Author: Filigree

Artist and writer living in the Southwest USA.

Web: cranehanabooks.com/blog

Well, my very outspoken needling of Trump & his Trumpculties on Twitter has resulted in my *second* account throttling, this time for six days. So if you don’t see me on Twitter this week, posting or answering, that’s why. Yes, I did say that specific Trump proxies should be ‘chomping Oxy by the dozen.’ I…

Read More Second Twitter ban!

From here I cannot see two oceans. Standing astride this ridge, one foot Touching sunset The other, night. On each side, cool winds taste the same.   From here I see no difference between Factory or farm, trailer or mansion, No hint of hand or ideology behind The lights that in distant valleys bloom. Thrumming…

Read More Continental Divide

So, I have this job. I like the work, it pays well, and offers fascinating coworkers. (I’ll skip the Trumpcultie militia members who still refuse to cover their damn noses with masks.) Backstory: for various safety reasons we can’t bring in earphones or our own players. We have to listen to radios, which in my…

Read More Fake drama, failing democracies

I wrote this post about beads a few months back. I’ve since been quietly processing the news that Kalmbach Publishing shuttered both Bead & Button Magazine and its annual flagship exhibition the Bead & Button Show. Covid19 may have killed the 2020 show, but it revealed larger market flaws and fragility in that part of…

Read More Beads, Diversity, and Green Cities

I’ll have work showing up in two anthologies this year. The first is the remarkable Mirrormaze, a dreampunk anthology of mind-melting SFF from editor Cliff Jones Jr. and Fractured Mirror Publishing, to be released on December 8, 2020. I’ve read the galley. It was stunningly well-put together. You should pre-order this book! My story is…

Read More New Anthologies

Spoilers! I’ll be honest: the main reason I got a new phone was its swanky camera, better rates from T-Mobile, and a reduced subscription to Netflix. The main reason I wanted Netflix was The Jim Henson Company’s ‘The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance’. This ambitious prequel to the Dark Crystal movie promised intriguing characters, plus…

Read More Dark Crystal Cancelled

Nineteen years ago, I’d almost pulled up to the parking lot at my factory job, when shocked co-workers flagged me down in the street. ‘There’s been an airplane accident in NYC. Big one. Management wants us to stay home today.” I drove the 20+ miles home listening to NPR coverage. Once home I turned on…

Read More 9-11 Memories and Fake Drama

TL;dr…I drone on about embracing one’s weird stories. Several writer friends confessed they don’t read many other writing blogs: “Because below a certain level of skill/experience, they all have the same bravado, bewilderment, and desperation to promote their work.” Above that level, writers’ blogs are often about other things than writing, an informative and often…

Read More The Sun and the Moon Debacle

High contrast: last week it was responsible adults in the room talking about hope, diversity, unity, and hard work. This week: rallying cries for a second Civil War delivered by coked-up nepotistic sycophants to a hateful demented old lech who can barely read from a teleprompter (yet mocks even family members with disabilities). Seriously, Don…

Read More DNC vs RNC conventions

Three years ago I bought a display form from a local boutique that was going out of business. I named it ‘Adelaide‘ after the boutique. Adelaide-the-mannequin had a cracked support post and base, and was permanently pitched backward (she frequently fell over). She also needed various bits of padding to mimic my ridiculously variable girth.…

Read More Say hi again to Adelaide

It’s literary pie fight time! Otherwise known as the Hugo Awards. And lo, in the midst of the Covid19 Plague Year, heat waves, hurricanes, murder hornets, and global political unrest, the speculative fiction community did come together virtually to award (some) of the best creators in the business. They did so in what could have…

Read More Those 2020 Hugo Awards

Warning: political snark. I’ve been admonished for being too political in my art & writing. I have also been accused of not being political enough. To be clear, I have been political since at least 1986. Sometimes it didn’t show as much. All that socially liberal SFF I’d read since 1977 ran up against my…

Read More Everything Is Political

TL;dr…Look up authors on social media before you decide to join their private writers’ groups or professional organizations. Yeah, there’s a pandemic happening, and it’s getting worse in the regions where Stupid Meets Hateful. I live in Arizona, one of the current US hotspots. Covid19 is around every corner. I’m in lockdown right now from…

Read More The RWA Meltdown: Codicil

I’m publishing a new version of my sword-and-planet fantasy novel BLOODSHADOW on July 10, 2020, through Draft2Digital. At 40,482 words, this is a revised version of the first part of the monster 135K book that was on Wattpad some years ago. Amazon US buy link Amazon global buy link Universal buy link (for platforms other…

Read More Relaunching Bloodshadow!

After the bloviated weirdness of Trump’s Nuremberg-Rally-style ‘celebration’ at Mount Rushmore on July 3, 2020, I’ve noticed a common thread on social media feeds. Ordinary non-Trumper Americans, especially people of color and LGBTQIA folks, are *flinching* at American flags. Because now there’s a deadly calculus going on in our heads: “Is that flag being flown…

Read More I Want My Symbols Back

Two good things have come out of our Plague Year nightmare: I’ve forcibly learned tips and tricks for a masked/veiled population in at least two of my books, so I have no excuse for any lack of verisimilitude later when working on NEEDLE AND SWORD or RED AMBER. As a rather standoffish person, I hate…

Read More Mask Selfie #1

Of course, I mean the wonderful Weird Western Bruce Campbell show that ran for a single season on the Fox Broadcasting Co. back in 1993-1994: ‘The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr.’ Go here for a fond, detailed retrospective. My quarantine binge-watching led me back to this show and happy memories of its direct ancestor, ‘The…

Read More Let’s Talk About Brisco

We’re moving into the white-hot, flat-blue-sky phase of Arizona summer. There may be storms later in June or July, but for now they are a memory, a daydream, or a nightmare (our storms can be all three at once.) Anyone who has ever been through a desert thunderstorm knows the electric feel of the air,…

Read More ‘Rain Season’ beaded panels