Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Periphery

Who gets to interview a rock star? I think I do.

Who's never done something like this before? I think I haven't.

Who's scared shitless? I think I am.

I'll give details after it's over and done with and I'm reasonably certain I didn't fuck it up. Until then, I'll leave this up as a tease, and because I'm excited, and felt compelled to spread the news. Just not all the news.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Going Postal

T.: So...a 52 cent stamp should suffice on the SASE, right?
Shayne: That should be fine.
T.: Unless they decide to send me back a pipe bomb. "Dear Writer, We have reviewed your story, and decided not to publish it in our magazine. To prevent you from sending us anymore crap, we have enclosed a small but powerful grenade. Sincerely, The Editor."
Shayne: Well, they'll just have to pay for that themselves.

Sunshine and Lollipops

The last few posts have been downers, so I decided to try and think of something cheery to write here.

Then I remembered, I'm a crappy friend. My dear Shayne Winters has recently had a story published in an online magazine, New Voices in Fiction. Her story is called "One Night", it's very, very good, and can be found here.

That cheers me up, in either case!

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

#3

Charm my ass.

This one was personalized, so that was nice. Dammit, I really wanted that T-shirt.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

#2

Already, the novelty is gone.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Working the Plan

"Stage 28" lies, thus unread and unloved, in the submission inboxes of a couple more e-zines.

Foundlings, faeries, catrinas...but first, "After the Blackout".

There are a couple of new links on the side. One is my friend Vikram's website, with his beautiful artwork, and the second is "The Digital Medievalist", which is currently proving more fascinating and distracting than Wikipedia and Crimelibrary combined.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Compensation

Shayne: Try these guys next. They're one of the fastest markets out there, pay a $25.00 flat fee, plus a t-shirt.

T.: Sold. You had me at 't-shirt'.

Not Artistically Acceptable

So, "After the Blackout" has been driving me batshit, and not in the artistically acceptable way where I feel myself being stalked by shadows of the main characters, or unable to sleep, making me instead stay up all night at my desk, drinking gin by candlelight with shaking hands (a bad mix all around. In other news, I need new batteries for my smoke detector), and penning rambling letters to my sick wife in the sanitorium about how I long for the release of a squalid death. No, it has been driving me to hair-ripping, wall pounding, procrastinating, run-on sentence Hell.

I was in a coffee shop yesterday (I was waiting for someone! Don't judge me!), and I made a bunch of notes, so I think I know what is wrong, and what I have to do to correct it. The problem is, it means scrapping everything so far and starting again, which I'm not keen to do. I have other ideas I want to move on to.

Part of my reason for having this site is to keep myself disciplined. I have the attention span of a lobotomized gnat, I want an egg salad sandwich.

Sorry, sorry, really, I'm back, but see what I mean? I know lots of writers have trouble finishing projects they start...that's a pretty common problem for people in general. My way of combatting this is by making myself work on only one project at a time, and I don't let myself touch anything else until it's done. My reward for completing my work is more work. This website is also a disciplinary tool of sorts, for publicly shaming me into working so I actually have stuff to post.

Right now I'd love to throw "After the Blackout" across my apartment, or bury the notebook in the garden, and work on the next thing. I know if I do that though, I'll fall back into bad habits in a second, and not finish a piece for another two years. I have a few writer friends who seem to actually work steadily on multiple projects at once, and I look upon them as unicorns. Pink unicorns, with glittery manes, and ruby hooves, who speak fluent French.

I'm still a bipedal, non-imaginary anglophone, I'm afraid.

So, for the sake of any and all future works, back to the beginning I go.

(sorry Shayne)

Monday, July 7, 2008

#1

Today is a day for the ages, I received my very first rejection letter! Thanks to all who've been there for me through it all.

Clearly, your friendship and love did me no good.