Thursday, November 21, 2024

Some Annotated Reading November 21

 Kind of a chaos reading week, folks.                                                                  

Books

I liked The Other Side of Mrs. Wood by Lucy Barker a great deal. Though I don't consider myself a fan of stories about spiritualism, I wanted to read some historical fiction that wasn't a mystery, and this fit the bill. So well done.

Then I had to give up reading a book by a pretty well-known science fiction writer. The second of her books I didn't like. She just does not work for me, and we must agree to move on. 

Short Work

Yes, I was one of those people who read what is being called "that Vanity Fair article about Cormac McCarthy." The situation described is terrible, though it's not clear if the guy writing the article thinks so. I had to skim portions of the thing because of the lengthy asides in which the author intrudes himself into this woman's story. Does Vanity Fair not have editors? Opportunity cost is the value of what you're NOT doing while you're choosing to do something else. What you COULD be doing if you hadn't chosen to do this thing you're doing. I kept thinking about it yesterday while I was reading the Cormac McCarthy article. I'll never get that time back. 

I read a number of flash fiction pieces at Fictive Dream. Here are some I particularly liked.

Rock, Paper, Scissors by Claudia McGill. I liked the frame on this.

A Friendly Confession by Lori Cramer. I'm not a fan of one-para flash, but I did enjoy this one.

The Goalless Draw by Gerard McKeown. There's something going on under the story for this narrator.

Then I read some microfiction at Centaur:

Mushrooms by Kathryn Kulpa. This is like a whole novel in a paragraph!

Manual for an Indian Novice in a Small Indian Town by Isabel Zambrano. It sounds as if somebody really needs this manual. 

Food

I meant for this be a food reading week, because I'm already baking for Thanksgiving, but then I stumbled upon the flash and micro opportunities and only managed to read one food piece and that explains why this is a chaos reading week.

The "Bake Off" Guide to loaf cakes: Secrets from a pastry professional by Michael LaCorte at Salon. This is one of the best food articles I can recall in terms of the pastry professional having secrets a standard cook might really be able to use. I do have a question here if we're talking about loaf "breads" like banana bread (mentioned toward the end) or something else. I never liked loaf breads in the past, but became a fan the last few years, which was what attracted me to this article. The word "loaf."

Humor

Welcome to Bluesky, but Maybe Take it Down a Notch?  by Miriam Jayraratna and Kathryn Baecht. Why, yes, I did jump ship to BlueSky, which could be a blog post one day. While I am getting benefit from the place, it's not as terrific as it's made out to be. But there doesn't appear to be any AI involved, which was the straw that broke the camel's back for me at Xitter.

Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Heritage Months In General And Native American History Month In Particular

There have been times over the years when I have made an attempt to observe some heritage months as a way of trying to offer my feeble support to various groups. And then there were times when I'd forget about it, because I don't always stay as on task as I'd like to. Recently I learned that we're halfway through Native American Heritage Month. I'm behind on this, and all I can do is pass on this reading list of adult books for Native American Heritage Month from Flyleaf Books

Now I recognize that "celebrating" heritage months has a virtue signaling aspect to it. Look at me! I'm doing good by supporting marginalized writers and people! Oops! I just snapped my arm patting myself on the back!

At the same time, though, when times are...strange, shall we say...publicizing the work of groups whose work didn't always get much attention in the past is something positive we can do. It doesn't involve name calling or ranting, which I've never seen doing anything for anybody. 

Additionally, heritage months are a sort of temporal landmark. They are set-aside times, during which  we can focus on one kind of reading we may not have had opportunities to do in the past, simply because there are so many books out there.

So next year I'm going to have an objective under my community building goal to observe a number of heritage months. It's already in my bullet journal for next year. I'm already collecting titles. I will not be restricting myself to history but any kind of writing connected to the heritage month involved. One year I read this great zombie story for Black History Month. I cannot deny myself that sort of thing.

Also, Francophonie Month is not a heritage month in this country, but, damn it, this is Gail Gauthier's blog, and we are observing it here. Comprenez-vous?


Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Time Management Tuesday: Slow Writing and Privilege

Here we are on Week 3 of my slow writing arc.

Remember Week 1  Slow Writing In November Instead Of NaNoWriMo?

And Week 2  Week Two Of Slow Writing? That really should have had a more descriptive title, since it deals with trying to pin down what slow writing is. But Zen tells me not to dwell on the past.

So we are moving  on to Week 3, where we admit that slow writing is going to be problematic for some people, particularly those who need to generate income. To do so, I'm going to refer you to A Manifesto for Slow Writing  by John Fox at BookFox

I want to put out there that I have trouble with manifestos. They are way too doctrinaire for my tastes. It's not that I'm such a nonconforming rebel. But I can't even tolerate 90 percent of writing prompts I see, because eh, I don't want to write about that stuff. So, sure enough, I can't fall into step with some of this particular manifesto. But the first two items are definitely worth some thought. Only one of which I will address today. Because, as I said last week, I practice slow writing here by writing about small aspects of a whole, rather than force feeding everything into one long piece, overwhelming for both you and me.

Those Who Don't Have the Option of Actively Resisting

Fox says in his manifesto, "Resist the commercial pressure to pump out manuscripts at breakneck speed." He then goes on to discuss Marilynne Robinson who went twenty years between publishing two well-known books. I'm not sure that that's a good model, because most writers at some point accept that they aren't Marilynne Robinson. Fox ends this part with "Everything in the writing industry pushes the writer forward at a quicker and quicker pace, and this machinery must be actively resisted." Manifesto indeed!

This is a cry-to-arms that can only be answered by those writers who can resist because they are privileged enough either to be making decent money from their work or to not need income from it.  All the other writers are dependent on the machinery to make whatever they can. Self-published writers, who aren't dependent on the writing industry, are in an even worse spot as far as being able to choose slow writing is concerned.

Self-published Book Writers and Slow Writing

A few decades ago, it wasn't unusual to read about self-published writers who were trying to pump out short novels multiple times a year. They did this because, without access to the book distribution avenues traditionally published authors had, they couldn't sell very many copies of any particular title. Many of them also weren't paying for editing, design, or professional cover illustration, the lack of which could have hampered sales as well. Since they couldn't sell many copies of any one particular title, they tried to have multiple titles available. Sales for each book multiplied by the number of books=trying to get a decent income.

I don't read about that much anymore, since the self-publishing world learned that in order to compete with traditionally published books, self-published writers would have to seek out and pay for editors, design people, illustrators, and even marketing...all the things traditionally published writers got automatically through their traditional publishers. You could say that having to do that slowed these writers down. But it was the administrative work of publishing that did it, not "slow writing."

Self-published Short-Form Writers and Slow Writing

Internet platforms like Medium and Substack provide the possibility of generating income for self-published writers of humor, essays, short stories, food writing, travel writing...you name it. They are self-publishing their work right there, though Medium includes publications that act, to some degree depending on which one you're dealing with, as gatekeepers should you want to submit to them. The income generated, though, is small. Sometimes ridiculously small. To date, I've only made fifty-five cents on Dinner at Shirley Farr's House, one of my more sophisticated pieces. (Keep in mind that there is always the possibility that I'll make a few more cents on this somewhere down the line and that if it had been published in most literary journals, I wouldn't have made anything.)

Like the self-published book-length writers in days of old, self-published writers at Medium increase their income by writing a lot. And I mean a lot. There are people there who try to write and publish every day. I know this, because one of the things many people write about is publishing on Medium. One woman wrote an article about the month she published as many stories there as I had in over three years. How-to articles are popular at Medium, especially articles on how to publish on Medium. A particularly interesting one was by a fellow who explained he spent three hours per article, which included Internet research and writing. There have been articles from writers complaining that some editors of publications don't respond the same day they submit. These writers have publishing schedules! 

At Medium you get paid a tiny amount for each reader you attract to a story. You may not have attracted a lot of readers for each piece you published this month, but if you published thirty pieces at a small number of readers per piece, you might be able to get some kind of payday for your effort. Additionally, if you publish a lot, some magic algorithm thing might happen and you could have your work promoted, that could attract followers, if you build up a few thousand followers those people will be seeing your work regularly and if a certain percentage of them read it...income!

Does this kind of rapid writing produce stellar results? Would slowing down maybe enhance things? Let's not go there.

My point, as I did state at the beginning, is that slow writing, which appears to be mainly a lifestyle not a true method of working, is going to be a hard sell for those writers who really need to sell regularly. 



Friday, November 15, 2024

Friday Done List

 Goal 1. Adult Short Stories, Essays, and Humor

  • Submitted a short story and humor piece, both to nonMedium publications.
  • Worked on a humor piece.
  • Was disappointed that I couldn't find some material I had sent myself to use in another humor piece. I mention this, because I spent some time looking for it this afternoon.

Goal 3. Community Building/Marketing/Branding 

  • Wrote three blog posts. Four counting this one.
  • Promoted a couple of blog posts.
  • Signed up for a social media Zoom workshop I knew I couldn't attend, but the organization is supposed to provide a recording for a month. Yeah, that hasn't appeared. I am missing Off Campus Writers' Workshop, which is stellar with its Zoom administration.
  • Having to cool my heals over that social media workshop is disappointing, because I'm considering joining either BlueSky or Instagram. I'm not in a hurry to leave Twitter, but it has changed dramatically since the election, filled with people angsting over the election or angsting over the number of people leaving Twitter and should they leave, too. The ratio of literary messaging to noise is way down. The place may not be a good use of time now.


Thursday, November 14, 2024

Some Annotated Reading November 14

 Books

I did finish one book that will remain nameless, because I had to skim the second half to get through it. It
was just so slow. Normally I wouldn't mention it here, but I liked the book's concept very much. It was an adult book about a former child detective who is being drawn into an adult case. We had her child scooby as adults there...a sibling...characters that would have appeared in a child detective book but grown up now. Perhaps that's why it was so slow. So much went into developing that aspect of the book that the mystery plot, which is what moves a story along, took second place. We might be talking a story in which the elements are not in balance. 

Short Form

Heavy Snow Han Kang in The New Yorker You can't read this without a subscription, but if you can get hold of the magazine it's in (Nov. 10), it is quite an experience. Truly we're talking a something-happened-to-somebody situation, which was L. Rust Hills' definition of story. Assuming anyone remembers him. He wrote a good book about writing, though good luck trying to find much about it or him.

The Countess of Warwick: A Society Cyclist by Sheila Hanlon at Sheila Hanlon/Historian/Women's Cycling Yes, I am still reading about women cycling in the nineteenth century.

DNA Analysis Upends Long-held Assumptions About Pompeii Victims' Final Moments by Ashley Strickland at CNN Was I a really morbid kid, because I liked reading about Pompeii? Yeah, I think I was.

Humor

Sure, I Voted For Someone Whose Policies Might Kill You, But Now's The Time To Put Aside Our Differences by Lisa Borders at McSweeney's. "I personally think it's awesome that my house in Central Massachusetts might be waterfront property sooner rather than later." 

How To Write A Book That Nicole Kidman Will Turn Into A Limited Series by Tom Smyth at McSweeney's. Hey, I liked The Perfect Couple. Kidman played a writer who we actually see working. A lot.

Wednesday, November 13, 2024

2024 Malka Penn Awards Announced

The University of Connecticut's Malka Penn Awards for 2024 have been announced. The award "honors outstanding children's books that explore important human rights issues." This year there are two winners, five honor books, and a special recognition title.

One of the positive things I think awards do is bring books to readers' attention that they might not otherwise have heard of. In this case, one of the honor books particularly interests me.

The Bodyguard Unit: Edith Garrud, Women's Suffrage, and Jujitsu by Clement Xavier, Lisa Lugrin, and Albertine Ralenti speaks to a number of my interests--women's history, early twentieth century history, and martial arts. I'll be looking for it.

Tuesday, November 12, 2024

Time Management Tuesday: Week Two Of Slow Writing

So here we are with Week 2 of my November Time Management Tuesday slow writing arc in which I, once again, ask, Can we be more productive by slowing down?

What is Slow Writing?

Well, there's a question or you.

First off, slow writing can refer to a method of teaching writing to children. I don't teach writing, so I'm not going to comment on this, other than to say this is not what we're talking about.

When looking for slow writing information on-line, you will come across material on how slow writers can speed up. We're not interested in that. 

What we're talking about here is related--somehow--to other slow movements, particularly slow work.

My Favorite Recent Reading on Slow Writing

The best piece I found on slow writing this month comes from Nicole Gulotta's The Art of Slow Writing: Pacing Yourself in the Digital Age. Gulotta describes slow writing as not so much about reducing your speed as it is about reducing your scope. It's a lifestyle. You mindfully integrate your writing life into your personal life, paying attention to how you can work during different stages of your life. I'm probably experiencing confirmation bias, since what she's talking about is very similar to the situational time management I've been writing about here for more than ten years.

Gulotta also mentions Essentialism: The Disciplined Pursuit of Less by Greg McKeown, which I did an arc on a couple of years ago, connecting his thoughts to writing.

I definitely have a specific writing lifestyle these days, and it probably does relate very much to slow writing. But before I get into that, next week I'm going to cover some slow writing conflicts.

What I Just Did There Was, I Believe, An Example Of Slow Writing And How It Can Benefit Readers


In Nicole Gullotta's piece on slow writing, she talks about it involving life overall, but not specific kinds of writing. 

I'm going to suggest that a specific way of practicing slow writing is to write and present a larger concept piece in smaller segments. By which I mean we don't just break writing something into smaller tasks, then put it altogether and present it, as in a novel or a dissertation. I mean we break something into smaller, complete types of writing that make sense of one aspect of an overall subject and present/publish them.

So today, I am only writing about what Nicole Gulotta has to say in The Art of Slow Writing instead of writing this much and then going on with something that's going to be quite contradictory. I also want to write about privilege in relation to slow writing. I might go on to the connection between blogging and slow writing. Whatever I do, I'll do in separate pieces of writing. 

This slows down the process for me. It makes it less of an ordeal to write, but also makes it possible for me to be much clearer and more thoughtful about everything I write on this subject. I'm not racing to get the equivalent of a magazine cover story written and published today.

But it will also slow down the reading experience, which I think is going to be a good thing, too. Readers will be handling one concept at a time, instead of multiple ones.

Slow writing may have something for everyone.  


Friday, November 08, 2024

Friday Done List

It doesn't seem as if I've done as much this week, yet actually having work submitted and ready to submit seems more significant than weeks when I've done more but didn't do any submissions or have work ready to submit.

Goal 1. Adult Short Stories, Essays, and Humor

  • Submitted a short story that had been published at a journal that no longer exists to another journal that publishes reprints.
  • Finished two short pieces
  • Created a photo illustration for the eating piece
  • Submitted the eating piece this morning
  • The humor piece should be ready to go the beginning of next week, after I finish obsessing over it.

Goal 3. Community Building/Marketing/Branding

  • Did two blog posts
  • Promoted both of them on Twitter 
  • Did a little research on Instagram
  • Am about to sign up for a SCBWI Zoom workshop on social media
 

Thursday, November 07, 2024

Some Annotated Reading November 7


Books

Well, I've been reading two books but then I had an unexpected opportunity to go to my favorite library with my list and a bag.

Yeah, I was overwhelmed for a moment. But the way to take on a task like this is to just read one book at a time. Though, actually, I'm reading two. That's not counting the two I was reading before, which I own and thus don't have a deadline for finishing them. 

You really have to give some thought to how you're going to approach a situation like this. 



Short Form

Steinbeck mined her research for "The Grapes of Wrath." Then her own Dust Bowl novel was squashed by Iris Jamahl Dunkle at Salon. Dunkle has written a biography of Sanora Babb, the women referred to in the title.

A Spanner of One's Own: Liberation and Mechanics in Maria Ward's "Bicycling for Ladies" 1896 by Sheila Hanlon at Sheila Hanlon/Historian/Women's Cycling I've been feeding an interest in 1890s history, particularly women's history, for many, many months. Why shouldn't you have to hear about it?

John Charrington's Wedding by Edith Nesbit at Project Gutenberg Australia. I'm reading a book about women who pioneered horror and speculative fiction. This is one of the stories and authors referred to. Nicely written, though the ending isn't much of a surprise. It's an older work that has probably been redone in various ways, so seems more familiar than it would have in its own time.

The Tight-knit World of Kamala Harris's Sorority by Jazmine Hughes at The New Yorker. This should still be interesting, if you have a digital subscription and can access it. Though probably not as interesting as it would have been before November 5.

#Girlbosses and the Stupid Idiot Men Who Welcome Them by Jamie Loftus at Paste. Jamie Loftus wrote Raw Dog, which is what led me to look for her shorter work. Her spin makes #girlbosses sound like #tradwives...something that never really existed.

Humor 

Thanks for Stopping to Chat. I'll Just Pretend You're Not Holding a Bag of Shit by Caroline Horwitz at Belladonna Comedy  Anything can be funny. Anything.

Thank You for Coming to My Fred Talk by Steven Ostrowski at The Offing. This is not so much about voice, but attitude. "Or consider this: on some days, there's a one hundred percent chance of rain...and yet...it doesn't rain!" 


Tuesday, November 05, 2024

Time Management Tuesday: Slow Writing In November Instead Of NaNoWriMo?

Another month has begun, this one with a strong temporal landmark attached to it for writers, National Novel Writing Month.  It appears that I started dabbling in NaNoWriMo twenty years ago, though I didn't start dwelling on the subject until 2016. Then I wrote about it quite a bit.

Well, poor old NaNoWriMo has been experiencing some troubles the last couple of years. I thought I'd written about them here a few months ago, but, nope. I will explain to the extent that I can:

  1. NaNoWriMo has forums, which I've never been part of for what that's worth. But an issue arose with how forums were being moderated, particularly forums for young writers
  2. NaNoWriMo is taking a position of neutrality on the use of AI in writing. The...discord...around NaNoWriMo's original statement on the subject came up a couple of months ago

I mention all this because it's November and National Novel Writing Month and we all want to keep up on what's going on in the writing world, non? Also, it leads into an article by Shaunta Grimes on slow writing. 

NaNoWriMo Is Fast, But I Am Slow


I mean, I am seriously slow. So you can understand why I was interested when I saw Shaunta Grimes' The Write Brain article, I'm officially done with NaNoWriMo. Lets start a Slow Writing Movement back in September. 

She's creating a program and community called Book-a-Year Project that involves writing a book over a year, instead of a month. Her plan includes creating a writing practice. There will be mentoring letters and daily links to a poem, an essay, and short story to read. There's a monthly book club. And more.

This sounds fantastic, even though I am shifting toward writing short form work instead of novels. What I particularly like about Grimes' plan is that it actually offers things to do, versus talking about taking care of yourself and smelling the flowers. Both of which, I'd like to point out, take time. I was excited as I read about her article

And then I began to feel overwhelmed. This is too much for me. Because, remember, I am truly slow. I get daily Book Riot emails with lists of ebooks on sale, and I can't keep up with those. There's a monthly subscription involved with the Book-a-Year Project, so I hadn't even gotten involved yet and I, a truly slow person, was feeling pressure because I knew I wasn't going to be able to keep up on something I was paying for.

But I love the idea of slow writing and have written here before about trying to find ways to do slow work. So I am inspired now to do more research on this. November, I feel, is a perfect time to be thinking about doing something new, because maybe I can have a plan in place for me for the new year.

The new year being a temporal landmark and all.

Just in: I had a perhaps serendipitous thing happen today that could impact my slow work studies. I'll let you know for sure next week.


Friday, November 01, 2024

Friday Done List

 Over all, a good week.

Goal 1. Adult Short Stories, Essays, and Humor

  • Started two new pieces! One is humor, the other is about yogurt.
  • Registered for a Zoom workshop I knew I couldn't attend, and watched the recording today. This may become a blog post.

Goal 2. Submit 143 Canterbury Road To Agents

  • I saw on Xitter that an agent who had rejected two of my books was opening again for submissions. So I submitted a third book to her so she could reject it. I don't believe I've ever submitted my children's manuscripts to her, and I see that she represents that, too, so I might submit those sometime in the future for an entire set of rejections. Even though I had all kinds of material ready to go for this submission, because I've submitted it elsewhere, customizing emails and filling in submission forms take time that could have been used for Goal 1. At some point, I have to come to terms with that. Book submissions are very definitely a low priority now. If short form work takes off for me some time in the future, I may just treat book submissions as a waste of time and stop them.

Goal 3. Community Building/Marketing/Branding


Goal 4. 19th Century Novel, which is totally just for fun

  • About all I do on this is read nineteenth century history and pile up links to articles. For the workshop I watched today, I used the prompts I was sent to write from the point of view of the main character. So I now have some new material for that.