Chapter 5 - Part 3 of The Ordinary Offspring is up. I will move on to the next chapter after this. I promise :-)
From most mundane things to topics of monumental importance, I would write what I feel like writing. This blog would not be bound by any narrow definitions. More often than not, I would be playing Devil's Advocate or moaning about crappiness of weekdays. Occasionally, it would be about unexpected joys and sometimes about heavyweight world matters. But come not here for pearls of wisdom. This place is simply my canvas.
Showing posts with label The Ordinary Offspring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Ordinary Offspring. Show all posts
Sunday, January 20, 2013
Sunday, November 4, 2012
Sunday, October 28, 2012
For a Pipe Dream
When I was in school, I had a pipe dream. Well, several of those. But here I am going to talk about just one.
I used to dream of being a published author
by the time I was twenty-five. Of course, I would also have a non-writing,
thriving career at the same time.
Well, here I am, some years past that age milestone.
And as you can guess, I am not a published author. Words which used to come to
me unbidden in dreams, in the middle of the night, got pushed under the bed,
while I sat working late into night, churning out presentations, analysing data
and answering mails. Mind you, I don’t regret doing all that. I just wish I had
done those other things that I wanted to. Needed to.
So, I have decided to brush those cobwebs
off the old diaries that I have filled over the years with all my musings,
strokes of my imagination. Most of them might be amateurish. But they are mine.
And I think that now they should see the light of the day.
I wrote a “book” when I was in college,
called the Ordinary Offspring. I finished
it in my final year but of course, I never tried seeing if it was worth
publishing. I was too lazy. Too tired. Too everything, except driven. No longer.
I have begun revising the manuscript – and believe me, it needs a lot of
reworking.
I am going to start putting it up
sequentially, as I go along. It would likely be still very, very amateurish. So,
apologies in advance. You see, I am doing it for myself. Finally.
In case, you are inclined to give it a try,
drop by at Weaver Imp presents 'The Ordinary Offspring'.
You can let me know if you liked it and if, you did not. Honest opinions may
not always please me but I definitely need them. I would be updating the
chapters in this new blog, hopefully with some regularity. I felt that a
dedicated blog would make all the instalments easy to find.
Do drop by. Until next time, ciao.
Monday, July 2, 2012
The Ordinary Offspring - Prologue & Chapter 1
Here's the beginning of something I attempted to write in college. Am trying to revise and edit it and you, my dear readers, should you choose to be, are going to be my beta audience. Please feel free to share all your thoughts on "The Ordinary Offspring"
Cheryl
saw her father slip out of the room. She burrowed her face in her mother’s
arms.
Prologue
The marriage of a reigning beauty queen is generally of some interest in
the media. So, it was natural that when Angela Cromwell, Miss Universe, decided
to get married immediately after fulfilling her year long contractual
obligations, it created quite a stir. The stir turned into a media frenzy when
the name of the groom was discovered - Daniel Woods.
A child prodigy, Daniel had performed his first surgery two months shy
of his sixteenth birthday. His feats evinced even greater interest when some
reporter discovered that his parents never went to college. He was the kind of
son who made his parents not just proud but also famous. That he was good
looking and photogenic made his courtship to Angela look more and more like a
fairytale.
The marriage ceremony managed to remain private despite some very
innovative paparazzi.
Angela continued modelling for several years, taking breaks to give
birth to her three children. When it became clear that her film career was not
likely to ever really take off, she gracefully withdrew from the world of
glamour and settled in the small town of Paraliena with Daniel and their
children.
The three Woods’ children were born at a gap of almost one year each.
Chris, the oldest, turned out to be the replica of his father and the
more he grew, the more striking the resemblance became. He had the same shade
of brown hair and a pair of deep brown eyes, same as his father’s. He too
turned out to be a child prodigy and by the time he was sixteen, he was working
alongside his brilliant father. He had a very good idea of how extraordinary
his own achievements were. Impatient with those not equally gifted, Chris
quickly earned a reputation of being arrogant and insensitive.
Bertha, the middle child, inherited her mother’s beauty and her father’s
prodigious talent – the proverbial ‘beauty with brains’. Her gorgeous blue eyes
sparkled with wit and humour, Bertha was an ardent believer in the philosophy
of Carpe Diem. Life was an endless
party to her. Not irresponsible but not responsible either, Bertha lived only
for today and couldn’t care less for what was to come.
Cheryl, the youngest, always saw herself as standing a little apart from
the lovely tableau that her parents and siblings presented. Sometimes, she
wondered if this was her real family. Not because she was not loved. Not
because she saw herself as the ill-treated Cinderella. Simply because she was
so different from them. And they were as aware of it as she herself. She was
pretty, not glamorously beautiful. She was intelligent but not a student
extraordinaire. She was special in a way that everyone is – just not like her
family. She was different from them because she was like everyone else. She was
ordinary.
By the time Cheryl turned eighteen, Chris had been a practising surgeon for
more than three years and the nineteen year old Bertha Woods was already a
supermodel. Cheryl’s siblings always had the spotlight trained on them. She never
tried to attract attention herself for the fear of being found lacking, but she
became an object of interest by default. Her being a Woods was enough. And she
hated being dissected in public, being an object of curiosity. Nobody ever said
it outright yet it was always implied whenever her siblings were discussed in
media. When would Cheryl Woods shows signs of genius or turn into a great
beauty or may be both? After all she did have superior genes – the best, some
claimed. How could she remain ordinary all her life?
Cheryl grew to despise the intense scrutiny that surrounded her family
and the limelight that spilled over to her. She only waited to escape.
Chapter 1
Cheryl was happy – no, not happy – but relieved. The papers were still
there. She could feel their outline through the thin material of her handbag.
She smiled and walked into her parents’ kitchen. Her parents were having coffee
at the kitchen table.
She stopped for a moment and watched her parents. Her mother was
relaying the latest wardrobe malfunction that had happened in one of Bertha’s
shows. “I keep telling Bertha that modelling should be classy. Clothes slipping
off on the catwalk, when they should be on, is definitely not classy. Not even
hot. I am just glad it has not happened with Bertha. Yet.”
Daniel listened with a smile. Interested but amused, Cheryl was sure.
She walked up to them.
“Hey, Mom. Hi Dad.”
“Hi sweetheart”. Daniel pulled her down for a kiss.
“Where have you been the whole day?” Angela asked.
Cheryl slid into a chair next to her father. “At the university. They
have accepted my application.” She smiled. And waited.
“Congratulations, darling. I am happy for you” Angela hugged her
daughter.
“Me too”, Daniel said smilingly. “The lab at the university is one of
the best in this part of the world.”
Here goes, Cheryl thought. “I am sure. I would not be seeing too much of it,
though. Actually not at all.”
“Of course you would”, Daniel assured her, though he was faintly
puzzled. “All students with science subjects do.”
“True. But I do not have any science subjects.” Cheryl closed her eyes
for a moment before continuing. “I am taking up English Literature as my major
with History and Philosophy as my minors.”
“Did we”, Angela responded, “not decide that you would pursue Science
with the option of choosing a branch of your interest for specialization later?
That is what…”
“That’s right, Mom. That’s what you
decided. Not me. I do not want to study Science. I like reading. And I would
like to write someday. Be published.” She turned to her father. Desperately
hoping that he would understand. That the fleeting expression of disappointment
she had seen only a moment ago in his now inscrutable eyes, was not real.
Daniel put a hand over Angela’s. “When do your classes start?” he asked.
“In September. Dad, Mom, I know that you…”
Daniel raised his hand to interrupt. “You do not have to explain
yourself, Cher. We only want you to be happy. So, if this is what you choose,
then this is what we want for you.” He got up, smiled, kissed her and walked
towards the living room.
“There’s one more thing,” Cheryl said. Daniel stopped in his tracks and
turned to look at her. “I will be moving to the university hostel.” She rushed
on. “I know since it is only an hour’s drive away, you wanted me to stay here
with you. But it would suit my schedule to stay there. And it’s time I moved
out anyway.”
“Cher. It’s okay. Relax. You are welcome here if you change your mind. Anytime.”
Angela opened her arms and hugged her daughter.
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