Jane Lindskold's Blog, page 80
January 5, 2018
FF: Capering into Adventure
Over the holidays, I found myself enjoying books that were a little on the lighter side, but with the new year, adventure beckons.
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Ogapoge’s Desert Dream
For those of you just discovering this part of my blog, the Friday Fragments lists what I’ve read over the past week. Most of the time I don’t include details of either short fiction (unless part of a book-length collection) or magazines.
The Fragments are not meant to be a recommendation list. If you’re interested in a not-at-all-inclusive recommendation list, you can look on my website under Neat Stuff.
Once again, this is not a book review column. It’s just a list with, maybe, a bit of description or a few opinions tossed in.
Recently Completed:
The Crown Jewels by Walter Jon Williams.
The Hammer of Thor: Magnus Chase and The Gods of Asgard, by Rick Riordan. Audiobook. Reader did improve as he continued, but I might not have continued if I wasn’t already a fan of the author’s work.
Tricky Twenty-two by Janet Evanovich. Audiobook.
House of Shards by Walter Jon Williams. Much more of a farce than the first book, but still enjoyable.
In Progress:
The Wind in His Heart by Charles de Lint. Just started. This was one of my Christmas presents, much anticipated!
First Test: Protector of the Small, Book One. Audiobook. Re-read. I don’t think I’ve done these as an audiobook, but I love this series. I have a cat named Keladry for the heroine.
Also:
Wolf’s Head, Wolf’s Heart by Jane Lindskold. Getting back into the flow. The only problem with proofing is I can’t just snuggle down and enjoy.


January 4, 2018
TT: Fragmenting Fandom
JANE: Alan and I want to welcome you all to 2018! Happy New Year!
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Fragmentation in Action
And now, Alan, you were saying that Fandom has changed a lot over the decades. How so?
ALAN: Fandom used to be a monolithic thing, but these days it has fragmented into a lot of special interest sub-groups, most of which have a vague connection to, and all of which are inspired by, Science Fiction and Fantasy. Such fans are very passionate about their interests. And some of their interests are influenced by things other than straightforward SF/F stories and novels…
JANE: One of the earliest subgroups of fandom reflects how important fandom as a way of life became to many people. Can you guess what this might be?
ALAN: An early subgroup? I’d guess you are probably talking about First Fandom…
JANE: That’s it!
First Fandom has been around since 1958, when various people started realizing that they’d been involved in fandom for at least twenty years. First Fandom members have their own shoulder patch and are very proud of their long-time participation in various fanacs.
First Fandom member Jack Speer, who was widely regarded as a historian of fandom, regularly attended Bubonicon. He’d sit in the front row during panels, glowering at the panelists. I really felt I had “arrived” when he complimented me on something I’d said, because the younger you were (and newer to fandom), the harder it was for you to please him.
But other than their shoulder patch, First Fandom wouldn’t have changed the general look or feel of SF/F conventions very much. Indeed, one might argue that some members of First Fandom would have been dedicated to not having anything change.
You’ve been involved in Fandom for a long time and in several countries. What sub-fandom began to change the look of conventions?
ALAN: I think there’s a couple of influences here. In the UK and (as I later discovered) in Australia and New Zealand, there are flourishing fan groups dedicated to the British TV programme Doctor Who. The New Zealand group is particularly active and has even discovered a couple of “lost” episodes lurking in private collections. (In the early days, the BBC did not keep archives of their programmes and many programmes disappeared.) Is the programme shown in America? Does it have an organised fandom there?
JANE: Absolutely! The latest reboot of the show has invigorated the fandom quite a lot.
ALAN: And then we have Star Trek which was (and still is) a hugely popular TV programme that introduced a great many people to SF in particular and to fandom in general. It wasn’t long before it had a dedicated fandom all of its own, though the overlap with what I suppose you might call “standard” SF fandom was large.
JANE: Star Trek fandom was the first one I heard about. For a long time, I didn’t realize that SF fandom was anything else.
ALAN: When I first came to New Zealand I discovered a flourishing fan base that called itself STANZA – the Star Trek Association of New Zealand. It no longer exists (at least not under that name, which is a pity because I think it’s a clever name) but in its day it had a lot of members. In collaboration with a group of people who enjoyed building models, STANZA constructed a full size model of the bridge of the Enterprise which they used in role-playing scenarios. The bridge set was far too large to remain permanently assembled, and so it spent most of its life in small pieces in people’s cellars. But it appeared on special occasions.
JANE: That sounds cool!
ALAN: One year David Gerrold (who was a Star Trek scriptwriter) was a guest at our national convention and the set was assembled in his honour. A small play was written and performed. Gerrold was most impressed and he complimented the two groups responsible for the set. He even autographed a section of it…
I have no idea where the bridge set is these days. It seems to have faded away and I haven’t seen it for years. Pity…
JANE: From what I’ve heard, Star Trek fandom was one of the first fandoms here to separate itself from the main. People would show up at cons wearing Spock ears and the like. This would have been fine, but many of these people clearly had no interests in anything but the show, which alienated them from the convention at large.
ALAN: That’s a very real danger – and now that a lot of different fandoms have started to appear, many people believe that we really need to start thinking about how to handle the problem.
I don’t know how it works in other countries, but here in New Zealand we have a couple of SF/F clubs (for want of a better word) which have come up with a solution that handles this fragmentation in a very clever way. Special Interest Groups flourish under the overall umbrella of the club organisation so that people with minority interests can continue to indulge themselves in their obsessions without losing sight of the larger group of which they are also a part.
JANE: My impression is that this is the case here in New Mexico, as well. But I think that in areas with larger populations, separate clubs flourish outside of the general organization.
ALAN: Perhaps we’re lucky that we have a small enough population to sustain the model.
The clubs also organise monthly, more general SF/F events which attract people from across these groups, to a greater or lesser extent. Though that, of course, depends very much on what the monthly meeting is about. But at least it’s a good opportunity for everybody to keep in touch.
There are also monthly parties which are, of course, just an excuse to eat, drink, make merry, and be sociable. The stereotype says that SF fans are not good in social situations. There may be a degree of truth in this, but I’ve always found that when they gather together as a group, they tend to feel less threatened and will often come out of their shells. These parties are very successful in bringing people from the Special Interest Groups together. Sometimes we even talk about science fiction at them!
The clubs publish a regular fanzine which reports on the activities of the Special Interest Groups, so there’s still a sense that we are all part of the same family. The model works very well.
JANE: What you describe sounds very similar to what I have seen here in the U.S. However, there is a serpent, even in fannish paradise. I wonder if it lurks there, too?
ALAN: Why don’t you whisper the secret in my ear? That way nobody will get scared.
JANE: Whisper. Whisper.
ALAN: Ah! Let’s talk about that next time.


January 3, 2018
Inspiration and Calendars
On New Year’s Day, I ritually opened my two wall calendars for 2018. The one that’s going in the kitchen where I’ll see it every day and where it will serve as command central for Jim and my life over the next year is the annual Julie Bell and Boris Vallejo Fantasy calendar.
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This Year’s Selection
I chose this one for several reasons. One is that Julie Bell is the cover artist for the Firekeeper novels, and much of this year is going to be centered around the Firekeeper Saga. As many of you already know, I’m in the process of writing Wolf’s Search, the seventh Firekeeper novel. I’m also preparing the first six novels for an updated e-book release.
Julie Bell very kindly offered me a deal that will enable me to use her artwork for both the e-books and for Wolf’s Search, so having her art where I can see it every day will remind me that unexpected good things can happen.
I’ve also had a liking for Boris Vallejo’s art since those days of yore when a bonus for membership in the Science Fiction book club included bookplates featuring “Golden Wings,” his wonderful painting of a warrior woman riding a winged horse. I’m certain that looking at his and Julie’s artwork daily will remind me of that younger, dreamier, more optimistic me. I’m going to need that this year.
My office calendar is completely different. It features brightly-colored mosaic cartoons, mostly of owls, although several other forest animals are included. Some pages incorporate brief inspirational sayings like “It Takes Courage to Fly” or “Have Patience and the Storm Will Pass.” Since in 2018 I’m definitely flying in different skies – starting with the self-publication of my novel Asphodel either in late January or early February – I’ll appreciate the reminders that I’m not the only person who needs encouragement.
After all, sayings like these wouldn’t end up printed on calendars if the need was unique, right?
A bonus to my office calendar is that the mosaic approach is something I want to try in several of my own art/craft projects, so seeing these images every day will remind me of something I’m looking forward to pursuing further.
Last year’s experiment with using a bullet journal went very well, and I’ll be continuing using one this year. One thing I learned is how important it is to date entries. I did some of this last year, but I’ll be doing even more in 2018.
For example, I was very down on myself for the lack of progress I was making in getting Asphodel out. Then I went back to the page dedicated to that book in the journal and realized that at this time last year I hadn’t even finished my revisions, nor had I begun the final proofing, which included several months reading the manuscript aloud to a group of friends. Suddenly, rather than feeling as if I’d been slacking, I realized how much I had achieved in a relatively short span of time.
When you work for yourself, it’s really easy to lose perspective.
Now it’s time for me to go write fiction… Catch you later!


December 29, 2017
FF: Reading on the Road
As we were on the road this past week, driving to and from Arizona, we let audiobooks fill the long hours.
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Ogapoge Tries to Open the Box
For those of you just discovering this part of my blog, the Friday Fragments lists what I’ve read over the past week. Most of the time I don’t include details of either short fiction (unless part of a book-length collection) or magazines.
The Fragments are not meant to be a recommendation list. If you’re interested in a not-at-all-inclusive recommendation list, you can look on my website under Neat Stuff.
Once again, this is not a book review column. It’s just a list with, maybe, a bit of description or a few opinions tossed in.
Recently Completed:
Top Secret Twenty-one by Janet Evanovich. Audiobook. This one was pretty good.
The Long Sunset by Jack McDevitt. Advanced review copy of the April 2018 release. Should we let fear rule us? Will aliens be truly alien?
In Progress:
The Crown Jewels by Walter Jon Williams. P.G. Wodehouse meets Jane Austen meets crime caper. Very amusing.
The Hammer of Thor: Magnus Chase and The Gods of Asgard. Audiobook. Just started. New reader. Not very good quality. Let’s see if it improves.
Tricky Twenty-two by Janet Evanovich. Audiobook. Didn’t quite finish while on the road.
Also:
Wolf’s Head, Wolf’s Heart by Jane Lindskold. One hour a day, proofing for new e-book release. Didn’t get much done over the holiday on this.


December 28, 2017
TT: Fact or Fiction? The SF Fan
JANE: What’s interesting to me is how the SF/F fan is perceived by those outside of the culture. Many years ago, a friend who was not a fan came to get me after a World Fantasy convention. As I climbed into her car, she said: “I knew I was in the right place because there were so many people wearing black.”
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A Random Bubonicon Moment
Well, the odd thing was, the reason so many people were wearing black had nothing to do with the fact that this was an SF/F event. World Fantasy is one of the rare conventions that holds its awards ceremony on the last day of the convention. The reason so many people were wearing black was because they were dressed up. Much formal wear, including suits for men and the classic “little black dress” for women, is black!
ALAN: Ah! Clash of the Stereotypes! SF and Fantasy fans. Now there’s a group of people who get stereotyped if ever there was one – especially since many SF/F fans are both nerds and/or geeks. Pelion piled upon Ossa! But I think that SF/F fandom also exhibits what I suspect is a unique social phenomenon – the fan who is obsessed with being a fan and who has little or no interest in SF/F itself. I like to think of these people as meta-fans.
JANE: I agree the meta-fan is unique. When I attended my very first convention, Lunacon had a “Fan Guest of Honor” – Dave Kyle, if I remember correctly. I had to have the concept of a Fan explained to me then.
However, I’m not sure I’d say these meta-fans have little or no interest in SF/F itself. I’d say that their initial interest in some aspect of the genre has evolved to being an interest in participating in a special sub-culture.
ALAN: I suspect that’s probably true. After all, something has to bring you in to that world in the first place. But once you were there, in the pre-internet days at least, being a fan could take up the whole of your day. Fanzines circulated widely, and dedicated fans spent their time writing letters of comment (LOCs) to fanzine editors and publishing letters from their friends in their own fanzines. All this fannish activity left little time for reading new books or for watching new movies. I have a friend who is widely regarded as a Big Name Fan (BNF) from that era, but these days he seldom if ever reads an SF/F book. He actually spends his non-fandom time listening to jazz instead…
JANE: But did he start as a reader or movie viewer? If he didn’t, what drew him into fandom?
ALAN: He started as a reader. His proudest possession is a first edition Gnome Press hardback set of Isaac Asimov’s Foundation trilogy which must be worth a small fortune now. I kept bumping into him at British conventions, though we only had a nodding acquaintance with each other then. I did notice that he seemed to be on first name terms with Brian Aldiss and Harry Harrison, and he was constantly taking photographs.
When I moved to New Zealand, I found that he was living just down the road from me and that was when we got to know each other a bit better. He showed me his slides from British cons and, sure enough, he had photographs of me!
JANE: Something that fascinated me about fandom as I learned more about it was that it had an elaborate vocabulary of its own. Let’s see what I can remember. Fanac was short for “Fan Activity,” such as publishing a fanzine. “Zine” was short for fanzine, which in turn was short for “fan magazine.”
ALAN: That’s right – and don’t forget LOC and BNF which I used (and interpreted) before. Related to BNF is SMOF, or secret master of fandom. These are the people who run big conventions, like Worldcon.
JANE: I know several SMOF. Nice, hardworking people, overall.
Another interesting piece of fannish vocabulary is “egoboo.” When I first heard, it I was completely baffled. Was it a sort of ghost? A side effect of catching con crud?
I then learned that “egoboo” was short for “ego boost.” This, as one hard-working fan explained to me, is the only currency that the largely volunteer organizers receive for their hard labor. She went on to say that egoboo (or the lack thereof, or someone stealing someone else’s) was the main reason for nasty feuds among fans.
ALAN: Smofs get lots of egoboo. I suspect that’s generally why they do it.
JANE: There was even a term for those who left fandom – gafiate – which was a semi-acronym for “getting away from it all.” It’s still in use, at least among older fans. When I was Guest of Honor at MileHiCon in October, I asked after a Colorado fan who always used to come to Bubonicon. The response was, “Oh, I still see him every week, but he’s more or less gafiated.”
ALAN: And don’t forget fiawol (fandom is a way of life), a lovely word used to describe the meta-fans whose original interest in SF/F now takes second place to their fanac. The sneering response, of course, is usually fijagh – fandom is just a god-damned hobby.
JANE: Wow! I’d never heard “fijagh.” Arguments in acronyms.
We’ve been talking about Fandom as if it’s a monolith but, while it started that way, it’s fragmented. Maybe next time we can talk about some of the sub-fandoms and the way they have transformed conventions.


December 27, 2017
It’s Never Too Late
A belated Merry Christmas to you all… We’re back from spending the holiday in Arizona with my mom, aunt, and a plethora of cousins.
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Cookie-Press Butter Cookies
Before Christmas – when I mentioned that I was trying a new (to me) butter cookie recipe – some folks asked whether, if it worked out, would I share the recipe. It did and I will.
Sure, it’s after Christmas, but is there ever a wrong time of year for butter cookies? These cookies are shaped using a cookie press. Mine (a Wilton Preferred Press cookie press) includes disks for hearts, flowers, a pumpkin, and what I’m pretty sure is a Thanksgiving turkey. If that isn’t a hint that it’s never too late to make butter cookies, then I don’t know what is.
One of the difficulties of cookie press cookies is that if the dough is too soft, the cookies will not hold their shape, and the dough will come out of the press in lumps and gobs. For this reason, many cookie press recipes are heavy on flour and, consequently, taste like solidified library paste. Therefore, the dough is often colored with food coloring, maybe so you’ll ignore the lack of flavor.
This recipe works best if you allow time for it to firm up for the fifteen to twenty minutes that puts it in the Goldilocks Zone of neither too warm (soft and sticky) or too cold (hard as a rock and certain to break your press).
The following recipe is adapted from an article published in The Washington Post, December 4, 2002. Yes. That’s the right date. It took me over a decade to get around to trying these. The author is Elinor Klivan, whose book Fearless Baking was a new release at that time.
Now, without further chatter… Cookie-Press Butter Cookies:
2 sticks unsalted butter at room temperature.
2/3 cup sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt (Note from Jane: If you use salted butter, just skip this salt)
2 large egg yolks
2 tsp vanilla extract
Colored sugar for decorating (optional) (Note from Jane: Go light on this to accent the cookies, not cover the details.)
Beat together butter, sugar, and salt until blended and smooth. (I use an electric mixer, but this should be doable by hand as well.)
Blend in egg yolks and vanilla. Gradually add the flour until dough is evenly mixed. Don’t worry! The completed dough should be slightly sticky. Chill dough as noted above.
Preheat oven to 350. (If you’re going to chill the dough, then shape the cookies, time your oven heating accordingly! Why waste energy?)
Get out cookie sheets. Note: DO NOT grease, or cookies will not adhere to the surface when extruded from the cookie press. Select your disk of choice. Pack dough into cookie press, following instructions for your press. Follow cookie press directions to shape cookies.
Sprinkle colored sugar on before baking. (Note from Jane: My experience is that with shapes that have a holes in them, like the wreath, you end up with as much sugar on the cookie sheet as on the cookie, so I didn’t add ornamental sugar to those.)
Let cool, then enjoy!


December 22, 2017
FF: Visions of Sugarplums
Guess what? Reading recipes is fun. I took a book of cookie recipes to bed with me and dreamed of baking. Does that qualify as “visions of sugarplums?” In this case, visions of hermits. I may have found a new favorite non-chocolate cookie.
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Ziggy Reads The Long Sunset
For those of you just discovering this part of my blog, the Friday Fragments lists what I’ve read over the past week. Most of the time I don’t include details of either short fiction (unless part of a book-length collection) or magazines.
The Fragments are not meant to be a recommendation list. If you’re interested in a not-at-all-inclusive recommendation list, you can look on my website under Neat Stuff.
Once again, this is not a book review column. It’s just a list with, maybe, a bit of description or a few opinions tossed in.
Recently Completed:
The Secret Adversary by Agatha Christie. Audiobooks. Also two of her rediscovered short stories.
In Progress:
The Long Sunset by Jack McDevitt. Advanced review copy of the April 2018 release.
The Hammer of Thor: Magnus Chase and The Gods of Asgard. Audiobook. Just started.
Wolf’s Head, Wolf’s Heart by Jane Lindskold. One hour a day, proofing for new e-book release. And, almost embarrassed to admit this, really enjoying!
Also:
I had to stop listening to the audiobook of All the Crooked Saints by Maggie Stiefvater because some of the choices made either by the reader or the director drove me nuts. I will be reading the book, but the audio… I know I’m not the only one to be turned off by it!


December 21, 2017
TT: A Nerd Is A Nerd Is A…
JANE: Last time, when we were discussing stereotypes associated with people who are good with computers, I found myself reflecting how what people mean by “nerd” and “geek” has changed.
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Geeking Out
When I was a kid, there was absolutely nothing complimentary about the term “nerd.” It conjured an abstract image of someone who wore thick glasses; who dressed not just unfashionably, but with no sense of what would look remotely good; and who was completely socially inept.
Did the word have the same meaning in England?
ALAN: I don’t think so – but I’m not really sure. When I was at school we certainly knew people of that type, but I can’t remember if we had a word to describe them. Or maybe we called them “drips”. That rings faint bells…
The internet, that infallible source of all knowledge, tells me that nerd first appeared in American teenage slang in the 1950s. So it probably didn’t migrate to English slang until quite some time later, after I left school.
JANE: Then there’s “geek.” I’m not really sure when that word started showing up. Its meaning was slightly more complimentary than nerd, since “geek” usually implied some intellectual capacity. Nerds could be stupid, as well as all the rest, but geeks were nerds with brains.
ALAN: Geek is a very interesting word. I first came across it in a short story (I think it was a Fredric Brown story, but I won’t swear to that) where it was used to describe a carnival sideshow where someone bit the head off a live chicken. Wikipedia tells me that the word derives from the Middle Low German work geck meaning a fool or a freak and that geek shows where performers used their teeth to decapitate chickens, rats, lizards and goodness knows what else were quite common in nineteenth-century North American circuses and travelling carnivals.
JANE: Urrgh…
ALAN: Quite how the word moved on from that rather disgusting origin to acquire its current meaning seems to be something of a mystery. Again, Wikipedia informs me that the only definition of geek in the 1975 American Heritage Dictionary was the carnival performer. So its current meaning must be a relatively recent formation. Perhaps from the early 1980s? Obviously I’m just guessing here.
JANE: Maybe some of our readers can fill us in on when and how the transition happened.
Going back to nerds for a moment, a few years ago, when I was comparing high school experiences with some friends who are a good bit younger than I am, one of them said, when explaining how their group had not fit in with the other students, “Basically, we were nerds.”
I was distinctly startled. I’d known these people, at least in passing, at that point in their lives. They certainly hadn’t fit my idea of what a “nerd” was. Eventually, I realized that the word “nerd” had become conflated with “geek,” and that even “geek” was considered more complimentary than it had been. The words remained the same, but the meaning, and therefore the stereotype, had shifted.
I’m not sure what words are currently used for the former nerds and geeks. Maybe in this politically correct modern world, the stereotype has vanished.
ALAN: I don’t think the stereotype has vanished, it’s just gained a bit of respectability.
JANE: That does seem to be the case. Even mainstream catalogs now have shirts with slogans that proclaim geek culture.
A popular SF/F blogsite I follow is called Black Girl Nerds. “Geeking out” about something simply means becoming very interested in it – rather as the word “fanatic” (which had very negative connotations) morphed into the more acceptable “fan.”
ALAN: The obvious area where this applies would be sports. When I was a child, my mother and father were fanatical watchers of the Wimbledon tennis tournaments. When the season started they drew the curtains to shut the world away, and huddled themselves around the television. We ate sandwiches for every meal because sandwiches were quick to prepare and therefore didn’t interfere with the tennis too much. Nobody thought my parents were strange for behaving like this…
Here in New Zealand both rugby and cricket are followed so fanatically that sometimes people joke that they amount to a religion – and the joke only works because there’s more than a degree of truth in it. Shortly after I first moved here, there was a crisis in the Middle East (just like always), and the Israeli air force bombed an Iraqi nuclear facility. The headline on the front page of the newspaper here was: “Young Man Dies of Rugby Injury”.
JANE: Fans, of course, are found in many areas of interest, although off the cuff I can’t think of any other area than sports that uses the term “fan” to identify its membership. Knitters, for example, can be fanatical, but they don’t call themselves “fans.”
ALAN: People often have very strong feelings about the kind of music they enjoy. Personally, I have quite eclectic tastes, but nevertheless I would certainly describe myself as a folk music fan, particularly when it overlaps with pretentious progressive rock! I have a friend who is so fanatical about heavy metal music that he has been known to travel to the far end of the country just to attend a live concert.
JANE: Yes! Fan definitely applies to music as well. I’m certain our readers will have some suggestions as to other areas.
We’re into the dangerous TL/DR zone, so let’s save the engrossing subject of the SF/F fan for next time!


December 20, 2017
Have Yourselves a Merry…
Right now I have a bunch of projects going. If you’re a regular reader of these Wanderings, you can skip the next three paragraphs.
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Wolf Cookie In Its Native Habitat
The most time-sensitive project is finishing off production for my novel, Asphodel, which I’m hoping to release in January. I chose to self-publish Asphodel because it’s a bit odd and finding the right publisher might have taken years. Sooner rather than later or maybe never seemed the right way to go.
I’m also working on putting together new e-books for “The Firekeeper Saga.” Last April, Tor Books courteously reverted to me the rights to most of my works with them. Since readers had complained that the Tor-produced e-books suffered from a lack of proofing, I’m putting out new editions. The cover art will still be by Julie Bell, but with different design elements. As a bonus, each book will include an original afterward about some aspect of the series.
Side by side with the above, I’m also writing a new Firekeeper novel: Wolf’s Search. I’ve been handwriting a bit every day. Pretty soon I’ll have the first story arc done. Then I’ll type that up, which will give me a chance to review, while meditating on details of the second part.
So how do I keep from crumpling up and becoming overwhelmed, especially now that I have holiday preparations taking over all my remaining available time?
What I’ve realized recently is that I need to remember the fun part. I really love writing. Not just “having written,” but seeing a story evolve, getting surprised by a twist in the plot. When I started doing self-publishing, I’ll admit, I wasn’t crazy about it. Now I’m growing to enjoy having some influence on both internal and cover design. I’m very excited by Asphodel and can’t wait to share it with you all.
As for the holidays… I really like the frills and flourishes of this time of year. Jim and I don’t have any kids. This year we won’t have any holiday visitors. But nonetheless we’ve been decorating. We’ve even added a couple of new wreaths, one of which hangs on my office door where I can see it as I work, the other of which is on our bedroom door.
Although it’s a lot of extra work, I honestly enjoy sending out Christmas cards. It’s a way of touching base with people I care about, as well as reminding myself how lucky I am to have so many interesting people in my life – some of whom have remained part of it for decades.
I really enjoy baking holiday cookies. This year I’ve had to trim back on the more time-consuming cookies than before, but I’m going to do those as New Year’s cookies. Meantime, last Sunday, Jim and I settled in and did the most complicated cookies of the lot: the frosted sugar cookies. Ours never quite look like the usual… I’m contemplating doing more sometime in the new year because I didn’t make nearly enough cats. Or guinea pigs. Or the fox…
As I’ve mused over this, I’ve realized that there’s an aspect of American culture that validates complaining. A person who is happy is somehow lesser. To get respect, you need to complain about how overworked you are, how tense, miserable, underappreciated, and all the rest.
Sure, not everything went as I might have hoped this past year, but disappointments aren’t what define me unless I choose to let them do so. Meantime, I have wolves roaming in Christmas cookies forest!
Merry, merry, merry to you all!


December 15, 2017
FF: Holiday Competition
I haven’t been able to read – especially print – as much as I like. When I’m not writing Wolf’s Search or proofing the final stages of Asphodel, I’m writing Christmas cards, wrapping presents, and fantasizing about baking cookies. (Maybe this weekend…)
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The Desert Willow Outside My Office
For those of you just discovering this part of my blog, the Friday Fragments lists what I’ve read over the past week. Most of the time I don’t include details of either short fiction (unless part of a book-length collection) or magazines.
The Fragments are not meant to be a recommendation list. If you’re interested in a not-at-all-inclusive recommendation list, you can look on my website under Neat Stuff.
Once again, this is not a book review column. It’s just a list with, maybe, a bit of description or a few opinions tossed in.
Recently Completed:
Quillifer by Walter Jon Williams.
The Sword of Summer: Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard, Book One by Rick Riordan. Audiobook. A re-listen.
In Progress:
The Long Sunset by Jack McDevitt. Advanced review copy of the April 2018 release.
All the Crooked Saints by Maggie Stiefvater. Audiobook.
Also:
Not much!

