Today’s song challenge is “a song that breaks your heart.” For me, that song is the Carole King composition “You’ve Got a Friend.” I own it by at least three artists, and I no longer listen to it. There’s nothing at all wrong with the song; it’s as beautiful to me as it ever was. But a moment came in my life when hearing “You’ve Got a Friend” evoked a lyric from a different song, the Jackson Browne composition “These Days”: Please don’t confront me with my failures/I had not forgotten them.
I’m not linking to either song. I had a great birthday yesterday, and today I’d like to pick up where I was in my manuscript. I don’t want to be derailed by melancholy.
On a lighter note, in February, I received “The Beatles Coloring Book” from Nurse Lisa in Iowa. Below are a series of photos showing the evolution of the first picture I colored from it and finally finished this week (working on it sporadically for the last five-plus weeks).
The cover of the Beatles’ Abbey Road album.
The cover of the coloring book Lisa sent.
My first coloring included the title and the Volkswagen.
Finished page!
Framed and hanging on the wall in the writing sanctuary, a little birthday gift to myself yesterday.
When I wrote A Coventry Wedding, I scattered Easter eggs (an “Easter egg” is defined as “a little extra something that authors hide in their books for readers to find”) throughout the book. In A Coventry Wedding, the Easter eggs were allusions to Beatles’ lyrics meant as gifts for Riley to find when he read the novel. Sadly, Riley died before the book’s release, five months before my mother died in 2008. The novel came out later than scheduled because the editor gave me an extension so I could focus on Mother during her final months while I was also grieving Riley’s loss. It doesn’t require a therapist to recognize that I haven’t tried to get another full-length work of fiction published since 2009 or that it took me ten years to even begin writing novels again.
Some of the Easter eggs in A Coventry Wedding alluded to songs on Abbey Road. Off the top of my head, those include “She Came In Through The Bathroom Window” and “Mean Mr. Mustard.” From that album, here’s my deliberately-chosen song “Carry That Weight” (in which the Beatles sample another song from Abbey Road, “You Never Give Me Your Money”). All kinds of writers have a little fun with their work sometimes. In fact, I’ve just written a scene with a character analyzing Easter eggs in a screenwriter’s music video.
I really like the Beatles Coloring Page. It’s cheery compared to sifting through sad songs. Two movies I cried at the end were Titanic and Ghost. So, after hearing a tacky dancy popy version of My Heart will go On, and I’ve already skipped over He ain’t Heavy I’d go for Unchained Melody but ….
The first week before my first semester at Virginia Tech, I was locking my bike up at the library one mid-summer-ish morning, I looked up and saw the corps of cadets jogging in step. On cue of eye contact, they burst into song, and You’ve Lost that Lovin’ Feelin’ took its place.
Runner ups include
why do you have to be a heartbreaker
billy’s got a gun
I like Def Leppard. I’m surprised they didn’t make any of the days on my challenge.
I like Def Leppard also, but that song makes me think of the Virginia Tech and all those other school, mall, “safe” places of shootings. They also destroyed what was once a humorous prom queen has a gun.
There were a lot of other themes Def Leppard songs could qualify for, though.
That’s such an iconic image. There was a photo of Sophie, Duchess of Edinburgh, walking across the zebra crossing on Abbey Road recently.
I saw it! She looked as if she were having fun.
Yes, I think she’s a down to earth sort of person.