Writing well by doing violence, at @Tordotcom

stubby the rocket
Thumping Great Crimes is the next in the intermittent crime series on Tor.com: as the title implies, it’s about writing about violence. The violence in this case is the type that falls short of murder: assault, fight scenes… thumping.

I will probably move on (or up?) to murder itself in the next article.

Meanwhile, here’s an assault on your senses: I’m still playing with the iPad and the Paper Camera app, with the resulting beeyooteeful self-portrait:

Still not tired of playing with iPad filters...

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*Stubby the Rocket appears with the permission of the kind permission of the Tor peeps


Two new essays on writing at Tordotcom

photo.JPG

Two new articles on TOR in the past week. One is the second in my sporadically-recurring series on writing about crime: it’s about thievery, the lure of the caper, and it’s called Imperfect Crimes.

The other, Tales out of School, is an essay about what it was like to start teaching SF and fantasy writing at the UCLA Extension Writers’ Program in 2005, at the height of the Harry Potter craze.

Enjoy! And let me know what you like, or don’t, or maybe even disagree with.

Yesterday’s dining, today’s iPad experiments

duck confit from @petitchauvignolShort rib poutine from @petitchauvignolRumbleMy Dutch Master phaseCafe Calabria, East Vancouverphoto.JPG
photo.JPGphoto.JPGphoto.JPGphoto.JPGphoto.JPGMinnow sketch
Broken house on 2ndAnd after my baff, I holds the bed down...What? I'm bathing!Princess and castleWine ReflectionsWine Reflections
Wine ReflectionsWine ReflectionsWine ReflectionsSwallowtail cropsSwallowtail cropsSwallowtail crops

I am up to 12,382 words out of 2K for my Clarion Write-A-Thon commitment (support Clarion here!) and could safely say I wrote twice today’s 382 words… it’s just that I cut 300 first.

I would also like to say that had I known that one day I could run a bowl of fruit through a Photoshop filter and come up with a smudgy-pastel sketch of a still life, I probably wouldn’t have expended any effort at all on art, in school or as an extracurricular activity. I am now eagerly awaiting the iPad app that allows me to effectively figure skate and do balance beam routines.

Students who teach, teachers who stude…

Wine Reflections

In a post called Shaping Dreams not long ago, I talked about pickiness, about trying to encourage new writers to write prose that isn’t merely good enough… about reaching, in other words, for excellence.

A thing about adult education (all education, really) is that it boils down to the old cliche about leading that horse to water. You can lay out ideas before a person–you can sparkle and cajole and really sell, but whether or not they pick ’em up is entirely out of your hands. There’s a bit of an emotional dance you have to do: you offer the knowledge up, and say “This is cool and really important and worthwhile,” but you can’t get in a big knot if a given group or individual kinda looks at it and replies with a shrug. You have to care–you shouldn’t teach if you don’t care–but it’s wrong to take it personally.

So one of the most interesting things that’s happened to me this year was seeing this shoe on the proverbial other foot as I Pac-Missed my way through Italian I again. (Tonight, I embark on a second round of Italian II.)

Adults take classes–writing classes, language classes, silversmithing classes, whatever–because they sincerely want to learn the subject material, but the degree of want can vary. And we all have so many commitments. Even as Teacher Me boggles at students who slide their assignments under my virtual door at literally the last permissible minute, Student Me has been known to finish up her assigned Italian exercises in the osteria half an hour before class begins. And even to think Who are you kidding? when this past term’s instructor snarked at us–we were a sad little trio of language students, who could not hide from her displeasure when we slacked–for neglecting to memorize pages and pages of vocabulary and grammar each and every week in our copious spare time.

The thing is: you’re taking the class for personal enrichment and fun. There’s often no grade, so there’s no fail. The instructor probably has limited options for forcing you to your homework, or making you learn, or–in the case of workshop classes, alas–even obliging you to give feedback as good as you’re getting. This is true whether the course is face to face or online.

Seeing my instructor take our moments of student laze personally was good for Student Me. Knowing how she felt underlined the whole concept of You don’t accomplish stuff unless you make an effort. This in turn has motivated me to actually do a little studying beyond the homework minimum. And I do mean a little. At the end of the day, I’m still more apt to watch an episode of Leverage on Netflix. Still–more than zero.

I also had a couple interesting conversations with my instructor, about these two perspectives, and I discovered she’s a student, too. She’s taking an ESL program, full-time. It has a direct effect on her well-being, as success will directly impact how employable she’ll be in the near future. She’s been working hard for six months and her English is astounding.

And even she has “Oh, I am such a bad student!” stories.

It makes me wonder what classes her English teacher might be taking on the side, and so on, and so on…

Exquisite Words

Happy Fourth of July, ye who celebrate!

This is a bit of an infodump, but it’s also a good observation about human nature, wittily expressed. This is the ‘spoonful of sugar’ method of infodumping: you share the desired knowledge and make it fun by adding humor.

[Morrill] Goddard’s more daring assertions begin from the premise that it is hard to make people think. He agrees that the power of abstract thought is the highest human faculty, but he nevertheless sees a lot of flattery in the notion that man is a rational animal. In Goddard’s observation, people are far more interested in their sense perceptions and emotions than in their thoughts. He sees nothing particularly wrong or shameful in this, but puts it down to the fact that we have been sensing, feeling and emoting since we lived in caves, while we have only lately begun to cultivate our rational faculties, public education and mass literacy being last minute innovations in the life of man. Thus, while all mankind is capable of rational thought, most of us only use it with deliberate effort, after a good night’s sleep, and for remuneration. Even then, our efforts are often halfhearted and the results mixed.

Kenneth Whyte, THE UNCROWNED KING: THE SENSATIONAL RISE OF WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST