Apple-Obsessed Author Fella

Category: The Ramble (page 322 of 462)

Yammerings and Babblings

Oblique Strategies For Authors, By Stephen Blackmoore

Today’s guest post is by esteemed urban fantasy slash crime writer, Stephen Blackmoore, who wrote the whip-cracking Dead Things last year (one of my favorites), and who will actually be carrying the Gods & Monsters mantled, continuing the series put forth in my own Gods & Monsters: Unclean Spirits. Stephen is here today — well, he’s here because he has incriminating photos and this is what it takes. SHUT UP DON’T JUDGE ME.

Back in the Seventies musician Brian Eno and artist Peter Schmidt came up with this thing called Oblique Strategies that was designed to help artists when they get blocked. It was a deck of cards containing a phrase or a word on each designed to help inspire the user to look at a problem in a slightly different way. Feeling stuck? Grab a card. See what it does for you. Maybe it does nothing. Maybe it unlocks the whole problem. If it doesn’t work, grab another. The point is that it give you something to help guide your problem solving.

The cards themselves are hard to come by these days, but you can see what was on them over at this site, which has an ever increasing list of these little phrases. Cryptic ones like “Honour thy error as a hidden intention” and “Use an old idea”. Things that you might need to unpack a little to really get a feel for what they’re trying to say.

Most times Oblique Strategies is a little too oblique for me. “Disconnect From Desire” or “Cascades” has never really done much for me. Possibly because the deck is really aimed at musicians. Or, more likely, I just need something a little more concrete because I’m an idiot.

What has worked, though, has been reminders. Things I always try to remember, but inevitably forget when I get stuck. Sometimes it’s a couple of words. Sometimes it’s a whole sentence. It’s still reads like bumper sticker advice, but the important thing is context. I know what I mean by them.

I started compiling these little phrases a while ago and I’m up to 15 at the moment. It’s a handy cheat sheet of my blind spots. At least the ones I know about. And remembering them helps me move forward when I get stuck.

So, here are my own oblique strategies. I’ve added context so you know where my brain is when I look at them, but this isn’t advice. This is just what works for me and has to do with my particular weaknesses. Maybe they’ll help you, maybe they won’t.

***

When in doubt, shoot the protagonist.

Sometimes you just gotta do it.

“But” and “Therefore”, not “And”.

Couple years ago Matt Stone and Trey Parker talked to a bunch of NYU and made an excellent point. “And” is fucking boring. This happens AND this happens AND this happens. Instead, try This happens, BUT this other thing gets in the way, THEREFORE these are the consequences. Easy to forget.

A straight line is the most boring way to get there.

Shit needs to happen between the plot points.

Own worst enemy

Fucking over a character is fine. Having them fuck themselves is better.

There are no darlings.

Words, sentences, scenes, chapters, characters, punctuation. Everything is on equal footing. If it’s in the way out it goes.

Zoom in.

I get caught up in the shape of the story rather than all of the moving parts a lot.

Watch the players, not the ball

And on the other hand, there are times where I get too caught up in the details.

A long time between monsters.

Read this. It’s educational. It’s a story about scheduling issues for The Thing that allowed John Carpenter to pull together a rough cut of the film between studio and location shooting. It didn’t work. Lots of problems. No one character driving the story, overly-bloated scenes. But the one thing that stuck with me was this. “He said the movie came to life for the first time during The Kennel, then lapsed into passivity until the next effects scene which was then the Norris transformation. And for a film that was trying to lay down its’ marker as a state of the art monster movie that, I remember John saying, was “a long time between monsters””

Burn it all down

A plot point, a character, somebody’s car, the whole fucking book. Also occasionally good life advice.

Go back to the beginning.

If I’m stuck, it’s usually because I took a wrong turn somewhere and need to backtrack.

Jump to the end.

And sometimes I just need to remind myself where I’m going.

Check the wall for Chekhov’s gun

I hide shit I can use all the time. A long lost cousin, a dead hobo, a treasure map. But I can’t shoot the rifle on the wall if I don’t remember I put it there.

Sometimes walking across the room is just walking across the fucking room.

I can spend HOURS on scenes that turn into “He left.”

Only an idiot would do this.

I don’t want my characters to be too stupid. Kind of stupid, because we’re all kind of stupid, but not so stupid that they won’t call the cops, or that they’ll go into the basement alone.

Motive motive motive

But if they are going into the basement alone, they better have a fucking good reason to do it.

How about you? Got any of your own?

Worldcon/LoneStarCon: My Schedule

[Updated 8/26/13]

Ahoy-hoy!

For those of you descending upon the heat-vapor planes of San Antonio to visit the vaunted Worldcon by way of LoneStarCon, here is my schedule (which is subject to change):

Wednesday

In which I penetrate San Antonio’s defenses and destroy the shield generators so I may land my ship, abscond with the Helm of Gaiman, and hide under the river until the coast is clear. Or something. Translation: I ARRIVE, AND THE CITY TREMBLES.

Thursday

Right now, I got nuffin’.

Friday

10:00AM till 10:45AM, Abaddon Publisher Spotlight, whereupon I join my hellish overlords in the Solaris Abaddon crew and talk about, you know, books and stuff.

11:00AM till noon PM: Kaffeeklatsch with Me, Lee Harris, and Charles Radley. I think Kaffeeklatsch is a German word meaning “crowbar fight.” So, bring your own crowbar. Or if we want to play it nice we can instead just sit and have coffee and talk about Authorial Things.

2pm till Wuzza Wooza: “Meet Chuck Wendig” at the Reddit Fan Table where I’ll be doing what? A Pop-up AMA? A reading? AN INTERPRETIVE DANCE? Come find out!

Saturday

Noon till 1pm: Signing in Dealer’s Room at Crime & Space Books. This should be the island immediately on the left as you enter the dealer’s room, or so I’m told.

3:00PM till 4:00PM, Angry Robot Publisher Spotlight, whereupon my cranky clanking masters talk about their books and authors of past, present, and future.

4pm till ???: NINJA BOOK SIGNING WITH KEVIN HEARNE, whereupon Kevin and I will plant ourselves in the bar or lobby and we will talk to fans and sign books and we’ll twerk and Thunderdome and draw kittens and basically clown around in whatever way you so desire.

7PM till We Find Ourselves Vomiting In A Cow Pasture AM: Drinks With Authors, a party put forth by author Myke Cole and some of the Reddit folks with the goal of being inclusionary, not exclusionary — meaning, open to all, come by, hang out with a freakishly exhaustive author guest list, get books signed, drink booze, drink more booze, wrestle Sam Sykes, whatever. Come out. We’ll have a few laughs.

Sunday

3:00 till 4:00PM: YA Fantasy Panel, subtitled “We’ll Always Be Young At Heart,” featuring me, Martha Wells, Emily Jiang, and Aurora Celeste.

5:00 till 6:00PM: 40 Years Of Campbell Awards Panel, featuring me, Ben Bova, Mur Lafferty, Stina Leicht, and Max Gladstone.

7:30PM till It’s Over o’clock, The Hugo Awards, in which I am reportedly nominated for a Campbell? As I do not expect to win, I’ve no speech planned, but I will dress in a snazzy suit.

Monday

Having claimed the Helm of Gaiman and beaten back my foes, I take off in my Whipwheel Ornithopter and once more navigate hostile airspace to return to the comforts of Pennsyltucky.

Signings?

I’ve had folks ask me about signings. LoneStarCon gave me one but it was at the ass-end of Monday which is a) a horrible time for a signing because everyone will be gone and b) doesn’t matter anyway because I’ll be gone at that point. (They also had me on another panel that day.)

At present, I’m noodling ways to do a ninja signing and/or reading. WATCH THE SKIES.

I was also originally on a panel about fanzines transitioning to the Internet, which is a subject I have very little experience (or interest) in. Further, that panel had no women on it, so I asked for them to take me off that panel and put a woman on. Hopefully they complied!

So many great writers gonna be at this thing. Friends like Adam Christopher, John Hornor Jacobs, Emma Newman, Mur Lafferty, Myke Cole, Andrea Phillips. Folks I haven’t yet met but have long wanted to, like Kevin Hearne, Sam Sykes, Robert Bennett, Betsy Dornbusch. Plus some legends, too. Robin Hobb! Joe Lansdale! Authors who have been instrumental in inspiring me to do this writer thang.

Anyway!

Please come say “hi” if you’re gonna be there!

Do not be afraid.

I will not bite, at least as long as nobody slipped me bath salts (again).

And if I do, I will transmit the Wendigo virus to you.

Which is really harmless, except for the mad hunger you’ll have for other people’s hearts.

I’ll probably be at the bar.

Top Ten Urban Fantasy Essentials (As Decided By You)

Awesome human being Carol McKenzie has gone ahead and started to tally the books listed in the various Monday “crowdsourcing the essentials” posts (everyone please say, thanks, Carol!) — now it’s time to view some of the results. Starting with: Urban Fantasy.

So, the top ten are:

1. Jim Butcher: The Dresden Files series

2. Neil Gaiman: Neverwhere

3. Neil Gaiman: American Gods

4. Ilona Andrews: the Kate Daniels series

5. Richard Kadrey: the Sandman Slim series

6. Emma Bull: War for the Oaks

7. Seanan McGuire: the October Daye series

8. Patricia Briggs: the Mercy Thompson series

9. Kevin Hearne: the Iron Druid Chronicles

10. Rachel Caine: the Weather Warden series

Amongst the next top ten after that were authors like Lauren Beukes, Karen Marie Moning, Mike Carey, Sergei Lukyanenko, Ben Aaronovitch, Laurel K. Hamilton, C.E. Murphy, Kelley Armstrong, China Mieville and, totally entirely utterly unfairly, me.

(Remember, these are the ones chosen through compiling the comments on the urban fantasy post. If you want to check out this week’s, we’re asking about essential steampunk reads.)

Crowdsourcing The Essentials: Steampunk

Last time, we crowdsourced straight-up horror novels.

Now it’s time to dive back down into the niche a little bit and ask —

What are your essential steampunk reads?

Hell, just what is steampunk as you define it?

Drop into the comments and list your top three essential steampunk reads (doesn’t matter if it crosses over with what other people have said; that’s the point, as you’ll see when we tally ’em). Then, if you’re so inclined, talk about what steampunk even is to you as a subgenre.

The comment section awaits.

Flash Fiction Challenge: Subgenre Frankenstein

Last week’s challenge: “Random Story Generator”

This week’s challenge is a fun revisit to the idea of mashing up two different subgenres.

So, look at the list of 20 subgenres below.

Pick two randomly (d20 or random number generator).

Write a ~1500 word flash fiction piece based on that world.

(You’ll note I’ve upped the word count a little bit. FOR FUN WHEE.)

Post at your online space.

Link back here.

Due by Friday the 23rd, noon EST.

The list:

  1. Dystopian Young Adult
  2. Slasher Film
  3. Weird West
  4. Zombie Apocalypse
  5. Paranormal Romance
  6. Ancient Myth
  7. Fairy Tale
  8. Spy Thriller / Espionage
  9. Haunted House
  10. Erotic Horror
  11. Low Fantasy (“Grimdark”)
  12. Dieselpunk
  13. Time Travel
  14. Murder Mystery
  15. Southern Gothic
  16. Noir
  17. Alternate WWII History
  18. Kaiju
  19. Comedic Fantasy
  20. Psychological Horror

 

The Cormorant (Miriam Black Book #3) Cover Reveal

Miriam Black is back.

And once again, inked by the mad scientist known as Joey Hi-Fi.

Miriam Black, the poison pill psychic who can see how you’re going to die just by touching you, returns in a new high-stakes horror adventure that drags her from the hoarfrost hell of Philadelphia in winter to the bleachy bleary sand-brined Sunshine State of Florida.  In The Cormorant, someone has a score to settle with Miriam Black, and sends a message written in blood sent through the cruel channels of fate to spur her forward on a path twined with revenge and redemption. New loves, old family, broken relationships — all of it crashes together sure as the dark surf smashes into the bone-white seawall.

To catch up on the other two books in the series before Cormorant lands in December:

Miriam Black Book #1: Blackbirds.

Miriam Black Book #2: Mockingbird.

(Both are pretty cheap as e-books right now: under $5 a pop.)