Word by Word

Practical insights for writers from Jessica P Morrell

Recommended: Lara’s Theme by Mudhuri Vijay

Written By: Jessica Morrell - Dec• 03•25

Contrary to appearances I haven’t forgotten all the writers  who have stopped by over the years, or the simply curious folks who slipped in for various reasons. I’m not  as active on social media as I’d like to be, but if I am, I’m typically posting art that has fascinated and moved me.  The painting on the left is from the brilliant Alla Transk, Russian-born, now living in the US and centering on women touched by nature and the seasons. Her work is glorious and mystical and seems just right for this time of year.

I’ve been busy wrapping up the season and mulching trees, taking in stories, hiking some, but not too high since the trails are slippery now that the rains are around. The nighttime temperatures are getting down into the thirties this week, the air smells like woodsmoke, twinkling Christmas displays are appearing like grounded constellations, and I’ve got snow envy for the regions covered in white.  Meanwhile, I’ve tossed out pumpkins, changed the sofa pillows to holiday colors, stocked up on beeswax candles, affixed a wreath to my door, and am searching out fresh garland to festoon the doorway and twine in a string of lights.  All manner of  luminescence to brighten the long December nights is such a lovely, ancient tradition, isn’t it?

And I’ve been working on a series of, um, challenging editing projects. It’s been a year for stories that have required an uncommon level of analysis and I’m managing to squeeze in my own projects samong them.  As I wrap up this mind-blowing  year on a sweet note since there’s lots of decorating, cooking and baking ahead, writers I’ve worked with have fabulous outcomes coming soon.  I’ll tell you more when I’m able except to mention how enormously proud I am of them and to work with them.

However, since I’ve mentioned before how writers are scavengers, I’ll be sending some recommendations your way. First, a short story, “Lara’s Theme” published in the November 17, 2025  issue of  The New Yorker and written by Madhuri Vijay, who grew up in Bangalore and is a graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. “Lara’s Theme” centers on an exceptional, striving Indian family, their secrets and desires,  an alto saxophone, and a deaf former saxophone great who is teaching the father in the story how to play. Vijay is the winner of a Pushcart Prize and India’s JCB prize for her first novel  The Far Field and has written other short stories.  “Lara’s Theme” is told from the younger brother, Kushal’s viewpoint, with an unerring ear and authenticity for the difficult teen and leaving-home years when parents’ expectations are especially weighty. Might I suggest you notice her word pairs such as monklike devotion and impeccable mind?

Here’s her interview with Deborah Triesman the fiction editor of The New Yorker. You can also listen to the author read it here on the podcast The New Yorker: The Writer’s Voice New Fiction–from The New Yorker.

And just for fun, here’s a saxophone rendition of “Lara’s Theme” which you might recognize from the film Dr. Zhivago.  

Keep writing, keep dreaming, have heart

 

December

Written By: Jessica Morrell - Dec• 03•25

November

Written By: Jessica Morrell - Nov• 02•25

JoImage

October

Written By: Jessica Morrell - Oct• 01•25

Image

Autumn Poplars, Otakar Nejedly

Write from a commotion in your heart

Written By: Jessica Morrell - Sep• 27•25

Find what causes a commotion in your heart.

Find a way to write about that.

~ Richard Ford

Eclipses are Portals

Written By: Jessica Morrell - Sep• 21•25

The Eclipse of the Sun in Venice, Ippolito Caffi

Eclipses are portals. This one is about endings. Letting go. Especially letting go of the stories we tell tell ourselves that we no longer need.

Time to ask youself what is no longer true.

Have heart, Keep writing, Keep Dreaming

And watchingt the skies

Sentence Begat Sentence

Written By: Jessica Morrell - Sep• 17•25

Yesterday I was hiking a small, nearby mountain with a friend. I always feel my mood shift as soon a I reach the point where the old firs take over.  The hike is only a mile, but you can wind around to shorter paths and stretch it out if you want to linger or get in more steps. The east side of the mountain near an extinct lava dome has a view of nearby Mt. Hood and the valley spreading below and sometimes we pause to gaze at the mountain. And sometimes visit at dusk just to watch the sky change.

As I was walking two solutions came to me about the current manuscript I’ve been working on for a client.  I drove down to a store before going home and another idea came to me. I pulled into the parking lot and typed it into my phone. And thought about how inspirations  often happen while away from my computer and how I sometimes wrote on my hand or arm because I couldn’t stop in the days before I carried a cell phone around. Most often these ideas came when driving along a highway, my thoughts drifting.

This morning I’m in from watering, weeding, assessing where to move hydrangeas that have been crowded out by two sprawling blue spruce trees.  I mostly plant taller, thinner tree varieties since I’m creating privacy, but they’re beauties and remind me of my favorite childhood home.  Parts of the yard need more sheltering shade, especically now that our summers are getting hotter. I’ve got eight hydrangeas {had to pause and count} four that need relocating and most of my beds are already brimming–but I’ll figure it out.  And as always, writing ideas drifted in along with noticing I need to clean the bird baths.

Which got me thinking about how some parts of the aforementioned manuscript need relocating, some parts trimming, and the most important flashback needs more intensity and emotional resonance. Wondering what would happen if I looked at every story as if it was a garden. Because gardens change season by season, year by year.  Musing about how everything can feed your writing–including your revising process.

Which now leads to this lovely essay by Karen Palmer on writing in motion based on a road trip she took while stuck on a novel she was writing. Literary Hub features these craft essays weekly. She writes, “Ideas flow in when the body is occupied but the mind is unbound.”  I’ve been writing about this for years, also inspired by Brenda Ueland’s important book If You Want to Write many years ago.

Be kind, keep writing, have heart

Life is art

Written By: Jessica Morrell - Sep• 07•25

September

Written By: Jessica Morrell - Sep• 07•25

Why Literature Can Save Us

Written By: Jessica Morrell - Aug• 29•25

The remarkable Richard Bausch has reminded us that literature can indeed save us.

“For me the greatest hedge against evil has always been the power to imagine the other. To enter the reality of the other. And literature, is, isn’t it, an exploration and confrontation of exactly that.”

Bausch is a prolific American original. I could write a string of superlatives to describe his body of work, but please, do yourself a favor and explore it. He’s a master of the short story and a Chapman University professor. He says, “I create characters and put them in trouble and see how they behave. They don’t interest me unless they’re in trouble.”

Read his entire essay here.

And to further elucidate and delight you, might I suggest you also read “In That Time” another of his gems. It’s a Pushcart Prize selection and you’ll find it in Narrative Magainze.