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Rossmoor writer Menalcus Lankford to speak in Fairway Room on Aug. 2

By Ken Wong, Club correspondent Rossmoor writer Menalcus Lankford will speak at the next meeting of the Published and Aspiring Writers of Rossmoor on Saturday, Aug. 2 in the Fairway Room of Creekside Clubhouse. He’ll be discussing his latest novel, “End in Sight: Senior Seances, Sex, Spirituality,” set in a retirement community much like Rossmoor, where his colorful cast of characters faces the challenges and changes that accompany end of life. As Amazon describes it, these challenges are “not necessarily negative. For some, it leads to a sort of rebirth, where old worries are set aside and new ways of being are discovered. They may experience a freeing understanding of what has gone before in their lives, and discover more fulfilling relationships, including sexual ones, than they have ever known.” In writing “End in Sight,” Lankford strove for literary fiction, a genre suitable for dealing with “the complex issues of aging in a senior community like Rossmoor.” As he defines it, “literary fiction is looked to for in-depth understanding of human life. It’s not formulaic, but much more varied and complex, and not predictable. “There is a focus on how his characters change or don’t change. It has originality. Though the literary writer has learned from the work of outstanding predecessors, there is something fresh and new in his or her work. And though most such writers never become famous, the ones who do are constantly studied for their insights and style: Shakespeare, Dickens, Kafka, Woolf, O’Connor, etc. Many of the same considerations define great art, theater, musical composition, etc. Does it ‘pass the test of time’? Is it still valued in the culture generations after it was created?” His writing process? “I first invent general situations — for one scene or a sequence of scenes. Only when I’m excited by what I’ve imagined do I move to my desk and begin to turn it into text. (I think sitting at your desk expecting to create on your computer right away is a prescription for failure. It just makes you tense: ‘Why aren’t the words coming?’ Because you haven’t yet invented a character or event in your mind that excites you to write!)” Lankford draws inspiration from his varied careers and life experiences. His work as movie theater usher, bank runner, general factotum at a newspaper, traffic engineer, Latin tutor, city planner, college professor, magazine editor and lay Episcopal minister introduced him to “all kinds of people with individual outlooks and lifestyles. I took a different job each summer from the time I was 15 and learned about different kinds of people, how they talked and thought. A literary writer should not be limited to the world of his parents and his schools.” Author of seven novels and a collection of short stories, Lankford grew up in Norfolk, Virginia. He received a B.A. from the University of Virginia, spent two years in a theological seminary, and earned an M.A. in the writing program at San Francisco State University. A Rossmoor resident since 2019, he keeps busy exercising, walking and doing work with the Dickens Society of Baltimore, which he founded. He is active in men’s groups, the History Buffs club and the Published Writers of Rossmoor and enjoys Rossmoor dances and concerts. He loves spending time with his family, including a granddaughter, 7, and grandson, 3. The Published Writers group welcomes aspiring writers as well as accomplished authors and anyone interested in learning more about writing and publishing. Meetings are held on the first Saturday of each month in the Fairway Room at Creekside. Visit the club’s website at publishedwritersofrossmoor.com for more information.
Menalcus Lankford
August 25, 2025
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End in Sight – Chapter One: Ben Blue

 To begin with, dear reader, please understand that I’m not one to attend a séance. Not normally. But now, having reached a certain age in a senior retirement community—ten thousand of us over fifty-fives surrounded by miles of picturesque hills in a beautifully landscaped California valley—well, there are so many club activities open to all… why not sample this one?
Blog

Does your reading satisfy your inner self?

Daily we all must read online more or less factual information to do our jobs, keep up our lives with others and meet our everyday needs—medical, grocery, clothing, car, home repair, money managing, etc. But what’s missing? Let’s try an analogy: every day we travel by motor-driven vehicles—clearly the best choice for getting to most places most quickly. Yet when we have a bit of leisure to follow our own desires, we often choose a different kind of movement: walking, jogging, hiking, bicycling, swimming, boats, trains. Though less efficient in getting somewhere quickly, this satisfies some other, deeper need of our being. This part of us knows life is not just about getting there, but how. Could reading fiction also satisfy this other, less factual and closer-to-us use of our time? It could help, but we’re not there yet if we stop at reading “formula fiction”—romances, detective stories, westerns or various “shoot-em-ups”. These can be entertaining, but there’s a mechanical, predictable quality there which doesn’t reach a hungry inner-self. Instead, try reading literary fiction—the truly engaging work of literary masters, authors like Charles Dickens, Franz Kafka or Flannery O’Connor. Or discover a contemporary master, not yet recognized. This kind of fiction can take you to a place where your inner character encounters novel or short story characters who are facing a real and complex world of deeper meaning, like the one you may inwardly be hungry for.
Menalcus Lankford
January 28, 2025
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