Tweets for Today

  • 07:22 Of course, now that I have a breather, it’s supposed to rain. Oh, well. It’ll keep me indoors writing. #
  • 10:45 If this bastard of an MS insists on being 6,250+ words, fine. Off it goes on Monday to whatever market might have it! Good riddance! :P~ #
  • 12:48 I know this is the attitude I should have with my writing: ♫ blip.fm/~a3jr #
  • 14:09 I am hereby banning myself from the campus bookstore for at least the rest of the month!! #
  • 17:32 I’d love nothing better right now… ♫ blip.fm/~a77d #
  • 22:09 Why, oh why do I feel a second wind at 10 pm?? #
  • 22:39 My second wind sure wasn’t from watching the presidential debate, that’s for sure. #
  • 22:43 Then again, am I really complaining that this debate actually looked like a debate? #

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Tweets for Today

  • 09:01 New attitude today. Yesterday’s got old really quick. ♫ blip.fm/~9ox0 #
  • 09:06 Mostly caught up with skoolwork, too. Which means more writing tomorrow!! #
  • 13:18 Is it bad that I plot my walk from work to class to walk up the fewest staircases possible? #
  • 18:07 Nothing like a fresh pair of eyes on an MS. Not that I’ll get to process any comments before tomorrow–it’s still a skool nite 🙁 #
  • 22:00 Skoolwork done until next week! (Aside from reviewing for next week’s midterm.) #

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Tweets for Today

  • 04:01 Why am I awake??? ♫ blip.fm/~8p2r #
  • 07:11 Ooh, this is gonna be a rough morning. The kind of morning where one falls back on old addictions… #
  • 10:35 Successfully resisted the red-eye temptation! Day will suck, but at least I have that one satisfaction ;)! #
  • 11:04 "The Paganini of Jacob’s Gully" by Carol Emschwiller is the best fucking lit/genre-blended love story I’ve ever read! #
  • 15:31 In the eye of the hurricane at work… #

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Tweets for Today

  • 08:29 I want to float through my Saturday. ♫ blip.fm/~8az0 #
  • 13:01 Sucks that my favorite food stand was *not* at the Farmer’s Market this morning! #
  • 13:04 Not thrilled about the money I spent buying pants this morning, either. But what can you do? #
  • 13:09 Will put off skoolwork until tomorrow. Edits today. #
  • 15:55 Far, far less writing/editing than should’ve been done by this hour. #

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Some Light Reading

Through the hustle and bustle of school, trying to fire off stories to markets, and eeking out some new stuff, I’ve been reading like I haven’t been in awhile. I’ve actually read quite a bit since my last set of reviews, but I haven’t had the brainspace to sit and give more than a passing thought to them before now. So, here’s the latest batch.

This first four pieces are from the Trampoline anthology…

“The Force Acting on the Displaced Body” by Christopher Rowe. A journey always makes a great metaphor, especially when a piece is as well-written as this. It’s a good example of something that skirts around the stricter genre definitions of fantasy. No magic as such–that is to say, no wizardry or the like. I guess it’s more on the lines of myth-making. 5 out of 5.

“Well-Moistened with Cheap Wine, the Sailor and the Wayfarer Sing of Their Absent Sweethearts” by Ed Park. Slightly long and slightly too descriptive for this Carver-lover but that’s my issue, not the story’s. The premise of the story more than makes up for it. You could almost call this piece Soft-Science-Fiction. 5 out of 5!

“Angel” by Shelley Jackson. This is the second or third Jackson story I’ve attempted. I really can’t put my finger on why I’ve been less than enthusiastic, thus far. Any idiot can see how good the writing is. I really don’t know what I’m not getting. As far as this piece though, it read like something calculated to be a bizarro, if well-written, version of Raymond Carver’s “So Much Water, So Close to Home.” Still, the writing rules, so 4 out of 5!

“Impala” by John Gonzalez. Straight-up sci-fi joint–almost! Loved it! Gonzalez took a risk with the choice of POV character, but I still found it compelling. 5 out of 5.

“Shiloh” by Bobbie Ann Mason. I searched high and low for a copy of Mason’s collection Shiloh and Other Stories, and finally found one (actually, three) in a second-hand bookstore around me that I didn’t know about until about a month ago. I see why this story’s a classic. Believable characters in a well-structured piece with the least amount of “writing” necessary. What more could a reader want? 5 out of 5.

“The Garden of Time” by J.G. Ballard. Another classic, this from his Best Short Stories. The line between sci-fi and fantasy blurs with this one because of Ballard’s skillful writing. A little light on characterization for me, though. 4 out of 5.

Tweets for Today

  • 04:00 Awake. Wide awake. Caffeine oversensitivity? #
  • 04:11 I like the new twitter. I don’t like that yesterday’s tweets didn’t ship to the blog via LoudTwitter 🙁 #
  • 07:39 Resolved, there will be no skool work until at least Saturday morning. Editing to do! Goal: submit the latest MS on Monday! #
  • 10:18 Believe it or not, I’m back on the low(er)-caffeine wagon. #
  • 12:00 Revised for an hour before work. Realized everything I wanted to cut should not only stay, but needs to be fucking rewritten!! GRRR! #
  • 15:15 My Put-a-Fork-In-Me-‘Cos-I’m-Done theme of the day: ♫ blip.fm/~84ni #
  • 17:45 Sitting, slack-jawed, with the thousand-yard stare and 45 min. left at work. #

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