Skip to main content

Emotion 365: The Land of Abundance, the Capitol The Treehouses of Plenty

“We are excited to go,” says Miss Doe Friend. “There is everything in Abundance.” 

“I love the forests of redwood trees,” says Miss Emeline Traveler. “They remind me of the size of the world. There’s so much to explore.” 

“Abundance makes you feel alive, awake, bountiful, and fulfilled,” says Miss Doe Friend. 

"It's alive! Like no other place!” exclaims Amma Pom. 

Wishes take visitors to Abundance, but only some wishes come true. The walls of Abundance, strong and alive, are made of redwoods. A thick canopy of the trees shelters all. Visitors cannot arrive by air. The soil is moist and full. Visitors cannot arrive from underground. Yet, the animals of Abundance roam unhindered. They build treehouses. They fear no thieves for there is too much to go around and too few to use it. The denizens of Abundance do not know how to share for there is so much it is not something one needs to do. 

“Unfortunately, they also do not share with the outside world,” says Miss Emeline. “Nor do they invite others in or have a care to do so.” 

The capitol city of treehouses, Plenty, hangs in the sky over Abundance. Plenty is made of living fruits which grow to enormous size and then float down to Abundance aided by parachute spiders. 

 “The view from Plenty is breathtaking,” says Miss Doe Friend. 

 “Plentians are delightful and giving hosts,” says Miss Emeline. “See the beautiful costume they made me.” 

“But Plenty is difficult to reach,” says the Guide. “And only the most committed, fortunate, or experienced Travelers find it.” 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Springy story review: "State Change" by Ken Liu

Why it springs to mind:  You'll never look at an ice cube the same way again. Where read: In the 2014 Hugo award-winning Lightspeed Magazine , August. Length: 5,194 words Summary: A woman has an ice cube for a soul. Memorable: How the story invites us to think about the shape of our soul, how it (or our perception of it) influences us and how it changes. What ordinary every day object would your soul be? A silver spoon, a beech stick? A great party conversation starter, this. Quote:  “All life is an experiment." Notable:  The protagonist Rina is an avid reader (always a good choice). Pairs well with: T.S. Elliot, Edna St. Vincent Millay Origin:  The story was written in 24 hours based on a writing prompt. (See Author Spotlight: Ken Liu ) About the author: Ken Liu’s debut novel, The Grace of Kings , the first in a fantasy series The Dandelion Dynasty, is due out from Saga Press ( a new Simon & Schuster imprint ) in 2015.

What is Solarpunk? Good question, great answers from our community

What is solarpunk? My fellow Glass and Gardens: Solarpunk Summers authors Commando Jugendstil and Tales from The EV Studio put together this video for the Turin International Book Fair . It features editors and authors from the solarpunk community sharing their thoughts. Together we're imagining optimistic futures based on renewable energy. My soundbite was: "Solarpunk futures are — green spaces with clean water that are pedestrian, collective, feminist, creative communities. And they include non-human animals. " Mary "solarpunk" Shelley cat did a great job (at 6:15) helping from her rather ridiculous cat tree which she absolutely loves. And what better time to wear this solar-colored "Veganism is Feminism" tee from The Herbivore Clothing Company . Seriously. I'm holding a stack of solarpunk books: Glass and Gardens: Solarpunk Summers  edited by Sarena Ulibarri which includes my story "Watch Out, Red Crusher!".  Wings of R...

Springy story review: "Torching the Dusties" by Margaret Atwood

Why it springs to mind: Relevant thoughts about how we view aging and how we treat the aged in our society. In this story, young people protest the existence of old people in an assisted living facility for taking up resources. Not far from the callous viewpoint of people sometimes expressed in the national news. Where read: The last story in  Stone Mattress: Nine Tales   (2014) a collection by Margaret Atwood Summary: Wilma and her boyfriend Tobias escape an assisted living facility, Ambrosia Manor, that has come under attack by protestors carrying signs that say "Time to Go" and "Our Turn" who think the old people are just taking up space and resources. Memorable: the delightful use of Charles Bonnet Syndrome as a character trait for Wilma Quotes:  "We have to be kind to one another in here, she tells herself. We're all we have left."   "According to Tobias, women hang around longer because they're less capable of indignation and...