Tag: writing

  • New twitter handle: @authormihirk

    After weeks of weighing the pros and cons, I’ve finally decided to separate out my social media avenues in a quest to better promote and manage my work – as an author and publisher – in the new year. As a start to this process, I have acquired a new twitter handle – @authormihirk, and plan to dedicate it to news and happenings in my publishing space.

    If you were following my previous handle (@mihirmdkamat), you should switch over to the new handle. I’m still going to use the old one for posting links to my personal blogs and messages, so do stay tuned to that one as well if you are interested.

    I thank you for your continued support and hope you have a great New Year.

    – Mihir.

  • New beginnings

    Embed from Getty Images

    Clear blue skies,
    Opened eyes
    Hands in hands,
    Wedding bands
    Crowded spots,
    Quiet thoughts
    Open air,
    Stand and stare
    Splash of wine,
    Joy divine
    Spoken word,
    Emotion spurred
    Years end,
    Ears lent
    Humankind,
    A lot more kind.

    Time for new beginnings.

    © 2014 Mihir Kamat

    A very happy and prosperous 2015 to one and all! Thanks for your readership and kind words in 2014, I look forward to a great New Year.

  • Clean Slate: A work in progress

    I was digging through some of my old pieces and came across an idea that I’d shelved for a while. I spent some time today cleaning up the old piece and wrote up a sample chapter based on the idea I had, a book loosely titled ‘Clean Slate’. I’m sharing it here, would appreciate feedback.

    Do you think I can turn this into a decent book?

    Clean Slate: Chapter One

    It was half past eight on a cold January morning, also incidentally the very first morning of the New Year. The days were beginning to grow, only slightly, so it was still dark out. Most inhabitants of the city of Franklin were still sleeping, what with the chill air and the exhaustion that followed their previous night’s revelry, coupled with the overuse of bottled spirits. But not the boys at The Hallford, they’d been up at the crack of dawn, getting their act together, ready to serve their first waking customers.

    The Hallford was less of a hotel and more of a riverside inn, a property well-kept and fairly luxurious for someone on a medium-sized budget looking for a place to stay. Originally an old mansion owned by a wealthy loner with no living heirs, The Hallford had quite the sprawling lawns and cobblestone driveways, some of which were now freshly black-capped and painted to offer for parking space. The recently painted ochre exterior gave the house a golden glow every time the evening lights came on. The property boasted a riverside deck that afforded its patrons a great view of the Red river and ample opportunities for fishing and sunbathing. And the excellent connectivity via the newly extended interstate highway, the spine that connected the lazy suburbs to the bustling business district, which ran along the east side of the estate, made it the premiere destination for fishing enthusiasts, visiting families, or for putting up uninvited guests.

    The desk manager was an old geezer named Harold Fox, affectionately known as ‘Dirty Harry’, not because of any relevance to the classic film but for the ungodly odor he emanated. He sat at the front desk, dressed in an ancient black coat and wearing inside a dull white shirt on black corduroy pants, slowly sipping on his morning cup of black coffee, adjusting his possibly antique spectacles while trying to read the Dispatch. One could only guess he’d dressed that way every single day of his life since he started there. His full head of white hair was neatly oiled and parted to one side, giving his wrinkly weathered face a spiffy look. The mornings were usually peaceful, but not today.

    The gaggle of attendants now gathered at the northeast window disturbed his concentration.

    ‘What’s going on, boys?’ He asked, shouting from across the desk.

    ‘Take a look for yourself, Pops’, replied one of the lanky ones.

    He wondered what it was that could possibly keep their tiny adolescent attention spans busy. He remembered the hubbub in the corridors from a few years back when one of their pretty guests had decided to go skinny dipping in the river. God bless her freedom of expression.

    Fox stood up, adjusting the crease of his pants so that everything lined up and held perfectly, and then walked towards the group as fast as his age permitted. He had his glasses on, and he kept them on, for he’d liked to get a better look at the nice-looking nudist, if it were one, for old time’s sake. The walk towards the window seemed like an eternity, what with all his bones grinding and feet flopping, and he felt like a rusty old clock going about its daily struggle to strike twelve and losing. Though if he’d have known beforehand what he was about to see, he’d have asked for more time.

    The cobblestone path leading towards the main riverside deck was in view from the window, and a previously clean walkway was strewn with debris that now occupied about twenty square feet of real estate.

    Fox squinted closely at the center of the rubbish for a better look, and identified that he was looking at the charred remains of something. He was standing at a distance of fifty feet from the water’s edge, and he could only discern a large black lump, dead center, surrounded by long scraps of burnt wood that he reckoned were previously painted blue. The water touching this object was slowly turning black and frothy, as if the lump were an oil barrel slowly losing its contents. The surface of this object was shiny black, like a black garbage bag was sheathing it, but at that distance and given his eyesight, it could have been the oil. The object itself was about five and a half feet long and a foot and a half wide.

    In the unending mass of black, Fox detected a startling hit of gold, close to halfway down. He strained his eyes to see, trying to narrow in on the outlier, and inspected it carefully for a few minutes, until he was certain of what it was. To a very old man, the revelation was overwhelming.

    He gasped for breath, held his chest tightly and desperately tried to sit down. The boys who were standing right behind him scrambled to hold him, make him comfortable and brought him a glass of water. He drank profusely, taking in a number of deep, calming breaths, and then whispered, choosing his next words carefully.

    ‘Call the fuzz. We’ve got a floater.’

    The gold wristwatch that adorned the grotesque, charred corpse had fought the scorching flames and won; valor at the cost of beauty that would never be admired again.

    © Mihir Kamat, 2014. All rights reserved.

  • One for the holidays

    It’s that time of year again
    To shop and cook seems such a pain
    Yet this is simply not what it’s all about

    There are also laughs and cheers
    Bottled ales and sweet, cold beers
    Little ones who love to scream and shout

    A nice little getaway
    Children gathered round to play
    Night time skating on a frozen lake

    Prayers echo in the night
    And families reunite
    Tables spread with food and Christmas cake

    A quiet time to reminisce
    To share a song or just a kiss
    On a silent night before the morn

    When the world seems to run around
    And the snow touches solid ground
    A fire keeps the home safe and warm

    A time to remember everyone who cares
    And even those in deep despair
    The time for giving is upon us all

    There’s happiness in the air
    As humanity fills the chairs
    Happy holidays to one and all!

    © 2014 Mihir Kamat

    To all my readers, wish you all a safe and happy holiday season. Hope you all enjoy the festivities responsibly, in the company of loved ones, and also make this time count towards being better human beings. Peace and prosperity to all.

  • Graduation day

    The mother spots her teenager easily
    Bobbing in a sea of black
    As she meekly takes her seat at the back
    In the ocean of parents gathered today.

    A quiet stream of tears flow
    Somewhere between the laugh lines
    And curvy, dimpled chins.

    A sense of pride emerges, knowing,
    He was once, just a little boy,
    She’d held in her hands, helpless, meager
    Hungry for love.

    She saw in him her spark, and
    His eyes reflected her vision.

    She was there to hold his hand,
    Nurture him, strengthen him, and his conviction
    He dwindled, at times, like candles in the wind
    Swaying, but keeping steady as she kept him on course
    Fighting, wishing, dreaming, living
    Waiting, in the ranks, for his moment to shine.

    That child, her child, now a grown boy
    Is ready to face the world,
    He, who had once taken baby steps,
    With the help of her steadying hands
    And the sound of happy cheer.

    She can hear the cheer now
    As the hundred boys and girls, toss their hats
    Now ready to cross the threshold,
    Between carefree lives
    And touching stars.

    © 2014 Mihir Kamat
  • Serena

    The night is young and restless
    As the candlelight glitters on her face
    She’s all dressed up in black silk
    With eyes that betray her frenzied search.
    She wears an unlikely grimace
    As her wine’s insipid, yet she sips on,
    A mere ploy to kill time;
    To fill a vacant void.

    I name her, Serena;
    Only because she looks so calm, and gentle
    What makes me fall in love with this woman
    I know nothing of?
    I look upon her; try to catch her gaze
    But fumble with her line of sight.

    I fight with myself, my mind plays games;
    How do tell her how I feel? For I don’t know
    If I stand a chance against such raw beauty.
    But how would I know? I say to my ego.
    Not if I kept what I felt to myself.
    So what if I tried, and failed?
    I must be a man, and not the mouse;
    Rather die a hero than live a coward

    I tell myself, that
    And some other nonsense
    To pacify my lack of self-confidence.

    I make up my mind;
    Must take the plunge, let go of my safety net
    Armed with some liquid courage
    And crazy, wishful thinking.

    © 2014 Mihir Kamat
  • The storm

    We watch the moon in all its brilliance
    The light, it shines across the bay
    The sea is calm, but there’s a storm
    Brewing somewhere in the distance.
    The world’s away, left far behind
    But there’s no escaping your probing stare
    Clearly there’s more to be wanted, or felt
    More left for the taking.
    I feel your trembling fingers, intertwined
    When I hold your hand firmly in mine
    But the tremors soak within my skin
    As my heart just, simply, melts away.
    Spellbound, hooked, fascinated
    To a point of no return
    We watch the moon in all its brilliance
    The light, it shines across the bay
    The sea is calm, but there’s a storm
    Brewing somewhere, yet
    Much closer than I’d expected.

    © 2014 Mihir Kamat
  • Sparkle

    ring-in-a-box

    She glitters on, unfazed at the touch
    of human skin; as he mulls holding her with
    jittery fingertips. He wonders
    what a hole she would make in his pocket,
    yet considering she would be totally worth it.
    She looks around, scoffing at her peers;
    they can only stare back, green with envy
    for she carries that crystal, that chunk of ‘ice’
    fit only for the hand of a queen.
    She spends a quiet moment on her silky berth,
    made of scarlet felt and velvet soft,
    as she preps herself for the big moment;
    for when the teary eyed, gorgeous dame
    beholds meekly her ravishing beauty
    and then looks back at the babbling fool,
    who now holds her hand, trembling, unsure;
    simply willing to trade one beauty away
    to have and hold another for life.

    © 2014 Mihir Kamat
  • The crush

    The boy focused his eyes at the empty arch staring back at him. With every twist and turn of its ornate stone, it spoke to him of the days gone by. Barely twenty-one, he felt like his scrawny arms had shouldered the weight of the world.

    It came to him as if it were yesterday. He was just another fresher dotting the ground floor of his college, some four years ago. His lifelong dream of getting an engineering degree was just getting started. He looked around to find a lot of fresh faces, some of which he’d get to know shortly.

    He remembered his first day at class; trying to keep his eyes open while concentrating on the teacher droning away the laws of Thermodynamics. Sixty others around him might have been feeling the same way, but none made it plain. The ceiling fan seemed more interesting that what might have been going on in front. He looked around the class to spot his colleague, a young girl, sitting one bench away to his right, and drifting away in the background. Her head oscillated in her stupor, conscious enough to keep away from the edge of the table, and dazed enough to be swaying away to the boring lullaby recited in front. He saw the seat next to her empty and jumped ship while the teacher had his head turn. He put a chubby book under her chin while her head troughed and it settled cleanly as it made contact. That was it, lights out. In that instant he’d made a friend, a friend he’d assisted sleeping in class.

    He’d never had a friend who was a girl before. Blame it on the convent schools, which had separate branches for boys and girls while he grew up. The experience was new, fresh. He’d never known what it meant to hold a girls hand, to look at her in a different light, or to begin and end his day with her, but within a year, he’d done it all. He’d met someone who’d smell extraordinary, who’d dress differently, like diverse things, and one who’d enjoyed his company. All he knew was that she made him smile and he liked taking care of her.

    As the folded paper cups of coffee piled on an already cluttered desk full of five-pound books, one would make out that exams were near. The gloom and doom that surrounded hours of poring through dreary textbooks and meaningless reference guides was starting to sink in. The elevator rides spent in reading and revising anecdotes captured in a previous class. The facial expressions conveying words of wisdom right before a spot quiz. The manner they’d complete each other’s sentences. The way they’d point to the same thing and giggle. The way she’d suck on a lollipop and force him to do so in front of everyone, and he would risk it all doing so willingly. In every moment spent in each other’s company. In every examination conquered with excellence. In every second that passed, he grew warmer to the girl that made him feel different.

    Every second passed, right across these now vacant halls.

    He couldn’t help but shed a tear. He recalled that day, their last day together. He’d held her hand as she’d checked out her result. She had passed, and he had too. Yet somehow, the music faded in the mist. For her the journey ended there. She had agreed for marriage, an arranged marriage, a week after her graduation. He held her hand as she broke this news to him, shaking with excitement. He felt his heart sink deep into his stomach, wrenching his gut, as a tornado would leave its victims. He decided to do nothing but smile, because he couldn’t explain what he was feeling, or why he was feeling that way. He could only watch as she placed her hand on his head, smiling and asking him to keep in touch, but he knew it would never happen.
    The boy focused his eyes at the arch right in front of him. He sees a boy and a girl laughing, looking much younger than he remembers. With a blink of an eye, the duo looks back at him, their eyes imploring him to look beyond the emptiness left behind. He’d known now the hard way what it meant like to lose a friend. What it meant like to have a crush.

    What it felt like to fall in love.

    © 2014 Mihir Kamat

    Inspired by this week’s writing challenge.
    Image courtesy of Cheri Lucas Rowlands.

  • At First Sight – Now available in stores!

    At First Sight – Now available in stores!

    It gives me great pleasure to announce that At First Sight is officially available for purchase, all around the world!

    It’s been a year of hard work watching the book develop, and I’m proud and excited to be launching and introducing it to the world. Many thanks to everyone who have already bought the book, and for those who haven’t, it isn’t too late to grab a copy now!

    If you do buy and read the book, please leave me a review on the store page. Your reviews help build credibility around the book and keep the author honest. It also help promote its visibility to potential buyers who would love to own and read the book.

    The book is available in Paperback and E-book versions. To know more or buy a copy, visit the launch page on my official site here – http://mihirkamatbooks.com/2014/02/01/at-first-sight-now-available-in-stores/.

    Thank you and God bless.