Posts Tagged ‘My Writing’

New Roundbottom: Faery Wintering Nests

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There’s a low-​​key new Roundbottom today detail­ing what faeries tend to do when it gets cold.  Feel free to drop on by and tell us how your local species pre­pare for win­ter, if your world has one.

We’re run­ning a sale until the end of the year, $5 off each mem­ber­ship kit, and large scale lim­ited edi­tion prints are now only $65 a piece.  After ship­ping and print­ing and every­thing, I don’t make much on these, so order a whole bunch okay?

I am lean­ing right now towards wrap­ping Roundbottom up again for the time being at the end of the year.  The real world is too scary right now for me to be able to con­cen­trate on cre­ated and telling such mostly whim­si­cal sto­ries.  That and I really need to find bet­ter ways of mak­ing money.  Roundbottom is a los­ing project, sadly.  If I sell more prints though, it’ll change my mind.

Weighing My Interests

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I had a very long week at work this past week, so most of my week­end was devoted to very low energy pur­suits.   I read a lit­tle, watched some TV, saw Quantum of Solace (okay, but not as good as the last one) and played the demo of Left 4 Dead, Valve’s new Zombie Survival Co-​​op game (fan­tas­tic so far and I can’t wait to play the full game).  More than half of today was devoted to mak­ing a prop for tomorrow’s Roundbottom photo, and then shoot­ing.   The newest post should be pretty amus­ing, even if it’s not the most meaty thing I’ve writ­ten lately.  After this, I’m tak­ing a 2 week hia­tus to attempt to build up some mate­r­ial and think about what I really want out of this project.

Lately, I have felt like I have to make a choice between writ­ing and photography–that I only have enough time out­side of my job to really mas­ter one of these two pur­suits.  It’s prob­a­bly not true, but I know that I split my ener­gies among too many things.  I was feel­ing okay about maybe dip­ping my toe back into the writ­ing waters, espe­cially after see­ing a great review of the Seeds of Change antholo­gies.  And then I saw some com­ments on a site about some of my work that was pretty bru­tal, and I lost what lit­tle moti­va­tion I had.

Until I can find a rea­son to write that can stand up to the whims of Joe Random Internet Commenter, then it’s best that I not do any writ­ing.   This is one of the things I like about pho­tog­ra­phy.  If peo­ple don’t like your pho­tog­ra­phy, they rarely say any­thing.  If they like it, they do.  But when it comes to fic­tion, peo­ple seem to be com­pelled to tell you at length just how much you suck. It prob­a­bly has some­thing to do with the time invest­ment it takes to con­sume a story vs look at a photo.

Sometimes I think that my pho­tog­ra­phy would get bet­ter if it was cri­tiqued to the same degree my fic­tion has been, but then, neg­a­tive comments–comments of any sort–don’t really count as cri­tique.  And maybe some of the fun of pho­tog­ra­phy would be drained if I took it that seriously?

Earlier, I went for a pho­towalk down by the river to clear my head and just be in the now.  Lately, I am too busy think­ing and the nature of my work doesn’t allow for me to get into the now very often.  By “the now” I mean, the groove,  the flow, what­ever.  A state of being and doing, where time is mean­ing­less and the ego slips beneath the sur­face.  I took a few decent shots, and stum­bled upon a bunch of beaver chews.  I walked up and down the area look­ing for the dam, but I couldn’t find it.  I will prob­a­bly go back the next time I want to take a walk and see if I can spot it.  It was very nice.

When I think about how plea­sur­able it is to go on a pho­towalk or take pic­tures in gen­eral, I won­der why I can’t have that much fun writ­ing any­more.  At some point, it stopped being about fun and started being some­thing else.  God knows I value my leisure time like it’s made out of dia­monds since my Dad died, so maybe I take writ­ing so seri­ously because I don’t want to waste anyone’s leisure time with crap writ­ing.  Ahem.  Which I sup­pose I am kind of doing right now.  I com­mand you not to read this unless you are steal­ing time from your employer!

There, I feel better.

One day I am going to look back at all the time I have spent ago­niz­ing over all this and I’m going to be angry at myself for not just shut­ting up and doing some­thing.  I used to tell peo­ple that the key to writ­ing was to “shut up and write” but I’ve got­ten awful at fol­low­ing that par­tic­u­lar advice.  But not tonight–I’m too tired to be angry with myself about it.

New Roundbottom: The Inkblot Spider…

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…and her prey.  This week, I wasn’t able to get to a decent pod­cast script, so I worked up an image I’ve had in the hop­per for a while now.  This week details the pre­da­tions and some bio notes of a unique species of spi­der that feeds on moth pix­ies in Roundbottom’s world.  Check out the Inkblot Spider and share your thoughts.

In other news, I am weigh­ing a sale for my inven­tory of images that I have printed.  I’m con­sid­er­ing $30 mem­ber­ships from now until the end of the year or until I run out of pre-​​printed stock, whichever comes first.

I’ll admit that I’m dis­ap­pointed with my suc­cess regard­ing mem­ber­ship kits.  I sold 9 kits, and I really appre­ci­ate those of you who bought them.  Unfortunately, sales have dropped off entirely.  I’m con­sid­er­ing giv­ing up entirely on lim­ited edi­ton prints and sell­ing every­thing on the site for $20 a piece.  Any thoughts?

It’s hard to keep at this so much when I feel like it’s not as pop­u­lar as I want it to be.  Traffic is low, sales are nonex­is­tent.  I know what you’re thinking–do it because you enjoy it, not to make money.  Well, no.  I’m sorry, but I’d like to make a liv­ing from my cre­ative endeav­ours and I don’t think there’s any­thing wrong with that.  I enjoy the project, but if there is not a large enough audi­ence to jus­tify my time and energy in the project, then I will have to move on to some­thing else.  I have a lot of faith in the gen­eral con­cept of the project, but I am increas­ingly cer­tain that it won’t turn a profit at all.  My best bet is prob­a­bly to use all of it as back­ground research and turn out a novel.  Keep the site updat­ing on a lower fre­quency and turn the whole thing into a good rea­son to pub­lish the book (beyond it being really good or something).

I’ve been mean­ing to write a book for a num­ber of years now.  I started writ­ing my first book attempt just before my father was diag­nosed with can­cer.  I’ve given up on that book along wth most of  of my writ­ing.  But the truth is that I haven’t been able to let go of that cre­ative urge, that drive to make some­thing that mat­ters, even if it only mat­ters in the form of fleet­ing entertainment.

But even though I’ve given up so much, I haven’t been able to give up on Roundbottom.  Maybe it’s because the char­ac­ter is a thinly dis­guised ver­sion of what I wanted to be once upon a time.  I don’t know.  But I want to keep try­ing to make some­thing of this in some form, even if it’s not the web­site and the weekly updates.  I just don’t know exactly what the best use of my time would be.  Look, I have stu­dent loans that would make you wince.  I may never be out of debt in my adult life with­out devel­op­ing some sort of alter­na­tive rev­enue stream to accel­er­ate my pay­off. I’m try­ing to buy my free­dom here.  If this doesn’t work, I’ll find some­thing else to sell, and I’ll keep try­ing until some­thing comes out of my gourd.   Because I want my free­dom so bad I can taste it, and right now, these projects are the best thing I have to accel­er­ate my earn­ing that.

This is Odd

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Very strange.  I’m sud­denly feel­ing an urge to write some­thing non-​​Roundbottom again.  No strong ideas, really, but there are ideas and a tick­ling in the back of my head.  Maybe I should have that tick­ling looked at. Could be seri­ous.  Speaking of Roundbottom, I’m not going to have a pod­cast for this Sunday, but I hope to have a  less-​​complicated photo and accom­pa­ny­ing post to fill in the gap and keep the streak going.

My search for stu­dio space has been a com­plete fail­ure so I don’t know what I am going to do to take pho­tos for the project this winter.

You know, I think this itch might actu­ally be a side effect of my daily walks.   Getting away from the com­puter?  The motion gets me think­ing right?  I don’t know, but I find this intrigu­ing. I must explore the notion further…

Or per­haps it’s the results of last night’s elec­tion?  Maybe a spark of hope has ignited in the lump of coal where my heart should be. I wit­nessed his­tory that didn’t involve the world chang­ing for the worse.  I don’t really remem­ber the wall com­ing down and 9/​11 was not remotely pos­i­tive.  I didn’t get to see a moon land­ing.  So that doesn’t hap­pen often. I actu­ally felt some­thing akin to pride for my coun­try.   I was so focused on the right guy win­ning that I for­got who the right guy was until he was giv­ing his accep­tance speech.  “Oh yeah,” I said.  “Barack’s black.”   And the full weight of that hit me, and I grinned (inwardly) until I went to bed.  That’s not all who he is, but I had lost sight of that his­tor­i­cal sig­nif­i­cance until I was reminded of it again last night by the tears of Jesse Jackson and Oprah Winfrey.

New Podcast: Arties Aren’t Stupid

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My story from the excel­lent anthol­ogy Seeds of Change (edited by the Anthology God, for­merly known here as the Slush God, John Joseph Adams)  has gone live over at Escape Pod.  This is a story that was pub­lished to mixed reviews.  But I am astounded by the job that Philippa Ballantine did here.  Her read­ing was spec­tac­u­lar, and adding a New Zealander accent to the patois of the Arties made the whole thing feel more fami­lar and more exotic at once.  I fell in love with my own story, which is not easy for me.  Thank you, Philippa.  And thanks to John for buy­ing the story.

I believe that my next pod­cast appear­ance will be on Starship Sofa with “Captain Bl00d’s Booty,” a story also edited by JJA.  It’s either that or one of my ear­li­est (and most loved) sto­ries, “The Girl with the Sun in Her Head” which is with Podcastle, but I don’t know when it is sched­uled to go up.  Both should be a hoot to hear. Writing all these Roundbottom pod­casts has me think­ing a lot more about how some­thing could sound when deliv­ered by a tal­ented voice actor.  I think it’s only going to improve my writ­ing in the long run.

Year’s Best F&H?

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Someone con­grat­u­lated me on a men­tion in the lat­est Datlow/​Link/​Grant  antho.  I’m swamped with work and won’t be able to pick up the book for a while.  Can some­one tell me in what sense I am mentioned?

Roundbottom Research Publication

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Harkening back to my post about crazy uncon­ven­tial zine ideas, and all this talk and thought about relaunch­ing the Fortean Bureau, has led me to give some seri­ous thought to try­ing some­thing very very different.

Roundbottom is my core project right now, but I have a strong desire to launch a new ‘zine. At the very least, I am going to pub­lish a few sto­ries in the Fortean Bureau for­mat, but what if… what if I cre­ated a meta pub­li­ca­tion like the Surreal Guide to Botany or the Disease Guide from a year or so back–but as a kind of naturalist’s research pub­li­ca­tion.  Nothing stuffy and dry like real sci­en­tific mag­a­zines, but basi­cally pay­ing other peo­ple to write posts like Dr. Roundbottom.  I’d accept sub­mis­sions from both artists and writ­ers. I’ll pro­vide a forum for artists and writ­ers to team up, if they want to make a joint pro­duc­tion of an article/​piece.

Art would be allowed in any for­mat.  Not every­one has to do the pho­tog­ra­phy thing that I’m doing.  But the basic idea behind all of this is that each arti­cle is writ­ten by another nat­u­ral­ist in their own world, sim­i­lar or dif­fer­ent to Dr. Roundbottom, but at least pass­ably steampunk.

To start, I’d offer $50 a post (not longer than 2000 words) for the writ­ing and $50 for the art.  You’d be free to sell both any­where, and we will pro­vide a link to sell prints at your print store for artists.   We’d have an option to pay more at the end of the year to pub­lish a print edi­tion of the research notes.

Finally, and I’d be doing the same, you have to allow–and I’m not sure how to legally for­mal­ize this–references to be made to your work and char­ac­ters in other submissions/​posts.  For instance, Dr. Roundbottom him­self might ref­er­ence your paper and link to it while talk­ing about some­thing sim­i­lar in his world.  And you’ll be able to do the same with Roundbottom.  This kind of shar­ing isn’t cov­ered under any kind of Creative Commons license that I know of, so per­haps I would need some odd con­tract legal­ize.  I should talk to the Creative Commons peo­ple and see if they have suggestions.

Would any­one sub­mit to some­thing like this?  I’m basi­cally think­ing about the com­ments that hap­pen already on Roundbottom and for­mal­iz­ing a way for writ­ers and artists to par­tic­i­pate in this fash­ion and get paid for it. I under­stand that it would be dif­fi­cult to sell any writ­ing writ­ten directly for htis project to any­thing else, so that’s one flaw that i have to con­sider.  Please pro­vide your thoughts and com­ments!  Would you sub­mit some­thing to this kind of pub­li­ca­tion?  What rules do you think would need to be made?

On Giving Up on Fiction Writing

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I’ve been talk­ing about this in pri­vate for a while now, but I’ve decided to talk about it pub­li­cally.  There’s a lot of infor­ma­tion out there about how to start writ­ing, but there’s not a lot writ­ten about how to stop.  Sorry if you’ve heard some of this before.

I’ve been strug­gling with writ­ing since my father’s death a few years ago.  His death was fol­lowed by his brother, then his mother, then both of my mother’s par­ents within a year.  Around the same time, my lit­tle sister’s health prob­lems became sig­nif­i­cant enough that she needed a kid­ney trans­plant.  Our fam­ily was put through the wringer, and I did not come out of it okay.

Early last year, my occa­sional panic attack prob­lem turned into a daily panic attack prob­lem.  Eating any­thing made me feel sick, and feel­ing sick felt like dying, and then I really lost it.  I tried to get help via my med­ical doc­tor, but they were afraid to pre­scribe a high enough dose of any­thing to help me.  I finally gave up and went to a psy­chi­a­trist who quadru­pled the med­ica­tion and finally started get­ting my attacks under con­trol.  The panic attacks had gone on for so long that I had lost over 50 pounds.  After get­ting med­ica­tion work­ing to con­trol the attacks,  I con­tin­ued to lose weight.  Recently, to my dis­may I’ve started to regain some, but that’s a topic for another post.

So it wasn’t until last year that men­tally I was start­ing to come back together.  Prior to my father’s ill­ness, I was pretty solid. I was enthu­si­as­tic and I was very pro­duc­tive as a writer.  I hated Laramie, but liv­ing there moti­vated me some­how to write 1–3 short sto­ries a week.  It was a won­der­ful out­let, and I learned a lot in my time there and started mak­ing my first few big sales.

So come the bad times of the last few years, my pro­duc­tion ground to a halt.  I had been work­ing on a novel loosely based on my father’s child­hood in Kansas in the 70s called Prince Starling when he called to tell me he had can­cer.  I think the coin­ci­dence here dam­aged me in some fun­da­men­tal way inside regard­ing writ­ing.  It broke some con­nec­tion I had to my cre­ative spirit.  The mon­key deep inside some­how decided, ridicu­lously, that by hav­ing used my father’s sto­ries that way, it was some how respon­si­ble for his illness.

I wrote some while he strug­gled with it.  I really didn’t believe he was dying until he was in hos­pice, because he did such a good job of pre­tend­ing he was going to beat it.  I will always react with sus­pi­cion to claims of recov­ery from can­cer now.  But I believed because I wanted to believe and I had to believe.

Now, in the last six months, I was laid off from a hor­ri­ble job and after a cou­ple of months of ter­ri­fy­ing free­lance scur­ry­ing, I got my best job yet with a new com­pany. I  work from home, I have tremen­dous cre­ative free­dom, and I get to work with cut­ting edge web tech­nolo­gies.   The only down­side is that it’s pretty time con­sum­ing and it leaves me more men­tally drained at the end of the day than I have ever been.

Rather than fight it, I’ve decided to just go with it.  The job is great, but it takes enough from me that I find writ­ing to be far too dif­fi­cult to man­age at this time.  Roundbottom takes up a con­sid­er­able chunk of my free time and I find it mostly very cre­atively ful­fill­ing.   I cer­tainly won’t run that site and project for the rest of my life, but I could get sev­eral years out of it for sure.

I love the idea of writ­ing.  I love writ­ing ideas.  But lately, the strug­gles to keep my life afloat have left me with lit­tle energy to deal with the fight of publishing.

Truth is, I am still pretty emo­tion­ally sen­si­tive.  I was much thicker-​​skinned before all this, but neg­a­tive reviews lit­er­ally send me into stu­pid tears.   Rejections some­times as well.   My one and only Clarkesworld rejec­tion con­firmed my worst fears about my inabil­i­ties and I nearly made the deci­sion there to give up on writ­ing per­ma­nently.    I do not have what it takes to shrug off rejec­tion very well.  Perhaps its because I have deep per­sonal issues iwth the sub­ject of rejec­tion or some­thing.  Either case, I can’t seem to make it not both­er­ing me, so when I’m doing it, it’s a major source of pain for me.

So to recap,  per­sonal issues, strug­gle with time and energy, plus inabil­ity to han­dle rejec­tion (all adding up to what is prob­a­bly a lack of motivation)–these are the rea­sons I have decided to set aside my pur­suit of a side-​​career as a fic­tion writer, at least until I have a bet­ter grip on the basics of a life, a fam­ily, and a job.

I hope those of you who are my writer and edi­tor friends won’t drift away because I’m not writ­ing.  I will be more than happy to read stuff for peo­ple.  I will not be giv­ing up read­ing, and talk­ing about SF.  Just putting any real story words out myself, except for the weekly Roundbottom sched­ule stuff which is not insignificant.

I don’t con­sider this a per­ma­nent retire­ment.  It’s still a pas­sion of mine, and I hope to return to it when I feel like it’s in me, maybe in a cou­ple of years.

A Request for Clockpunk Suggestions

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Hello all.  As you may know, I’ve been updat­ing Dr. Roundbottom on a weekly basis for some time now. (If you missed the new post yes­ter­day, be sure to go check it out).   The site seems to have matured itself and as far as I can tell is mostly sta­ble.  I have the most awe­some com­menters in the world. I don’t even know who half of them are.  Keep it up, mys­tery commenters.

My ques­tion is this:  what other fea­tures could I add to the site?  Any basic func­tion­al­ity that you would like to see that is missing?

If you have sug­ges­tions for things you want to see/​read more con­tent about, please share that with me too.

I am mak­ing this my sole project out­side of my day job (and a cou­ple of clients I sup­port)  for the forsee­able future.  So any sug­ges­tions on things I could add or do dif­fer­ently would be appreciated.