Always & Forever Awesome

AlwaysOver at Bookslut, Colleen Mondor has given a rave review to Nicola Griffith’s fabulous Always. As you might recall, it’s my pick for the LitBlog Co-op for this round, which is coming up very, very soon. In earlyish August, actually, we’ll kick off the discussion. If you’d like to be in on that, either with a post at your own site or some other grand or teeny plan, please let me know. Drop a comment here or send me an email (link up and to the right). Danke!

And if you haven’t read it yet, there’s still plenty of time to do so and join the talkity talk.

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Monday Hangovers

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Two Links

1. Kelly wrote a little piece for Salon with predictions about the final Harry Potter, including those of Gavin, Karen Fowler, Cecil, Jed, Holly and Steve Berman. (Hers is the second piece.) And Liz Hand also wrote a wonderful one; supernatural wedding planners are the next big thing. (Hers is fourth.) Now, I imagine most of these people are at Readercon, with even more people I adore — I hope you are all having too much fun. We’ll see some of you soonish, at least.

2. Kara Jesella, one half of the writing team of the utterly fabulous How Sassy Changed My Life (see Read Read sidebar for my take), writes about the hipping of librarians for the NYT. I find myself wondering if it’s true that librarians used to be less hip, or if that cliche was always just a cliche. Also, I didn’t see a single public librarian in the piece, but still, I loved reading about all the various drinks of the included librarians. I love the idea of coding drinks by book names. More though, I’m curious what the actual librarians among us think about all this. (And your drinks of choice.)

And a p.s. We saw the new Die Hard movie last night and it was great. Seriously.

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Poetry Friday: Rejection

(This one’s for you, Coll — chin up.) You can read more of Philip Dacey‘s work at his web site.

Form Rejection Letter
by Philip Dacey

We are sorry we cannot use the enclosed.
We are returning it to you.
We do not mean to imply anything by this.
We would prefer not to be pinned down about this matter.
But we are not keeping—cannot, will not keep—what you sent us.
We did receive it, though, and our returning it to you is a sign of that.
It is not that we minded your sending it to us unasked.
That is happening all the time, they come when we least expect them, when we forget
we have needed or might yet need them, and we send them back.
We send this back.
It is not that we minded.
At another time, there is no telling. . .
But this time, it does not suit our present needs.

We wish to make it clear it was not easy receiving it.
It came so encumbered.
And we are busy here.
We did not feel
we could take it on.
We know it would not have ended there.
It would have led to this, and that.
We know about these things.
It is why we are here.
We wait for it. We recognize it when it comes.
Regretfully, this form letter does not allow us to
elaborate why we send it back.
It is not what we wanted.

We hope this does not discourage you. But we would
not want to encourage you falsely.
It requires delicate handling, at this end.
If we had offered it to you,
perhaps you would understand.
But, of course, we did not.
You cannot know what your offering it meant to us,
And we cannot tell you:
There is a form we must adhere to.
It is better for everyone that we use this form.

As to what you do in the future,
we hope we have given you signs,
that you have read them,
that you have not misread them.
We wish we could be more helpful.
But we are busy.
We are busy returning so much.
It all comes so encumbered.
And there is no one here to help.
Our enterprise is a small one.
We are thinking of expanding.
We hope you will send something.


Becky at Farm School has this week’s round-up.

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Friday Hangovers

51%

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Yawn

A little slow on the start here this morning, due to our neighborhood’s brave, fireworks-loving souls who would not be silenced by mere rainstorms (inspiring, really)… much to the dogs’ and cat’s dismay and mine. Until the middle of the night.

I’m used to it by now, but will never lose my next-day resentment for the resulting tiredness and crankitude.

p.s. I suppose this was a day off then; I’m comforted by how many of us disgruntled day-after-the-Fourthers there are. Christopher just made the most amazing dinner of whole wheat fancy pasta, chicken, avocado, yellow tomato (from my little plant!), mango and probably something else. Yum, I say. The rest of the evening to errands and undemanding television. Back tomorrow. Probably.

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Tuesday Hangovers

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Good Things

cket.From the last week and to come this week, mostly inspired by Jules and Eisha’s weekly kicks over at Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast.

1. Hosting Ms. and Mr. Tingle Alley for a night of pizza, beer and rootball stories last week. And Emma only ate a little bit of Mr. Tingle’s hat.

2. First tomatoes from the garden. Need I say more? YUM.

3. A hike yesterday afternoon through the Tom Dorman Nature Preserve to see the cliffs of the Palisades. Aside from the long uphill climb and the murderous daggery plants near the river, pretty much perfect. The dogs would agree.

4. Putting in my pre-VC MFA residency Godiva shampoo order at Amazon and having it only cost 23 cents (gift certificate!).

5. Two excellent days of work on revising le novel that got me entirely back on track. I should be all caught up on revision by the end of this week and on to new stuff just in time to get in a groove before the residency–where I actually hope to get some writing done this time. (Perhaps overly ambitious, and I may just succumb to the summer charms of wine and iniquity, but we’ll see.)

6. A day off on Wednesday.

7. Three excellent mornings of ninja trainingyoga in a row.

8. Simmone Howell’s Notes from the Teenage Underground. I LOVE this book.

9. Oh, and sometime last week, I hit 1,000 posts at this particular incarnation of ye olde Shaken & Stirred, but forgot to say anything to mark the occasion. So, happy 1,012th post. Y’all rock.

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Free the Words

One of my very favorite writers of both novels and short stories is Lewis Shiner. Lew writes these amazing, intricate gems. His novels are always something to clear the calendar for, reading events made more precious because they’re relatively infrequent. His short stories are likewise always a great pleasure, and have become reading events of their own.

The very good news for you today is that Lew has decided to start putting his short fiction online for free — this is old stuff AND new stuff — at his new Fiction Liberation Front site. In a manifesto explaining why, he says:

There’s been no living to be made from short stories in my lifetime. But short fiction endures because it provides a way of introducing writers to new readers, and because there are stories that need to be told at that length.

For all these reasons I’ve decided to open myself to this uncertain future. Starting now, I plan to make all my short fiction and articles available on the web, both in HTML for easy browsing and in typeset PDFs for those who might want to print them. The process of conversion will take a while, but I hope to get to everything eventually, including a number of previously unpublished pieces.

I’ll also be adding new short fiction, music reviews, and articles from time to time, though I won’t guarantee that I won’t also publish short pieces elsewhere. I’m launching the site with three previously unpublished stories ("Straws," "Fear Itself," and "Golfing Vietnam") plus a major story from 2004 ("Perfidia") that’s had only limited circulation, and as a special bonus, my previously unpublished "vampire lawyer" screenplay, THE NEXT.

You read that right — you can go over there and read THREE previously unpublished stories; "Perfidia," which was originally published in Black Clock; and a vampire lawyer screenplay. If this isn’t a yay!worthy occasion, I don’t know what is.

So go over and give Lew your support. If it’s your first time reading his work, you won’t be disappointed.

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