2013

This is a re-blog of a great interview I just found, courtesy of Publishers Weekly: Steven Zacharius of Kensington Publishing Corp. talks frankly about changes in print and digital publishing, the harsh reality of low sales for the majority of self-published authors, and what lies ahead for one of the last big domestically-owned publishers duking…

Read More Kensington Publishing Corp.

Tune in today as J.J. Abrams capitalizes on the concepts of interactive storytelling, deep maps, secret histories, and some really fabulous book production. …Not that I’m snarking too much, because I am always thrilled when this form of interactive art media snags more willing victims. I am even looking forward to reading this newest addition.…

Read More Hey, look, Someone Important discovered Book Arts!

This started as a simple review of Alfonso Cuarón’s new movie Gravity. As usual with my posts, it morphed into something else. In this case, a study of three very different sci-fi films, and only one that lived up to its potential. First: Gravity. The commercials had to be dumbed-down for a general audience, I’m afraid.…

Read More Gravity, Elysium, and Titan AE

Time to dig out an old but fun project, and subject it to public ridicule: Flame Banner, from 1995, rebuilt slightly in 2003. A very few people might have seen the early version of this hanging in the 1995 DragonCon art show (or maybe 1996, I don’t remember.) Dimensions: approx. 60 h” x 11 w”…

Read More Flame Banner

Well, yes, most writers do. But there is a special, oddly pure bond when it comes to readers of my free stories, whether those are fan fiction or original fiction. I’m not making money directly from those stories. I get nothing out of them except the initial satisfaction of writing, and the reviews and comments…

Read More I love my readers

I’ve blogged about how industrialization has simplified the process of making art and craft: hobby stores gave us relatively cheap and pre-prepared art materials, artists like Bob Ross showed us how to cleverly fake our way toward a sense of achievement, and Ebay and Etsy give us outlets to peddle the results. Sometimes it’s a…

Read More Pour a drink and lift a paintbrush (language advisory)

(Nope, don’t look at me. I didn’t enter this year. Moro’s Price came out last year, and I didn’t even know what the Rainbow Awards were at the time.) But several fellow authors from Loose Id are on this year’s honorable mentions list, and may be finalists when the formal announcements are made tomorrow, October…

Read More 2013 Rainbow Awards honorable mentions are out! (Adult content advisory)

…steal words from other people. Now, hold on there, pilgrims. I know that most artists ‘steal’ from each other. Most of the time we try a little finesse, taking bits here and riffs there, and sewing it up into a recognizably different package. There are only a few basic plots, after all. But with the…

Read More What to do when you can’t write…(adult language advisory)

(Beginning an intermittent series about making stuff. These are my personal philosophies about art and craft. As such, they are guaranteed to piss off some people. Please don’t feel singled out, and please feel free to answer me with your own thoughts on the matter.) Credo 1: The more we call some artifact or process…

Read More Craft Credo #1 (adult language advisory)

“Laugh and the world laughs with you. Weep, and you weep alone,” runs the quote from poet Ella Wheeler Wilcox. Maybe not. The NY Times Bestseller list almost always has at least one example of ‘Misery Literature’. Misery memoirs (and their cousins family histories and autobiographies) have been made into major movies and won significant literary awards. And…

Read More Misery Memoirs and Pay-to-Play Publishing