L.E. Modesitt Jr.'s Blog

March 19, 2010

Anyone Can Do That

The other day I received an email from a faithful reader who noted that he had stopped reading The Soprano Sorceress because the song magic was "too easy." Over the years I've received other comments along the lines that all she had to do was open her mouth and sing.

Right. Except that under the magic system in Erde, the song had to be perfectly on pitch and in key; the words had to specify what had to be accomplished; and the accompaniment had to match. In the opening of that book, a...

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Published on March 19, 2010 10:14

March 16, 2010

The Impact of the Blog/Twitter Revolution

The Pew Research Center recently reported that among 19-28 year-olds, blogging activity dropped from close to thirty percent in December 2007 to around fifteen percent by the end of 2009, while the number of teenagers who blogged continues to decline. Those under thirty now focus primarily on Facebook and Twitter. On the other hand, blogging has increased among adults over thirty by close to forty percent in the last three years, although the 11% of those who do blog is still below the 15...
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Published on March 16, 2010 11:12

March 12, 2010

Miscellaneous Thoughts on Publishing

Several of the comments in the blogsphere during the Macmillan-Amazon dust-up focused on the point I and others had raised about the fact that, depending on the publisher, from thirty to sixty percent of all books lost money and that those losses were made up by the better-selling books. A number of commenters to various blogs essentially protested that publishers shouldn't be "subsidizing" books that couldn't carry their own weight, so to speak. At the time, I didn't clarify this...
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Published on March 12, 2010 08:37

March 9, 2010

Thoughts on "The Oscars"

Actually, this blog deals with my reaction to the expressed thoughts of others about the Oscar ceremony. Before beginning, however, I will cheerfully admit that I watch almost all movies either on DVD or satellite, often years after they're released.

Now...for those thoughts. By Monday morning, in all too many media outlets, so-called columnists and pundits were complaining about the ceremony being too long and that too much time was wasted on "minor" awards that no one cared about...

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Published on March 09, 2010 07:48

March 5, 2010

Reader Expectations?

The other day I got an email from a male reader who "finally read" The Soprano Sorceress... and enjoyed it and says he's looking forward to the others. What was interesting about the e-mail was that this reader -- a careerist serving in the military -- admitted he'd put off reading the book because the protagonist was female. After receiving that email and then getting the early sales reports on Arms-Commander, I got to thinking matters over. I've written a number of books with female...
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Published on March 05, 2010 08:43

March 2, 2010

And The Winner Is...

No, I'm not giving awards, but commenting on the social implications of the recent Winter Olympics. Put bluntly, there's something really wrong with the world when a national psyche, such as Canada's, rests on the outcome of a hockey game. Did this athletic contest produce a cure for cancer, a new space drive that will allow us access to the planets, or a way to effectively deal with terrorism? For that matter, did any of the Olympic contests really determine the best athletes in any...
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Published on March 02, 2010 09:05

February 26, 2010

The Difficulty of Optimism

The other day, Jo Walton, another author, posted a commentary on Tor.com about the decline in "optimistic" science fiction books, claiming that she found few SF books that showed a "positive future" and asking "Why is nobody writing books like this now?"

I won't quote extensively from her article, but she does make the point that optimistic science fiction was written in the depths of the Great Depression, through WWII, and through the 1950s, none of which were exactly the most cheerful of...

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Published on February 26, 2010 07:51

February 23, 2010

The Iceberg/Powder Keg

Last week, a biochemist who was denied tenure shot six of her colleagues, and three died. An engineer blew up his house and piloted his private plane into an IRS office after publishing a manifesto claiming how, time and time again, tax judgments by the IRS had wiped out his savings and retirement. What wasn't revealed by these reports is the fact that they're the tip of an iceberg that's been quietly growing over the past several decades.

What is this iceberg? It's the ever-growing...

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Published on February 23, 2010 10:19

February 19, 2010

A Different Extremism... On the Rise?

Last week the U.S, government released statistics showing that for the first time women held more payroll jobs than did men. Not only that, but overall male unemployment was three full points [or roughly 30% higher:] than that of women. Among blacks, the discrepancies were far greater, with black male unemployment rates being more than twice that of women. In addition, there's a similar pattern occurring in education, where women are not only obtaining more collegiate level education...
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Published on February 19, 2010 08:23

February 16, 2010

"New" as the Enemy of Excellence

For some time as a writer I've wondered why so many books that I and others have found good or even excellent seldom ever get discussed by the critics and reviewers within the F&SF field, and why so many of those books that get praised are demonstrably weaker than all too many of those that are never mentioned. The most obvious answer, and the one that comes up the most often, is that it's just a matter of taste. That's certainly a factor, and one that can't be discounted, but I don't...
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Published on February 16, 2010 12:12