November 2009

World in the Satin Bag

I Dream of Zombies

And I want to know if anyone else does. We all dream. I know this, and most everyone does. The only thing is that most of us don’t remember our dreams. I usually don’t…unless they’re about zombies. Now, not all of my zombie dreams are scary in the traditional sense. Zombies are always scary, to me, but my dreams tend to have me fighting off zombies and rescuing damsels in distress and other such nonsense. I almost always lead a resistance of some description, and then I wake up never finding out if I succeeded. I suspect that these dreams explain why I find zombie movies both thrilling and terrifying (with exception to a handful of zombie movies that are so terrible they’re not even funny). Still, it’s a tad disconcerting to find yourself afflicted with inmortusomnia (that’s my fancy made up medical term for dreaming about the undead). Maybe I’m not the only one. Anyone else dream of zombies?

World in the Satin Bag

I’ve Been Interviewed!

Harry Markov over at Temple Library Reviews has officially posted his interview with me. Go check it out. It’s awesome, and not because it’s me, but because it’s, well, it’s just awesome, and fun.In other news, I have two small things coming up: a quick plug for a cool new site I learned about through the University of Florida and a Book Magnet promo for a bit of cyberpunk goodness. I hope you all will enjoy them. And that’s enough from me. Have a good night. So say we all.

World in the Satin Bag

What Are Editors Good For?

I’ll tell you. Editors are gatekeepers. The whole purpose of an editor in the publishing business is to weed out the bad and leave only the good. This is especially true in magazine publishing (online or in print). If you think that every story written is good, then you are sadly mistaken. Just because you have written something doesn’t mean that it needs to be seen. Bad stories exist. That said, it should be acknowledged that editors don’t always get it right; but that’s the nature of the human condition. Editors spruce up prose. They don’t do it quite as much as the other kind of editor that you hire, but they do make good writing better. In book publishing, an editor does a hell of a lot of work, and most of the time the work they do is good work. I’ve seen manuscripts from before publication and after and can honestly say that the final product is almost always better than the original thing. Editors make you into a better writer. Emphasis on better. They don’t make you into the greatest writer ever, but they certainly teach you a few things. Ask anyone published by a major publisher or even a small press. Ask them if their editor taught them anything. They did, didn’t they? I thought so. Editors are dedicated to good books. They are not evil, but benevolent creatures with only one goal in mind: find and publish good books that consumers will like. They don’t always get it right (but, hell, let’s face it, writers don’t either), but they put a hell of a lot of work and TLC into every book they edit. They want to put out good books. In fact, they have to. A string of horrible books that don’t sell very well could spell certain doom for an editor; it’s in their best interest to provide consumers with good products. And if you don’t believe that, then ask an author published by a traditional press. Ask someone at Tor or Penguin whether or not their editors did a lot of work to produce a quality product. Did you ask? And? I thought so. The thing is, some people are jaded against traditional publishing. Sometimes it’s for good reason, and a lot of the time it’s not. Editors are not useless entities. They serve a vital purpose in publishing, and writers need them (even good writers). Self-published writers need them too. Every sentence you write isn’t gold. Sometimes a sentence is utter drivel. The problem is that writers don’t always know that, and it can take a good editor to make them see it. If I missed anything here, let me know. I’m learning a lot of the editing trade, so if there are things editors do that I’ve forgotten, leave a comment! (This post is a preface to another post I have coming up. I’m trying to wrap my head around a string of paragraphs written elsewhere that I can’t help staring at–not because they are interesting, but because what is being said is so ignorant and stupid that I can’t help gawking at the words. Expect that soon.)

World in the Satin Bag

Calling On You: Ecocriticism, green, DIY science fiction?

I’m in the process of doing some research for a paper proposal and am looking to put together a list of recent (last ten years) science fiction stories containing some element of the “green” movement in it. This can be anything from obvious ecocriticism, but more particularly aspects of the DIY (do-it-yourself) green movement as visualized through science fiction. This is not limited to near future stories; one of the novels I am working with is Sly Mongoose by Tobias Buckell, which is set pretty far into the future, but deals with a lot of the issues I am curious about in regards to “green” literature (i.e. living with the environment and creating tech that accommodates that sort of relationship). Any help would be appreciated. Again, it should be recent fiction. I know of a lot of older stuff, but I want this paper to be more relevant to the more recent “green” movements today. Thanks!

World in the Satin Bag

Writing Prompt #7: Comical Imitation

Now that we are in the glorious month of November, it is time for yet another writing prompt. I thought I’d be silly this time around. Here goes: Write a humorous short story in your favorite genre doing your best impression of Douglas Adams. I think this one will be a lot of fun. Go wild, everyone. Seriously! I might have something for this by the end of the month. Have fun, and feel free to let me know if you’re taking part in the comments.

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