Tate Hallaway's Blog, page 18
July 2, 2014
Wordpress Wednesday
Hah! I knew I'd figure out an alliteration! Speaking of silly language tricks, Mason and I have named our 15th MangaKast "15 - Ichi Go" because the hero of Bleach, Ichigo, is constantly seen wearing the number 15. It took me years of reading (and finally learning a bit of Japanese) to realize that it's a giant pun on his name because Ichi is the word for "one" and Go is "five" together his name makes 15.
http://mangakast.wordpress.com/2014/07/02/15-ichi-go/
So, of course I put up a picture of Renji who has nothing at all to do with the number 15. But, I really couldn't resist the fact that he's talking about chickens. Chickens is a funny thing at our house. One time, as we were snuggling before bed, Mason asked: "What do you want to talk about?" I said, "Chickens!" just to be a weirdo.
So now, every night before bed, we discuss something about chickens.
http://mangakast.wordpress.com/2014/07/02/15-ichi-go/
So, of course I put up a picture of Renji who has nothing at all to do with the number 15. But, I really couldn't resist the fact that he's talking about chickens. Chickens is a funny thing at our house. One time, as we were snuggling before bed, Mason asked: "What do you want to talk about?" I said, "Chickens!" just to be a weirdo.
So now, every night before bed, we discuss something about chickens.

Published on July 02, 2014 08:08
July 1, 2014
Tate Tuesday
Huh, I should have started posting this on a Wednesday so it could be "WattPad Wednesday" or something more alliterative. But, regardless, the newest section is up:
http://www.wattpad.com/57418191-unjust-cause-part-14-unnatural-unleashed
In "Unnatural Unleashed," Alex has to face the consequences unleashing her magic on Jack and his magpie familiar, Sarah Jane...
As usual, when you go to the site (or return here afterward), I would love any commentary you have, even if it's critical. I noted on the Wyrdsmiths' blog that the pacing for a serial-type novel is very different than writing a traditional novel. I took WattPad at their word when I signed up and have been tailoring these installments in very short, digestible chunks aimed at people who are using their smart/iPhones to read bits of things while commuting to work or wherever. I might be making these sections too short for other readers.
I will admit, as I have before, that I'm using this weekly deadline to make word count on a project that I've been struggling with. So, admittedly, much of what appears on-line is actually very first draft-y, very by the seat of my pants, oh-crap-is-it-Sunday-already??--which is also why I would love suggestions for improvement. The work posted there is being collected and massaged into an eventual e-book, so anything people have to say will actually help me write a better book (even if I can't go back and change what's on-line.)
http://www.wattpad.com/57418191-unjust-cause-part-14-unnatural-unleashed
In "Unnatural Unleashed," Alex has to face the consequences unleashing her magic on Jack and his magpie familiar, Sarah Jane...
As usual, when you go to the site (or return here afterward), I would love any commentary you have, even if it's critical. I noted on the Wyrdsmiths' blog that the pacing for a serial-type novel is very different than writing a traditional novel. I took WattPad at their word when I signed up and have been tailoring these installments in very short, digestible chunks aimed at people who are using their smart/iPhones to read bits of things while commuting to work or wherever. I might be making these sections too short for other readers.
I will admit, as I have before, that I'm using this weekly deadline to make word count on a project that I've been struggling with. So, admittedly, much of what appears on-line is actually very first draft-y, very by the seat of my pants, oh-crap-is-it-Sunday-already??--which is also why I would love suggestions for improvement. The work posted there is being collected and massaged into an eventual e-book, so anything people have to say will actually help me write a better book (even if I can't go back and change what's on-line.)
Published on July 01, 2014 12:07
June 30, 2014
Road Trip
Last night, I read this article: How to Solve an 88-Year-Old Literary Mystery by Susan Cheever. It talks about the limits of research, about how you can talk about a thing, read about it, interview people who know things or might even have been there... and still miss some critical detail.
It's a fascinating article in its own right, but it made me think about the fact that one of the things Wyrdsmiths told me to do for the novel I'm working on is take a road trip to Pierre, South Dakota.
I've spent a lot of time on Google Earth, walking around that town, but there's probably something I'm missing, some quality, that would stand out more if I went.
We joked about making it a group exercise. If that happened, I might go.
It's a fascinating article in its own right, but it made me think about the fact that one of the things Wyrdsmiths told me to do for the novel I'm working on is take a road trip to Pierre, South Dakota.
I've spent a lot of time on Google Earth, walking around that town, but there's probably something I'm missing, some quality, that would stand out more if I went.
We joked about making it a group exercise. If that happened, I might go.
Published on June 30, 2014 16:47
June 27, 2014
The Guilty Pleasure of Implement Porn....
Shawn has been looking for a journal to replace the one she keeps Mason's memories in. That sounds very science fictional doesn't it? But, in reality, it's just a kind of a baby book that's kept growing over the years. Shawn writes down little tidbits she'd like to remember or thinks should be noted for the future/future reference. The one she just filled upstarted in 2004.
Today, after her haircut, we decided to see what we could find to replace it. We went to the kinds of stores that specialized in fancy pens and papers and...
...of course, it was *me* who walked out with twenty dollars worth of STUFF.
Admit it (because you know it's true), paper and pens are like porn for writers. I will confess that have this particular love affair with quad lined notebooks. I filched my very first one from Shawn, back in our college days, when she would have to special order lab notebooks that were quad lined. Now you can find those pretty regularly at Target, and I usually buy myself a couple of the really cheap ones during the back to school sales.
At Wet Paint today, I found something I might be even more in love with "dotted" notebook paper.
Look how pretty!
The guy at the art store might have thought I was a little odd for petting it, but they DON'T UNDERSTAND.
Paper is very special to me.
I mean, maybe I *am* a bit weird, but I still love the feel of pen on paper. I find notebook writing still very useful. I've been known to carry a notebook around not only to take Captain America style notes, but also to have on hand should I be inspired somewhere where my computer isn't easily accessible--like, say, when I show up a little early at Mason's school for pick-up or whatever. Plus, even though it ends up messy and crossed out, I enjoy the constriction of having to write long-hand sometimes. I almost always edit when I transcribe to screen, but the act of having to push on and not worry about perfect phrasing can really help me get the gist of a scene out on paper.
Also I used to occasionally sketch out pictures of my characters and I found that a lot easier when I had quad or blank pages. Now... now I can haz dots!
Plus, I had to buy a pen. I had two in my hand, but Shawn made me put one back. I did get out with two notebooks though... hee hee.
I'm not sure non-artists understand this weird implement thing. I suppose it's like anything aesthetic, like a nice briefcase for work or a good pair of sexy shoes. Paper and pens are a bit cheaper, too... or at least can be. There are some people who are willing to pay a LOT for a really nice pen (luckily I'm a cheap date when it comes to pens.)
Today, after her haircut, we decided to see what we could find to replace it. We went to the kinds of stores that specialized in fancy pens and papers and...
...of course, it was *me* who walked out with twenty dollars worth of STUFF.
Admit it (because you know it's true), paper and pens are like porn for writers. I will confess that have this particular love affair with quad lined notebooks. I filched my very first one from Shawn, back in our college days, when she would have to special order lab notebooks that were quad lined. Now you can find those pretty regularly at Target, and I usually buy myself a couple of the really cheap ones during the back to school sales.
At Wet Paint today, I found something I might be even more in love with "dotted" notebook paper.

Look how pretty!
The guy at the art store might have thought I was a little odd for petting it, but they DON'T UNDERSTAND.
Paper is very special to me.
I mean, maybe I *am* a bit weird, but I still love the feel of pen on paper. I find notebook writing still very useful. I've been known to carry a notebook around not only to take Captain America style notes, but also to have on hand should I be inspired somewhere where my computer isn't easily accessible--like, say, when I show up a little early at Mason's school for pick-up or whatever. Plus, even though it ends up messy and crossed out, I enjoy the constriction of having to write long-hand sometimes. I almost always edit when I transcribe to screen, but the act of having to push on and not worry about perfect phrasing can really help me get the gist of a scene out on paper.
Also I used to occasionally sketch out pictures of my characters and I found that a lot easier when I had quad or blank pages. Now... now I can haz dots!
Plus, I had to buy a pen. I had two in my hand, but Shawn made me put one back. I did get out with two notebooks though... hee hee.
I'm not sure non-artists understand this weird implement thing. I suppose it's like anything aesthetic, like a nice briefcase for work or a good pair of sexy shoes. Paper and pens are a bit cheaper, too... or at least can be. There are some people who are willing to pay a LOT for a really nice pen (luckily I'm a cheap date when it comes to pens.)
Published on June 27, 2014 05:00
June 26, 2014
New in Ebook!

The penultimate novel in my AngeLINK series, Apocalypse Array, is out as an e-book from Wizard's Tower Press today. Believe it or not, this cyberpunk book was never previously released in e-book format. Now you can go get it.
It also has, as you can see, shiny new art from Bruce Jensen.
Published on June 26, 2014 14:54
June 25, 2014
New Podcast

Mason and I had a blast doing out 14th MangaKast: https://mangakast.wordpress.com/2014/06/25/fourteen-for-the-team/
Go check it out if you want to hear me babbling about manga without coffee--well, technically, I HAD a couple of cups, but... I felt like I was in a sitcom or something because, not finding any of the good stuff on the shelf, I simply ran water through the old filter. Yeah, that was just about as gross as you might imagine it would be.
Anyway, what I find fascinating about the podcast is that, unlike my WattPad project, I really could care less if no one listens. The process of making it with Mason is just so MUCH fun. So, you know, check it out... or not. I will keep doing this because I love it.
I only wish I felt that way about other things I do...
I wish I could figure that out.
At any rate, here's another screen shot from this week's Bleach (by Tite Kubo.)

Published on June 25, 2014 08:54
June 24, 2014
New Installment and Thoughts
My newest installment of UnJust Cause, my serialized work-in-progress is up:
I thought that maybe here on the thirteenth episode, I should take a moment and discuss my feelings/experiences working this way.
There are, for me, some distinct advantages to having a strict 'publishing' deadline. Having set myself a weekly goal of getting something up, some forward momentum made, is probably the only way I would have written as much as I have to-date. Considering the extent to which writing original fiction has been difficult for me in these last few years, this stands out as a HUGE benefit.
The disadvantage is that writing like this is also very seat-of-my-pants. If I go down a road, I'm committed to it. Revision is only going to be possible once the story is completed and ready to become an e-book. I'm already feeling places where I wish I could go back and restructure things a bit.
The way I've decided to deal with that is that I've handed out some of this to Wyrdsmiths with the idea that I can be concurrently working on a more polished draft for the e-book. Of course, the first-draft-y-ness of this serialization may ultimately turn off some readers. I'd been hoping, of course, for the kind of community that AO3 (archive of our own) gives a writer, where there might be a strong back-and-forth during the process, between the writer and the community of readers. I'm not getting anyone brave enough to point out my faults yet, and that really kind of bums me out.
This is, btw, one of the main reasons I don't come out on AO3 as a 'professional' writer. I have a feeling all the criticism would stop dead under the silly idea that 'well, she must know what she's doing,' which is of course not only nonsense, but which actually discourages me. I like the back and forth. I like knowing people are into a story enough to get mad about some turn of events or a moment that seems out of character or whatever.
*sigh*
Well, all the same, at least I'm writing. This is much more than I can say that I'd be doing without WattPad. So the experiment continues to be "profitable." We'll see if I'm able to grow an audience as I'd like to, and whether or not it will translate into e-book sales once everything is done and dusted.
Alex hasn't used her magic since she accidentally blinded Devon (the half-werewolf/half-vampire). Now, feeling cornered, she instinctively lashes out... at a friend.
http://www.wattpad.com/56251842-unjust-cause-part-13-a-dangerous-rush-of-power
I thought that maybe here on the thirteenth episode, I should take a moment and discuss my feelings/experiences working this way.
There are, for me, some distinct advantages to having a strict 'publishing' deadline. Having set myself a weekly goal of getting something up, some forward momentum made, is probably the only way I would have written as much as I have to-date. Considering the extent to which writing original fiction has been difficult for me in these last few years, this stands out as a HUGE benefit.
The disadvantage is that writing like this is also very seat-of-my-pants. If I go down a road, I'm committed to it. Revision is only going to be possible once the story is completed and ready to become an e-book. I'm already feeling places where I wish I could go back and restructure things a bit.
The way I've decided to deal with that is that I've handed out some of this to Wyrdsmiths with the idea that I can be concurrently working on a more polished draft for the e-book. Of course, the first-draft-y-ness of this serialization may ultimately turn off some readers. I'd been hoping, of course, for the kind of community that AO3 (archive of our own) gives a writer, where there might be a strong back-and-forth during the process, between the writer and the community of readers. I'm not getting anyone brave enough to point out my faults yet, and that really kind of bums me out.
This is, btw, one of the main reasons I don't come out on AO3 as a 'professional' writer. I have a feeling all the criticism would stop dead under the silly idea that 'well, she must know what she's doing,' which is of course not only nonsense, but which actually discourages me. I like the back and forth. I like knowing people are into a story enough to get mad about some turn of events or a moment that seems out of character or whatever.
*sigh*
Well, all the same, at least I'm writing. This is much more than I can say that I'd be doing without WattPad. So the experiment continues to be "profitable." We'll see if I'm able to grow an audience as I'd like to, and whether or not it will translate into e-book sales once everything is done and dusted.
Published on June 24, 2014 09:03
June 23, 2014
What I'm Reading....
I probably haven't mentioned this here yet, but I've taken an extremely part-time job at the Ramsey County Libraries as a "sub," (which they, quite charmingly call "itinerant page" a job title that makes me feel like it ought to come with tights, a tunic, and a lute.) It pays well, but I work very random hours. So one of the biggest benefits for me is exposure to all the books, etc.
On Saturday I worked at Maplewood (one of my favorites partly due to their astounding manga collection). While I was there, I noticed a two volume manga set marked as "new." It was called No.6.
Yesterday, while cooking our annual fleischkuekle batches, I read both volumes and started in on the remaining chapters at MangaPanda.
So, I ended up writing a review of it this morning: https://mangakast.wordpress.com/2014/06/23/review-no-6/
And... I just got a call from my sub coordinator, and it looks like I'll be working there again tonight! Yay! More manga!
On Saturday I worked at Maplewood (one of my favorites partly due to their astounding manga collection). While I was there, I noticed a two volume manga set marked as "new." It was called No.6.
Yesterday, while cooking our annual fleischkuekle batches, I read both volumes and started in on the remaining chapters at MangaPanda.
So, I ended up writing a review of it this morning: https://mangakast.wordpress.com/2014/06/23/review-no-6/
And... I just got a call from my sub coordinator, and it looks like I'll be working there again tonight! Yay! More manga!
Published on June 23, 2014 09:16
June 22, 2014
Poetry Market
I'm not much of a poet, but maybe some of you are. If you have some speculative poetry you've been wondering if there's a paying market for, there is: http://www.liminalitypoetry.com/?page_id=6
During national poetry month, I did, by chance, write a haiku. I have no idea if it's quite what this market is looking for, since it's not terribly speculative, but I thought what the hey! and sent it.
Wish me luck. And luck to anyone else who might submit!
During national poetry month, I did, by chance, write a haiku. I have no idea if it's quite what this market is looking for, since it's not terribly speculative, but I thought what the hey! and sent it.
Wish me luck. And luck to anyone else who might submit!
Published on June 22, 2014 07:47
June 20, 2014
Will Review for Books
Today I got the strangest e-mail on my hotmail account from these folks: http://www.bloggingforbooks.org
They seemed to be under the mistaken impression that I was a blogger of note. Maybe, it's just that not a lot of people blog at all anymore and so the pool of names to pick from is very, very tiiiiiiiny. Because, let's be straight with one another, I haven't blogged here with any regularly since the Late Jurassic. So, it can't be THIS site that got them interested, especially since it's very obviously connected to my gmail address (I don't actually think you can use blogspot without gmail.) The Wyrdsmiths blog, likewise, is gmail connected and fairly static, so.. that kind of leaves LJ (Live Journal) which would make ZERO sense.
My Facebook and Klout accounts attach to my dusty hotmail address, as do my super-static web pages. But again... WTF? Really?
I still think you'd have to be high or desperate (or both!) to count me as any kind of influential book recommender.
Regardless of how they got to me and whether I'm really what they want, we're talking about FREE BOOKS. They're willing to send me review copies if I'll post honest reviews on their site (and presumably link the review to all my social media places.) So, what the hey... I signed up. I've requested my first book-- a graphic novel by the same guy who did World War Z called "Harlem Hellcats" (I think.) It's a historical graphic novel about a WWII black regiment and their struggles on and off the battlefield. I actually read something about this somewhere else (a Random House tweet, maybe?) and thought it sounded interesting.
So you might be hearing more about the things I'm reading here and elsewhere.
They seemed to be under the mistaken impression that I was a blogger of note. Maybe, it's just that not a lot of people blog at all anymore and so the pool of names to pick from is very, very tiiiiiiiny. Because, let's be straight with one another, I haven't blogged here with any regularly since the Late Jurassic. So, it can't be THIS site that got them interested, especially since it's very obviously connected to my gmail address (I don't actually think you can use blogspot without gmail.) The Wyrdsmiths blog, likewise, is gmail connected and fairly static, so.. that kind of leaves LJ (Live Journal) which would make ZERO sense.
My Facebook and Klout accounts attach to my dusty hotmail address, as do my super-static web pages. But again... WTF? Really?
I still think you'd have to be high or desperate (or both!) to count me as any kind of influential book recommender.
Regardless of how they got to me and whether I'm really what they want, we're talking about FREE BOOKS. They're willing to send me review copies if I'll post honest reviews on their site (and presumably link the review to all my social media places.) So, what the hey... I signed up. I've requested my first book-- a graphic novel by the same guy who did World War Z called "Harlem Hellcats" (I think.) It's a historical graphic novel about a WWII black regiment and their struggles on and off the battlefield. I actually read something about this somewhere else (a Random House tweet, maybe?) and thought it sounded interesting.
So you might be hearing more about the things I'm reading here and elsewhere.
Published on June 20, 2014 10:05