10 Reasons Why I Love Living In Oakland

I live in the Oakland neighborhood of Pittsburgh.  Oakland is the home of the University of Pittsburgh.  From my apartment I can walk to the neighborhoods of Bloomfield, Lawrenceville, Shadyside, Point Breeze and East Liberty.  Oakland is the cultural center of the city.  I’m right in the middle of everything.  There are a lot of things I like about this city.  Here are just 10 of them.

1.  Steelers

2.  Pitt football

3.  Pitt basketball

4.  Penguins

5.  Carnegie Library and Museum

6.  WQED

7.  Del’s Italian Restaurant

8.  Kiln ‘N’ Time Pottery Shop

9.  Schenley Park

10.Iron City Beer

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The Best Short Story I’ve Ever Written

The Pirate opener is today.  That means another losing season.  With teams like the Steelers, Penguins and the Pitt football and basketball teams representing Pittsburgh, how can the owners of the Pirates show their faces in this town?  Oh, the Old Soldier really knows how.  That was just a rhetorical question.  The owners are making money hand over fist, that’s how…

Enough about sports.  The Gazette is about blogging and writing and flash fiction.  Bloggers, writers and readers are the target audience of The Gazette.  The Gazette is full of flash fiction and articles on writing the very short story and there are articles about writing in general.  Tell your friends about The Gazette.

And you really want to share with your friends today’s short story.  It’s been featured here at The Gazette before but it is such a good example of what the flash fiction story can be that it’s being featured here today again.  Enjoy.

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The Twenty Dollar Suit

 

The man hadn’t worn a suit in over thirty years. When he was young he pitied other men his age who had to go to work in suits. He was going to be a great photographer of beautiful, nude women and would dress as he pleased. Well, he did not become a great photographer of beautiful women, nude or otherwise, and now at the age of fifty five he had to wear a suit. He adjusted his tie.

It was Friday. Standing just inside the main entrance of the hospital, the man saw through the glass of the two sets of automatic sliding double doors his relief coming across the hot parking lot. The parking lot was full of vehicles. His relief was middle age and wore a suit and tie, too. The men were “Greeters,” an entry level position. The two men stood together just inside the main entrance and watched the people, a few using canes or walkers, making their way to the entrance.

The man’s relief said, “Still in love with that young girl?”

“She’s thirty six.”

“You’re still old enough to be her father.”

“You don’t know the half of it.”

On the way home, sitting in the air-conditioned chill of the 61B bus, the man was glad to have the suit on. He watched the many gravestones of a cemetery pass as the bus rubbered along Forbes Avenue and into Squirrel Hill. Finally, in Oakland the Cathedral of Learning of the University of Pittsburgh came into view and he got off the bus at Forbes and South Craig and turned into the Panther Hollow Inn.

The man’s cousin sat on a high stool at the bar. A few college-age young people sat drinking pitchers of beer in the booths along the wall. One group drank beer and ate pizza. A man and woman gave the news on the muted TV above the bar top and the bar radio was tuned to a station that played the hits of the 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s and of today. “House of the Rising Sun” by The Animals came over the speakers. The song had been the man’s favorite song when he was young and full of dreams. The man sat next to his cousin. The cousin was sixteen years younger and taught mathematics at the local community college. The cousin was a full professor.

“Well well well,” the cousin said when he saw the man in the suit. The man saw the cousin was a little drunk. A beer mug and double shot glass sat on the bar in front of the cousin and both were empty. The cousin said, “You clean up nicely.”

“I feel like someone else.”

“Give it time.”

“Working for the man.”

“Think I like wearing a suit?” the cousin said. “At least now you’re working. I’ll buy you a few beers. You’ll feel better.”

“I’m sick of being broke. Where the hell’s the bartender?”

“Changing a keg.”

When the man left the PHI he spotted a 54C ready to make the left hand turn onto South Craig as soon as the light changed and there was a break in the straight ahead traffic. The man hurried to the bus stop on South Craig. He got off the bus in Bloomfield. He walked down Main Street and crossed over and made a left on Penn Avenue. The suit was hot. Man, was the suit hot. He walked down Penn Avenue until he came to a pottery shop and he went inside. A little overhead bell tinkled as he opened and closed the door. A strikingly beautiful woman sat at a table of unpainted pottery. She wore a rubber apron over her clothes and sat painting a vase. The vase had to be three feet tall. When she saw him she started laughing.

“I knew it,” he said. “I just knew it.”

“No no no,” she said, still laughing. “You look very professional.”

“It cost me twenty bucks at the second hand store. I got two of them.”

He walked to her and when he bent down she raised her face and closed her eyes. He kissed her lingeringly in the mouth. He straightened up and looked around at all the unpainted pottery that sat on shelves up and down and all along the walls. He thought, business must be good. Sunlight flooded through the display windows. The woman went on painting, quietly.

He asked, “Is something wrong?”

“Oh, you know Cleo.”

“I know her all right. Is anything wrong?”

“She doesn’t want me posing nude for you any longer.”

“I can’t afford to pay you more.”

“She doesn’t want me posing at all. She says you’re invading our private space.”

“Invading your private space,” he said. “What am I suppose to do?”

“Get someone else.”

He said, “Has she seen the last shots? They’re beautiful. You’re beautiful.”

“You’ll have to get someone else.”

“There is no one else. At least no one else for me. It’s the best work I’ve done in years,” he said. “In years.”

“I’m sorry.”

She wouldn’t look at him. He didn’t know what to do with his hands so he put them in the pockets of the pants of the suit. He said, “What exactly do you two do when you’re alone?”

She stopped painting and looked up at him. “What do you mean?”

“You know. When you…”

“When we what?”

“Do you ever think of me when you’re doing it with her?”

For a moment she said nothing. Then she said, “Why would I? This is not like you. This is not like you at all.”

“No,” he said. “It isn’t.”

“Where are you going?”

“It’s not you,” he said. “It’s me.”

“I never lied to you,” she said. “Not once did I ever lie to you.”

The little bell tinkled as he went out. He walked back to Bloomfield. He thought, we never had a chance; we really never had a chance. He waited at the bus stop in front of Del’s Bar and Ristorante. He thought about going inside for a few beers but knew he couldn’t afford to. He caught the 54C back to his apartment. Sitting on the bus and looking out the window, he decided to go to bed early that night. Tomorrow was Saturday. He knew it was going to be another hot day in Pittsburgh. He wanted to get up early before it got too hot. He wanted to get up early and buy a couple more of those suits.

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Click here to download my ebook of short stories.

Three New Flash Fiction Articles To Read

We in Pittsburgh are still basking in the glow of the Penguins’ Stanley Cup victory.  The Redwings are a formidable hockey team and played a superb game…

It’s another warm and sunny day for blogging and walking in the ‘Burgh; but before I go for a walk I want to blog just a little bit…

Writing well is a life long goal.  It’s a life style.  Every writer needs advice and tips along the way.  I know I do.  Some of the advice and tips are helpful and some are not.  Writing is so personal and involves so many conscious and subconscious decisions on the part of the writer, that even the most experience editor cannot help every new or aspiring writer.  And writing flash fiction is a very demanding art form.

So, the Pittsburgh Flash Fiction Gazette tries to do its part to promote flash fiction and to offer whatever advice and tips about writing the very short story that it can.  Here are three more articles that might help: Male-Female Relationships in the Flash Fiction Story, Revision and the Flash Fiction Writer and Flash Fiction Captures a Moment in Time.

Stanley Cup Victory Hangover

What a year this has been for the City of Pittsburgh: The Steelers win the Superbowl; the city is named the most livable city in the United States by The Economist; President Obama picks the city to host the G-20 meeting in September and now the Penguins win the Stanley Cup.  And to boot, the after game victory celebrations in the city were energetic but not destructive.  “Well I love that dirty water/Because Pitt-Pitt-Pittsburgh is my home”.  Well, enough of that silliness.  What’s in the news for today?

Hemingway is still having an impact on American fiction to this day.  For all you new and aspiring writers out there (and for all you interested readers) here are 10 Things to Learn About Writing Fiction From Hemingway

By far, the two most popular stories in the Gazette are Girls Gone Wild and Girls Kissing Girls.  Both are about young women attending the University of Pittsburgh…

The page of the Gazette has been changed from five postings to eight because the stories and articles in the sidebar on the right are getting too long and the page looked unbalanced.  So now there are eight postings on the page and this will probably change as more stories and articles are added…

This month the Gazette hit 12,000 page views.  I’d like to thank all the bloggers, readers and writers that made this possible…

Well, it’ll around 11:00 a.m. in Pittsburgh and it’s time for the Old Soldier to take his walk down to the Carnegie Library to exchange movie video tapes.  Last night I watched Farewell My Lovely starring Robert Mitchum and Charlotte Rampling and Black Angel with Dan Duryea, June Vicent, Peter Lorre and Broderick Crawford.  After I exchange the tapes I’ll continue my walk through Schenley Park and pick up a couple of ice cream bars to eat on the way home.  That will be a pretty good walk.

The sun is shinning and it’s a warm, beautiful day.  So, I’ll be back when I get back to do some more blogging.  In the mean time you’ll find plenty of articles on writing in the sidebar on the right and just above the articles you’ll find some of the best flash fiction stories on the Internet for your reading pleasure.  And it’s all free.

The “Sexy Flash Fiction” Tab

It’s a warm, overcast day for blogging in Pittsburgh.  I want to take my walk to the Carnegie Library and exchange my two movie tapes and finish my walk through the park before it rains.  I’m returning The Long Goodbye starring Elliot Gould as a hip, rumpled 1973 Philip Marlowe private eye.  I watched the movie three times.  Then there was Bette Davis in Beyond The Forest.  Miss Davis plays a bitch as only Bette Davis can…

Now for some random blogging about life and writing…Tomorrow its do or die for the Pittsburgh Penguins.  I don’t know what to say.  It’s amazing how a sports team can lift the social pride of a city.  A loss tomorrow would bum out a lot of people in Pittsburgh.  In this economy we need something, anything to cheer about…

The Pittsburgh Flash Fiction Gazette has plenty of articles for writers about writing and story ideas in the sidebar on the right and it has plenty of very short stories on the right, too.  But if you like your micro-fiction and sudden fiction to have a good dose of sexuality in it let me draw your attention to the tab at the top of the page that reads “Sexy Flash Fiction”.

Here’s to Kim Carnes and “Bette Davis Eyes.”

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