Third Novel | Take Me Home | Available as a paperback and eBook 6/27/2023 ... Second novel | Here, There, & Everything | Available in paperback ... Debut novel | (un/learned) | Available as a Paperback and eBook ... http://katherine-mandzak.wixsite.com/author
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Excerpt | 1,344
Summary: A journal, written by Will Taylor in second person, breaks down the 1,344 hours from the beginning of the end to that very end. The hours are spent shooting the breeze with best friend Sam Tasker as they telling stories of their friendship, revealing secrets as Will's normal slowly unravels. Context: On day 34 of the story, Will has to explain with great shame to his best friend that he has kicked his dating app boyfriend out after an instance of DV. We also read a journal entry where he explains the events that led him into the foster care system.
Day 86 lay here until you can feel me
“Is that you out there? Hurry up and get inside, I have a pressing topic to cover today.”
Bruised and aching in more ways than one, I had lost the ability to put on a façade and take life for what it was. The mask was broken and scattered around the townhome I had kicked Aaron out of the night before. Not even an energized Sam voice could ease my rattled brain.
“We can skip today if you want,” Leah said as she appeared seemingly out of the blue. She seemed more involved than at the beginning, or maybe she was always there and I was finally out of my own ass. “I can tell him.”
“That’ll just make it worse.”
“What worse?”
I was only going to talk about the breakup and violence once and I was definitely not about to have you learn it through a nurse.
Through the door I pushed.
“We need to make sure you aren’t left completely friendless when I’m gone, Tayl-. Holy shit. There’s no way…. Did… did he finally leave?”
If I was going to cry in front of you it was somehow more courteous to do so talking about Aaron’s freak out.
“Kicked him out.” Lip quivers were acceptable in a place and circumstance like mine but there weren’t enough millennia for me to rewrite my personal expectations.
“Really?!” For a second your face lit up with pride and surprise. Even more reason to pretend everything was okay; you deserved good things. “That’s-. Will?” For Sam this was a common test to give. I’d either make eye contact and break, not make eye contact and break. What I wouldn’t be doing was holding myself together. There was no reason to.
“Remember when I told you about meeting Calvin?”
“Yeah of course.”
“And how I ended up living with him?” Your eyes darkened and I could see the gears starting to turn. Maybe you were smarter than I thought and could put it together.
“I remember.”
“I thought it’d be different by now. Experiences like that are supposed to rewire us, right? Why do we go through shit if we can’t take the lessons and make sure it doesn’t happen again? What have I been doing for the last decade if I haven’t learned anything?”
……
Austin knew what he was doing. I’ll stand by my belief that abusive people are also some of the smartest. He only fucked up once. Of course it wound up saving my life.
He begged and cried the morning it happened, trying every trick in his arsenal of manipulative phrases to guilt me into keeping his lapse in judgement a secret. He knew he was about to face the music. He knew that he unfortunately raised a smart son.
The begging and crying – voidless, tearless, feeling-less – stopped when it was clear he wouldn’t get his way. Instead it flipped to more anger. More anger, more threats, more gaslighting. Blame, shame, guilt… the Wheel of Fortune ticker spun round and round until I said the words that told him he won.
“I have to go to school. Don’t worry, I won’t tell anyone.”
He must have been having a bad day outside of what was going down with me because he let me go. He had a history of not letting me go to school after he fell off the deep end. Again, smart man. Smart men don’t let their victims out of their sight where they can reveal their truths.
Though of course if the victim has been under the thumb of their abuser for their entire living life, the flight risk is far less. I didn’t know what would happen if I disobeyed him. What I did know is that I didn’t ever want to.
As Stockholm Syndrome’d as high school Will was, something sent me straight from the bus to what textbooks call a Trusted Adult. My US Government teacher had been on my case for months, trying to show me that he knew more than I thought and that he could help. The way he spoke of his own shadowy past and difficult childhood told me what he knew as he bared all to try and get a scared kid to realize how not alone he was.
Straight to the classroom I went, where I told Mr. Coulie that it had happened. We were in the front office before I could dig through my brain and remember the reason Austin hit me in the first place.
……
“We were fighting. I don’t even remember what it was about. It was like he woke up yelling. I can’t remember if it was about you or not but then-.”
“Sit,” you interrupted and I obeyed. Your hand grabbed mine, tighter than I thought possible.
“I don’t think I felt it until after. I don’t know if he hit me multiple times. I couldn’t tell you. I just… I’m sore and I can’t believe I’m doing this again. He’s… he was a terrible man. And the fact that I was so, so shitty to you while you were so sick all because I wanted to keep putting myself through his bullshit it’s… it’s shameful and cruel. If I had just told you about him we would have argued before my eyes were opened and I would have been around at the beginning and we wouldn’t have to do all of this.”
“This?”
“You wouldn’t have to tell me all the terrible things because I would have been there with you. For you. And instead I snuck around like some sort of glutton for punishment and…. And I let him! I let him keep me from you. I let him get under my skin and stay there. Maybe unconsciously I knew it would end badly. I want to rage right now but it’s displaced because in the end the only person to blame is myself.”
You pulled me to you and I curled up against your thinning side and wept, large swaths of my arms bruised, my back sore from Aaron’s fury.
“Whether you were a good friend or not, you never deserve to be hit.” Your voice broke on the last word and I shook harder. “Just like whether you were a good son or not, Austin had no right. You’re right that I would have seen through his crap very quickly and you’re also right that I would have been annoying and fought for your safety. But it’s in the past and I don’t want to spend any more time thinking about what a piece of shit Aaron is. He’s taken so much already. You’re safe now.” Your hands held fistfuls of my hair. “So I need you to lay here until you can feel me next to you.”
“Not enough….”
“Hmm?”
“Not enough time.”
“I think we have just enough. I have just enough.”
#writing#writer#novel#novelist#author#new project#1344#tw#tw domestic violence#domestic violence#fiction#in progress#kamandzak
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Excerpt | 1,344
Synopsis: A journal, written by Will Taylor in second person, breaks down the 1,344 hours from the beginning of the end to that very end. The hours are spent shooting the breeze with best friend Sam Tasker as they telling stories of their friendship, revealing secrets as Will's normal slowly unravels. But not everything is what it seems.
Context: Mere days after the men discover their secret love of the other, another complicated memory breaks Will's heart
Recommended Listening: If it Makes you Happy - Sheryl Crow Excerpt:
Day 71
“I’m scared.”
Almost 50 days in and there they were. There were the words I knew would hit the airwaves. Only now it was complicated. Hand holds meant more, eye locks meant more.
Each kiss meant more than the last. There was something I never thought I would say.
“I know,” I said uselessly. “Do I need to get Leah?”
“Maybe. Don’t know…. Come here.” Down on the bed I sat. “Tell me something.”
Months-old, stale thoughts hanging in the back of my head dusted themselves off.
“I do need to know something.”
“What?”
I tasted iron as my bottom teeth bit through my upper lip.
“Why didn’t you try and get a hold of me before you went to the ER?”
“I went to Urgent-Med first. Thought I had another sinus infection or something. And then I called.”
“No you didn’t?”
“But I did. I did call you.”
“I don’t understand.”
“I did call you the day I went to the doc because I wasn’t feeling good. I called you to see if you could come to the hospital with me because they told me they wanted me to get an x-ray. I had to leave a voicemail.” Your tone split at the word. “So I texted you. Hey call me back, it’s important. I waited 30 minutes before I drove myself there. You never replied.
“I was annoyed. Figured I’d make a big deal about it when the exams and scans and tests showed nothing more than maybe bronchitis or something. I wanted you to be mad at yourself for not picking up the phone. And then….”
Each word out of your mouth twisted the knife in my stomach, the splinters beneath my fingernails, the wooden stake through my heart.
“Then the results came back and I knew I’d have to tell you. I figured I’d meet with you and Helen… break the news to both of you at once. But when I came to the office that morning I heard you talking to her. Something about your weekend spent with Aaron. I already knew about him, Taylor. You did your best to keep him separate but I guess I know you too well. I didn’t want you to be concerned because you knew I was so sick. I wanted you to be concerned in the way you were for most of the time I’ve known you.”
“Did you tell Helen that day?”
“No, but I put a meeting request in for the next morning when I knew you’d be meeting with the client from uptown. I told her then.”
“Did she ask why I wasn’t there?”
Whether your head was nodding or shaking, it wasn’t possible to tell behind the haze of uncontrollable tears.
That would be our last long conversation.
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Excerpt | The Night We Collided
Context: In a Tim-narrated chapter, we see just how in love a man can be with a woman
The distinctive sound of Lily’s door opening and closing, followed by her rehearsal bag dropping to the floor, had me up and at my own door in seconds. It was the first time since meeting on our balconies that we went more than a few daylight hours without some form of contact. I missed her. My hand was on the knob, the door actively opening, and standing on my doormat was Lily, fist in the air, poised to knock. “Lily-.” Words that even I was unsure would make sense were stifled as she cut me off, reaching up and throwing her arms around my neck, hanging her head over my shoulder heavily. Slowly and keenly aware of the action I returned her embrace, hands pulling at the cloth of her shirt as I brought her close. For a brief moment Blake and Brandon didn’t exist. My mother didn’t exist. It was me and Lily on my stoop. “I’ve missed this,” I heard her say as I continued to hold on. “I’ve missed coming home from a long day to someone I know cares about me.” I was fresh out of words in the wake of the day and it’s events and I didn’t have it in me to dissect and deep dive her thoughts. Normally I chomped at the bit to overthink, nothing pulling me from the endless cycle of questions. But Lily smelled of theater and Tic Tac’s and roses and the cycle didn’t stand a chance. We remained entwined for a bit longer, though time always seemed to stop when I got to be so close to her. Classmates with nothing better to do had teased me relentlessly in high school for never being as tall as the other boys and performing couple numbers on stage was always a bit of an adventure as Lily seemed to never stop growing. Come the summer between ninth and tenth grade and suddenly she stood nearly half a foot taller than me and that was without the help of shoes. It did nothing for my social status – not that I had had much of one. I had always been quiet offstage, ‘too soft’ for a boy, or at least according to those same students always looking for trouble to cause. But on that day, the soft boy stood in harmony with the most beautiful woman he knew he’d ever meet and there was a comfort… a solace in her presence. In the warm softness of her shoulder and rhythmic swells of her breathing, I found myself thankful for the accident that led to our reunion.
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I be loving these sentences from THE NIGHT WE COLLIDED [draft 4]
Synposis: 15 years after graduating high school and parting ways, theater geeks and best friends Lily Clarion and Tim O'Connor are very different versions of themselves. When they wind up on neighboring apartment balconies in New York, sporting fake names and scars from their pasts, will the feelings resurface or will their senses of self-worth and an unexpected connection keep them apart?
Recommended listing: Soundtrack for Gigi & Nate
I was a canyon, the years of water running over the same spot eroding anything that I used to claim as mine. New York and singledom were the top of the precipice; little old me feebly tossed shovelfuls of red sand into the thousand-foot-deep chasm and then wondered why it didn’t seem to be getting less deep. Every possible reminder was a person in the depths driving their own dump truck and hauling pounds of progress out of sight.
||
But Harrison and his slow and gradual breaking of my spirit made the childhood concept of two steps forward, one step back look like a two-piece puzzle that fit together no matter the direction or mental acuity of the solver. If the first eighteen years of life and growth and happiness could be boiled down to two steps it was as if each day of my ten-year marriage was a step back. 3,650 steps in the wrong direction.
||
He didn’t mean to set my teeth on edge but in that moment all he was doing was hauling dirt out of my canyon and undoing steps 3,650-3,600. I could repeat a mantra over and over – Lee isn’t Harrison, Lee isn’t Harrison– and my subconscious would still throw up the pyres and barbed wire and gatling guns in preparation for an all-out blood bath to protect its host from subtle destruction.
#writing#novel#author#novelist#writer#kamandzak#in progress#fiction#writing community#the night we collided#moulin rouge#gigi and nate
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Excerpt | Working Title 'Render Me Speechless'
Context - Sam has a dissociative/suicidal ideation episode.
I wanted to rip my hand out of Will’s and run out into oncoming traffic. I wanted to run over to the lawn care service three units down and douse myself in their gasoline before setting myself on fire. I wanted to find the nearest standing body of water and lay face-first until it took me over completely. I wanted to be anywhere but alive. Living meant I had to remain aware of all the ways in which I had caused pain in another’s life, intentional or not. I had to keep the memories of Cassie and Chance and my mother and the people who had come and gone without leaving much of an impact at all but who still weighed me down like the stones in Virginia Woolfe’s coat pockets. I longed for a way to kill the synapses that connected me to those who I cared for but that would leave my physical body intact. Maybe I didn’t want to kill myself. Maybe I just wanted to kill the parts of me that made living unbearable.
I wasn’t living in that kind of world, though. I wasn’t living in an episode of Futurama in the year 3000 where doctors could simply go in and laser the connections between the conscious and unconscious with no repercussions or consequences. I was living in the present and it was excruciating. Every movement, whether I was aware of it or not, was working to pull an aching anchor through Mariana’s Trench depths and sunless silt. With each new notch in my belt of life’s experiences came another anchor, and with each anchor came the increase in required effort not to merely remain in motion but simply to keep my head from going under. I was in a constant fight to not let the dark sides of me win.
A bolt cutter snipped one of the heavy chains, allowing for buoyancy as I managed to lift my head out of the unrelenting waves. I was in a living room – whose I didn’t know – and overwhelming anger rose quickly. Why couldn’t I just get it together? Why did I remain so out of control when I could identify y demons? What was I missing? I couldn’t start healing until I found that tray piece of the puzzle. I was starting to think I’d never see it again. “You’re safe.” I retched at the words. Safe. What did that even mean? Safe was gone – dead in the water. “I promise. You don’t believe me but you are.” A firm pressure wrapped around my upper body and I prayed it was Death at last giving me the greatest gift of my ‘life’. After all, there were no recollections of what it felt like to die out in the living world. For all we knew it felt like the truest, deepest love from a person who cared for us unconditionally. So appealing it was; so inviting was the idea of death – and better yet seeing Cass and Mom again – that I found myself relaxing into the warm arms of the End of Times. “There you go.” The Grim Reaper was speaking to me, drawing me in, the grip tightening and crawling up my spine to the nape of my neck. “You’re safe.” Coming from the mouth of the Afterworld, Will’s sentiment was a source of otherworldly understanding. “Sam?”
By name I was being beckoned. “Can you look at me?” I didn’t dare open my eyes and behold that which welcomed me without extraneous commentary. “No.” “That’s okay. Follow me, then.” I did so willingly, enthusiastically even, blindly led into a space no more or less dark as I didn’t dare to open my eyes but with a refreshing chill that reined in my heartbeat. I would be calm and relaxed for my introduction to whatever was awaiting me on the other side…. The first thing to go right in a long time. So far out of myself was I that it never occurred to me that maybe I wasn’t fully aware of my sense of being. “Sit.” I obeyed. “Take this.” Instinctively I lifted my hands and grasped at something unknown. “Drink.” The tip of a straw flitted across my tongue and with the stream of cold liquid came a sledgehammer to my throat as I was clotheslined by realty and realized that I wasn’t dead but instead sitting on a foreign couch in a foreign place with a barely-discernible face staring down at me. The featureless pale oval could have belonged to anyone; Cass, Chance, Mom… hell, even Dad or the cryptid Slenderman. Was Death faceless?
The figure moved and with it the surroundings shifted into focus. I wasn’t dead. I was gripping a glass of water so tightly my knuckles were pale, my chest heaving, and my eyes staring straight into those of Will as he crouched in front of me with his hands on my knees.
It was the first time I’d come out the other side of hell to find the person from Before still around.
#writing#novel#author#novelist#writer#fiction#book#ka mandzak#kamandzak#render me speechless#tw#trigger warning#suicidal ideation#ptsd#dissociation
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Sentences in my new WIP that hurt to write
Working title: Render me Speechless
Premise: Army medic Sam Taylor (narrator) loses his best friend and is left with a letter revealing secrets about her life. Said secrets lead to Sam landing in New Orleans to complete a mission; a mission that will turn into a journey of mutual healing as common threads between two trouble men blend seamlessly with their growing feelings.
"I was on the Formula One racetrack to nowhere for what felt like both minutes and lifetimes and when I finally hit the wall, I was on the sidewalk running in front of a small row of attached townhomes. If my life depended on giving directions to my current location, I’d be hung out by my heels and shot, and that would have been a welcome alternative to the real world."
"There was something horrifyingly stagnant in the knowledge and sensation that I was simply nowhere and nothing. What was life, and who was I, and why hadn’t I died instead of Cass, and why was I too much of a coward to put myself out of my own misery? I didn’t deserve to be alive."
"It was as if I no longer held the rights to my own bones."
"'Do you dissociate a lot? It’s nothing to be ashamed of,' he added quickly. 'It’s just a way to keep parts of you safe. It’s you protecting you in the only way that seems to work.' Will was staring straight ahead as if he hadn’t just encapsulated my yo-yo-ing brain in such a simple and clear way. 'It probably feels like everyone is watching but in the end we know who we are and taking care of yourself to the tune of others music will only muffle yours.'"
"Part of the programming of my childhood – intentional or not – was that only I could fix my problems and that the easy way was most likely a shortcut. You wouldn’t follow XYZ off a cliff, would you? Maybe not, but if I’m on an island that’s ablaze and there’s a boat at the bottom of the cliff, I’d rather live."
"I hated Cassie’s last few moments but I would have rather shouted them from the mountaintops than think about the version of me that would never set foot in the US again."
"The weight had dropped and all I could do was sit and be clung to by a man drowning in the finality of what a complete stranger had thrown into his life."
"J burst into sobs so gut wrenching I felt nauseous. They weren’t the cries of a dying soldier passing me his valuables so they could be sent to his partner. They weren’t the wails of a spouse who flew a distance to ID their loved one. These were the sounds of a man lit on fire; a man so distraught I wished I had snuck a gun into the ER so I could put him out of his misery."
"Being raised by a narcissist did a number on my childhood, namely that I never really had one. Being constantly forced into a mold meant I never found my default self. Add my unstable and impressionable mother with her own demons and I was a parentified child by my teens. No matter the issue, I was expected to find a solution and impartially execute. No fix equaled failure. Failure equaled blame. Blame laid the foundation and expectation and realty that any negative connections to said lack of fix was therefore my fault.
Adults have the experience and mental acuity to find the most effective fixes and the best ways to apply them. Ten-year-old's don’t."
"There was no doubt in my mind that combat had royally fucked me up. Beyond the injuries resulting from an ambush on our makeshift base, the range of ways in which every aspect of my existence was a barren wasteland terrified me. The Army had given me a place and purpose after a not-so-stellar childhood. The fact that something I held so close was also the reason I’d never feel comfortable in my own skin again broke my heart. It was all I had had and all I would ever have."
#writing#novel#author#novelist#writer#in progress#render me speechless#ptsd#combat#war#fiction#narcissistic parenting#grief#loss#platonic friendship#dissociation
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Available Now!
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0C87R4QBY/ref=sr_1_1?crid=3JRYJR6V5D0P7&keywords=take+me+home+ka+mandzak&qid=1687278891&sprefix=take+me+home+ka+mandzak%2Caps%2C102&sr=8-1
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https://katherine-mandzak.wixsite.com/author
#writer#pride 2023#writing#author#novel#novelist#kamandzak#new release#take me home#disability fiction#platonic friendship#slow burn
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TAKE ME HOME | 6.27.2023 | 7 am EST | Links on Facebook, Snapchat, Tumblr, Twitter, Instagram, and website
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katherine-mandzak.wixsite.com/author
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And the countdown commences
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6.27.2023
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Excerpt | A Many Splendored Thing
Context: in the Come to Jesus/all is lost chapter, protagonist Tim hears the truth about the night that changed both his and Lily’s lives and how their traumas are connected, unraveling as his mother reveals details of his injuries and why she inadvertently caused him to be an unreliable narrator.
“The call came through around midnight. I thought it was you calling on your drive back from the clinic but it wasn’t. Someone from Northwestern’s hospital was on the line and told me that there had been an accident on campus and they couldn’t ID the victim but my number was the most recent call. They asked me if I knew anyone who was supposed to be there that night and I told them. I told them my adult son was teaching a class. “You were so cut up they didn’t know if you were you so they asked if I’d drive up and see for myself. It was on the road that the doctor called and read off a laundry list of things that were wrong. I even remember telling him to not say anymore because we couldn’t tell for sure and he said he had to because no matter who it was, I was going to see some horrific things. “There were so many injuries, baby.” Mom hadn’t called me baby in so long. “I didn’t know what half of them meant and with each passing mile and vague explanation I felt like I was going to vomit. Over and over I repeated a mantra in my head: there’s no way it’s him. There’s no way it’s him, there’s no way it’s him… again and again. I would get to the hospital and meet the parents of the actual victim. I would console them as they learned of punctured lung and the closed brain injury and the whole left side of his torso being ripped open and his left arm, which was degloved, whatever that meant, and the blood loss and the-.” Mom choked on her tongue and this time I pulled her close to me. “And the ear that he could be losing and the eye that wasn’t much better and the cuts and the dents and the crushing reality that he had a five percent chance of making it through the night. It couldn’t be you,” she shook and I found myself having a difficult time keeping it together for her sake. “You were in surgery for so long and when they brought you out I was waiting in the hallway and I had to come to terms with everything. It was like a sledgehammer to the chest. Beneath the sheets and the tubing and the gauze was my entire world. It was a nightmare. A crippling dream I couldn’t wake from. “It was when you were rushed off at five in the morning; when you started choking and the blood…. My God the blood was everywhere and the room was thrown into madness. I’ll never forget being left at a set of swinging doors and a nurse with these… these big eyes and a beautiful hummingbird necklace sat me down and said she wanted to tell me what was happening. I remember asking her if you were going to make it and she wouldn’t answer me.”
Lily once described what it was like to watch me look at myself in the mirror; the way her stomach would drop as my blank stare spoke more than any words could, the way I couldn’t tear my eyes from my reflection, how the tremors would start without me knowing. I hadn’t understood and thought I never would.
That is, until I sat with my mother as she struggled to breathe. “She told me that there was too much damage and they were going to take your lung out to give you a chance. She said you were bleeding internally and maybe they could hold it off long enough for you to start healing. And then she said she wasn’t sure if it was going to work. She told me when you got out, I needed to sit with you and tell you everything I wanted you to know. She held my hands and told me she had a young son and while she didn’t know what I was going through, she knew what she’d want to do if there was a chance he would never wake up. I asked her if she thought you’d make it off the table.” “What did she say?” “She slid closer to me and put an arm around me and asked me if I had anyone she could call to come be with me. My first thought was Maura but I knew Lily and Harrison were going out and she was going to be waiting at home for them to return. I figured I’d see her eventually but I needed to make sure you were alive first.” “When did you go back to campus?” Mom inhaled deeply, “A couple days later. I knew I needed to get home to pack an overnight bag and tell Maura what happened. The GPS took me past the school and suddenly I was parked in a lot near the site. The road had been cleared and the asphalt hosed down but it’s like I could smell the blood as I got out of the car. The world started to close in and I started walking fast, the world blurred and body in a conflicting state of needing to know who did had hurt you and wanting to wake up from what had to be a delusion or a fever dream. “My phone beeped and I couldn’t stop shaking as I scrambled to see if it was the hospital. Maura’s name burned my eyes, asking me if I wanted to chat and that she had to tell me something. It hit me that I was going to have to explain the past few days not just to her but to the world and I couldn’t respond. I was floating out of my body, desperate to no longer feel. And-.” My own phone beeped and I threw myself across the couch in hopes that it was Lily. It was not. “And what, Mom?” “There was a camera on the building in front of me. I was staring straight into its lens. I don’t remember going into the building or talking to anyone or what I said or how I said it. The next memory was sitting in my car, a still image of the front of the car and a figure just behind. I knew it was you. I just… I knew. “The license plate was one I had seen numerous times when visiting Maura. I drove home and showed up on her front porch with the picture ready. Her eyes were red and I thought maybe somehow, some way, she had heard but they weren’t red from sadness and she once again cried as we hugged tightly and she told me that… that….” “That Lily was leaving. That they had been in Chicago,” I took Mom’s hands. “That Harrison had hit a deer and refused to pull over.” Lily had relayed the events of the evening to me many times though now they hit different. “That by the time they got home, she believed him. That she saw blood on the car the next morning. You didn’t want her to blame herself for possibly killing me. I get it.”
#writer#writing#author#novel#novelist#in progress#all is lost#come to jesus#lord have mercy#I've never written something that makes me as emotional as this damn book does
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In a little under two months, a novel written during a strange and stressful time in my life will belong to the world and I couldn't be more excited. As my best friend said about my first book cover, "the picture doesn't tell me anything.... *perfect*". For quotes, check out https://katherine-mandzak.wixsite.com/author
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Join me in the journey of discovering the cover for Take Me Home through daily snippets of what's to come!
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Excerpt | A Many Splendored Thing
Context: Tim O’Connor hasn’t had a mental episode in several weeks after being reunited with his childhood best friend and developing a sweet relationship with her through a shared Broadway production. We answer the question - can you write down what dissociation feels like?
On that particular day, thirteen days away from curtain up, even her round face and bright eyes couldn’t keep me from the persistent threat of nausea. Staring ahead, I couldn’t focus. I could only breathe and feel Lily’s eyes boring into the side of my head.
“Hey,” she began, reaching out for my hand. I was in such a state that I didn’t bother to check if it was visible to anyone else. Looking down, mine was shaking beneath hers, the world closing in and so stuffy that I could barely feel as she wrapped her fingers around mine and squeezed.
Without warning I ran out of the theater; every step of my foot I became more and more detached from my present state of mind. Dress shoes hitting the carpet felt like I was stomping on rubber mats, I raked my hands through my hair with fingers that could have been someone else’s for all I knew. Down the narrow hallway to the foyer I sped, hands clasped together but barely feeling anything, as if encased in thick gloves, the flooring still comprised of unforgiving rubber.
It was as if someone had covered me in topical anesthetic and a too-tight wetsuit, the air thick, the sounds of my very concerned girlfriend muffled as if traveling through cotton-packed ear canals. Acting on its own accord, my brain desperately kept me moving forward at a normal speed while my heart felt like it was pumping corn syrup through my veins.
When I finally landed on my back on that spongy rug, I watched Lily’s lips move but heard nothing.
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