Currently Reading:

I recently (finally) finished Vernor Vinge’s A Deepness in the Sky.  Great novel.  To recap, this was one of those that I’d started/re-started several times, not because I didn’t like it, but because I was constantly distracting myself with other books.  Like most books I get into, it went fairly quickly in the end.

This next comment will be unfair and incomplete, but I wanted to mention in the context of my belief that Vinge is a great hard science fiction writer:  I did notice an occasional clunkiness to the language in this one.  No specific examples, and they’re not really necessary, because my point is that the power of Vinge’s ideas and storytelling were more than enough to let me gloss over an occasional bit of language that broke me out of the narrative moment.

In the aftermath of finishing Deepness, I decided to go back and re-read A Fire Upon the Deep (this is the book that Vinge wrote seven years earlier; the story actually takes place long after the story in A Deepness in the Sky).  So far, about a quarter of the way through, I do think the writing Fire is tighter.  Also, I’m re-enjoying the novel immensely.

I’m also currently reading China Miéville’s Kraken.  This is my first Miéville novel, and I’m really struck by how much he and I appear to have in common as writers (style, etc.).  Probably just convergent evolution.  I’m sure we have a lot of the same influences.  I guess my main point is asserting that reading his work makes me feel some sort of validation that there is room for people who write like me.  Not sure why that was a concern; I understand on the top levels of my brain that there is room for everybody.

Call it reinforcement of another supporting beam in the mind of a writer who has spent years and years swimming through an ocean of insecurity.  Not to mix metaphors.

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One Turn Too Many

Bear with me on this one, because I’m going to be discussing incomplete story drafts of mine, and I only want to discuss them in the abstract, because I still like the core ideas in the stories in question, and I’m not the kind of writer who likes to workshop in the middle of the first draft.  Maybe I’ll return with a follow-up analysis if I can successfully return and finish the first drafts in question someday.

I’ve noticed a micro-trend in a subset of the stories I’ve been writing lately.  The trend starts in this way: I have an idea for a story in a world which is slightly different from the world we inhabit in some fundamental way.  This isn’t too hard to do.  You just let the reader assume that the world in the story is mostly like the one they already know, while also letting them know (ideally, in a subtle way), that it is different.

Fine, so that’s easy enough.  Only, in the case of the anonymous incomplete stories I’m referencing, my micro-trend continues with my brain deciding to turn away from this new world, in a different direction.  The unfortunate consequence is that I’ve now abstracted my story away from a place where the reader can keep up.

I guess this is hard to illustrate without specifics.

I guess this entry is also evidence of the ongoing struggle in my brain between thinking in the abstract, and thinking at the practical, visceral level needed for good storytelling.

Like I said, maybe I’ll revisit this topic once I’ve successfully finished these stories.

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I’m Alive, but no longer in Perfect Hibernation…

Hey, just thought I’d write something on my website, for old time’s (old times’ ?) sake.  I’ve been dormant in website updates, but not so in general writing work.  I’ve been quite productive over the last two months, and I couldn’t be happier about it.  Still have a number of stories out in submission, and I’m finishing up several more, and still working on new stuff day to day.

I know I always say this after some time off from posting, but I’m planning to post more on the website, now that I’m in a pretty good writing groove.  To prove it, this time, I’m going to write another post today (just see if I don’t…).

Hmm.  Is there more to say beyond that, in this particular post…?  Maybe not.  You’re welcome.

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Happy ‘days.

Happy New Year, and Happy Martin Luther King Jr. Day.  I’ve been sort of out-of-commission lately.  We all caught colds after the holidays, and I’ve had some other physical ailments pop up in the last few weeks.  Also, dealing with other family health issues.  Also, also, dealing with a toddler who is now walking all over the place, and giving his stay-at-home father some deep indigestion.  Mostly recovered now, and adjusting, and trying to feel like a real, live person again.

Also had a hilarious (if you have a deeply cynical sense of humor, maybe) crash-and-burn with one of my story drafts in the last two months.  I worked and worked and worked at this anonymous story draft, put a lot of energy and effort into it, and when it reached my First Editor (Alyssa), big, resounding fart noise.  Haven’t really had a spectacular failure like that in my writing life, to this point, which is more a testament to my relative lack of effort than anything.  I’ll admit, the failure did sting quite a bit, though it didn’t really hit me until days after the feedback, but I’m trying to pick myself up again and throw myself into other projects.  I’ll probably return to the failed draft sometime in the future, because I think it still has a good idea at its core (as well as some salvageable parts), but for now, I’m content to let it stew on the back burner.

Anyway, more thoughts in the near future, as they come to me.  Hope you all are well.

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Heretic

I am part of a worldwide cult, founded in the 1970s.  Our numbers are legion, and growing every year.  Some of us are more devout than others, and while all are welcome, you have to know how to navigate the touchy social strata of our now-Balkanized faith.  Yes, dear Internet, I am a Star Wars fan.

I thought I’d commemorate the recent sale of Lucasfilm to Disney with a few thoughts.  I joined the cult in 1980.  One of my earliest memories is going to The Empire Strikes Back with my parents when I was three years old.  I can still see, through an open door, the Millennium Falcon flying against a backdrop of clouds during the previous screening, as we waited in line for our turn.  In a recent conversation with my parents, my mother remembered taking me to this screening, but we couldn’t pin down when it happened.  She said there was snow on the ground outside, but we both thought it was during the opening weekend, which was in May.

I actually have no idea when I first saw the original Star Wars.  I was born in 1977, so it couldn’t have been the original theatrical run (or, at least, I wouldn’t remember it).  Maybe it was during one of the re-releases (1981, 1982…?).  Maybe it was on TV.  I do remember my father bringing home an 8mm projector and the 20-minute digest version of Star Wars (along with Superman II, and a few others).  Part of the fun of watching this truncated version of the movie was when my father would play the film backwards in order to get it back onto the original reel.  Nothing like watching stormtroopers fly, backwards, up out of the pit in the Death Star and start receiving shots back into their blasters.  My father initially had no memory of this when I brought it up to him during that recent conversation, but later, a murky memory started to surface.  Obviously, it was more important to one of us than the other.

It’s no secret that many believers of my generation were completely disappointed by George Lucas’ prequel trilogy of 1999-2005, and frothingly enraged by the changes Lucas continued to make to the original trilogy as it came out on each new home video format. To many of these many believers, this is Lucas, the original Prophet, becoming his own Heretic.

I remain relatively more positive about the original trilogy changes (maybe I’m less orthodox).  Yes, there are changes I don’t like, but there are changes I actually do like (small e.g. Cloud City looks better with something other than white walls in every single scene).  The strange thing is that there are actually changes to other movies that bother me as much as the changes to Star Wars bother other people.  The only explanation I can come up with is that, to me, the essence of the original trilogy, most of what I loved as a child, is still present, even if occasionally obscured.

By the way, when people talk about getting the original movies, unaltered on DVD or Blu-ray, they don’t really mean it.  No one wants the version where Obi-Wan had to go through three jerky jump cuts to activate his lightsaber before fighting Vader.  Everybody wants an altered version, just a differently-altered version.

When it comes to the prequels, I’m also more forgiving than average.  I find it mildly annoying when people my age offer this (or an equivalent) critique:  “Jar Jar Binks!  Grrr!”  Certainly, the prequels fall short of the Glory of the Originals.  Well short.  And even calling them good movies is a stretch.  Nevertheless, the prequels do contain some goodness for Star Wars (Darth Maul, anyone? Ewan McGregor’s pitch-perfect tribute to Alec Guinness?).  I’ll probably even show them to my children without muttering grumpily in their ears.

I’m certain that these thoughts, which I have not heard from many (any?) Star Wars fan of my generation, are enough to warrant serious consideration of my excommunication from the cult.

In the very least, I expect I can be labeled a small-h heretic.

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