When I don't have an alarm set for work, I always awaken in the morning out of a dream. The one I was having this morning involved pushing a car along a brutally rutted road in the dark. But that wasn't of much interest. Far more interesting to me is that, as I lay there for a moment, words suddenly appeared floating in the air right in front of my face. Closing my eyes allowed me to see them better, because, of course, they weren't really there.
Sometimes when I awaken I'm very briefly caught in what is called a hypnopompic state. From what I've read, the state is produced by being largely awake but with the brain activity in the frontal lobes still suppressed. Frontal lobe activity is key to what we call rational consciousness. Most people will occasionally experience such states, though most don't recognize them and just refer to them as dreaming.
Hypnopomic states are driven by emotion, and, in my case, probably because I'm such a huge reader as well as a writer, the imagery that appears in that state often consists of words floating in the air before my eyes. Most of the time I can read a few of the words but the meaning is usually jumbled. This morning, however, a whole phrase appeared to me. I've copied it below. Only the word indicated here as "throat" was smeared. I couldn't read what was actually there but "throat" seems like the most logical choice to my fully awakened frontal lobe. Perhaps you have a better word to replace it.
"There are those who smile and talk to your face with the tongues of angels, and all the while their black gaze is fixed on your throat, and their teeth click, click, click as they whisper evil behind your back."
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Friday, May 30, 2014
Monday, May 26, 2014
Fish Bone Cure
We ate quite a
lot of fish when I was growing up. Dad always ran a couple of trotlines in the
spring and summer, and both Paul David and I liked to fish. Mostly we caught
catfish on cane poles with hooks baited either with grasshoppers and worms, or
with some of the chicken hearts, livers and gizzards Mom brought home from the processing
plant. We also caught bass and bream, though, usually on old Zebco reels with
spinners on the line. We loved eating them all.
Though I liked the taste of fish, I didn’t
like bones and sometimes worried about choking on one. I’d heard that if you
ever got a bone caught in your throat you should drink vinegar, which would
dissolve it.
One night the
terrible thing I’d dreaded happened. I got a fish bone caught in my throat and
panicked. I jumped up from the table and took off running into the kitchen
where mom kept a little carafe of vinegar on the counter. I tore the cap off and
drank the whole thing down in a couple of gulps.
The cure worked,
though whether the vinegar dissolved the bone or just washed it down I’ll never
know. Unfortunately, the treatment was about as bad as the bone. I think the
vinegar dissolved about half my esophagus too, and maybe a little bit of
stomach.
Come to think of
it, though, it wasn’t much worse than drinking straight shots of Jack Daniels.
But that’s a story from when I was quite a bit older.
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Thursday, May 22, 2014
Ideas
I have gotten the question, "where do you get your
ideas?" It's not the most common writerly question I get but it's
certainly happened more than once. My first word in response is:
"Everywhere." And that's true. But some particularly fertile
places for ideas for me are:
1. Dreams
2. Overheard conversations, particularly
"misheard" ones
3. Reading science
4. Reading history
5. Nature (both seeing it and listening to
it)
That's not particularly the topic of my
post today, though. I want to talk about the fact that, for me, I get two types
of ideas. The first kind are those that leap into my mind fully formed. Imagine
kicking through some debris and turning over a perfectly cut and polished
little jewel. Maybe there's a little dirt on it to brush off, but once that's
done the jewel is ready to keep or to sell. For me, this happens most
prominently with flash fiction, and sometimes with longer short stories. But
not with novels.
As an analogy for the second kind of idea
I get, imagine digging through a cave somewhere and uncovering a fossil. Only,
it's not the whole fossil. It's just a single big bone. You dig around a little
more and find another bone, and then pieces of others. The finding is pretty
easy but now the hard work begins. As any paleontologist will tell you, getting
a fossil out of the ground is back breaking work, and after that you have to
put it all together, which requires even more hours of time. This is most often
how my novels get put together. And sometimes it happens this way for stories,
usually longer pieces. I get a big idea and realize there are a lot of smaller
ideas all nestled around it. Then I have to dig it out, start putting it
together, find on occasion that I’ve put something together wrong and have to
back track. But finally you have a finished piece.
So, for those of you who are writers, is this something similar to
what happens for you? Or is the process
very different?
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Saturday, May 17, 2014
Zanthar of the Many Worlds: Review
I love Sword and Planet fiction. Edgar Rice Burroughs, Leigh
Brackett, Alan Burt Akers (aka Ken Bulmer), and many others. There’s a reason
why I’ve spent so much time writing it myself, as with the Talera series. I
find it the purest form of adventure fiction. And I take it seriously.
I also demand that the writers whose Sword and Planet
offerings I read take it seriously too. I’m afraid that I can’t quite picture
Robert Moore Williams, who wrote this book, Zanthar
of the Many Worlds, taking the genre seriously.
The book begins with John Zanthar, a brilliant Earth
scientist who invents a machine that can open portals to other worlds. Zanthar
himself is sucked through it accidentally, and later two of his students are
sucked through as well. So is a man named Fu Cong, who becomes the primary
villain of the story. So far, so good.
Then the weaknesses with the work start to arise. One would
expect that transportation to an alien world would cause a person a bit of
dislocation and discomfort. Not Zanthar. In the first few pages of the story he
acquires some allies who decide he’s a god, and defeats the leader of a horde
of attackers who are riding “miniature dinosaurs.” These appear to be T Rexes a
bit bigger than the “Velociraptors” of Jurassic
Park. Zanthar kills one of these dinosaurs with one blow from a
“copper hammer” he’d been carrying in
his lab when the transportation occurred. He also has no problem communicating
with his new friends, who are conveniently riding telepathic beasts. And one of
his new allies is a beautiful woman capable of healing any wound merely by laying
hands on it and concentrating. Later she proves capable of raising the dead.
(I’m not sure I’ve ever had a day that easy in the real world.)
I’m also a lover of good poetical prose, and the best Sword
and Planet fiction has this. The prose in Zanthar of the Many Worlds is almost
completely leaden, and in many cases just downright silly. Here’s a bit of
prose from early in the book: “And then: ‘The love-life?’ Zanthar questioned.
He did not understand the term. In fact, he was not at all certain that he understood
a tenth of the words she used. ‘I do not understand.’” The repetition was just
wretched.
Later, there’s an actual bit of dialogue imagined by Zanthar
between atoms. I’m not making this up.
Here it is:
“Zanthar had the impression that he could hear the atoms
talking each to the other, saying, ‘Brother, where are you?’
‘Comrade, what has happened?’
‘Sister, why are we in darkness?’
‘Cousin molecule, where has mother gone?’
‘And where is father?’
‘Is—is this the night that never ends?’ an atomic voice
wailed.
‘Is—is this the end of the universe of atoms?’ another
whispered.”
That was it for me. I stopped reading and just quickly
scanned the rest of the book. I can’t in good conscience recommend it to
anyone. And, do be aware that there are three sequels in this series, Zanthar at the Edge of Never, Zanthar at Moon’s Madness, and Zanthar at Trip’s End. All were
published by Lancer books and were probably contracted for to capitalize on the
Conan boom of the sixties. They were published between 1967 and 1969 and I’m
guessing they were written exceedingly fast. I know Moore wrote a lot of books.
He died in 1977. I have a few others of his at the house, most notably the
Jongar series. They’ve all moved way down my list of books to read after this
Zanthar fiasco. I read a quote once about a different writer that rather sums
up my feelings about this book. “That’s not writing. That’s typing.”
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Access Restored
The technician from AT & T showed up about 8:30 this morning and took about 15 minutes to restore our phone service and internet. Turns out a tree limb had fallen on the wires across the road from us and that proved easily rectified.
Although I'm very glad the guy finally came to fix it, and that it was easily done, I'm still furious that AT & T let us sit for a week without any phone and net service. They could clearly care less if they have our business or not.
Anyway, I'm way, way behind on things so I'll start going around to blogs before long. It will take me a day or two to catch up, I imagine.
Although I'm very glad the guy finally came to fix it, and that it was easily done, I'm still furious that AT & T let us sit for a week without any phone and net service. They could clearly care less if they have our business or not.
Anyway, I'm way, way behind on things so I'll start going around to blogs before long. It will take me a day or two to catch up, I imagine.
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
Off Line through no choice of mine
As of Sunday night about 9:00, our phone and internet went out. We called AT & T the next morning bright and early and they told us it would be fixed by May 17, Saturday. When I protest they supposedly switched me to a supervisor, where I remained on hold for over 20 minutes and finally hung up. I am not happy but it seems there is little I can do,
Almost any other week would not have been a problem because I'd be going into work. But this marks the one full week I have off before summer school starts and I was hoping not to have to make the two and a half hour round trip this week. I finally came over to the library with my laptop, which is a good 15 minute drive but much better than the alternative. Unfortunately, I failed to bring extra batteries for my mouse, which is dying. This laptop gives me a problem with the built-in mouse so now I'm up a creek.
Anyway, this is why I'm not visiting blogs this week. I'll be back as soon as we get phone and net back.
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Almost any other week would not have been a problem because I'd be going into work. But this marks the one full week I have off before summer school starts and I was hoping not to have to make the two and a half hour round trip this week. I finally came over to the library with my laptop, which is a good 15 minute drive but much better than the alternative. Unfortunately, I failed to bring extra batteries for my mouse, which is dying. This laptop gives me a problem with the built-in mouse so now I'm up a creek.
Anyway, this is why I'm not visiting blogs this week. I'll be back as soon as we get phone and net back.
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Friday, May 09, 2014
LEADEN
I love a good story but I also love lyrical prose. Lyrical
is the right word because prose has a sound to me. It’s not quite poetry but it
has a musical element. In the hands of a master, it sings.
Consider: “See the child. He is pale and thin, he wears a
thin and ragged linen shirt. He strokes the scullery fire. Outside lie dark
turned fields with rags of snow and darker woods beyond that harbor yet a few
last wolves. His folk are known for hewers of wood and drawers of water but in
truth his father has been a schoolmaster. He lies in drink, he quotes from
poets whose names are now lost. The boy crouches by the fire and watches him.”
(Cormac McCarthy, Blood Meridian)
Or: “The battle in the meadowlands of the Euphrates was
over, but not the slaughter. On that bloody field...the steel-clad bodies lay
strewn like the drift of a storm. The great canal men called the Nile, which connected
the Euphrates with the distant Tigris, was choked with the bodies of the tribesmen,
and survivors were panting in flight toward the white walls of Hilla, which
shimmered in the distance above the placid waters of the nearer river.” (Robert
E. Howard, “The Lion of Tiberias”)
Very different language, and yet both are beautiful to me. I
always strive to make my prose sound good as well as be functional, although it
is not easy to achieve. I also believe the sound of the prose should match the
content of the story. A horror tale will have different music to it than a
fantasy. I believe fantasy in particular lends itself to beautiful prose,
because fantasy generally requires much more description than horror fiction
does.
So, I read a lot of fantasy, in hopes of getting a fix of both
great story and beautiful writing. Then I come upon something like this:
“More important, if he could but grasp the language, what
was the strange power this woman had? ‘You have strange powers,’ Zanthar said.”
And then: “The love-life?” Zanthar questioned. He did not
understand the term. In fact, he was not at all certain that he understood a
tenth of the words she used. “I do not understand.”
Repetition ad nauseam seems to be this author’s stock in
trade. The repetition of “strange power(s)” and of “understood” are just killers
here to any music these phrases may have had. Not to mention the far from pithy
dialogue, which simply restates exactly what the writer has just told the
reader in narrative. This is the very illustration of “leaden” prose.
One guess who this author is. If you read my last post, it’s the same guy.
Robert Moore Williams. I was gonna give up on this book but have decided to
continue on. I think I can milk a few more blog posts out of it. I can only
hope no one will ever find my own writing so worthy of this type of
exploration. I’d much rather be compared with McCarthy and Howard.
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Wednesday, May 07, 2014
STRUGGLE
This holds true no matter the ‘level’ of the struggle. It
doesn’t have to be a fight to the death. It doesn’t have to be a “save humanity
or it goes extinct” kind of conflict. A child struggling against prejudice, a
woman struggling to escape an abusive relationship, a man striving to find
meaning in a world where he feels like a spent coin are all examples of the
kinds of struggles that could, and have, become engaging fiction.
I’m reading a book now where the writer didn’t know this
simple fact, or at least hasn’t illustrated his knowledge of it so far. The
book is Zanthar of the Many Worlds by
Robert Moore Williams. A man is transported to another planet. Within a few
moments he acquires some allies who decide he’s a god, and he defeats a horde of
attackers. He kills something referred to as a “miniature dinosaur” with one
blow from a “copper hammer” he’d been
carrying in his lab when the transportation occurred. He has no problem communicating
with his new friends, one of whom proves capable of healing any wound merely by
laying hands on it and concentrating.
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Friday, May 02, 2014
Notable New Releases
Several of my friends have new books out that I’m eagerly
looking forward to getting and reading. Perhaps you might enjoy these works as
well. Here’s a quick blurb about them.
1. First up, Ron Scheer, over at Buddies in the Saddle has released How the West was Written:
Volume 1. Beat to a Pulp is the
publisher. Ron has been doing a long running exploration on his blog of the
early history of printed western tales. And he’s branched out well beyond such
names as Owen Wister and Zane Grey. I’ve been following his work on this
project eagerly and have ordered the book, though I haven’t yet had a chance to
read it. Both an ebook and print version are available. Here’s the link on
Amazon
2. Bernard Lee DeLeo at Bernard’s Blog has the second book in his Cold Blooded series available for preorder. I tell
you I almost NEVER preorder a book but I did this one. Looking forward to
reading it. I’ve liked everything I’ve read from DeLeo, but the first Cold Blooded was my favorite. You can
preorder here
3. C. S. Harris. The latest
in Harris’s Sebastian St. Cyr mystery series has been released, Why King’s Confess. This is an excellent
historical mystery series that just ‘drips’ with atmosphere. It’s at Amazon
here. I love this series.
4. Richard Prosch has released One Against a Gun Horde,
a collection of western stories set mostly in Nebraska and Wyoming. I’ve been remiss in getting this one up. I
plead overwork. See Amazon link here.
5. Beat to a Pulp has a number of new releases out. They also have a re-release of A RipThrough Time, which yours truly has a section in. An exciting space time adventure, if I do say so myself. And I do.
6. James Reasoner and his wife Livia have also leaped into the publishing ranks with Rough Edges
Press. They have a good number of releases out already with a lot more to come.
Check out their website.
I’ve probably forgotten someone. If so, I’ll have to put up
a second edition of this short list. But, for now, happy reading!
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