Apple-Obsessed Author Fella

Category: The Ramble (page 314 of 462)

Yammerings and Babblings

News-Flavored Snidbits

Ahoy, human readers!

Note I said human readers. Don’t you come around here, robots. Spilling oil everywhere. Barking your anti-human propaganda through tinny speakers.

Some quick updatey things:

First up, if you were like, “You know, what I really want is a new Miriam Black short story before The Cormorant drops,” well whack-a-dang-doo, do I have you covered. A new Miriam Black short story, “Birds of Paradise,” is in the Malfeasance Occasional: Girl Trouble, which also features stories by Hilary Davidson, Travis Richardson, and Patty Abbott.

The new Miriam story begins with the following few lines —

Five women walk into a dildo shop.

Sounds like a joke. It isn’t.

Because only four of them are going to walk out alive.

Second, if you were thinking on pre-ordering The Cormorant, the price just dropped.

Third, if you ever thought, “Hey, somebody should do a Kickstarter for an anthology of fictional Kickstarters,” I’d say hey, somebody already beat you to it! With the combined power of Keffy and John Joseph Adams, the campaign has launched: Help Fund My Robot Army! You may note some very impressive names attached to that Kickstarter (Seanan McGuire, Tobias Buckell, Daniel H. Wilson, Mur Lafferty, Mary Robinette Kowal, and more), and you may also note one slightly less impressive name: hey, it’s me! Fund it, we write it. Get in there.

Fourth, hey, not only is Under the Empyrean Sky still only $1.99 for the Kindle book, but it’s also only $1.99 for the audio book. Go see!

Finally —

After tomorrow, I take flight on an Iron Bird and disappear up into the clouds for 24 hours of travel in order to hurl my butt onto the Australian landmass. I am there for GenreCon, a genre-blending writing conference which looks wildly exciting.

While there, I will be wrestling koala, karate-kicking cassowaries, spreading vegemite on my naked form and hunting humans for sport, and engaging in the forbidden elven sexual act known as the “Tim-Tam Slam.” I’m pretty sure I have all that right.

I’ll be in Oz for seven days, but gone for 10 days because time travel. (Seriously, when I come back I leave Australia at 10 AM on Thursday, and land at LAX at 6 AM on the same day, thus arriving before I ever left. Australians know the future and they’re just not telling. I’m going to go there, get some intel, and report back. This is provided that customs doesn’t arrest me at the border for trying to sneak a cornucopia of venomous creatures back into the States.)

This here terribleminds should not experience any great outages — you should get steady content until I return. A mix of cool guest posts and hastily-scrawled Wendig posts await! If I can carve out wi-fi while there I’ll try to be present on social media, but no guarantees.

Crowdsourcing The Essentials: Young Adult

(Previously: noir!)

Okay, this is a big one.

Big category. Not really a genre (though some have debated it is, I’d argue it’s an age range).

Young adult fiction.

No subgenres in particular.

But I want to know: what do you consider to be the most essential reads for anyone looking to pick up a young adult book? And further, what (for you) makes a young adult book? What is YA?

So, drop to the comments, and discuss. Oh, and list your top three essential YA reads, too!

(related: 25 Things You Should Know About Young Adult Fiction)

Flash Fiction Challenge: Roll For Your Title

Last week’s challenge: “Cooperative Cliffhanger, Part Two.”

This week?

Easy. All you have to do is randomize a title from the two columns. Each has ten items, so, roll a d10, or throw open a random number generator. Pick one from each column, and [Column One] [Column Two] is your title. You can throw “The” in front of it if you’re so inclined — e.g. “The Horse-Drawn Lighthouse,” or without it, “Crimson Bride.”

Then, write a story.

~1000 words.

Post at your online space. Link back here.

Due by Friday, October 11th, noon EST.

Your columns are:

Column One

  1. Forgotten
  2. Crimson
  3. Remote Control
  4. Horse-Drawn
  5. Dead Girl’s
  6. Labyrinthine
  7. Orichalcum
  8. Ink-Stained
  9. Apocalypse
  10. Infinity

Column Two

  1. Bride
  2. Mechanism
  3. Library
  4. Hive-Mind
  5. Slave
  6. Orchid
  7. Island
  8. Shame
  9. Lighthouse
  10. Sailor

The Way We Talk About Pop Culture

When I was a teenager, I would’ve judged you for your pop culture predilections.

I would judge you based on what you liked or didn’t like.

If you liked a movie I thought was stupid, I thought you were probably stupid.

If you liked a book or TV show or whatever that I also liked, I assumed we could be friends.

I believed I held objectivity in my hand. My opinion felt like a glorious hammer and given half a chance I’d smack you with it to teach you a lesson about the failure of your personal tastes.

It was a jerky, self-righteous viewpoint. It was me squinting at you through my asshole, not through my eyes, and I think now — not then, sadly — I know where it was coming from.

I thought at the time if you didn’t like the things I liked, how the hell could you like me?

It came from a sad and uncertain place within — a place notorious to teenagers, I suspect. Those years I was plagued by a lack of self-esteem and a fundamental kind of anger over that perceived weakness, and what happens sometimes is we see a hole and we try to fill it. We fill it with distractions and we cram it with a papier-mâché version of ego that looks like confidence but is really just a shitty origami boulder, flimsy and hollow. It’s a stop-gap measure, a finger in the hole of a dam crack, a gym sock stuffed in a shotgun wound. It’s triage, in a way.

I figure we all have this in some measure — it’s not just teenagers, of course. We all get these holes, holes in how we feel, holes in how we perceive ourselves. And we patch them hastily, hurriedly, without much concern for what we’re shoving in there to fill those pits and fissures.

Point is, what happened then is when I found the things I loved — books and films and games and TV — I used them as standard-bearers in my army, I saw them as representations of me, extensions of myself. I bound myself up with them like a sailor lashing himself to the mast of a ship in a hard storm.

So, when you insulted those things, I felt like, you insulted me.

You didn’t like them, you didn’t like me.

And if you did like them — or could be made to see the error of your ways — then we were pals.

Like I said, bullshit.

But that’s part of the toxic thread that runs through pop and geek culture, I think. I don’t say that with any lack of love for geekery — I’m still a geek about a lot of things and I love to love things because hell, I think it’s cool as fuck to love stuff. We should celebrate the things we love! Nothing wrong with adoring the work of an author or a particular film or a modern classic television show (I’d argue this is a Renaissance of television right now).

It’s cool to like stuff.

Just the same, it’s really important to disentangle yourselves from that stuff.

And it’s important we look at the ways we talk about pop culture.

See, I understand that you have Very Strong Opinions about that Pop Culture Thumbtack stuck in the great big corkboard of our Geeky Heritage. Like I said: totally cool. You should! You should be encouraged to love the things that you love and to have reasons to love them. Hell, you don’t need reasons, either. You can just love something unabashedly, flopping and flipping around on it like a kid at a fucking Bouncy Castle. “I LOVE THIS AND I DON’T KNOW WHY,” you can say, a blissed-out look on your face. I adore your adoration. I love that love.

Embrace your bliss monkey.

You’re also allowed — encouraged, even! — to not like stuff. While I don’t know that “hating” something is valuable, at least in the sense that, say, That New TV Show is worth the hot irons of your internal furnace, but hey, you feel what you feel. Once again, unless you’re a paid critic, you’re allowed to dislike something without any rational or cogent reason presented. You can just be like, “Man, that show Homeland just, it just, gnaaaarghle vvvzzzzz ahhhhhh. You know?”  And then you flounce about and angrily eat a churro. CRUNCH CRUNCH FROWN.

Here’s the thing.

When it comes to pop culture —

Someone is going to dislike the things you dig.

Someone is going to adore the things you don’t.

And that has to be okay.

Is it worth discussing? Of course. We should engage in conversations about the stories that we shove in our media-hungry mouths! We should be free to talk about why we like things, or dislike things, or even better, why we liked some stuff and didn’t like other stuff and oh hey look a nuanced opinion. Engaging in thoughtful dissection of why something works for us or fails for us is really valuable! It helps us discover more things we like. It lends us a greater understanding of the things we consume beyond them being mere entertainment.

But here’s what it comes down to: when we talk about this stuff, we need to maaaaaaybe ease off the stick a little bit. Fandom can get a little intense, moving beyond passionate nerdery to codependent geekery. We feel so intimately toward some of this stuff you’d think we created it, or that we represent the creators in some big way. This is a time of big pop culture releases: the end of Breaking Bad, the start of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., a brand new Stephen King. The way some folks talk about Joss Whedon suggests they’re part of a Whedonesque hive-mind, representative spore cultures of the Original Whedon Mother Patch.

And you’re not. You’re not him. You’re not his television show.

You’re not your favorite novel. Or that beloved movie. Or a game that just came out.

(Related: Gaming Community, We Have To Talk Again, a post about toxicity and bullshit objectivity when it comes to game reviews — in particular how folks reacted with intense bat-guano vitriol around a mostly positive review of GTAV, not an unabashedly positive review.)

We should be encouraged to discuss our pop culture feelings.

We should never, ever argue about them. Or insult folks. Or tell them how they should feel.

Everything you think and feel about that book, that show, that game, that cupcake, that sunset, that proctology exam — it’s subjective. Subjective as in, I am the subject of this sentence, and this is how I personally experienced something.

(Now, all that’s a little different if you’re a critic — I mean, a real, actual, professional critic. But if what you’re doing is just talking about stuff on Facebook, believe me when I tell you: that’s not criticism. Nor should you expect that everyone surrounding you on social media is capable of dissecting the moving parts of art or pop culture. Besides, criticism is very rarely about THIS WAS GOOD or THIS SUCKED BALLS, so let’s stop confusing what proper critical theory accomplishes with what a review does.)

Stop defending your choices. Defense implies you’re going to war for the pop culture property — as if Breaking Bad or Iron Man or the books of George R. R. Martin somehow need you as a knight for the realm. This isn’t a battle. No stakes on the table.

Stop defending. Start discussing.

Stop being so invested in your pop culture that it makes you upset when someone likes something you don’t, or when someone hates something you love. It’s not personal. Joss Whedon isn’t your child. Neil Gaiman isn’t your Mom. You’re not dating Harry Potter. (I KNOW YOU’RE NOT BECAUSE I AM YOU STAY AWAY FROM HIM *hiss*). Those with different pop culture opinions than you aren’t aliens. They’re damn sure not enemies. Instead of trying to Prove Your Point and Force Them To Agree, why not have a conversation about it? Try to learn about what makes them tick. Try to suss out how the mechanics of story — and world, and character, and so on and so forth — affect different people in different ways. Stop thinking it’s awful when people disagree with you, and start thinking that it’s interesting, instead.

Because it is! It is interesting when people don’t agree. Of course we don’t all have the same tastes — why would we want that? We don’t all need to be unified.

A hive-mind would just be sticky and weird.

A diverse storytelling and pop culture environment exists because of these varying, many-headed tastes. This is a feature, not a bug.

Be polite about it. Be cool about it. Be excited, engaged. Don’t be venomous. Don’t be an asshole. (Damn sure don’t be a venomous asshole, because ew.) Love what you love! Dislike what you dislike. Don’t insult. Talk about it in ways where you seek to become enlightened and aware instead of in ways that suggest the other person just took a shit in your soup.

It’s normal to feel intimately connected to our stories and to those who like the same things we do. Stories have power! They possess a potent gravity. Just don’t let it grow tribal. Don’t throw up walls because of it. That’s how the purity of geek culture gets dragged through the muck, and that sense of tribalism and cultishness is what spawns things like the Fake Geek Girl bullshit meme or threatening people over reviews.

Hell, it goes beyond just geek culture. A lot of the problems my Dad and I had when I was a teen and beyond came when I stopped partaking in the things he loved. He loved to hunt and as a teenager, I wasn’t all that into it. I loved computers and books and he didn’t touch or even understand either of those things. A wall separated us as a result — if he loved hunting and I didn’t, well, shit. He felt insulted. Just as I felt insulted that he didn’t understand computers or read books. Neither of us tried talking about it. We were just pissed. And it stayed that way for —

Well, too damn long, really.

By the time we started fixing it, starting finding a way to appreciate each other beyond our interests and stop being so angry all the time, he only had a few more years of life and now he’s gone and — what? Was it worth it? Shit, I know, that’s an extreme example (and someone out there is like WAY TO BRING THE MOOD DOWN, DEBBIE DOWNER), but it stands to follow that we gotta be a little less wrapped up in the things we like.

That guy likes beer. Another person likes wine. This lady likes cake, some dude likes pie. You like the paddle, I like the whip. Football, baseball, foozball, fuckball. We can’t let these preferences compete. We can’t let them be subtractive to our relationships.

Don’t we have enough real things to worry about?

The government?

The climate?

Meteors?

Miley Cyrus’ sentient parasitic tongue?

NOW LET’S ALL HOLD HANDS AND MAKE OUT

*lurches toward you, mouth open*

The Terribleminds Pumpkin Carving Contest

I WANT YOU TO CARVE A PUMPKIN.

Whoa, sorry, a little early for the aggro ragebadger capslock thing.

I want you to carve a pumpkin.

And I want you to somehow incorporate one of my books (physical copy of said book, or if you feel like rigging your Kindle all up in there, hey, so be it).

Here’s how this works:

You will carve a pumpkin, for It Is The Season Of Pumpkin. This will be a jack-o-lantern of some stripe: one assumes you’ll carve a face into/onto it, though if you’d prefer to carve a tableau from one of my books, hey, more power to you if you got those mad gourd-carver skillz.

That’s right. I said skills, but with a ‘z.’

I’m a writer, I can make brave decisions like that.

ANYWAY.

You will carve this pumpkin and it can be carved however you see fit, and you will then place one of my books in and around the pumpkin (next to it, into it, on top of it, underneath it, but visible somehow) and then you will get out a camera of your choosing and snap a picture.

Then, you’ll send me the photographic evidence to: terribleminds [at] gmail [dot] com.

You can be in the photo if you’d like.

You have roughly one month to enter.

This contest concludes at 11:59 PM EST on October 31st.

As they say on Survivor, Wanna know what you’re playing for?

Well, I’ve got two prize packs. The Big Stack Of Books prize is for the picture that I like the most. The Miriam Black Is Back prize is for the picture you all like the most (and we’ll take the first week of November to vote for your favorite photo).

The Big Stack of Books prize is:

A big ol’ stack of autographed books from Yours Truly.

That means nine total books:

Under the Empyrean Sky (hardcover)

Blackbirds (mmpb)

Mockingbird (mmpb)

The Blue Blazes (mmpb)

Double Dead (trade paper)

Unclean Spirits (trade paper)

Dinocalypse Now (trade paper)

Beyond Dinocalypse (trade paper)

Bait Dog (self-pub hardcover)

The Miriam Black Is Back prize is three books:

You’ll get digital copies of the first two Miriam Black books (Blackbirds, Mockingbird).

And you will receive a very early digital e-copy of The Cormorant.

The rules for this whole affair are as follows:

You will take a picture of your carved pumpkin with one of my books present in the photo.

You will send me that photo in the allotted time frame (before 11:59PM EST, Oct 31st).

I will be posting all photos to Flickr for display (though I will not own the photos in any way).

The first week of November will be used for voting and winners will be announced just after.

You will enter only once. Multiple entries will disqualify you.

If you are in the United States, I’ll front the shipping.

This is open to international participants, but if you win? You have to front the shipping. (I apologize, but man, shipping a big-ass box of books internationally can be onerous.)

You can be in the photo if you want.

The jack-o-lantern does not need to be carved in any specific manner — long as it counts as a jack-o-lantern, we’re good. Though, obviously, bonus points for creativity, horror, hilarity, or tying the pumpkin in some way to one of my books or characters.

(Results of the last photo contest for The Blue Blazes here.)

NOW GET CARVIN’, YOU FIERCE-FACED PUMPKIN-WRANGLERS.

Dystopian Cornpunk Agpocalypse For $1.99

My YA novel, Under the Empyrean Sky, is $1.99 today for your Kindle.

It features an oppressive wealthy government lording over the hard-working commonfolk of the farflung corn-choked Heartland and the teenagers who go on an adventure to fight back against the Sky Bastards who tell them who to marry, where to work, and how to live their lives in the dirt and misery of a failing world.

It’s got: hobos, piss-blizzards, teenagers drinking whiskey, robots, humans growing plant appendages, secret gardens, smoking, sex, hover-boats, slingshots, bloodthirsty corn, and more.

Why is it $1.99 today?

Not sure! Let’s call it a “Government Shutdown Hey Look It’s The Dystopia” special.

Either way, I’m working on the sequel (editing) right now: Blightborn.

Hope you check this out and diggit. If you ever wanted a good way to support this blog or my work as a writer, tossing two bucks into the coffers and checking out this book isn’t the worst way. (Or, at the very least: tell folks about it!) Thanks, and please to enjoy.