This Is Disturbingly Meta

working_novelI’m not quite sure what to think of Working On My Novel.  On the one hand, it looks pretty funny, and also sad and horrifying.  It also seems to say something about the novel writing process, and the weird way some people are desperate to put it off, or to brag about it, or to try to force themselves to do it by making it public.

It also says something about the publishing industry that a ten-dollar book with one tweet that someone else wrote per page will probably be very successful.  I’m just not sure what.

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An Unsettling Development Involving Squirrels

zombieSquirrelI’ve shared a number of bonechilling ideas over the years, for the edification of my readers.  I’m not sure how the latest would work as a story idea, but it certainly was bonechilling.  I was riding along on my bike, minding my own business, passing what I assumed to be a roadkilled squirrel in the other lane, as one does quite a bit in these parts.  When the squirrel sprang to its feet and darted in front of me, I didn’t have time to so much as twitch, and rolled over it with a nasty thump.  Worse yet, thanks to my speed, the squirrel was kicked up and back by my tire, where it grabbed on to my ankle with super-squirrel strength.

I reacted coolly to this development, of course, unclipping from my pedal and shaking it off while saying something witty that I can’t quite recall at the moment in calm, measured tones.  It didn’t look too good as it bounced along the pavement behind me, but once I’d collected myself and returned, planning to put it out of its misery, it was gone.

Now, I don’t wish to alarm anyone, but it is pretty clear that we’re dealing with a zombie squirrel here, and where there is one zombie squirrel there are others.  Worse yet, given the speed with which it moved, it seems these are not a canonical Romero-esque shambling zombies, but rather the fast, “28 Days Later”-ish zombies.

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Finally, Some Useful Writing Advice

badMuseWe’ve all seen plenty of advice, as writers, plenty of lists of things to do, or avoid.  Personally, I’ve been hesitant to recommend most of them, but finally I’ve found one source of inspiration that I think anyone would find handy.

 

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Author Photos

smokingPersonally, for my author photos I plan to stage a series of photobombs.  Oh, sure, it may take readers a while to figure out that the guy who keeps showing up in the back is that author, and not smiling family or the wedding party, but once it hits them they’ll have that warm feeling of satisfaction that comes with figuring out a puzzle.

But Szilvia Molanr has come up with a pretty fun take on author photos, too, and all it took was some cigarettes and very serious expressions.

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The Oxford Comma: Clear, Useful, and Validated

oxfordComma538.com has done a survey about the Oxford comma, and come up with some interesting results.  Americans only prefer it by a small margin, which seems strange at first, given how useful it is.  Why wouldn’t it be overwhelmingly favord, you are no doubt wondering.  Well, it sort of becomes more clear if you dig into the statistics, as these things often do.  A careful read shows that people who don’t like the Oxford comma tend to be the sort of people who don’t know what it is.  As such, they may be simply reacting to the word “Oxford”.  Sad, but can you really blame them?

 

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Life is Pain

1DYoung writer earns six figures with erotic One Direction fanfic

 

 

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I Can’t See How Anything Could Go Wrong With This

westworldHot on the heels of Subway’s cross-promotion comes another great Hunger Games tie-in.  Personally, I had a great idea for a Theme park based on the movie Westworld, and it sounds like this may be the time to make it happen.

 

 

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Kickstarter Projects Worthy of Your Attention

cthulu_figure_largeGiven all the horrible Kickstarter projects run by wealthy celebrities who shouldn’t need help from the little people like you and I, it is nice to see some proper literary projects, like a children’s book by Zach Weiner, of Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal fame, and some kick-ass Lovecaftian action figures from the 70’s and 80’s TV show Legends of Cthulu.

 

 

 

augieIt is also worth noting that Augie and the Green Knight has already raised so much money that it will include an audio book read by Ellen McClain (that’s the voice of the Jaeger AI in Pacific Rim, if you didn’t know, and more importantly GlaDOS in Portal).  Now go and pledge, so my book gets printed on acid-free paper!

 

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A Critique of the Lyrics of Sally From Syracuse

StuNunneryToday, I’ll be critiquing the lyrics of Stu Nunnery’s 1971 hit “Sally from Syracuse” (song here, if you care to listen).  If you’re all very lucky, this will be just the first in a long series, assuming I can find enough songs on topics about which I have expertise (Syracuse, in this case, not Sally).

“Sally from Syracuse” tells the story of a lawyer from a big-city family, born with a “silvery spoon”.  He had, for some time, followed his daddy’s life, going so far as to get a fancy wife.  He had obtained, in fact, a home on Long Island, complete with three kids and maid, and an office on Park Avenue.  Now we come to the first problem with the lyrics (if we may set aside the fact that the spoon he was born with was “silvery”, rather than “silver” which implies that it may have been a cheap fake).  The narrator tells us that he spent his days in court, learning cases and torts, “things that he already knew”.  Now, if he already knew them, he couldn’t really be learning them, it seems to me.  At any rate, it seems to have contributed to his malaise, and led to him hopping into his Caddy and saying goodbye to old daddy before heading for wide open skies, and eventually meeting the eponymous Sally.

Our first encounter with the chorus, “Sally from Syracuse / I was a young recluse / You broke the shell over me / Sally from Syracuse / You’re such a silly goose / Don’t take your lovin’ from me,” presents several more problems.  First of all, while it is possible to have a shell “over” something, more generally you’d expect to see the word “spell” in that formulation.  More importantly, we have the rhymes for “Syracuse”, recluse and goose.  “Syracuse” is a word rich in potential rhymes – chartreuse, masseuse,  fruit juice, Norway spruce, etc., so these are weak choices.  Surely a lawyer with an office on Park Avenue would not be likely to be a recluse, and this is meant to be the song of a man liberated from a stultifying existence by an exceptional woman – it seems odd to call her a “silly goose” (a term more suited for use by matrons scolding young boys).  I would note in passing that in some versions of his song “Wanted Man”, Johnny Cash rhymes “Syracuse” with “Baton Rouge” – this is one way we know that Johnny Cash is a goddamn lyrical genius and Stu Nunnery is not.  Stu also pronounces “Syracuse” in a vaguely Italian fashion (“Siracuse”), as opposed to how the locals pronounce it (“halfway between “Sare-a-cuse” and “Syare-a-cuse”), but we can let that slide since the narrator does theoretically hail from Long Island, and might not know better.

As we leave the chorus, there are a few more problems.  First off, the narrator meets Sally “standing at the end of the turnpike” – there are a few roads called turnpikes in New York, but it is a fairly uncommon usage.  Even if we let that pass, though, we run immediately into the description of Sally, who has a “body quite alarming, as her jeans gave her ass quite a squeeze”.  Now, as Eric Jonrosh will tell you, any writer worth his salt knows you can’t bunch the same word up against the same word like that, it’s not done.  And “quite” is not used as a rhyme, so Stu would have been free to pick any number of intensifiers on how alarming her body was and how squeezed her ass.  And the first thing Sally does is to tell the narrator not to “dilly dally” (which, I mean, come on), and demand to be taken to “West Syracuse”.  Now, Syracuse happens to have suburbs called “East Syracuse” and “North Syracuse”, and it has a distinct “South Side”, but there is no particular entity such as “West Syracuse” – anyone who needed to be taken to some specific location in western Syracuse would instruct the narrator to take this buggy to Solvay or Onondaga Lake or something.  Stu had a three in four chance to pick a relevant direction and managed to blow it.  At any rate, the narrator and Sally then spent the week “making it like it was going out of style” at Sally’s “downtown apartment”, and downtown Syracuse is nowhere near the west side of the city – I suppose Sally might have had to run an errand at the state fairgrounds or someplace before heading home, but it all seems unnecessarily complicated, and detracts from the central message of the song (again, redemption from a dull life and introduction to adultery by an exciting woman).

This is when we run into another one of Stu’s odd “slant cliches” – Sally loosens the narrator up, and gives him a “new look on life”.  We’ve all heard of a “new lease on life”, of course, and a “new outlook”, and Stu seems to have gotten these confused, since one generally looks at things, not on them.  The song ends with Stu attempting to rhyme “driving” with “slipping and sliding” (you’re not the Man in Black, Stu, just stop trying) before ending with a repetition of the “dilly-dally” thing, which along with the “silly goose” business begins to make Sally and the narrator sound like geriatrics.

All in all, while this song was apparently “inspired by a real life event”, I’m afraid it shows signs of both lack of research and lazy rhyme schemes.

 

 

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Diagrammed Literature

P-Sentences_914x627_A_1024x1024I was hoping this would help me figure out how to diagram sentences.  My hopes were dashed.

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