Canuck Scriber L.Lachapelle Author
Bio
Published Poet and Author. Making rainy days feel like Sundays with words.
Stories (146/0)
- Top Story - March 2023
The Mystery of Gannon Stauch The Grueling Story
Gannon Stauch (pronounced Stock), 11 years old Never one to fear the truth or express it as far as I see it, especially after doing a psychic reading, here is my Reading about the Stauch case that is pending trial soon, set for March 20.
By Canuck Scriber L.Lachapelle Authorabout a year ago in Criminal
Fate Awaits
Every night at midnight, the purple clouds came out to dance with the blushing sky. We'll see what fate awaits this night. The young men fought beneath the lit street lamp. Neither one was right to do so. Swings and punches were mickey mouse to this. These were galloping hooves of repeated strikes against any body part. The sound of bones against bones, feet against anything, a rapid assault of flailing bodies and blood flying. Both used to it, pain, they bit until there, the sound of a broken bone, down one went to his knees that's all his assailant needed to take his boot to the man's head and shove down with all his might the jaw against the curb. Even as he felt his face breaking in several parts and the taste of blood rise in his mouth, even as he heard some unnatural scream-like, agony filled sound escape his bloody head, his inner thought was, "it's ok, the doctors will fix it, they can re-construct, they can replace teeth. I can survive this."
By Canuck Scriber L.Lachapelle Authorabout a year ago in Fiction
Sister Maríam Caterina
Sister Mariam Caterina Once in a while comes a sample of faith that cannot be denied. It comes from the church and those who devote their lives to the message it gives. Want not or will not, lives have been preserved historically and otherwise by faith.
By Canuck Scriber L.Lachapelle Authorabout a year ago in Interview
Free Form Poetry
The love of poetry begins at insight. Making the known or the impossible to know appealable to the senses. The pure expression of an art form in words. The perfection in simplicity or complex subject matter shining through. The early bards knew it so did Walt Whitman, T.E. Hulme, Richard Aldington, Ezra Pound and T.S. Eliot, to name a few. So if meter and rules have you going cross-eyed relax in the sphere of thought and let it roll. Let's not forget this classical approach to poetry.
By Canuck Scriber L.Lachapelle Authorabout a year ago in Poets