kinzel: (conshot)
As I'm going over a candidate script-splinter for Splinter Universe I'm brought to recall something today's young kid writers never had to go through -- printing the final draft of a novel on a 9-pin printer.

With Agent of Change, that meant we had to set the Star 9-pin on doublestrike, and stay awake for the entire 21 hours it took. The paper was a continuous form-fed, ribbon of super-fine bright white paper, expensive as all get out ... and it what it produced was a thick pile of paper that wasn't the real final draft.

By that I mean, once that ribbon of paper was collected -- sometime after we'd mollified the neighbors who'd also heard the 9 pin printer double-striking through the night ... we had to check the entire lot of 500 or so page for slippage, and burst it.

Never had to burst a manuscript? Well, see, in those days the paper had the paper feed-wheel edges that had to be carefully pulled off -- and then each sheet of paper had ot be parted from the neighbors, being reasonably careful not to tear them badly.  The cats loved tearing the side panels off, because if you did it right (with a novel manuscript) you could have a pair of paper snakes, each 400 or so feet long, for them to play in.

Yes, the fine or super finer perfs were supposed to make that .... effortless. Ayuh, kind in the way that taking a tree and making it into a cord of wood is effortless while you're sitting in front of a roaring fire. And you couldn't forget to have Band-aids and cotton swabs and antiseptic nearby, because paper cuts were endemic to the process. ...

Then just when you had a big lump of burst manuscript ... you weren't done -- because *then* you went to the copy shop and had the whole thing copied twice, at 97%, so the letter bled together better. If you were lucky, the copy shop had a box your script would fit in....

After that, you went to the PO and made their day.

All I'm thinking of this because? Because some of these pages I'm reading are still on the off-color, partial-burst original draft paper, where the edges have been taken off but the paper is still attached top-and-bottom. Ah -- yep, we wrote up hill both ways in those days, and when I was doing freelance newspaper work I wrote uphill both ways all night long, had to burst the stuff, and then get in the car to hand-deliver it!

For Splinter Universe, I'll scan this, edit on screen, and drop it into a template for the Wordpress page.

We've come a long way, baby!


kinzel: (srm)
Had a blast at AlbaCon and was sorry that this time around I couldn't stay the Sunday night ... on the other hand it was a beautiful ride home, amazingly trouble free, with blue skies, blazing colors of red green gold on the trees and traffic that just flowed, even around Boston.

Got back to the state O' Maine at sundown -- pretty exactly sundown. Which means I came over the border-marking  Piscataqua River Bridge,  which was brightly sunlit at the top but elsewise in shadow, descended into shade, and pulled into the first  tree-lined rest & welcome area, stretched, and the GPS went from day view to night view, telling me I was 2:00 hours from my destination.

Saw lots of old friends and folks at Albacon and met some new ones; got a chance briefly hang out with various of the writers, which was good, and had a small Liaden Lounge, complete with banner, which I failed to to document. I think there were some folks with cameras in the room -- if so, can you point me to photos?

So anyway, now I have all these piles of things to take care of, which  I guess I should do.

Eventually I need to talk at length about my thoughts on "publishing and social media"  ... they've been jelling over the last few conventions.

One  immediate point: I believe that mavens like Cory Doctorow -- inadvertence at work or not I can't say -- has convinced people that being a celebrity equates being a success as a writer, and that one can, in fact one ought to skip the stages of "normal" publishing.

Thus we have some young writers (that is, new or wannabes in the field, no matter their age) spending more time on "building their base", "interconnection", "branding", than on writing or creating.  Right -- it is useful for a writer to have a Facebook presence or to have followers on twitter. Want to follow my tweets?-- I'm Bechimo -- you can. You may have already found my LJ, and I'm building another web presence, too ... but to spend the first three years of your career telling people that you're going to be a writer worth following is leaving something out: a real reason for readers to be interested.  I mean John Scalzi was an overnight success, right?  I've seen and heard him pointed to that way, but overnight success?  Ummmm, no. That success was more than 10 years in the making ... and it came through real hard work, not from being viral.

So John gave people a reason to read him, and so did Doctorow, and so can any writer who writes, has talent, and who can reach the people. Reaching the people doesn't start the process -- having 17,000 Facebook friends doesn't mean you can write your way out of a paper plane.  Worse, the more would-be writers who crow their success stories before they have one, the less likely readers are to follow any single one.

I/we have been accused of being among the Oft Published Elite, and thus of being willfully In The Way of The Coming Thing.  But, you know, part of that being in the way is the weight of a few million actually published words, a few unsolicited awards, and guest convention appearances across North America, and readers willing to trust us with their hopes and money because we 1) have time in grade and 2) have performed more or less to spec for over 25 years.

And that's one immediate point because a publisher is waiting for our next three proposals, and I've only got one in the can.
kinzel: (Default)
First, an amendment:

These just in ... as in these 328 plus page-proof pages of Duainfey. On my plate for the next few days, yes.

Meanwhile, how do you guys do this? I mean, historically we've had a habit of rereading our previous books when getting ready to write the next one if there's been a break in the writing process ... and since we're contemplating the follow-on to Scout's Progress, which is sort of out-of-story sequence for us, I'm in line to reread ... um ...1.5 or 2 million words? Even at a leisurely book every other day that's a month! And we hear from some of you that you reread the series at least once a year... and have real jobs, too!
kinzel: (Lord Black Cat)
Well,

To me, writing a short story is like skimming an encyclopedia of discord and finding truth coming together in lush brief images for breakfast with very little connective tissues but some toast and coffee and lots of passion and orange juice on the side.

There, I've said it!

Actually, writing a short story is not like anything else just as writing a poem is not like anything else, though writing a poem is closer to writing ad copy than it is to writing a news story. I've been there and written some of all of them for pay, so I should know.

Now, if you have time on your hand and no liquid in your mouth I suggest you do a google-search on the phrase:

"Writing a short story is like" just to see how ineffable, how romantic, how banal, how uplifting an act "writing a short story" can be/is/ought to be/should never be ... and see what searching for a conceit for an introduction to a collection of short fiction can do to you?

I do note that google wanted to offer me something over 41,700 examples of "writing a short story is like" and could only find about 11,700 examples of "Her breasts were like". I think I glanced through the first four pages of "writing a short story is like" and one of "Her breasts were like" so I guess there's proof that writers are far more interested in short stories than they are in breasts, in a ratio of about 4-1.
kinzel: (Default)
Some things still have to happen.

So am washing clothes, I took out the trash, I cleaned cat boxes, and...

gah, had to clean up the macaroni salad that I'd put in the little container topped with plastic wrap... which leapt out of the refrigerator when I opened the door and dutifully unwrapped itself when I tried to catch it....

I have NASA TV online behind my OpenOffice so I can listen in on landing preparations... man, this is what the internet is for!.

Today's outrage? How about a "support" company sending sex offenders for overnight stays with people with mental issues? How about hiring someone under criminal investigation for embezzlement to... run the company books?

I cant tell you that's what happened, but that's what employees seem to be saying happened: http://morningsentinel.mainetoday.com/news/local/3990877.html ... sigh

Sometime this weekend I may get that scanner that got moved because it wouldn't fit on the same desk as the new printer into a spot the really old scanner had on the file cabinet beside my desk. Next week, then, maybe the desultory scanning of photos dating back to Clarion West of 1973... and old BaltiCons .. shall I post some here?

Now to work....

oops,
this is version 1.1 one because I have another potential outrage for you...
a fireworks seizure....

http://pressherald.mainetoday.com/story.php?id=116025&ac=PHnws

now are you outraged at all?
If so, by endangerment, or by endangerment charge?

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