Sunday, 24 August 2025

Colours

 



The colour of distance was a kaleidoscope –

glass shards, shiny dreams mixed in with river gravel,

wildflowers flattened by raindrops, dusted with hope,

a lone evening star pierced by a mountaintop,

the primordial rhythms of footsteps, sands and travel.

 

Everything isn’t a journey, there’s standing still

to observe the intent rain trickle down your nape.

Everything isn’t colour. Endless climb uphill.

It’s picking up a seashell too, and watch it fill

with rain and ocean, reflect you and the landscape.

 

The colour of home, in contrast, was more specific

tending to terracotta – burnt clay pots and pans,

a mud-wide riverside, a wall of exposed brick,

my father’s wedding ring, my mother’s old ceramic

mug of clear black Darjeeling steaming in her hands.


Everything isn’t home and home’s not everything.

There’s being alone, a stranger, under vaster skies,

the thrill of unknown earth, unknown paths beckoning,

the bone deep peace of trees, the flash of a birdwing,

feet firmly on strange tracks with nothing recognised.



I came across this book title and a quote from it - 'you can't go home again' by Thomas Wolfe, a famous author from North Carolina. The quote's been buzzing around my head...it has permeated everything I've written subsequently, home and away, the various shades of homecoming and unhomecoming. Someday I would like to get my hands on this book. 


Amazon offered me a free audio version - but you know me, my neural pathways are paved in concrete and it's too late to change their preferences - audio isn't remotely as satisfying as a regular printed book with that crisp papery feel between thumb and fingers. It might work for a short story, but don't see how I am to manage with audio for a 700+ page novel. Hubby keeps extolling the various virtues of audiobooks - no shelfspace requirement apart from being practically free, no stress on eyes etc etc, but the heart wants what it wants. No arguments possible with that.


Which do you prefer  - audio or printed? Hope your week is filled with colours and books in your preferred avatars. Have a blissful one. 


16 comments:

  1. Printed. Every time. I love the feel and the scent of a book. And suspect I always will. Even e reading is decidedly second best for me.

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    1. Totally agree, nothing to beat a proper paper one with pages I can turn with my fingers. E-books come a long way behind, only when there's no other option. Audio doesn't even feel like an option, tbh.

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  2. I prefer reading, although I used to enjoy listening to books on the radio. These days I mostly read on kindle because I can make the type larger

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    1. That's definitely an advantage - and I do look at the font size in printed books before purchase. Listening is strictly for music in my book, if you know what I mean :)

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  3. Hari Om
    I must confess, bibliophile though I have been, that almost exclusively now I take audio books... And any hard copy versions on screen reader. My arthritic shoulders don't do well with prolonged holding of books... But mostly that van life doesn't suit it either. Audio is a godsend, then, or no books would be 'read' at all! YAM xx

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    1. I see where you're coming from. Van life sounds so enchanting! Do you listen to long audios too, like novels? Poems are a great fit though. But I haven't seen too many poetry audios...

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  4. Bet I could find a printed copy here!
    Neither - I prefer eBooks.

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    1. I bet you could!

      eBooks have the same advantage - no shelfspace requirement.

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  5. I like printed. I have come to appreciate ebooks. Not much for audio, but to each their own.
    I enjoyed your poem. Everywhere and everyone is in a state of constant change, so yeah, one really "can't go home again."

    “Let’s strive to be better in September!” – Charmaine J. Forde #quote
    I have a novella coming out on the ninth. And a post about condiments planned on the A to Z site. Hope you're well!

    J Lenni Dorner (he/him 👨🏽 or 🧑🏽 they/them) ~ Speculative Fiction & Reference Author and Co-host of the April Blogging #AtoZChallenge

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    1. I do like that quote. All the best for the novella! And I'll be checking out that post on condiments. Thanks.

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  6. Hi Nila - only printed ... the occasional novel/quick read as an ebook is ok - but audio - one has to like the narrator's way of reading or speaking - not necessarily easy for me ... cheers Hilary

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    1. I hear ya Hilary! Audio is a fearsome prospect!

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  7. Print for the tactile feel, plus the cardboard bookmark - I have multiple to choose from per my mood. The Thomas Wolfe book is worthy, albeit long. For me, I was just "home" to PA/DE. Even though my dad is gone, I have friends and family and I feel comfortable in the pace, the roads, the trees, the chatter, and laughs. Excellent poem!

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    1. Parents define 'home' in so many different ways, don't they? And continue to do so even after they're gone.
      I'm hoping that a print version of that book will find its way to me! :) Glad you enjoyed the poem.

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  8. Lovely poem and especially love the last 2 lines as for audio or printed; definitely printed

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    1. Thank you, more print fans than audio it appears. :)

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