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This Recording

is dedicated to the enjoyment of audio and visual stimuli. Please visit our archives where we have uncovered the true importance of nearly everything. Should you want to reach us, e-mail alex dot carnevale at gmail dot com, but don't tell the spam robots. Consider contacting us if you wish to use This Recording in your classroom or club setting. We have given several talks at local Rotarys that we feel went really well.

Pretty used to being with Gwyneth

Regrets that her mother did not smoke

Frank in all directions

Jean Cocteau and Jean Marais

Simply cannot go back to them

Roll your eyes at Samuel Beckett

John Gregory Dunne and Joan Didion

Metaphors with eyes

Life of Mary MacLane

Circle what it is you want

Not really talking about women, just Diane

Felicity's disguise

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Entries in lois ehrenreich (2)

Monday
Mar182013

In Which We Make Plans For Our Future In This Industry

Things I Plan To Include In My Future Work

by LOIS EHRENREICH

A lioness with an eating disorder.

Alliteration when you least expect it, abbreviation when you do.

Garbage cans knocked over as a metaphor for domestic unrest.

A shocking denouement that revolves around the implication of betrayal rather than the thing itself.

Bare, unfettered honesty without regard for the feelings and concerns of others.

Magnification using the latest scientific techniques, adapted for literary inquiry.

Obscure references to a troubled upbringing. 

A maraschino cherry, perched on the fingertip of a bodybuilder named Jerome.

She gives up pilates.

Apologies, subtle or opaque for those I wronged through my inconsideration.

A re-imagining of The Punisher in a high school setting utilizing weapons-grade plutonium in a cello as the MacGuffin.

A gentleman who throws pennies into toilets instead of fountains.

Use the murder of innocents as justification for imposing my views on others.

Name my characters after months, days and astrological signs as God intended.

Publish my e-mails save for the ones that make me look like a fool.

A medical drama revolving around the malfeasance of a baby sitter.

A pet parrot who mimics the sound of his owner's orgasms. 

Detailed descriptions of breakfast sandwiches.

Death by Camelot.

An important clue revolves around whether or not a woman takes her husband's name.

Utilize a pseudonym to hide my true feelings about a semi-famous person.

Subvert the well-known tale of a woman cast out by her faith by showing her to be in the wrong.

Contain simple anger in the spoken words of my mother as she watched me walk to school. Years ago.

Eliminate the word "was" from my writing.

Deep unhappiness.

Show the reason for something occurring and then leave the rest for a semi-poetic homage in the style of Tender Buttons.

Steal the ending of The Once and Future King but make it good. Throw it away.

At the end of the rainbow the protagonist finds nothing but dirt and dust.

Return all the books I borrowed to their rightful owners.

End with a joke.

Lois Ehrenreich is the senior contributor to This Recording. She is a writer living in New York. She last wrote in these pages about things she will not do in her writing. You can find an archive of her writing on This Recording here.

Images by Colleen Ann H. Philippi (color) and Cathy Daley (b&w).

"Dreaming Without You" - Bleached (mp3)

"Searching Through the Past" - Bleached (mp3)

Saturday
Nov032012

In Which We Vow To Stop This Immediately

You can find an archive of our Saturday fiction series here.

Red Portrait no. 2, Adam Neate

Things I Will Never Do In My Writing Again

by LOIS EHRENREICH

Finish in the place that I started.

Have a protagonist reassure another, even in jest.

Create a victim of any accident, unless it is the breaking of a fingernail or burning of a house.

Ring a doorbell.

Reveal a detailed background on how anything received its name except a boat.

Use water as a metaphor for rebirth; e.g. feeling better after a hot shower.

Force one character to respond to another by saying, "Yes."

Imply a married woman is tormented by an abusive or compelling relationship from her past.

Someone is a moment too late flipping off the safety of a gun.

End with a man opening or closing his arms.

Pray.

Unveil sex that concludes when someone leaves without saying a word.

Suggest stairs that only last for one flight.

Let my people imagine they cannot leave the world in which they live.

Have anything hinge on the gesture of someone giving away their money, whether it be a nickel or a billion dollars.

Pretend e-mail and cell phones never existed.

Speak to the dead.

Give a personal history of a character that includes the sentence, "After graduating from Columbia..."

Detail the appearance of the ocean or the power of the weather.

Describe disgust as if it were not also a kind of pleasure.

Play with the ring on her finger.

Divine any political point more complicated than hinting that poverty is degrading.

Give a blessing.

Sing a song.

Make any reference, no matter how oblique, to him.

Lois Ehrenreich is a writer living in New York.

Paintings by Adam Neate.

"Hunting For You" - Robbie Williams (mp3)

"Different" - Robbie Williams (mp3)