Friday, June 29, 2012

Lucky Seven

A fellow author/classmate at Seton Hill tagged me to do a Lucky Seven.

Check her out here!

Lucky Seven

The rules are:
- Go to page 7 or 77 in your current manuscript (fiction or non-fiction)
- Go to line 7
- Post the next 7 lines or sentences on your blog as they are (no cheating, please!
- Tag 7 other authors to do the same

The following seven lines are from a paranormal mystery/urban fantasy I’m working on.

            “Sounds normal,” I said.  I waited until I heard the click of Warren’s office door closing before turning to my computer.  I’d planned to spend the morning updating case files, but I pushed that down my list.  I Waved my hand in front of my computer screne and Google Chrome opened.  I hit the N key on the keyboard and waved my hand again.  That was one of the perks of working at MIA.  The computers worked like…well as magic, and it made my job a hell of a lot easier.

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

15 Always Nevers of Writing

Hello and welcome to Writer’s Wednesday #1. 

A bit about my writing before I get started. I write mainly epic fantasy and paranormal mystery/urban fantasy and a bit of science fiction and romance on the side. Okay, enough about me, let’s talk about this week’s post.

This past week I went over to Seton Hill for my second residency. It was a blast and consisted mainly of critique sessions and module classes. It also consisted of attending two student teaching presentations. In a few semesters, I too will need to complete a student teaching session, and, as my fellow second-semester students and I observed, we’re not looking too forward to that. 

The idea is to present something relevant to writing that will be beneficial to your fellow Writing Popular Fiction students (WPFers). However, we are writers, and as such, we are creative persons or, in my case, a joker. After the student presentations, I turned to a friend of mine and said “When I do mine, I want to walk into the room, turn off the lights, and say ‘Forget everything you’ve learned about writing.  I’m here to tell you what’s real.” I explained that I wanted to do this in the creepiest voice possible and further that it would be amusing if I reversed all of the lessons about writing that Seton Hill teaches. My friends took this to heart, and we spent lunch that day coming up with the reverses I speak of. Here are a few.

  I now present 15 Always Nevers of Writing.

Again, I want to stress that this is for humor only. “Do not try this at home…go to a friend’s house.”

-Always avoid conflict – Readers get frightened by arguments, battles, internal struggle, or any other problems the characters might face.

-Always use plenty of adverbs and adjectives – Compare the following two sentences.
“He sprinted down the hill and into the on-coming hordes.”
“He ran quickly down the sloping, winding, twisting, decline and toward the oddly placed, sweaty, unfashionable army below.”
Clearly, the second sentence is the better of the two.

-Always make your protagonist either too perfect or too flawed – Readers want to read about people they could never hope to be/relate to.  The “every-man” is so boring.

-Always tell don’t show – It’s faster and allows you to get more description on each page. 

-Always repeat words – “The whip cracked in the silence like the cracking of a whip in the silence.”  That’s what I’m talkin’ about.

-Always shape your plot progression as a straight line rather than a bell curve – Readers are resistant to or fear change.

-Always make all of your characters’ dialogue similar – Readers get confused by too many characters that sound differently.

-Always head hop – It’s so boring being in one person’s thoughts for too long.

-Always infodump – It’s easier to explain everything in one five-page section of paragraphs then to sprinkle details throughout the novel.

-Always write in the second person point of view – Readers want to be directly addressed and told what to think.  Figuring it out takes too much work on both your part and theirs.

-Always finish a synopsis with “If you want to know what happens, you’ll just have to read my book.” – Publishers love this.

-Always use exciting speaker tags, such as “exclaimed emphatically” or “droned quietly” – It makes your writing more understandable.

-Always write what you know nothing about, especially for fantasy or science fiction – It’s all made up anyway.

-Always use a lot of commas – Periods indicate longer pauses. The breaks are too long, though, and will impact the flow of the story.  “Go, keep running, if we keep going we’ll make it by night fall, hurry up”  Much faster than “Go!  Keep running.  If we keep going, we’ll make it by night fall.  Hurry up.”

-Always have your characters grimace – It’s important.


Monday, June 25, 2012

Back...Sort Of

Hello folks again,

I have returned from grad school sleep deprived but invigorated.  Unfortunately, it is the exhausted part that has taken the lead.  I intend to set up my blog posts so that they schedule themselves.  However, since I haven’t been at this very long—and since I haven’t had any solid free time to work that out since starting this blog—that is not yet the case. 

So, rather than a critique/commentary this week, I will make a recommendation for media. 

GO SEE “BRAVE.” 

Did you get that?  Good.  I am a kids movie advocate, and “Brave” is a kids' movie.  Therefore, I have advocated. 

I promise I will be back to my normal self next Monday.  In the meantime, this Wednesday, I will begin a new weekly post—Writer’s Wednesday.  This will consist of something concerning writers, be that something character development, plot creation, world building, etc.  It promises to be engaging or at least I hope it will be.

Again, I apologize for the lack of a post.  Little sleep and a delayed flight can do that.  See you on Wednesday! 

See you out of the box,
Caboodle

P.S.  6x9=42.  “I told you there was something fundamentally wrong with the universe.”

Answer—it works in base 13. 

Monday, June 18, 2012

Life Happens Sometimes

Hey folks,

Normally, it would be media Monday.  Unfortunately, I’m not going to be able to give you a media this Monday.  Death in the family this morning, and I just have not had a chance to be my usual witty self the past few days. 

Also a heads up, not sure if Flash Fiction Friday will be happening this weekend.  It’s grad school week, and I’m going to have roughly 0 free time.

I will not leave you empty handed, though.  I will take this opportunity to comment and compliment on my grad school.  If you desire to be a writer of genre fiction—fantasy, science fiction, mystery, romance, any combination of these, or any other genre you can think of—I encourage you—make that strongly recommend that you—check out Seton Hill University.  I’m entering my second semester of their MFA in Writing Popular Fiction program, and I cannot even begin to explain the improvements the program has already brought to my writing. 

The program is low residency, which means that students go for a week twice a year and then do the remainder of the work online.  SHU’s residencies are in January and June—hence me going there tomorrow.  Aside from reinforcing excellent writing habits, the program offers the opportunity to network with other writers (novice and extremely published/practiced alike), cultivate personal and working relationships, and really let your inner introvert shine out.  Yes, that’s oxymoronic.  No, I’m not going to change it.  It’s true.  I’m shy and introverted like you wouldn’t believe, and I’ve somehow been dubbed unofficial event coordinator (1 of 2) for my class.  Yeah, I don’t know either.  Point is, it gets you out of your shell if you have one. 

Check it out at http://www.setonhill.edu.  And, if I don’t give you a piece of flash fiction this Friday, I will see you back here (“Same bat time, same bat channel”) for Media Monday next week.

See you out of the box,
Caboodle


Friday, June 15, 2012

Glowerfly

Flash Fiction Friday #2!  Sorry it’s so late.  I literally just turned on my computer tfor the day.  Anyway, enjoy, and see you on Monday for Media Monday #3!

                Keena pounded down the hall after her prey.  She was so close.  She refused to give up.
                The air was dank.  The hall was dark.  Faintly glowing wings fluttered away from her. 
                She lunged.
                The wings slipped through her fingers.
                She lunged again and connected. 
                Her prey fluttered in her grasp—so beautiful.
                It wasn’t everyday someone caught a Glowerfly, and Keena had managed the feat.
                It would bring her good luck.


Monday, June 11, 2012

6x9=42

“I told you there was something fundamentally wrong with the universe” (Arthur Dent). 

Believe it or not, this is true somehow.  How, you ask?  Well, I’m starting a new tradition this week for Media Mondays.  I’ll pose a question/seemingly wrong fact/something similar at the beginning of each Monday’s post and reveal the answer at the end of the following Monday’s post.  Now, you say, does this have a point in the age of Google?  Google it if you want and then see if we agree. J.  J

Anyway, moving on to the topic of the first true Media Monday—“The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy—which is the only  book in the whole of the known universe to have the letters ‘Don’t Panic’ inscribed in large, friendly letters on the cover.”  If you are anything like me, you are now wondering how letters can be friendly.  I don’t know either.  Maybe they wave at you or something.  That would be neat.

Anyway, this post will focus on the Primary and Secondary series of the original BBC radio show (1978).  It’s British Comedy at its best, and it’s funny science fiction.  What more could you ask for?  (Answer—probably a lot, but this is what you’re getting.)

Moving on—or perhaps back.  For anyone who doesn’t know.  The concept behind “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” (hence forth known as “Hitchhiker” because typing that whole thing out takes too long) is basically that the Earth has been demolished “to make way for a new hyperspace bypass.”  Earthman survivor (Arthur Dent), his companion Ford Prefect (who is “from a small planet somewhere in the vicinity of Betelgeuse”), Zaphod Beeblebrox (the galactic president), Trillian (“a rather nice astrophysicist Arthur once met at a party in Islington), and Marvin the Paranoid Android spend the subsequent eleven episodes (after the demolishing of Earth) traveling the galaxy and attempting to revise the Guide/stay alive and reasonably out of harm’s way.  The exception to this is Trillion.

Fit 5 – Series 1 – The Restaurant at the End of the Universe.
“End of what?”
“The Universe”
“When did that end?”
“In just a few minutes.”
In this fit, our dynamic groupies (with the exception of Marvin) find themselves “blasted 567 million years through time by an exploding computer” and at the host desk of “Milliways: The Restaurant at the End of the Universe.”  The episode features Ford trying to explain how the restaurant doesn’t end with the rest of the universe through the use of a wine glass, which he shatters.  So, “well forget that.”  He then launches into a lengthy, but very false, description of how the universe began. 

While this is happening, Marvin is down in the parking garage waiting, and yes, he had been waiting the entirety of the 576 million years.  According to him, “The first ten million years—they were the worst, and the second ten million—they were the worst too.  The third ten million—I didn’t enjoy at all.  After that I went into a bit of a decline.”  Clearly, he had a great time.

This fit ends with the dynamic groupies “stealing the flag ship of the admiral of the space fleet.”  Oh, and they also have a discussion revolving around the question to the ultimate answer of the universe, which is (of course) “42.”

Fit 11
Now Trillion-less, the group (in the previous fit) found themselves on a mysterious planet featuring a 15-mile high statue of Arthur throwing a cup.  “It’s a long story.”  In this fit, the results of this development are that Arthur found his way to ground level (after falling,, being picked up by an “extremely large passing bird,” and meeting the bird people and learning of the “somethings of which the bird people refuse to speak.”  Ford and Zaphod also fell, and begin the fit on the back of a different “extremely large passing bird,” which they force to take them to the ground and spend the remainder of the fit running away from.  “That should keep them busy.”

Back to Arthur, he is now in the company of an archaeologist named Lintilla.  After a discussion and narration about “crisis psychology—the benefits of working under extreme pressure,” Arthur then finds himself in the company of three archaeologists named Lintilla.  One of these three Lintillas explains that they are clones.  Arthur jumps on board (thinking he finally understands something) and explains “that there was one of them and then exact copies were made and now there are three of them.” 
“Yes, except there are now nearly 578 thousand million of us.”  But the rest aren’t there. 
In any event, “that’s rather a lot, isn’t it?”

The fit plays out with Arthur and Lintilla 1 being captured by a shoe company executive and his foot warrior who's “feet are the wrong size for his shoes” and thus is of virtually no help to anyone because he can’t walk.  Marvin rescues Arthur and Lintilla 1 and they take off for better parts, and the fit ends with Ford and Zaphod taking cover in an old building full of “amazing old ships”.”  And, I mean really old ships.  “One look and they fall apart.  I mean look at that one.  *ship falls apart*.”

Summary complete.  There you have it—a look into the world, excuse me, universe of “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.”  Oh darn, I said I wasn’t going to type that out again.  Oh well.  If you found this funny, read the books, watch the movie, or track down the radio series.  Aside from the Primary and Secondary series, there were three more made several years later—the Tertiary, Quandary, and Quintessential Phases.
 
Closing statement—for this to work, let’s pretend for a moment that the word “drink” means the same as “post.”  Ready, go.

“If you enjoyed this drink, why not share it with your friends?” – A drink Machine on the Star Ship Heart of Gold Infinite Improbability Drive Ship

See you out of the box,
Caboodle

P.S.  I have added a video to the “Disney Gave Me Unrealistic Expectations about Death” post.  Would have been up with the post, but “we were experiencing technical difficulties.”  So, it wasn’t, but it is now.  Enjoy J

Friday, June 8, 2012

Musings of a Free-Faller

Welcome to Flash Fiction Friday #1!  Enjoy the following 118 words.

“Ahhhhhhhhh…” 
All right, I’m sick of screaming.  I’ve been falling for…oh, it has to have been at least a week.  Who knew bottomless pits were so boring.  You do the same thing over and over.
                Let me see.  Wake up, scream, stop screaming because throat hurts, contemplate situation, realize there is no change in situation, look around, stop looking around because everything is black, contemplate situation some more, scream, rinse and repeat.  Pretty boring.  At least the sick-from-falling sensation in my stomach finally went away.  That was getting old a few hundred-thousand miles ago.
Man, this is tiring.  That’s the last time I pick up a cute puppy in a dungeon.  What was I—