. It requires a significant amount of mental energy to stay focused on a creative project for that long. Yet we only get better by practicing our craft, which means more writing.

By constantly writing, we drain our creativity. At some point we have to give our minds a break. So how do we give back to that source we’ve so thoroughly drained for months?

Well, after a quick celebration with margaritas (you knew that was coming, right?), we begin to take a short mental break from the work and make “refilling the creative well” our main focus. Since we don’t have a beach close by we have to come up with other ideas.

First we reintroduce ourselves to our families who have probably only seen the backside of our heads for weeks. Then we may catch up on all the TV shows our families have recorded for us. Read the books that have been stacked on our nightstands or added to our Kindles while we were on deadline. We try to catch a movie or two, and make a concerted effort to restart our exercise plan of daily yoga and walking. If possible, we’ll attend a writing related workshop or conference. If we had hobbies, we’d probably take them up again after neglecting them for months. 
Our favorite way to refill the well is to spend time with our family and friends. We laugh, make new memories, and experience the world through the eyes of our grandchildren. Is there anything better than that? We don’t think so either.

Then after a couple of weeks, once we’ve caught up on housework, social media, and paying the bills we re-evaluate our goals. We prioritize. Refocus on the steps needed to take us further in our writing journey.

And then we start the madness all over again, because writing is our passion.

What about you? How do you refill your well?

As always, if you'd like to stay up on the latest news, new releases or upcoming appearances, sign up for the Sparkle Abbey newsletter at www.SparkleAbbey.com