Archive for the ‘My Writing’ Category

Federations Antho For Preorder, and My Story: The Culture Archivist Free Online

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The anthol­ogy of Federations sci­ence fic­tion, aptly named Federations and edited by anthol­o­gist wun­derkind John Joseph Adams is now avail­able for pre­order.  Come on, you know you want it.  You can order it on Amazon and prob­a­bly some other places too.

Would you like to read my story, “The Culture Archivist?”  Well, um, how about sto­ries by James Alan Gardner or Genevieve Valentine?  Head on over to the Federations web­site for your pick of the free sto­ries.  I believe that my story will be pod­cast on Starship Sofa around the time of the release as well.

I’m fairly happy with my story.  I hope you will be too.  And even if you’re not, hey, it’s free!  You can’t lose!  And if you like it, buy the book and sup­port good short fic­tion out­side of the pages of mag­a­zines.  I’ll owe you one.  Check out the rock­ing cover!

The Life and Times of Jeremiah Tolbert

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This morn­ing, I’ve real­ized that I don’t have any­thing else  to share via this blog at the moment except old pho­tos.    The truth is, I’m strug­gling a lot with feel­ings of depres­sion related to being unable to find a job.  Yes, I know I’m not the only one who can’t find work, yes I know it’s osten­si­bly not my fault, but as it prob­a­bly comes as no sur­prise to you, I have high expec­ta­tions for myself and think that if I were truly good at what I do, find­ing a job/​money would not be hard.  As a very kind and gra­cious some­one pointed out to me in an email this morn­ing, I’m not really strug­gling.  Struggling  isn’t depress­ing. I am tread­ing water, unable to move for­ward or back.  I can’t move from the place that I am in, in my life, until I have some path to a future.  There are a lot of paths but I am con­strained on which ones I can accept.  Right now, the only path I can accept is one that gives me enough income to sup­port Sarah and I while she returns to school full time for 1–2 years.  After that, she can get a teach­ing job and quite pos­si­bly I can actu­ally ded­i­cate myself to the pur­suits that I love.

With the eco­nomic cri­sis going on in the back­ground, and with me won­der­ing if any­one will have a job a year from now, if we’ll even have a valid cur­rency, it makes our sit­u­a­tion feel even more des­per­ate at times.

So I’m basi­cally spend­ing all my time flail­ing about for short term plans.  What can I do to make it more likely I will get a job?  And at the same time, I have these dri­ving pas­sions of pho­tog­ra­phy and echos of my pas­sion for writ­ing swirling around and because I have no rea­son to focus on any one thing, my atten­tion keeps shift­ing wildly from thing to thing.  I can’t tell if any­thing will work, so I am try­ing to go in 4 direc­tions at one.  I can’t keep that up.  Even unem­ployed, I only have so much time, and I’m com­ing to the con­clu­sion that my ten­dency to split my atten­tion among a vari­ety of pur­suits does noth­ing but harm my chances of ever get­ting to the level I want to be at any of them.

They told me as a child I could be any­thing I wanted to be.  That my IQ test demon­strated that, or what­ever.  And I always took that to heart.  Perhaps too well.  I’m great at open­ing doors, but I’m ter­ri­ble about clos­ing them.  Yesterday, I thought I could close the door on pho­tog­ra­phy and move for­ward.  Instead what hap­pened was, I closed the door on pho­tog­ra­phy and feel into the deep­est funk yet in this phase of my life.

Does that mean I should be giv­ing up one of the other pur­suits and stick­ing with pho­tog­ra­phy? I don’t know.  Perhaps my cen­tral the­sis that I need to focus on one thing is flawed.  Or maybe I’m just sad for giv­ing up some­thing I gen­uinely love (for the time being) and I’ll come to terms with that shortly.

I don’t really have it that bad.  I don’t work back-​​breaking labor all day.  I’ve been there. I worked in a lum­ber yard as a yard hand for a sum­mer, and ulti­mately, I didn’t much care for that as a job.  I like work­ing with my mind. I like chal­leng­ing my brain to solve things and to come up with things that wow me and oth­ers.  That’s what I like doing.  I don’t care if I do it with words or pic­tures or web­sites.  I just want to make amaz­ing things.    And I really have to be paid to do it,  because I can­not live the life of the starv­ing artist.

Not with the debt I have left over from my time as your typ­i­cal amer­i­can con­sumer.  Not with stu­dent loans.

I don’t care about money except for the sense of secu­rity it pro­vides.  If I could have a safe warm place to live with space for a bed, books, and a com­puter, if I could eat at least once a day, and if there were beau­ti­ful things around me to look at, I could be con­tent.  Give me the inter­net and the land­scape around me and I don’t need much else.   Or am I kid­ding myself about that too?

Do most peo­ple know who they are and what they want at my age?  I’m 31.  I feel as old as the earth some­times.  I expected in my youth that at 31, I would know what I was doing for the rest of my life.  Instead, I don’t even know what I will be doing next week, not for sure, although at this point it involves going to see my fam­ily in Kansas and look­ing for a job in Kansas City.

My life has been a series of rein­ven­tions.  First I was a stu­pid kid with bad grades.  Then I was tested and they decided I was too intel­li­gent for my classes and that’s why I did badly.  So they tested me to be in gifted pro­grams, and it turned out that my hand-​​eye coor­di­na­tion was so bad that I might as well have been men­tally hand­i­capped.  So I became the kinda bright kid who liked sci­ence.  I did great, grades-​​wise in junior high but then I got to high school.  My par­ents made me get my license and a job so that I could drive the younger sib­lings to school.  The only job that would have me worked me until 2 in the morn­ing on school nights and sud­denly my grades slipped.  I was no longer a straight-​​A stu­dent.  Chances for a good schol­ar­ship dis­ap­peared instantly into the grease traps behind the Sonic.  I fell asleep in class. Turned in papers late.  Now I was the kid who used to be pretty good at school but was hav­ing a hard time get­ting his work done because of the long, late hours he worked.   I gave up any hope of doing much in col­lege beyond state school which I prob­a­bly wouldn’t finish.

Then I met Tama, one of the smartest peo­ple I’ve ever known.  Our rela­tion­ship changed me again, and I dis­cov­ered again my pas­sion for sci­ence.  I joined a pro­gram doing research at the wet­lands and I started to dream about col­lege again.  Tama, a National Merit Scholar, was tour­ing schools all over, and she vis­ited Grinnell.  I tagged along.  What I saw there con­vinced me that I wanted some­thing more. With the help and guid­ance of her and her fam­ily, I got in to Grinnell.  And things were good.

But I got it by mort­gag­ing my future.  What no one told me was that the price I was pay­ing could not be paid back with my plans.  Biologists do not make enough money to pay back these kinds of loans and pay the rent.   At this time, I met the love of my life, Sarah, and I became an engaged and then mar­ried man.  So I shifted my inter­ests again, to pro­vide for us.  I became an artist, a web designer.  I co-​​founded a com­pany which failed pri­mar­ily because of my fear of learn­ing any­thing programming-​​like.   I wasn’t will­ing to rein­vent myself again so quickly, I sup­pose.  But it was enough expe­ri­ence to get started down that road.

Then I became a mar­ried IT guy with too much time and no social life.  So I became an aspir­ing writer, some­thing I had toyed with in my youth. Slowly, I trans­formed into a sort-​​of pub­lished writer who couldn’t crack any of the truly big mar­kets.  I was happy to be big in Europe for the time being.  I started a novel.  Then my father got sick.  I fal­tered.  He died.  My hopes for writ­ing as a future died with him. The two things became so inter­linked that I couldn’t move past it.  I’m still angry that he’s gone some­times.  Shortly after, I lost a friend who, in ret­ro­spect, was a huge part of the rea­son that I wrote.  I wrote in part  to impress, and with­out that friend, I had no one to try and impress.  The peo­ple I had, whom I love, loved me too much to really be crit­i­cal enough. To be a chal­lenge to impress.  I lost my dri­ving force in writ­ing then.

Another rein­ven­tion then. We moved to Colorado.   If I couldn’t write, per­haps I could take pic­tures to feed my cre­ative need.  Slowly, I poured money into it. And time, oh by god, I poured time into it.  And I got a lit­tle bet­ter, but then I hit a road­block.  I didn’t have the vision that truly great pho­tog­ra­pher did. I didn’t have the patience to wait for the light, day in, day out, until the clouds looked just right on the moun­tain­scape.   I couldn’t afford the lenses to get close enough to wildlife with­out scar­ing it off.

And then I lost my job again in a lay­off.  I had been prepar­ing to rein­vent myself as a Portland res­i­dent, but now I had to return to the pre­vi­ous self-​​version of “resource­ful unem­ployed nerd.”  I didn’t mind at first.  It gave me time to try and break down that road­block in pho­tog­ra­phy.  I started to enter­tain the idea that maybe I could get through my writ­ing blocks and get back to who I was then, because it had given me so much plea­sure at the time.  And thanks to Steve Eley, I was able to restore my iden­tity as an editor.

I don’t mind being unem­ployed most of the time, unless I try to pic­ture the future.  That’s when things spi­ral out of con­trol.  Because there’s no pre­dict­ing my future right now.

My iden­tity is as shift­ing as the sands of the Mojave.  The only thing I’ve truly mas­tered is an abil­ity to adapt to less-​​than-​​ideal cir­cum­stances.  To find some plea­sure in life even if things are not per­fect.   To put up with it all.  Sometimes I don’t want to though.  Sometimes, I just want suc­cess.   I want all that energy and effort and rein­ven­tion to amount to some­thing.  I want some­one with power and respon­si­b­lity to see what I have done and say “I can put this per­son to work at a great goal” and I want to feel like I can adopt that goal as my own.

Because under­neath it all is a search for per­sonal great­ness. I don’t want to be good, or ade­quate.  I have that drive that some ath­letes have to keep push­ing, keep search­ing myself until I find what it is that I am meant to be doing.

That’s why being unem­ployed hurts so much.  It focuses me on those things at which I am not great.  It makes inescapable my fail­ures to achieve that.

But I can no more eas­ily give up my drive for great­ness than I can give up my need to breathe.  It’s rooted deep and I wouldn’t even know how to stop want­ing it.  If I give up, or set­tle, that part of me will stran­gle me with dis­con­tent.  The drive is lit­er­ally dri­ving me with men­tal whips and curses.  Do bet­ter you dumb, fat piece of shit, it says.  “Accomplish some­thing that mat­ters.  Put the fuck­ing video game down and make some­thing of yourself. ”

And I do my best to lis­ten, because I don’t have a choice not to.  All I can do is hope that the drive will do more good for me one day than harm.  Right now, I’m not mov­ing fast enough or in the right direc­tions and it’s giv­ing me a beat­ing like you wouldn’t believe.  And by it, of course I mean me.  I know that it’s me hold­ing the whip, it’s me that insults myself and calls me names try­ing to moti­vate me like you would a stub­born mule.  I know that.  Doesn’t make it any eas­ier though.

Well…

So there’s a deeply per­sonal look inside my psy­chol­ogy.  I wish I could say this has been cathar­tic to write, but I sus­pect it will drive away friends and poten­tial employ­ers just to read all this.  It’s prob­a­bly been a bad idea to write it.  But it’s the longest thing I have writ­ten in six months, so screw it.  Being  hon­est is more impor­tant than get­ting a job.  If you dis­agree with that, then I don’t want to work for you anyway.

Observations on the Symbolic Nature of the Arches National Park Landscape

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I believe Utah, or at least Moab, should appro­pri­ate the tourist tag line “Moab is for Lovers.”  What’s sexy about Virginia?  Because it has the word “vir­gin” in it?  Are they the world’s cap­i­tal pro­ducer of nov­elty con­doms?    Moab, and Arches National Park in par­tic­u­lar, is inher­ently a very sex­u­ally sym­bolic place.   It’s for lovers with the sense of humor of a 4th grader.  And I think that’s all of us.

Look, you’ve been read­ing this blog, so you’ve seen the pic­tures.  The phal­lic nature of many of the sand­stone for­ma­tions is unde­ni­able.  Some of them are quite explicit in imi­tat­ing the shape, and aren’t sim­ply taller than they are wide (the Men’s Club stan­dard require­ment to use some­thing as an allu­sion to a penis is defined as sim­ply as that).  I double-​​checked this obser­va­tion with my wife to make sure that it wasn’t sim­ply a trick of the mas­cu­line mind.  No, no.  There are penises every­where in Arches National Park.

But Arches National Park is any­thing but phal­lo­cen­tric.  It’s got plenty of vagi­nal allu­sions in the land­scape as well.  Its very name­sake evokes a cer­tain female organ.  Not quite so ele­gantly, I sup­pose, but if you really squint and stretch your metaphor­i­cal brain, it kind of makes sense.

I don’t want to say that the land­scape acted as an aphrode­siac, but– the land­scape acts as an aphrode­siac. For uh, other cou­ples that, we, uh, saw doing it?

Moab is miss­ing out on an entirely dif­fer­ent tourist tac­tic.  “Moab is for lovers–huh huh, it totally looks like a giant penis.”

Call me, Moab Tourist Board!

Link Dump Posts, Begone!

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I have turned off my link dump posts that turn up around once a day.  They’re basi­cally made up of the ran­dom, mostly web design links that I come across in my feeds.  I don’t give them much in the way of con­text most of the time, and that lim­its their use­ful­ness.  In an attempt to force myself to pro­vide more use­ful and com­pelling con­tent via this blog, I’m remov­ing those posts.  I’m going to be nar­row­ing down what I talk about here to pri­mar­ily pho­tog­ra­phy and writing/​science fic­tion. I may even move pho­tog­ra­phy dis­cus­sion over to the web design blog that I’ll be start­ing when I can get around to it.

I give a lot of advice to my clients on how to build a good blog audi­ence, but I don’t do a very good job of fol­low­ing my own advice.   I’m going to try and change that in the future.

My 5 Minute Review of The Watchmen

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It’s weird, but my non-​​fiction pod­cast debut  is over on Starship Sofa this week (rather than Escape Pod where I now work).  Tony asked me to throw together a review of the film, and I wanted to play with my record­ing equip­ment again, so I did so.  You can check out the episode and hear my thoughts on The Watchmen film on the Starship Sofa pod­cast web­site. There’s also fic­tion in this episode by Kim Newman.

Meet the New Managing Editor of Escape Pod

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Big news of the year so far– recently, Steve Eley of Escape Pod asked me if I would like to come on board as man­ag­ing edi­tor of Escape Pod. I would han­dle story selec­tion for the most part (with his input), and the behind the scenes pro­duc­tion pipeline. He would still host the show and do read­ings and be the aweome guy that he is.

So I jumped at the chance. I con­sider Escape Pod to be the most impor­tant thing hap­pen­ing in SF short fic­tion today. It reaches audi­ences that the print mag­a­zines never reach. I am sad to lose a reprint mar­ket for my own work, but I feel I can make a big impact with Escape Pod on the genre as a whole.

I ask your patience as I sort out the slush pile. It’s fairly deep and back­logged, and I will be tack­ling it as quickly as I can.  If you’re think­ing about sub­mit­ting some­thing, wait 2 weeks, and then fire away.

The pro­duc­tion pipeline is also very short. I am going to be grab­bing and pro­duc­ing a cou­ple of sto­ries within the next sev­eral days. If you are inter­ested in nar­rat­ing and can help with a super-​​rapid turn­around time while I get ramped up, and have done this before before or even if you just want to get started, drop me a line in the com­ments. Cat Rambo, I’m look­ing  (with plead­ing eyes) at you.… ;)

Postmortem: What the hell was #futureJer?

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My 3 month long exper­i­ment in 140 char­ac­ter fic­tion posts ended on Sunday.  You can read my ser­ial fic­tion #future­Jer on the Thaumatrope web­site here.  The premise was  pretty sim­ple: I attempted to imag­ine my life 2 years into the future if our econ­omy doesn’t get any bet­ter.  It’s fairly grim, but has a touch of hope to it too.  The cast were barely fic­tional ver­sions of my fam­ily and friends, and it takes place in rural Kansas.

The Genesis of a Twitter Serial

Back before I was actu­ally laid off, but knew the threat was loom­ing, I was expe­ri­enc­ing a lot of anx­i­ety.  On a whim, I decided to imag­ine how bad things could get to exter­nal­ize my fears, and I started twit­ter­ing this in the form of #future­Jer.  Within a cou­ple of days, Nathan Lilly, the edi­tor of Thaumatrope, direct mes­saged me and offered to pay me to do what I was already doing, at pro rates no less.  It was an easy deci­sion to make.

Postmortem

I never had any inten­tion of telling a story when I started out doing this, but once I was offered money, I had to give it an arc.  I intro­duced the ele­ments of the preg­nancy and the grow­ing vio­lence to develop the drama.  I was hap­pi­est about the project when I was sim­ply imag­in­ing our lives as essen­tially sub­sis­tence farmer/​hunters.  I find some­thing deeply com­pelling about a life with­out work, where you sim­ply grow your own food, main­tain your own home, and enjoy life.  I think we’re hard­wired more for the hunter/​gatherer or farmer life more than we are for work­ing in offices.

The tone prob­a­bly got even darker when I was actu­ally laid off at the end of January.  I sat down a few days later and wrote the entire month of February in an after­noon, plot­ting out the remain­der.  I sus­pect the final bit felt slightly more cohe­sive than the bits that led up to it.

Overall, it was an inter­est­ing exper­i­ment in writ­ing on the fly, and hope­fully I didn’t screw it up too much.  Also, I hope it doesn’t turn from fic­tion to real­ity, because I don’t actu­ally know how to build or repair wind tur­bines or cas­trate bulls, although I’m will­ing to learn if some­one wants to teach me!

Why So Silent?

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You may have noticed that I don’t blog much any­more except to share the occa­sional pic­ture or pile of links.  When I do blog, it’s typ­i­cally a very short entry about some other project I’ve done.  If you look back at my old blog, you’ll find a very dif­fer­ent blog­ger.  What changed?

When I built this site, I built it with the inten­tion of being a pro­fes­sional.  I was going to con­duct myself in the most pro­fes­sional way pos­si­ble, try­ing not to ever com­plain, and intend­ing for my entries to be some­thing of sub­stance, rather than fluff.  The truth is that there are a mil­lion inter­est­ing blog­gers out there.  I got tired of just adding to the noise with my inane bab­bling.  I decided that I wouldn’t say any­thing if I didn’t feel that it was some­thing truly interesting.

I’ve done this before in my fic­tion writ­ing too.  I resolved to only write the best things I could. In both sit­u­a­tions, the real result has been that I don’t write much of any­thing at all.

There are two ways I could choose to look at this.  One is that I sim­ply don’t have any­thing pro­found or inter­est­ing to say.  I imag­ine a few of my friends would agree to this if pressed on it.  The other way is that when you put pres­sure on your­self to only do great things, then you sti­fle your­self so much that you don’t do any­thing at all.  Rather than attempt­ing to do the best you can, you set the expec­ta­tion of doing bet­ter than you can, which doesn’t just hap­pen.  You do bet­ter than you usu­ally can by doing lots and lots and some­times hav­ing a breakthrough.

I’m going through a rather early mid-​​life cri­sis right now.  Probably an accu­rately mid-​​life given the aver­age lifes­pan of men in my fam­ily.  I’ve been laid off from two jobs in the last year.  The last one was a job I thought I could do for a very long time.  It gave me pre­cisely the free­doms I wanted from an employer, and while the stress was at times rather high, I didn’t feel trapped in the posi­tion, which was a wel­come change after some of the jobs I’ve worked.

I’ve toyed with try­ing to go free­lance writer/​designer/​photographer, given that my wife pro­vides our insur­ance now.  Again, I have to set these goals aside because it falls upon me to pro­vide our insur­ance ben­e­fits so that Sarah can go to school full time to receive her teach­ing degree.  This will pro­vide her with great ben­e­fits and a ful­fill­ing career.  I’m in full sup­port of it.  It just means that ulti­mately, I _​have_​ to get another job. Which I have been look­ing for, of course, but the pres­sure wasn’t on then like it is now.

The health sys­tem in this coun­try is pri­mar­ily respon­si­ble for killing my entre­pre­neur­ial spirit.  If you go ANY period of time with­out health insur­ance in the U.S., all of your med­ical con­di­tions become labeled “prex­ist­ing” which means that when you DO get health insur­ance, they won’t cover any­thing they think you were sick from before you got cov­er­age.  And even if you have insur­ance, and apply for pri­vate insur­ance, you get turned down.  Why?  Because you have prex­ist­ing con­di­tions and they would actu­ally have to spend money on your health. The only peo­ple who qual­ify for med­ical cov­er­age are those who are so healthy they don’t need it.

No mid­dle class American can afford basic med­ical neces­si­ties like pre­scrip­tions with­out health insur­ance.  I have to take a cou­ple of med­ica­tions every day.  For instance, I take an acid reflux med­ica­tion.  Without it, I become rather vio­lently ill.  Imagine throw­ing up in you mouth.  Now imag­ine doing that all day long, for your entire life.  That’s my acid reflux.  There’s no cure.  All I can do is take lit­tle pills the rest of my life so my stom­ach acids don’t boil over and give me throat cancer.

Me and the stom­ach don’t get along very well thanks to this.

With insur­ance, these pills cost me $20 a month.  Reasonable.  It prob­a­bly costs the man­u­fac­turer 25 cents to make a month’s worth.  However, should I go with­out health insur­ance, that same pre­scrip­tion becomes around $300 a month.

I take a generic, which shall remain name­less.  It’s $10 a month on a health insur­ance plan.  Without insur­ance, it’s $150 a month.

To put this in per­spec­tive, I lived in the ground floor of a small house with two very cramped bed­rooms and a liv­ing room which can barely take a couch and a TV at the same time.  My rent is $1000 a month.  If I were to not have health insur­ance, two of my pre­scrip­tions would be equal to nearly half my rent.

And that’s not even tak­ing con­sid­er­a­tion of Sarah’s med­ica­tions for asthma.

Even with­out the risk of cat­a­strophic health issues that could cost hun­dreds of thou­sands of dol­lars to be treated, just basic health main­te­nance stuff, the stuff that makes me not vomit blood all day and makes sure that Sarah can breathe would put us on the street.  We’re two intel­li­gent, col­lege edu­cated adults, and we’d be forced to choose between pay­ing the rent and pay­ing for our med­ica­tions.  And because I don’t like the taste of stom­ach acid, I would prob­a­bly choose homelessness.

Good qual­ity of health should be a fun­da­men­tal right.  I would gladly pay more in taxes if they burned our med­ical sys­tem to the ground and replaced it with one that didn’t have out­ra­geous rules of prex­ist­ing con­di­tions.  I’ll PAY for insur­ance.  Do you hear me, you con­ser­v­a­tive lib­er­tar­ian ass­holes?   But the sys­tem is flawed, and it’s keep­ing me from build­ing amaz­ing things.  Countless oth­ers are chained to jobs they hate, filled to the brim with ideas for ways to change the world, busi­nesses to launch, but they can’t leave their employer for fear of  trip­ping and break­ing a toe and receiv­ing a $5000 emer­gency room bill.

Our sys­tem crip­ples us finan­cially.  It’s either be crip­pled phys­i­cally or give up every­thing to pay the bills.

If you don’t believe in uni­ver­sal health­care, if you think all peo­ple don’t deserve it, then fuck you.  Fuck you, fuck you, FUCK YOU.  I hope you lose your job and then have a health prob­lem and your COBRA insur­ance is more than half your unem­ploy­ment pay­ments so you can’t afford it.  I hope your child devel­ops a cough late at night that won’t go away, and you lie awake in your bed lis­ten­ing to it, doing the math over and over again about how you can pay for a doctor’s visit and still feed the fam­ily.  FUCK YOU.  You have no human­ity and I hope you con­tract leprosy.

So to answer the title in my post above?  Why so silent?  Because I’m so angry, when I start to write, this is what comes out.  I’m so angry with the world right now, all I want to do is scream with rage at every­one around me.  Capitalism has failed us and the coun­try is crum­bling all around us and some ass­hole on TV is whip­ping up fury directed at peo­ple who got raped by uneth­i­cal bankers who might get some help so they don’t have to live in a fuck­ing card­board box.  That man is a pop­ulist piece of shit.  Many of us are angry right now, so angry that I worry about what hap­pens when some­one comes along and finds a way to tap into that anger for power.  Power derived from the anger of the peo­ple is too dan­ger­ous for even good men and women to wield.  It back­fires every time.  It ends with streets slick with blood and heads in bas­kets.  With peo­ple lined up with gun bar­rels to the backs of their skulls.   I don’t want that in my future.

I just want to set out on my own and inno­vate and cre­ate a busi­ness with­out hav­ing the taste of stom­ach acid in my mouth from dawn to dusk.  That’s all I want.

I’m done being “pro­fes­sional” here.  I’ll cre­ate a new pro­fes­sional per­sona else­where.   Because if I don’t find an out­let for my frus­tra­tion, I will burn up like a microwaved potato in tin foil.  I’m not going to be quiet any­more.  If that keeps you from hir­ing me for a job, then I didn’t want to work for you anyway.

The Angry Bastard is back.

Diamonds in the Sky: Free Hard SF Anthology

Posted on:

The anthol­ogy of astron­omy sto­ries I’ve been work­ing on for the last year or two, off and on, is finally com­pleted and avail­able: Diamonds in the Sky.

The anthol­ogy is free and you can go there now and read the sto­ries, most of which are orig­i­nal but a few of which are reprints from Analog or Asimov’s. Contributors include Hugo and Nebula award win­ning authors. Each story focuses on one or two key ideas from astron­omy and should have some edu­ca­tional value, but are hope­fully first and fore­most sim­ply enter­tain­ing and good qual­ity sto­ries. The project was funded by the National Science Foundation as a pub­lic edu­ca­tion and out­reach effort, and I’d like to reach as many read­ers as pos­si­ble so please spread the word!

via Mike Brotherton: SF Writer.

I did the web­site for Diamonds over a year ago.  This one has been a long time in the works, but it’s now finally live!