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sparkwarden

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Speculative poetry and short fiction.

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9 contributions to sparkwarden
My Mood is a Lamprey
Be careful when you approach me today . Usually I’m in a pleasant, playful mood, but. . . . Today, I might bite with the venom and vengeance of a Lamprey .
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Blackwater Rivers
A hundred bent blackwater rivers pour maple syrup over frozen falls, wandering through snow coated pinewood powdered with sun spun sugar.
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Blackwater Rivers
This is Pinteresting
Pinterest is a picture-based social media tool that allows you to organize and display images. You can upload your own images or simply search existing ones on Pinterest. In most cases, you’ll find images already on Pinterest. Here’s a few examples from my Pinterest profile, Sparkwarden. What makes Pinterest a fun and sometimes engrossing experience is how easy it is to find and organize content. You can organize images in three ways: pins, boards, and collages. You can upload your own images into individual pins: Middle-Earth Map by Pauline Baynes “Views” art book by Roger Dean Once you find enough pins with pictures you’re interested in, you can organize them into boards: Fictional Cartography Favorite Artists Peter Jackson’s The Lord of the Rings Movies You can also create a collage. Here’s an example: Twilight Zone Collage I encourage you to try Pinterest on your phone or other device.
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Doves in Crooked Starlight
Crooked starlight bent into shapes, sparkling eyes, from a distance as tears from lonely travelers who’ve trekked the constellations of northern skies. May the doves sound their cries under the melancholy sky. Can you reach up and touch the ice cold waters, rippling with merfolk from armada to archipelago, reefs afloat on millennial seas. Crooked starlight bent into shapes we don’t often see, but resolve to embrace the dark bright tears of newly rekindled joy. May the doves sound their cries under the melancholy sky.
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The Ginnead
Nars woke up with morning’s bright moisture on his face. He looked up. The pinyon pines, prickled by a sudden breeze, smelled darkly of creosote. The sun had barely reached above a tear in the clouds, its light still damp in the hollow. Nars usually woke at midday, being a nocturnal insectivore, and extraterrestrial. Today something new spoke in the wind. There were always conversations to be heard, whispering in branches at night. Fat winged moths fluttered and birds tickered and swung. Sometimes there was a singer singing. Except today. Just a small mole’s face, dry but sobbing dusty tears that smelled of centuries. Then, in a moment stranded in the river of thoughts, a leaf pile loosened and fell from high in the tree canopy. He trained the tines of his ears into the wind this time, listening again. A small human child was laughing. He froze. Never in all his summers had he heard such a thing, but instinctively he knew it. The loud, hollow voices of hunters one autumn had frightened him once before. All he had to do was imagine the precious pink face of this infant aged forward, beard specked, looking out from above a long grey trench coat. But he couldn’t. How did humans say it? He didn’t “want” to imagine it. His wings trembled, though he wasn’t cold. There was a different, cooing voice near the child. The sound gave rise to stealthy ice picks along his spine. But the child buzzed and giggled again—mirthfully, and he couldn’t help himself. Nars, four thousand human years old now but young in the sinews and pipette bones and filament hairs that furred his back and the edges of his wings, shook with a frightening sound. Frightening to his own kind, that is. To every other terrestrial eardrum he squawked like a parakeet. But not this time. While his face creased with laughter, he clapped a webbed hand over his mouth to stop it, the effort to contain the outburst causing him to drip snot from his cranial orifices for a week. Careless, indeed! He froze, realizing that anyone, anything, could have heard him. Even the feeble ears of humans. The wind shifted. He smelled potatoes cooking with deer meat—both an atrocity and both a tumult to his senses. He looked for shadows, and sprang into the lowest branches of the pines, concentrating so that his wings changed color to match the variegation of cone and needle leaf.
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The Ginnead
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Gary Smith
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@gary-smith-7531
Sparkwarden (Gary D. Smith) is a poet and blogger of speculative poetry and short fiction.

Active 2d ago
Joined Dec 25, 2025
Los Angeles
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