Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Photo: Fog in the Trees II

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It’s very dry in the part of the coun­try, to the point where, at high alti­tudes, you don’t find your­self sweat­ing much because it evap­o­rates too quickly. This means one of my favorite weather phe­nom­ena, fog, rarely comes along. But while up in Rocky Mountain National Park, I found a whole cloud bank set­tled into a val­ley, which gave me a great oppor­tu­nity to prac­tice shoot­ing in fog.

Fog makes for an inter­est­ing pho­to­graph but I found there’s no point in shoot­ing in it unless you’re shoot­ing directly at a light source. Backlit fog just looks blurry. If you can take pic­tures of fog from a dis­tance obscur­ing some­thing like say, the Golden Gate Bridge, that’s pretty cool too, but for this round of exper­i­men­ta­tion, the only good shots I got were of sun­beams com­ing through tree and selec­tively illu­mi­nat­ing the fog, like this one.

A note to other new­bie photographers–I view his­togram clip­ping as the kiss of death for a photo and oftne delete it on site–but you just have to live with it when shoot­ing basi­cally right at the sun in an over­cast situation.

Photo: Fog in the Trees II

Photography: Sometimes You Just Get Lucky

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It’s hard to over­es­ti­mate the use­ful­ness of luck when it comes to wildlife pho­tog­ra­phy. A lot of my best shots owe their exis­tence to chance. Being in the right place at the right time, that’s luck. So it hap­pened this week­end that I found myself unex­pect­edly tak­ing a photo when I thought I was done.

I’d gone for a walk down a short trail in Rocky Mountain National Park, but the fog was thick enough that I wasn’t see­ing much of any­thing beyond a few deer and some squir­rels. (This is what it looked like) I turned around and headed back to my car. As I sat my cam­era on the roof of the car so that I could get out my bag and put it away, I looked across the car at the tree on the other side and saw this red-​​naped sap­sucker sit­ting there, not even pay­ing atten­tion to me. At a dis­tance of about 4 feet, It’s hard not to get a rea­son­able shot.

I might not have even noticed the bird. It blended in with the bark fairly well except for that red head and throat, and I must have caught that color out of the cor­ner of my eye.

Sometimes, the best shots come not because you’ve pre­pared, or because you wanted it. Sometimes, you just get lucky. The trick is, hav­ing enough skill to make your luck work for you.

Photography: Sometimes You Just Get Lucky

On July 20th, 1969…

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I wasn’t even a gleam in my father’s eye. Or, as my mother some­times claims, my genetic mate­r­ial had yet to be manip­u­lated and pre­pared for inser­tion by the grays who would abduct her 7 years later.

Still… yay, Moon land­ing! Had hoped I would see some­thing play out like that in my life time, but I don’t really expect it now.

Light Blogging This Week

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I prob­a­bly won’t have the usu­ally sched­uled posts up on Wednesday and Friday. I’m going up to Laramie to par­tic­i­pate and help with the Launchpad Astronomy Workshop and I don’t think the sched­ule will allow me the time to blog.  Some of you will be very pleased at this, judg­ing from the grum­bles I’ve got­ten on Twitter this week about my last post.  Enjoy your vaca­tion from me!

Maybe I will actu­ally start writ­ing hard sci­ence fic­tion after Launchpad.  Not likely, but who knows.  Maths are hard.  Much eas­ier to just make up stuff!

An Editor’s Perspective on Rejection

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Since I’ve taken on the gig of man­ag­ing edi­tor at Escape Pod, I’ve been relearn­ing a lot of things about being an edi­tor that I had for­got­ten in the time since clos­ing th Fortean Bureau. I’ve been think­ing a lot about rejec­tion let­ters, and rejec­tion in gen­eral, but not from my usual per­spec­tive as a writer, but now as an edi­tor. It’s inform­ing the way I think about rejec­tions as a writer as well.

It’s Not Personal

Rejection let­ters aren’t per­sonal. I find it very hard not to take them per­son­ally because by god, I wrote the story, I poured my self onto the page, and so it hurts to see that rejec­tion come in most of the time. My sto­ries are like the mind-​​prosthesies I never really asked for. And they trans­mit pain like any real limb. Er, so to speak.

Doling out rejec­tions, many to fine writ­ers whose work I love in a gen­eral sense, it’s really hit home. The rejec­tion is always for the story at hand, and it’s not about you. Great writ­ers get rejected. You will too.

I walk a very fine line in try­ing to avoid offense with my rejec­tion let­ters. How much detail does a Hugo-​​nominated writer need when you bounce his or her story? Do they need a rea­son other than, just didn’t sync up with my inven­tory needs at this time? I don’t want to be in the busi­ness of hand­ing out writ­ing advice in my rejec­tion let­ters. I tend to err on the side of less, rather than more, infor­ma­tion. Which brings me to my next point.

My Rejection is not Writing Advice

Most of the time, my rejec­tion let­ter says the same sim­ple line: “didn’t grab me.” I stole this one from F&SF, because it’s suc­cinct and a polite way of putting the truth. When I write this, it means that I did not fin­ish your story because I got bored with it. Sorry, but that’s the truth. And that’s why I don’t write what I lit­er­ally mean in the rejec­tion let­ter, because I am not a cal­lous mon­ster. When I do pro­vide feed­back as to why I am not buy­ing a story, it’s just based on my per­sonal expe­ri­ence of read­ing the story. Every edi­tor brings their own pecu­liar biases and inter­ests to the table. There are some ideas that always grab me more than oth­ers. Biological SF will win out over aster­oid min­ing every time, until you write that aster­oid min­ing story that proves me wrong.

New writ­ers should most def­i­nitely not be look­ing for writ­ing advice in their rejec­tion let­ters. Other writ­ers, and a cri­tique group, are the best way to gain this insight. It’s not the (short fic­tion) editor’s job, espe­cially not today, to cul­ti­vate the writer’s tal­ent. We sup­port your tal­ent, but we don’t have the time to fer­til­ize it. You need to turn to other sources for advice.

I can under­stand the impulse to seek feed­back from edi­tors. Writing is a soli­tary game, and it’s hard to find meth­ods with which to mea­sure your progress. How do you know if you’re get­ting close?

Again, time to be blunt. You’ll know you’re get­ting close because the edi­tor will tell you. When your rejec­tion let­ter asks for more of your work, that’s not just being polite. That’s because we think you have the chops and we’re just look­ing for the right story. When rejec­tion let­ters turn from “didn’t grab” to “didn’t work for me, for the fol­low­ing rea­sons” that’s a step up.

Trust me, the pain is only begin­ning when you’ve made those first cou­ple of sales. You’ll want more, and if light­ing has struck a lit­tle early, it can be painful to go quite a while afterwards.

At the same time, if you go from encour­ag­ing rejec­tions to a non-​​encouraging one, it doesn’t mean you’ve back­slid. It prob­a­bly just means the edi­tor has got­ten a bit too busy to give you spe­cial attention.

I Liked It, but I Didn’t Love It

I get to buy 52-​​ish sto­ries a year, and I prob­a­bly select those from ten times that many at least. This means I am not only look­ing for good sto­ries, but I’m look­ing for sto­ries that leave an impact on me. I reject a decent num­ber of good sto­ries, because I can’t use up all my slots buy­ing just good sto­ries. They have to be good, plus some. That spark is the most elu­sive thing you’ll seek as you develop as a writer.

I per­son­ally haven’t bro­ken past this phase. My rejec­tions are very often in the “this is a good story, but I didn’t like it enough to buy it” vari­ety. I sell oca­sion­ally, but this is my career wall at the moment. I think I’m close to under­stand­ing why, but I may never know, and I may never take the step for­ward. Especially if I don’t write more than I have been these past few years.

Doesn’t Fit My Needs at This Time

This is very sim­il­iar to the “like it, didn’t love it” rejec­tion let­ter. Under dif­fer­ent cir­cum­stances, I might have, prob­a­bly would have, bought this story. But maybe it’s a bit dark in tone, and I’ve been buy­ing way too many of those lately. Maybe at the moment, I need more light-​​hearted pieces. Maybe I bought an aster­oid min­ing story shortly before you sub­mit­ted yours, and they’re too sim­i­lar in sub­ject matter.

This is the “shit hap­pens” rejec­tion let­ter. I find they’re the hard­est and eas­i­est to take at the same time. They’re frus­trat­ing, but at least you can put these to the capri­cious­ness of fate, rather than your own per­sonal skills. It helps.

So that’s a lit­tle bit of the think­ing I’ve been explor­ing regard­ing rejec­tion as I work to select sto­ries for Escape Pod. It’s def­i­nitely given me a bet­ter per­spec­tive on my own rejec­tions. If it were pos­si­ble, I would rec­om­mend every seri­ous writer find a way to read slush some day. Not only do you learn to spot the most com­mon mis­takes, you start to get a lit­tle empa­thy for that poor soul on the other side of the transom.

Drabblecast 120: Featuring Me!

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Drabblecast is one of the quirkier, cooler pod­casts out there, run by the genius that is Norm Sherman.  His music tracks are absolutely awe­some.  He guest hosted on Escape Pod a while back and threw down a phat “pimp my satel­lite” track that has to be heard.

Anyway, a cou­ple of my pieces from The Daily Cabal project, back when I was par­tic­i­pat­ing, ran in Drabblecast 120;  “Fishermen” and “A Sandwich Shop in Chicago, 1 AM.”   In par­tic­u­lar, the sec­ond one actu­ally choked me up a lit­tle, which is a tes­ta­ment to how well Norm read it, given that I wrote the damned thing.

Go take a lis­ten, and sub­scribe to Drabblecast. It’s always fascinating.

Sofanauts Episode 10 Live

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It’s Friday, so a new Sofanauts pod­cast is up. This week’s guests are Damien G. Walter and Mary Robinette Kowal (and as usual, myself). This week, we talk about the Steampunk Tales iphone app, Dr. Roundbottom, and lots of other fun stuff. Check it out.

Hard to believe I’ve done 10 of these things.

I’m sorry

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The Fundable project from yes­ter­day is offen­sive to peo­ple.  It felt a lit­tle crass, but I’d dis­cussed the idea before and peo­ple said that they would sup­port it, so I thought I would give it a try.  I didn’t think that the idea itself would anger any­one.  I’m sorry.  I’ve can­celled it.  If I want to go to Yellowstone to shoot, I’ll see if I can sell some prints over time to pay for it instead.

Some Upcoming Podcast Appearances

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In the past week, I’ve con­vinced Tony at Starship Sofa to pod­cast “The Kansas Jayhawk vs. The Midwest Monster Squad.”  Dunno when that’s com­ing out, but I will post about it here when it does.  It’s a favorite of my work for a lot of people.

Additionally, I sold 3 sto­ries orig­i­nally from the Daily Cabal to appear on Drabblecast, Norm Sherman’s excel­lent pod­cast that i’ve only recently become acquainted with.   I’m also work­ing on a lit­tle longer piece for them, revis­ing some­thing from the back cat­a­log.  We’ll see how that goes.

I really seem to be get­ting caught up in the world SF pod­cast­ing.  I think I’m going to order a nice USB mic for my wife here this week­end.  I’d like to see her record­ing more nar­ra­tions for the Escape Artists family.

Photo: Blur

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That’s right. MORE blurry fish. But art­fully blurry so it’s cool. Or so I am told.

Photo: Blur