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Nov. 7th, 2009 @ 10:57 pm Baeg Tobar short
If you read my short story on Baeg Tobar or have been following the Web comic, you've already heard a bit about the Black Queen. She reappears in this week's story, "Shadivengen" by Mark Adams, one of my co-writers on the Steampunk Musha d20 RPG (which is still in limbo somewhere). Mark is also working on the newest incarnation of Steampunk Musha, and "Shadivengen" is (I believe) his first published short story. It's exciting to see his work out there for everyone to read!

If you have a chance, please pop by, read Mark's story, and drop by the forums to say hello and let him know what you thought!

--

On a completely different note, my wild selkie photos went up at Nicole Peeler's blog today. I had a lot of fun with the selkie hunt, and the shot I took of the selkie I found at Branford Point (near where I live) is one of my favorites.
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[info]alanajoli
Nov. 7th, 2009 @ 04:14 pm A Day
I was kinda sick in the middle of the night. Likely reflux; I'm a lot better now, if not perfect. But it's scary.

Today is such a pretty day, though: mid-60s, sunshine, and the smell of wood from someone's grill coming through the window. Tomorrow is supposed to be just as nice; there will be barbecue. Oh yes, there will.

And Prilosec.

How's your weekend?
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[info]filkertom
Nov. 7th, 2009 @ 12:25 pm Artists and Art Panels!
Current Mood: cheerful
Hello there! I am the Art Programming coordinator for Norwescon 2010 and before I send out invitations to artists I thought I would check in with you, the attendees, to see if there is anyone that you would love to see at Norwescon next year! Keep in mind, the Artist Guest of Honor has already been chosen and the people that we invite are either ideally local artists or artists who don't mind traveling without pay to attend the convention. So think LOCAL and FREE! Tell me who you'd like to see and why you feel they would be a great art panelist! If you can provide website/contact information, that would be ideal. Please don't post anything that isn't already publicly available. Private email addresses should be sent to me via the LiveJournal message system. :)

I'm also interested in panel ideas! Art panels that you loved from the past? Let me know! Art panels you have always wanted to see but never have? Tell me! After all, this convention is for your pleasure and entertainment, so the more we know about what you would like to see, the better we can meet your hopes and expectations! :)

Many thanks in advance for your input!
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[info]mamishka, posting in [info]norwescon
Nov. 7th, 2009 @ 10:53 am How is your Nano going?
Just thought I'd check in with you guys.
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[info]xjenavivex
Nov. 7th, 2009 @ 02:00 pm Twittering Away, Today!
  • 11:15 Accidentally left my typing gloves at home. Pro: can wash them (and they need it). Con: typing without them all day today. #
  • 12:11 @singlefile But, guys, isn't Life cereal *already* cinnamon? #
  • 17:27 I-95 is a mess. Totally not going to Burlington Mall tonight. #
  • 18:14 Rocking out to "Here Come's Science". Maybe it will be enough to inspire me to finish the cleaning. #
  • 19:56 Vacuumed 1st floor. Just not a fan of vacuum. I think it would be better if we had carpets---the carpet mode rocks! Time to buy rugs? #
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[info]bluedaisy
Nov. 6th, 2009 @ 06:02 pm A Serious question of Comedy
So, "The Legend of PRB" has been doing smashingly on the DT20...thank you all who've voted for it (two weeks in a row at number 1! Woo!). This brings about a serious question...

Many have said it's one of my best songs, musically and vocally (which for me, is a big thing, considering I'm...we'll say, not the strongest of singers). I'm currently considering sending it to Dr Demento for his show, but the subject matter is keeping me from it. Considering it's about a REAL person whom I know personally, some of the jokes may be considered a bit to "in" for the show (despite my attempt to make them as broad about general drinking as possible, it IS funnier if you know of Rob's "Party" persona, IMO) and that may keep it from being played. However, since Rob's own song "Gamer Funk" (which itself is also about the con scene) has been number 1 two months running on Dr Demento's Top Ten, a SONG about the number one artist would do at least moderately well in that setting...or so my theory goes.

What say you, friends? Should I just forgo all worries of "in jokes" and send it, or should I keep it twixt our little comedy music community? Please...any help would be appreciated.

Oh, and thanks again for voting for my songs...after doing this for 15 years only locally and without much success, to have my work be so well received is amazing, and I love you all. Seriously. ^_^
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[info]insane_ian, posting in [info]marscondementia
Nov. 6th, 2009 @ 04:49 pm more rushed than I would like
Current Location: 55101
Current Mood: rushed
Supernatural last night did not disappoint me in the slightest. I laughed pretty much the entire way through. slightly more in-depth discussion with spoilers ) Next week it's back into nonsensical meta humor, though. These promos are beginning to remind me of how every promo on the dub of Neon Genesis Evangelion (bleargh) used to end with, "...and more fanservice!"

Survivor also took an unexpected turn for the awesome post-merge with a blindside truly deserving of the name. Whoever wins this season, I think we can safely say that the true victor is the Russell seed.

In music-related news, this week on the Mad Music Dementia Top 20 "Mary Sue" is at #12! Thanks for voting, and here's how you keep it up:

1. Register an account at The Mad Music Archive, if you haven't already.
2. Then go here and click "Vote" in the sidebar.
3. Check the box for "Mary Sue" (you can do it once per week). You can also vote for other songs from their individual song pages by searching for the on the Mad Music Archive.
4. Ideally, watch "Mary Sue" rocket up the charts.
5. ???
6. Profit!

Finally, my heart and my prayers go out to everyone hurt by the shootings at Fort Hood yesterday. But I can't be the only who, upon reading the shooter's very Arabic name, got a sinking feeling. A tragedy of this magnitude perpetrated by someone who will be shoehorned into a hurtful stereotype only adds fuel to a fire that is rapidly growing out of control. I hope that justice will be served for the victims and the perpetrator(s) and that these events do not become another political football to be kicked around by bigots.

I'm gonna go have a fun weekend of food and Torchwood and gaming and karaoke now. I hope that yours is good, too.
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[info]gamerchick
Nov. 6th, 2009 @ 01:53 pm Tension vs. scares
Current Mood: contemplative
Current Music: Marie Darling, Aliens
I just read a review that panned an upcoming movie but reluctantly admitted "it had a couple good jump-cut scares." Because I'm currently working on a monster fight scene, that comment made me wonder about creating -- and experiencing -- terrifying moments in words.

I consider Dean Koontz one of the best at creating on-the-page terror. Whenenver I sit down with one of his books, I block out an entire afternoon so that I can 1.) finish in one sitting, and 2.) finish before the sun goes down. His stories are wonderful examples, I think, of breakneck pacing and high-ratcheted tension.

A Koontz story can amp up my blood pressure and make me dread, but even he has never made me jump out of my blue Snuggie.

On the other hand, fuzzy puppies leaping unexpectedly across a YouTube video will make me shriek.

I'm inclined to think a jump-cut experience can't be created on the page because you can't force the timing on the experience. A reader's eye will move onto the next sentence when she's good and ready, and the mental processes required for reading will undermine the emotional response. Maybe the human imagination -- no matter how rich and varied -- can never quite give us the visceral thrill of even the cheapest visual stimulus which bypasses the frontal lobe of the neocortex and goes straight to the freaked-out monkey limbic system.

Have you ever read a passage that literally made you jump? Please share. If not, what's the next best thing you've read for wordly scares?
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[info]jessaslade, posting in [info]fangs_fur_fey
Nov. 6th, 2009 @ 09:59 am The Apex Book of World SF edited by Lavie Tidhar
Tags:
One of the best things about working for a publishing house is receiving books. There is one in particular that I am interested in right now. It is The Apex Book of World SF edited by Lavie Tidhar. I won't get my copy until the end of the month. I'm really looking forward to it.

The Apex Book of World SF edited by Lavie Tidhar

The world of speculative fiction is expansive; it covers more than one country, one continent, one culture. Collected here are sixteen stories penned by authors from Thailand, the Philippines, China, Israel, Pakistan, Serbia, Croatia, Malaysia, and other countries across the globe. Each one tells a tale breathtakingly vast and varied, whether caught in the ghosts of the past or entangled in a postmodern age.

Among the spirits, technology, and deep recesses of the human mind, stories abound. Kites sail to the stars, technology transcends physics, and wheels cry out in the night. Memories come and go like fading echoes and a train carries its passengers through more than simple space and time. Dark and bright, beautiful and haunting, the stories herein represent speculative fiction from a sampling of the finest authors from around the world.

Edited by Lavie Tidhar

S.P. Somtow(Thailand)—“The Bird Catcher”
Jetse de Vries(Netherlands)—“Transcendence Express”
Guy Hasson (Israel)—“The Levantine Experiments”
Han Song (China)—“The Wheel of Samsara”
Kaaron Warren (Australia/Fiji)—“Ghost Jail”
Yang Ping (China)—“Wizard World”
Dean Francis Alfar (Phillippines)—“L’Aquilone du Estrellas (The Kite of Stars)”
Nir Yaniv (Israel)—“Cinderers”
Jamil Nasir (Palenstine)—“The Allah Stairs”
Tunku Halim (Malaysia)—“Biggest Baddest Bomoh”
Aliette de Bodard (France)—“The Lost Xuyan Bride”
Kristin Mandigma (Phillippines)—“Excerpt from a Letter by a Social-realist Aswang”
Aleksandar Žiljak (Croatia)—“An Evening In The City Coffehouse, With Lydia On My Mind”
Anil Menon (India)—“Into the Night”
Mélanie Fazi (France, translated by Christopher Priest)—“Elegy”
Zoran Živković (Serbia, translated by Alice Copple-Tošić)—“Compartments”
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[info]jennifer_brozek
Nov. 6th, 2009 @ 11:15 am Secretive
Current Mood: contemplative
You don't realize how many secrets you have until you start reading the Postsecret archives.
Then you worry about what is wrong in your head.

My secret is, I'm full of secrets and am afraid to tell anyone any of them.
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[info]mskitty23
Nov. 6th, 2009 @ 10:45 am Guest Blog: Seanan McGuire
I first discovered Seanan McGuire ([info]seanan_mcguire) when she created some fan art for Anton Strout's Deader Still. He posted it up over at [info]antonstrout, and I was intrigued enough that I thought, I should find out who this Seanan person is.

In short, she's amazing. She's one of those super talented people who is an artist, a musician, and a writer, all wrapped into one. She has three albums of her music available at CD Baby and she performs at conventions, seemingly all over the place. Her first novel, Rosemary and Rue, debuted last month to excellent reviews, and was recently the bookclub pick over at Genreville. I'm incredibly tickled that Seanan took the time to talk about fairy tales here at Myth, the Universe, and Everything.

Without further ado, I turn it over to her!

--

CONFESSIONS OF A FAIRY TALE GIRL.

Hello. My name is Seanan, and I'm a folklore addict. I started small, like most addicts, with Disney movies and the Brothers Grimm, and branched out from there into the Colored Fairy Books, Child's ballads, the works of Shakespeare, and the fabulous scholarship of Katharine Briggs. It didn't take long for me to lose my way completely, falling into bad company, like the hero with a thousand faces, and the princess of the glass mountain. Pushers were everywhere, and I was weak.

I'm not sorry.

The urban fantasy of today is built atop the folklore and fairy tales of yesterday. True, a lot of it draws on archetypes that we've classified as "horror," but if you look at the roots of those stories, you'll find that witches and werewolves originally appeared next to pixies and elves. The divide between fantasy and horror is a modern construction. We're just getting back to our roots. Our bloody, bloody roots.

The gradual blanching of all the blood from the fairy tales is responsible for a lot of crimes against folklore, not the least of which is the relegation of the fae to cute nursery illustrations and CGI movies featuring Tinker Bell and her friends. Most of the traditional fae would kick your ass for even suggesting that they might be "cute," and they definitely aren't the sort of people you want in your nursery. The irony of decorating childrens' rooms with the very creatures we used to protect them from with horseshoes and rowan wood has not escaped me. (It's also not a good thing to explain while standing in the Disney Store.)

So what is folklore? At its simplest, it's the oral or written tradition of a culture. Tall tales, fairy tales, ghost stories, urban legends, they're all folklore. Every human culture has its own folklore and its own folkloric traditions, and no one is completely familiar with absolutely all of them. Folklore changes constantly. The old-school Cinderella may have sent pigeons to peck her stepsisters' eyes out, but there's room in the tradition for the Disney Cinderella, too; as soon as little girls started to retell the story of the movie, she became just as valid (if a lot newer).

As urban fantasy becomes more and more established, tropes and concepts go from "fresh and new" (and five hundred years old) to "been there, done that," which is especially comic when you consider that it's all been done before. Everything old is new again once it gets old enough. Even the fairy tale girls.

There's a lot of freedom in the urban fantasy playground, and a lot of history still waiting to be remembered. We've found our roots. All that remains to be seen is what we're going to plant this time.

I don't know about you, but I'm planting myself a pumpkin patch.
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[info]alanajoli
Nov. 6th, 2009 @ 09:29 am Publishing/Writing Needs
I still wonder daily just what utilities are out there for authors, publishers, and others in the field.   I constantly find that people are unaware of websites and tools that I thought were common knowledge and assume there have to be more than I'm in the dark about.

publishermarketplace.com is a site I'm going to have to sign up for in the coming year.  I've had the free signup for a while now, and it is useful, but I'm missing something important.  As a small press I can always list our titles acquired, which is good.  Unfortunately I never know what gets posted, since the list of sales that goes out to the free mailing list is extremely shortened and includes only a few of the MAJOR publisher's purchases.  I only seem to find out that the annoucements went out on Publisher's Marketplace when an agent drops me an email congratulating me prior to submitting a query on behalf of one of their authors.  (Makes perfect sense, since they know that after negotiating a deal at least the acquiring editor has freed up some of their time.  I wish as an author there was an easy way to figure out when an agent has more time to read your manuscript.)

Any tools that you've used and recommend?
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[info]dqg_neal
Nov. 6th, 2009 @ 08:26 am Stewart Does Beck
Tags: , , ,
This may be the funniest thing you'll see all year. It's 8½ minutes long, but really worth it.
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[info]filkertom
Nov. 6th, 2009 @ 02:00 pm Twittering Away, Today!
  • 08:46 Someone has come and stolen away all the leaves that were in my front yard and driveway. I'd swear they were there yesterday... #
  • 10:19 Loving this shirt: bit.ly/2IwXee #
  • 12:55 The continuing saga of "who cleaned up my yard?": The hostas were cut back and I'm pretty sure the grass was mowed. Now I have a theory. #
  • 12:58 Watching my work computer churn on a Visual Basic script. Run, script, run! Please don't crash! #
  • 13:00 @avacon Bunnies would have eaten my carrots, one would expect, not the oak leaves. :-) But yes, I now have that song stuck in my head too. #
  • 22:14 I should know better: digging around for a tag for sweater material => itchy rash all over hands when the answer is wool/angora. #
  • 22:15 Help MIT undergrads design better ice scraper. bit.ly/AhZpz They need your feedback on their design for their class project. #
  • 22:17 @gisellis Thanks for tweeting the survey link-I did not think of it. Also, hope you don't mind I retweeted w/o attribution-it didn't fit #
  • 22:33 @afinck I'm so glad you dodged! #
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[info]bluedaisy
Nov. 5th, 2009 @ 10:33 pm Has it really been a week?
My phone has been ringing and not getting answered. My e-mail is building up. I'm falling behind on my facebook games. I haven't blogged in a week.

I'd like to say I've figured out how this happens, but it seems to sneak up on me all at once!

I was out of town last weekend (Saturday through Monday) visiting family in Michigan, and it was really wonderful to see everyone. The cause was sad (my grandmother passed away after a long illness), but the memorial service was really beautiful, reminding me what an amazing woman my grandmother was. I'd forgotten that she used to call her granddaughters in the morning sometimes to let us know if the prisms she had hanging from her windows were making rainbows, or if we'd have to create some rainbows for ourselves that day. I'm thinking about getting a prism for myself to hang in my kitchen and think of her.

The trip sadly meant that we missed most of the Halloween festivities, but I do have a quick photo of me in my airplane-friendly costume to share.


(I'm posing with Anton Strout's books, as part of his Halloween costume contest. That's a bun in the oven on my shirt, in case you can't make it out.)

While on the trip, I read three review books and Tempest Rising by Nicole Peeler, which is not only an awesome debut, it's an awesome mythie novel. (You can get a sneak peek here at Nicole's site.) In between catching up on work assignments (two down since I've been home!), I'm trying to get my library pile down a bit, as well as tackling my TBR pile. And also, there's writing to be done. It is November, after all, and I did say I'd write 30,000 words (and while I wrote four essays this week for a freelance assignment, I'm not really counting those toward the full goal).

Anyone read anything good lately that I should have on my TBR pile? Anyone make a writing goal so far this week? Inquiring minds (seen below) want to know!

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[info]alanajoli
Nov. 5th, 2009 @ 10:28 pm Well... someone remembered the 5th of November.
Someone has been setting off some pretty hefty fireworks, this evening.
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[info]kendokamel
Nov. 5th, 2009 @ 04:10 pm Horrible
Tags:
Shooting at Fort Hood, TX leaves 7 dead, at least 12 injured, and one of two shooters still at large.

ETA: Numerous updates on dKos.

ETA2: At least 9 killed, maybe 30 wounded. Live video coverage on MSNBC.
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[info]filkertom
Nov. 5th, 2009 @ 01:04 pm Obscure Celebrity
Authors (who are not super famous like Stephen King or Neil Gaiman) live in a strange world of being a kind of hidden celebrity. Unless people know what you do for a living (or even do part-time), they don't give you a second look. As soon as your profession is known, you become an interesting bug or a 'celebrity.'

When I go out with my husband to the store or to eat and someone asks me what I do for a living, I always have to brace myself for the response to "I'm a fulltime author."

The first response usually is, "Really? Are you, you know, published?" This is the kind of response you give a friend who's asked you to listen to their garage band CD. I'm used to this response because I understand it very well. The editor part of me always wants to know the answer to this question to anyone who tells me they are an author.

When I say, "Yes" and qualify it with something like "I have a page on Amazon" or "I have a page on DriveThruRPG" (depending on who I'm talking with), the response almost always boils down into two categories: Interesting Bug or Celebrity.

Celebrity: This response is awe and an immediate need to know what I've written and if I would talk to a friend/spouse/sibling/child about being a professional author. You know, to give them an inside tip on how to get published in the business. Sometimes it includes a request to meet my agent. But as I don't have an agent, I mention this and they become confused.

Interesting Bug: This response starts with "I've always wanted to write…" and continues with a barrage of questions on what I did to get published (ass in chair and fingers on keyboard for a start). It usually ends with a request to read something they've written or a question asking "really, how hard is it to get published?" There's the intimation that it can't be "that" hard. My answer usually is something along the lines that, yes, it is very hard to get published but it can be done.

I've thought about not answering the "what do you do" question but really, I am proud of what I've done with my career. I get paid to write. I enjoy what I do. Honestly, I get a thrill when people tell me they've read my stuff and like it. Sometimes, I really enjoy the look of awe that I get. I admit that. It's kind of cool to be a celebrity for a very short time before going back to my life of obscurity.

I suppose it's one of the reasons I really like going to conventions. There are those professionals there that you can hang out with who understand intimately what it is like to be an author. Then there are those people who hero-worship and look up to authors as a goal to become one someday. At a convention, all authors are celebrities and interesting bugs. People want to know what we did and what they can to become like us.
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[info]jennifer_brozek
Nov. 5th, 2009 @ 12:46 pm Updated ...
Abstract Thoughts has been updated with Obscure Celebrity - about people's responses to authors. Read more... )
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[info]gaaneden
Nov. 5th, 2009 @ 01:07 pm Remember the Maine
Because Matthew Shepard Can't, and I Can - THAT'S why.


(nicked from
[info]chaosdancer)
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[info]filkertom