Thursday, November 28, 2013
Friday, November 22, 2013
Michael Burgess
Michael Burgess has died. He was just sixty-five. I usually called him Rob, because Robert
Reginald was the professional name that he did most of his writing and editing
work under. I never met him in person but I talked to him occasionally on the
phone and corresponded with him for years through email. I knew he’d had health
problems as a consequence of a bad heart attack about ten years ago, but his
energy was always so palpable that it came as a complete shock to me to find
out he had passed on November 20. I had an email from him a week or so before saying
he’d just gotten out of the hospital and was feeling pretty weak, but that he
was glad to be home. I never for a moment thought that would be the last email
I ever saw from him.
I was introduced to Rob by a mutual
friend, Charles Nuetzel. Rob was editor and publisher of Borgo Press, which later
became an imprint of Wildside Press. I wrote him about my Talera series of
novels and he asked to see them. He accepted all three and that was the beginning
of my working relationship with Rob. He went on to edit three collections of my
short stories, a couple of my nonfiction books, and the Wildside Double that I
was very proud of, having grown up reading the old Ace Doubles. A couple of
years ago, when Rob was revisiting the Talera series to put them in ebook and audiobook
format, he wrote to tell me that he’d almost forgotten how good they were and
that I should write more. That compliment really meant a lot to me and I did
indeed write another Talera book. I sent it to him at the end of this past
summer, and though he acknowledged receiving it I don’t know if he ever got a
chance to actually read it. I like to think he did, and that he enjoyed it.
Rob was a professional editor and always
freely expressed his thoughts, comments and suggestions on my work, but he was
also an incredibly warm individual who was easy to approach and open to
discussion. He always took into account my thoughts and hopes for the stuff I
sent him. He was certainly the kindest and most supportive editor I’ve ever
met. I will miss bouncing ideas off him and knowing he’d give them an honest
but caring appraisal.
A second way that I knew Rob was through his own writing. He
wrote mysteries, pulp noir, science fiction, and nonfiction with equal ease. I
was a particular fan of his science fiction, which was very much classical SF
in tone and content. That is, he took interesting ideas and melded them with
action and wit for a fun and thoughtful read. I’m lucky that I still have
several of his novels yet to read. Each one will be especially meaningful to me
now.
The picture I put up of Rob comes from the webpage of Bobbitt Memorial Chapel, where the services are to be held for him. I imagine it was
provided by Rob’s family. The link is here if you would like to visit. There is
also an obituary of him up at Locus Online.
One of the good things about the age we live in is that we can become friends, good friends, with people we have never met face to face. I consider Michael Burgess (Rob) a friend. I’m very sad today that he is gone, but
very happy that I got a chance to know him.
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Tuesday, November 19, 2013
The Right to Bear Arms
Nowadays, many
folks are afraid to give their kids toy guns to play with. They don’t want to
encourage violence. But I’m not a violent guy and playing with toy guns was
half my childhood. Of course, I didn’t have many ‘actual’ toy guns. I had
pretend toy guns. Other than a cap revolver that was part of a cowboy outfit,
the only toy guns I had were ones I either found or made myself from items
around the farm. I had a piece of fence post that looked a little like a tommy
gun, and a long, straight piece of limb from a Chinaberry tree that I used to
represent a musket like Dan’l Boone used to carry. Sometimes I used a pocket
knife to improve these pieces’ resemblance to actual weapons.
I even had a
kind of armory for all my weapons set up in one of our barns, and I’d go and
pick out whichever one was most suited to the type of game I was about to play.
My nephews, Terry and John, who were six and seven years younger than me
respectively, knew where my armory was but I didn’t often let them play with my
“guns.” And then only if I knew about it. I’m sure I was just trying to protect
them from growing up to be outlaws.
Apparently, however,
Terry didn’t care much for my selfishness. One day I couldn’t find my
Chinaberry musket in the armory and began searching all over for it. I finally
discovered it broken and lying nearly under the wheel of an old wagon that we
had on the farm. I couldn’t figure out how the gun had gotten to its new
location, or how the wagon wheel had broken it since this wagon had four flat
tires and hadn’t moved in years.
I confronted
Terry and John about the broken weapon and found out that Terry had borrowed
the gun, broken it, then put it under the wagon wheel in hopes I’d buy the
fiction that the wheel had run over it and done the damage. I don’t believe he
had thought the whole thing through.
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Thursday, November 14, 2013
Writing as Play
Years ago when I first started writing I read something that
stayed with me. A well known writer—I no longer remember who—said you shouldn’t
tell other people about your stories because if you talked them all out you’d
never write them. I certainly followed that advice as I began my career.
As time went on, though, I began to hear about “plotters,”
those writers who meticulously plan out stories and novels before they put the
first word on screen. That seemed to me to be much the same as “talking a story
out.” I didn’t think I’d like it and I just didn’t do it. I often commented on
the issue with, “that would take all the fun out of it.” So, I continued my
life as a “pantser,” a writer who prefers to discover what is going to happen
in his or her story as they write it.
To be completely clear, however, I’m not 100 percent a
pantser. I don’t commit to a novel, for example, until I know about where it’s
going to end. I often have a good ending in mind even for short stories, although
such endings are more likely to change as the tale weaves on. In novels, I will
generally know some trends and some high points in the book well before I begin
writing those sections. But I don’t meticulously plan and outline and I always
leave lots of room for ‘discovery’ as the tale unfolds.
As more time passed, however, I discovered that—many times,
but not always—plotters got bigger contracts and made more sales than pantsers.
I also discovered that plotters often spoke of writing two or three thousand
words a day (or more), and sometimes of writing 1000 words in an hour. I was
flabbergasted. I generally averaged about 250 an hour and seldom made more than
a thousand in a good writing day. Finally, one plotter told me they could write
so fast because they knew exactly what they were going to write when they sat
down. They knew what the scene was about, where it was going and what was going
to happen.
An epiphany! The scales fell from my eyes. I suppose I
should have easily realized this but I’d not actually made the connection
between writing speed and complete scene knowledge. Maybe this was the secret
to producing more, which is something I’ve been wanting to do for a long time.
So, a few days ago, I set down to play the plotter role. I’d
already written an opening scene for a story in my usual way, but decided now
to carefully plot out the rest. By the end of an hour or so, I knew every plot
turn and twist in the tale. I knew all the characters and had the setting
firmly in mind. I began to write. The words flowed swiftly—500, 800, 1000,
1250. In less than two hours. I was pleased.
Then came day 2. I found myself not very eager to get back
to the story. It took quite a bit of motivation to do so, but I got started.
500 words, 600. I began to slow down, paused to check email, 700, paused to
watch a sit-com, 800, 850, stopped. Still, a respectable showing, and I’d been
working on the tale less than an hour.
Day 3. Again, very tough to get myself motivated. I waited
until an hour before bed but I knew I could do a good amount in an hour. I
rolled to 400 very quick but then started looking for breaks. I fought that
urge, made it to 800 in about 30 minutes and quit for the night. And I realized one important thing. I was
bored as hell with the story. I’d enjoyed the ideas during the plotting phase.
I thought the story had a good concept and could have some very nice elements
of suspense. But I was not enjoying the writing at all. It felt like paint by
the numbers to me.
I’m going to finish the story, read through it again, and
see if it is worth anything. Not having done this before, maybe it will be just
fine. I can’t tell until I see the finished product. But one thing I know. For me, writing is very much a form of play. And
when I know precisely how a game is going to turn out, I don’t enjoy it nearly
as much.
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
The Machineries of Mars
The Empire of Sol!
Some say it lay in an ancient
past.
Some claim it will rise in a
distant future.
But one thing is clear. What
rises must fall again. And no one knows what will crawl from the ashes.
* * *
In the last days of empire,
Mars became a pleasure planet for the wealthy and powerful. Every vice was
permitted there, every hunger satisfied. But what happens when an empire collapses
and the wealthy stop coming? What happens when the machines that fed humanity’s
dreams for so long are left on their own? What dreams might rise in them?
The Machineries of Mars tells a tale of battle and
honor on the red planet. If you like stories written in the tradition
established by Edgar Rice Burroughs and expanded on by such writers as Alan
Burt Akers, Leigh Brackett, Gardner F. Fox, and S. M. Stirling with his In the Courts of the Crimson Kings, then
The Machineries of Mars may just be
the kind of Sword and Planet adventure you’re looking for.
--- By the way, another tale from this lost anthology is also available as of today. Check out Tom Doolan's blog for more information:
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Friday, November 08, 2013
Vocabulary
I've been talking to my students this week about various elements of professionalism, ranging from concepts such as punctuality to knowing where and how to find information that you need. Today we are going to talk specifically about vocabulary.
Every field, from plumbing to psychology, has its own terminology. Some terms will have common meanings in the world as a whole, but special meanings within a field. A professional knows these terms and their subtleties; a non professional most likely does not.
Below, I'm including the list of "psychological" terms that we'll be discussing today. I thought it might be interesting to run it here as well.
Every field, from plumbing to psychology, has its own terminology. Some terms will have common meanings in the world as a whole, but special meanings within a field. A professional knows these terms and their subtleties; a non professional most likely does not.
Below, I'm including the list of "psychological" terms that we'll be discussing today. I thought it might be interesting to run it here as well.
WORD PAIRS
Affect vs Effect
Confident vs Confidant
Covert vs Overt
Councilor vs Counselor
Deductive vs Inductive
Discreet vs Discrete
Disinterested vs Uninterested
Envelop vs Envelope
Exhaustive vs Exhausted
Explicit vs Implicit
Extant vs Extent
Former vs Latter
Hallucination vs Delusion vs Illusion
Imply vs Infer
Manic vs Maniac
Nature vs Nurture
Obsession vs Compulsion
Positive vs Negative
Principal vs Principle
Psychotic vs Neurotic
Qualitative vs Quantitative
Sensation vs Perception
Simple vs Simplistic
Stereotype vs Prejudice
Stimulant vs Stimulus
Timber vs Timbre
Valid vs Reliable
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Tuesday, November 05, 2013
New Cover and TOC for Killing Trail
Killing Trail was
the first item I self published, back in 2010. This 24,000 word collection of
western tales has been among my better sellers, but hasn’t sold much of
anything over the last six months.
When I first put the book up, I knew
relatively little about formatting an ebook and setting up a clickable table of
contents. I’ve decided to reissue the book in an updated version with a clickable
TOC. The stories themselves are not changed so if you’ve
already bought this book don’t buy it again. In fact, I think Amazon is
supposed to let those who bought it know about the update and provide it to
them free of charge. I don’t know how that works because I haven’t done this
before. But let me know if you have the book and get a notice about the new
version. Or if you don’t get a notice and want the clickable TOC version let me
know and I can get it to you.
I also uploaded a new cover for the
book, which contains the pseudonym, Tyler Boone. I’ve got several more
western stories in the planning phase and when I do publish them they’ll go up
under the Tyler Boone name.
If you haven’t read the
Killing Trail collection already, I hope you’ll give it a
look see now. Here’s the link to Amazon. The book is also up for the Nook but I’ve not yet changed the cover there. Since
sales on Nook have been very very very minimal, I’m not sure I’ll bother to make the change.
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Saturday, November 02, 2013
Charade You Are
Today
marks the first time that Razored Zen Press has published an entire work by
someone other than myself. Although the Louisiana Inklings
Anthology has material in it by other folks, it also contains stuff from me. Last
night, a short story called Charade You Are went live on
Amazon. Outside of the introduction, which I wrote, the tale is the product of
another mind. One that is—perhaps—even more twisted than my own.
Charade
You Are is a political satire. The name on the cover as author is
Reagan Pheasant, which is a bit of word play on the contents. It is, as you
probably have surmised, not the author’s true name. I know Reagan Pheasant but
am not going to reveal their identity.
The
reason for the mystery is simple. Charade You Are contains
some graphic sexual scenes and some very strong language that might get Reagan
into trouble at their job. The sexual scenes are neither erotic nor
pornographic per se. They are not meant to titillate but are part of the satire.
As I said, I know Reagan Pheasant. They have a point to make about the
increasing polarization that we’ve seen in our government and society over the
past twenty or so years. I think they make the point well, and with humor,
albeit of the black kind. Otherwise I wouldn’t be involved in publishing it.
I
don’t want to discuss the story more at present because I don’t want to spoil
anything for those who might read it. Over time I can talk more about it, and if
anyone has questions I can relay those to Reagan. I can’t guarantee they’ll
answer them.
Charade
You Are is 99 cents on Amazon.
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