Twitter will be taking away blue-check verification from those, like me, who won’t pay $8 a month for what will become a useless tool.
This post exists to
verify that, yes, I’m who I say I amlist where else you can find me online
So, hello! This is me, Nicola Griffith, writer and queer crip (see About for more). Here’s where you can find me:
My blog and website—where you are now, reading this. Starting in 1995 I began Ask Nicola, a subsite of a website run by friend Dave Slusher. In 2001 I launched nicolagriffith.com, and in 2008 started a blog, also Ask Nicola. In 2014 I consolidated everything into this site. I post whenever I feel like it—sometimes often, sometimes rarely. Take a look at the
Top 15 posts of the last year and you’ll get a sense of my range of interests. If you like what you see, sign up to get new posts sent directly to your inbox.
Twitter—the place I’m most likely to see what other people say and interact online. I mostly work through curated lists of early medieval history, disability, life sciences, and books. Over the last few years I’ve become less politically engaged. Facebook—both a
personal profile and an
official page, though my page is sadly neglected (right now it mirrors posts from my research blog, Gemaecce.com).
Research blog—
gemaecce.com, which I started in 2008 to have a place to put ruminations on the research I do for my sequence of novels about the seventh-century figure, Hild of Whitby. This goes through phases. I can go a year with no post, then when a book approaches publication, or when I’m in the initial, intense phase of research for a new book, post in a hurry and flurry.
Instagram—where I post pictures of books, and drinks, and cats, and Kelley on an irregular schedule.YouTube—where I’ve posted a miscellany of videos, mostly to
Blow Shit Up!, my playlist of FX vids, and
Readings, which is, well, me reading from and talking about my books. There are also a
few music videos—of Janes Plane, the band I fronted in the Long Ago.
LinkedIn—which just mirrors my blog.
Tumblr—ditto.
Muckrack—where I sometimes remember to add portfolio links to Op-Eds, newspaper reviews, and essays I’ve written.Author pages on
Amazon and
Goodreads—but I rarely do anything with them.I also have placeholder accounts on Mastodon, Spoutible, TikTok, Post, Medium and many others—whenever a new thing comes along I sign up, just in case, but rarely bother to establish any kind of presence there. As and when that changes I’ll link the accounts.