Archive for the ‘links’ Category

Dean Wesley Smith ran a long series through December on goals. You don’t have to slavishly adopt them all, and agree or disagree all you like, but it’s probably that there’s something in here for everyone:

How to think about goals, Making goals real, Personal example on how to set goalsAttitude and Numbers, Doing the Numbers, Avoiding Failure, More than one goal, Motivation, Fear, Craft Goals, Summary and Tricks.

Still with Smith — he’s added a new feature: a writing streak Page. Anyone can join in, simply report at the end of the month and he’ll add you to the page.

Rabies may have inspired vampires — this is so cute :tongue:

Jim Hines has been writing this series of the Writer as RPG character. Do read it if you haven’t yet, and this is part 2 so click back for part 1. hilarious.

Facebook inside joke — what if Pride and Prejudice were written in a FB newsfeed style?

Dudes don’t read, a self-fulfilling prophecy — talk about a provocative article. As one can expect, the comments section range all over the place, from folk with axes to grind gleefully latching onto this to outright affronted dismissal. This will probably elicit various emotional responses in people. I found it an interesting, and unusual today, perspective.

Use of the world “like” serves a like useful purpose in language — I’m not English, not a teen (well, in literal years) but also use it and also likely to use it more in casual conversati0n than like, elsewhere.

Glossary of Book Publishing Terms — this is so good I don’t even know where to begin to pick favourites!

The Museum of Bad Art.

All Hail Sir Terry Pratchett!

Best of the Onion:

Courage — thine name is golf player. Quite possible one of the most brilliant and subtle pieces of satire written in recent times.

Factual error found on the internet shocks world and undermine’s internet’s impeccable reputation as source of unimpeachable information.

The 15 most expensive paintings ever.

It’s not the amounts that made my jaw drop but..WHO are these people who have this kind of money?! be sure to check out the right sidebar, which contains links to more Top [] lists.

The Devil’s Writers Dictionary Part 1 and Part 2.

Brilliant! Brilliant! Brilliant!

Think Anatomy

A website dedicated to human anatomy. check it out, trust me.

15 tools for Twitter

I use Tweetdeck too, and can recommend it.

An Amazonian tribe that might invalidate Chomsky’s theory of universal grammar.

very long article. fascinating stuff and recommended to read

How to find free images for your blog

Internet vs books: peaceful co-existence

I’m glad to be able to read an article that doesn’t pose some flawed-understanding Darwinian principle of either or, for a change.

And finally from the ligher side of life:

Red Wine improves memory and mind, says research study conducted by that impeccable science organization, The Onion.

10 reasons books are better than sex

10 most outrageous opening lines

16
Mar

Linkage

   Posted by: David de Beer

Nancy Kress compares writing preferences to eating habits. hmm, I think I lean more towards the seasonal gorger. I eat that way too, really. Interesting, she might be on to something here. Everyone else?

Joe Nassise on Storytellers Unplugged has started a series on story beginnings; this time he talks about establishing sympathy witht the lead. This is overall a handy site, I quite like it, although my interest in the articles wax and wane.

Janet Reid - ten tips on query letters. And on what works in queries.

Good question - author promotion: what works for you and what doesn’t?

Writer Beware: what slice of the book pie does internet sales take? Very informative, definitely a huge surge in the amount of sales via the internet the last couple years, but I agree with them that the net will never entirely replace physical stores (and I would hope they don’t). Maybe just me, but I just don’t see the need for the two to be in competition. Both a bookstore in RL and online, just makes so much more available to the reader/ consumer.

Backstory is not all bad things all the time

Great article by James van Pelt at The Fix. Man, that image at the end of the Chevy Chase movie he mentions - I can sooooo identify with that one! It’s true, though, sometimes you do need to get out of the house to get the juice flowing. I hate driving, but have to admit that few things work as well for me as being on drives. Probably the mindless tedium of the Free State, getting stuck in peak traffic or whatever, but those are usually the times when my story brain is at its best. Might have to start thinking in investing in a recorder….and learning to deal with funny looks from people in other cars as I talk aloud to myself.

Jay Lake on rejections. There’s a couple of links to older posts he wrote about it, including a fascinating quick breakdown on how his rejection “levels” changed over time. So, for those who get despondent about how long they’re taking to get anywhere, somebody like Jay (Or James above) are both good examples that literature is not ruled only by the young and the quick. Some writers do take time to mature. Depends on whether you’re a beer or a wine, I guess *joke*.

In any case, have to admit, I’m not overly fond of the word rejection either. Inasmuch as we try to tell ourselves it’s not personal, it happens to everyone, it’s part of the gig, you have to learn to deal with it - it’s hard sometimes. It gets you down. Of course, you can quit. No one ever stops you from quitting. There is every reason to quit. There’s no reason at all to carry on and to keep trying. Writers are nuts…

Point is (and Eric Marin has a post about it too), rejections do happen to everyone and they aren’t personal*, and more than likely they are based on subjective preferences. It comes down to that nebulous phrase “well written” that no one can ever agree on what precisely it means.

*well…they could be, but it’s best to assume they’re not, I reckon. My advice (and I get huffy a lot when it comes to getting rejected) is that when your first instinct is that the rejection is personal (and the likelihood of this will increase with feedback as opposed to form slips) also first assume your reaction to it is your own huffy barrier being breached. And, if you genuinely believe an editor is making rejections personal and insulting you? Don’t submit there. Simple as that. It might be a bit more difficult in the novel fields, but in short fiction markets and anthos come and go at such a rate that there’s no sense in subbing to an editor you feel has personal issues, whether with you or the world at large. Sure, it’s one less market. But there’ll be another one along to replace it shortly enough. Short fiction it’s just possible that markets need writers more than writers need markets. But like I said, assume it’s your own huffy barrier in play first.

12
Mar

Linkage

   Posted by: David de Beer Tags: , , , ,

James Moore, on the virtue of patience in the writing game, and including a digression into self-publishing.

Booksquare: the book  is not the territory. Some thoughts on alternative modes of storytelling. There’s an important point - storytelling and stories written in bookform are not really the same thing. Books might die, be replaced. Stories will go on, even if they’re not being written anymore, but created in some other fashion. I digress; the article is rather interesting.

Also from Booksquare: The art of conversation: Those who are living and working online require another new approach: authenticity. Honest, open discussion. Nothing turns off a potential customer like constant happy sunshine talk. 

 Building character

Jeff Vandermeer: 7 tips for beginner writers

Scalzi’s thoughts on the 1000 true fans (see post for link to the article he’s referencing). Very interesting posts, both of them.

 For those who are unaware, author JA Jonrath sporadically makes these posts where he gives new and prospective writers various tips, focusing on promoting yourself. This one is about stuff not to do.

Curious Expeditions: not so much a direct link, but I keep meaning to mention this site, one of my faves on my feedreader. Every post of theirs so far I’ve marked to go back and re-read. Fascinating. Great site. “We, your humble explorers, are devoted to unearthing the wondrous, the macabre and the obscure from around the globe.”

21
Feb

The good, the bad and the ugly

   Posted by: David de Beer Tags:

5 myths about torture

Nathan Bransford on similies

200 odd years later, people are concerned about why Jane Austen never married? well, I have to admit, it’s kind of interesting and all, but it does seem a bit of  a pointless matter to devote so much time and effort on.

Zimbabwe sets new world record! for inflation.

Student unrests in South Africa again. There’s been quite a bit of this recently, and for some time too. Back in my day, it wasn’t unusual to come to varsity and see the cops in full riot gear armed with R4’s (assault rifles) manning the gates. But, you know, we got an education (some of us, no comment) and I only ever had one class abandoned when the toyi-toyi erputed in the halls outside. I remember my lecturer, cut off in mid-sentence when the ululating and foot stamping started outside, and calm as you please, without missing a beat, he just says, “Time to go home, ladies and gentlemen. There’s unrest on campus.” Funny thing is, we all lackadaisically collected our stuff, filtered out of the room and went home. Next day you come back. Didn’t happen all that often, but you know, not so unusual that we ever even thought about it.  My brother tells me they had cops more often when he went to varsity. He decided to rather do his honors via correspondence. But yeah, riots and protester-police conflicts are not a bygone relic from Apartheid days; they still happen and much like then, most of us give it a read, go “again?” and carry on with our daily routines. Since I really don’t know how to compare the normality of this - what are other countries like in this regard? protests and stuff, and cops showing up to guard the university gates in the mornings?

Richard Branson. What can you say? somehow it’s not surprising that he’s the man leading the charge for commercial space flight. 

Schoolchildren, teachers and parents march through Joburg in reaction to the shooting of 12-year old Emily Williams. I didn’t see the march; but Fairland is where I live. Kessel street, the street where the gunfight broke out between robbers and armed response resulting in a stray bullet killing her, that’s the street behind mine.  The real question would be where the #@$% were the police when 1) the house was getting robbed, 2) the fight broke out and 3) why do we call armed resonse instead of the police? well, the answer to #3 is easy - on average the cops come sauntering by a day or 2 after you call them. If they come at all, that is. SAPD - what a joke. It’s where you go if your goal in life is to sit on your arse and watch it grow. When people disbelievingly ask me, “come on, is it really that bad in SA?” then what can I tell them, except this? it’s not uncommon, not uncommon at all. It’s sad, it’s tragic. But honestly? Nothing will change. Nothing. As I said, this is Fairland, this is where I live. Girl who went to school with me, her mother was shot in their driveway, middle of the day, she came home too soon. When I was a kid? I would walk these roads at night to my friends, by myself. Now there’s hardly a house left that doesn’t have walls, electric fencing and rolled wire, and the dogs are getting more, bigger and meaner. Armed response get paid to cruise up and down the streets. The police, they sit on their arses and watch it grow bigger, and when you call them for anything, the response is something like: “We have no petrol.” Welcome to South Africa, we’re not Sierra Leone but we ain’t Disneyland neither. Yes, it really is as bad as many of us keep telling foreigners. This, this is just one very minor, very random story that happens all over the country every single day.

In case anyone thinks our government is not doing anything - au contraire: they are brilliant at mismanaging funds.

Authors get paid to mention products in their books? is this one aspect of the future of writing? good god, i hope not..then again, sports superstars make the bulk of their money via adverts and endorsements, so I wonder if this will really be such a bad thing? After all, everyone complains about how bad the pay in writing is and how no one can make a living out of it anymore. Supplemental income? it’s a little manipulative, and requires a concern with ethics possibly, but what the hell, sinc when are writers expected to be the bastions of morality? Morality is defined by the dollar sum, no? maybe this says everything that’s bad and unhealthy about modern society.

The way of the conversation of the book - rather interesting, although I don’t have an opinion on this except that I do make an active effort to search out people who read and like to talk about books. And I love talking about books, or at least taking part in such conversations.

From John Scalzi - this is just too funny!

speaking of ethics.. 

John Grisham - writer of quality popular fiction. But, you know, as ever it’s an interesting question, the difference, if any, and the importance, if any, between commercial fiction and literature. Personally, I just don’t see the two as being mutually exclusive, I really don’t. And I think it’s too pat and convenient to insist that the top selling authors must be hacks, and so what if they’re popular? they’re not creating Art, or whatever the buzzword of the day is. No writer that I know of will turn down a paycheck. But somehow getting paid well for writing books that are popular do carry a stigma of being inferior, of selling out.

ok, that aside, let’s put the question to everyone and answer honestly - if you could choose, what would it be? books that are popular now, but will be forgotten in 50 years? or books that sell slowly now but will still be read in 50 years? Sure, I think every writer dreams of making that much of an impact, but me, I’m realistic — and greedy — enough to settle for a good pacyheck now. Let the future take care of itself.

Facts in fiction