Summer Reads Make Me Feel Fine

As usual, I'm busy, etcetera, etcetera, but I've been meaning to recommend a few things I read on vacation, where I experienced one of those magical streaks of wonderful read after wonderful read:

  • Claire DeWitt and the City of the Dead by Sara Gran: How much do I love this book? If you have any small love in your soul for girl detectives, sharp explorations of race and class, books within books, friendships between girls and women that echo through a lifetime, and just generally fine writing, please to read this. I'm beyond ecstatic that it's the first of a series. Our next taste of Claire can't come soon enough. (I highly recommend this for fans of Scarlett Thomas, too.)
  • Rules of Civility by Amor Towles: This is a debut novel set in the 1930s, centered on 20-something Katey Kontent making her way in the big city. The novel has a great mix of glamour and witty dames and charming men and melodrama that kept me up late reading. And the heroine is entirely appealing.
  • The Girl of Fire and Thorns by Rae Carson: I just turned in a review of this one for Locus*, so I'll let that stand as my full take BUT: I will say this is undoubtedly one of my favorite YA reads of the year. If you like Kristin Cashore and Megan Whalen Turner, pick this up. Rae's an amazing writer, and this is a fantastic book. I can't wait to see what Elisa does–or eats!–next.
  • Deadline by Mira Grant: Oh, so good–the follow-up to Feed, which I'm assuming you've all read and if you haven't, well, get on that. I won't say much because I don't want to spoil anyone, but suffice to say this is another clever, scary, hilarious book in the best zombie series around, bar none. Bring on Blackout. 

*Other great newish and forthcoming YA books I've recently reviewed for Locus (some still to appear)–all highly recommended: Janni Simner's Bones of Faerie, Malinda Lo's Huntress, Nova Ren Suma's Imaginary Girls (a particularly good summer read, I think), Maureen Johnson's The Name of the Star, and Franny Billingsley's Chime

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Last Story & Thanks

Summer-2011Well, not the last story in the history of time or anything… but the last story in the special YA issue of Subterranean Online. "Demons, Your Body, and You" by Genevieve Valentine has been posted, and it's such a great, hilarious note to end the issue on. I love this story. It's an incisive portrait of a teen pregnancy and features a friendship between two girls that doesn't end in tears.

(I had an interview with Genevieve about her novel Mechanique as part of the SBBT last week–the post right below this one!–and I highly recommend you check out her work in all its many and varied forms.)

Thanks again to the wonderful writers* whose stories made guest editing so much fun, and to the one and only Bill Schafer of Subterranean Press for giving me the keys to his magazine in the first place. And thanks to all of you who RTed and linked along the way. One last time, and I'll stop being obnoxious, check out all the stories, if you haven't.

*Seek their work: Sarah Rees Brennan, Tobias Buckell, Karen Joy Fowler, Alaya Dawn Johnson, Richard Larson, Kelly Link, Malinda Lo, Tiffany Trent, and Genevieve Valentine. And seek the cover artist Sara Turner of Cricket Press' work too.

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SBBT Stop: Genevieve Valentine

GV2Genevieve Valentine is one of my favorite people and, happily, also one of my favorite writers. If you look at her bibliography, it's astounding how many fabulous short stories she's published since 2008 (really? JUST since 2008? wow!) in anthologies and magazines, basically all over the place. And this in addition to tons of fabulous and hilarious nonfiction writing on her blog and elsewhere about movies, television, and red carpet fashion. (Plus, she will nerd about So You Think You Can Dance with me.) Her first novel Mechanique was published in May to rave notices, including a starred review from Publishers Weekly. It's a cirque de force; a thrilling, death-defying tale of the post-apocalyptic, steampunk- and magic-infused Circus Tresaulti, and also, one of my favorite novels of the year, hands down. It's an assured, gorgeous, gripping debut novel and also a great, huge, tremendous amount of fun to read. You want a ticket.

GB: I'll start, as usual, by asking you about your writing process. Mechanique is your first novel, and it's very complex structurally; like a juggler, you keep a lot of balls in the air. How did you approach it? Was there a lot of outlining and planning?

GV: At the time I started the book I had a total lack of outline, which is a habit that often backfires for me when I start a large project with a single Post-It reading "THINGS AND STUFF," but in this case seems to have worked out. When I sat down to start it, I had a couple of images I wanted to lead with, and then I wanted to explore the acts themselves, so I wrote it down as it presented itself; very early on the story began to emerge between the lines, and I went with what seemed natural to the story at the time until I had all the pieces falling into place.

GB: Do you have any favorite circus stories/novels by others? What was the seed of this novel?

GV: I actually hadn't read much circus fiction when I began my book (I'm criminally under-read in many areas)–my fondness for the circus had always been either of a movie or a nonfiction bent. However, since I finished Mechanique I've started playing catch-up, and can say that Nights at the Circus and Geek Love are classics for a reason.

I guess the seed of this novel was the cumulative effect of being a film nerd since ever; the circus really lends itself to film, in any form, from the Penguin's circus cadre in Batman Returns to the trapeze bits in Buster Keaton's Allez Oop. I also had a developing interest in vintage photography and graphic design and the stories behind the posters and portraits. Add this to the fact that I've always been a sucker for stories about performers (no surprise), and you have the beginnings of a story about a circus that's ragged around the edges, and the performers who are trying to keep it together.

GB: Your cast of characters in Mechanique is incredibly memorable and well-developed. Do you have a favorite or favorites? Was there someone you particularly enjoyed writing? (My own favorite is probably Little George, or maybe Boss, or Elena–okay, so maybe I love them all.)

GV: Thank you! Also, this is such a hard question to answer, because while I feel they're all flawed in some deep way (why else would they be in the Circus?), I can understand some of the flaws more than others, and when you're the writer in charge you end up with favorites no matter how the story goes. I did find myself with a soft spot for anyone who felt out of place in the Circus even after making all the necessary sacrifices, a list that shifts as the book goes on and we learn more about them.

GB: What are you working on now? What's next?

GV: I have a secondary-world noir in the hopper, and earlier this year I finished a novel that's a retelling of the Twelve Dancing Princesses set in 1927 New York, which was a blast. There is a long and scary list of books I'd like to write, most of which move forward or not depending on if anything awesome is on Netflix. I also have several short stories I'm working on; you may not have seen the last of the Circus Tresaulti…*

GB: And, last, what have you been watching that you think other people should give a shot? Or, given your habits, what extra-awful movies and TV have you been watching that should people avoid like the plague?

GV: I'm really crossing my fingers for SyFy's Alphas, which stars longtime favorite David Strathairn, in whose career I am a little over-invested. Hopefully it will be good, and I can enjoy seeing him every week! But from thence came also Aztec Rex, so we'll have to see.

Moviewise, Priest lacked the gonzo joy of Jonah Hex, a movie so hilariously terrible it has yet to be knocked off its perch of Bad Movie Everyone Should See, No Joke. And in terms of upcoming things I'm actually planning to brave Outdoors to go see, I have some cautious hopes for Captain America, even more cautious hopes for Tarsem Singh's Immortals, and a delightful lack of any hopes at all for The Three Musketeers.

*Note: Genevieve has several fabulous Tresaulti short stories out in the wild, too; you can find links to them here.

Visit today's other SBBT stops (will update with links as I get 'em):

Stacy Whitman at The Happy Nappy Bookseller
Alyssa B. Sheinmel at A Chair, A Fireplace & A Tea Cozy
Matthew Cody and Aaron Starmer at Mother Reader

Or collect the whole set at the master schedule.

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Wednesday Hangovers

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More Subterranean YA (Et Things!)

The new story posted this week in the Subterranean Special YA Summer Issue is Kelly Link's "Valley of the Girls." I believe this is Kelly's first new story published in some time (she also has a fabulous story coming out in this fall's Steampunk! anthology, which she and Gavin co-edited for Candlewick). "Valley of the Girls" is typically brilliant; a mash-up of ancient Egyptian culture and science fiction that only Kelly could come up with, let alone pull off.

And, after this, there's just one more story left to come in the issue. It's from Genevieve Valentine–who, coincidentally, will be stopping by here on Friday for an interview as part of the Summer Blog Blast Tour. You can see the full schedule for the SBBT over at Colleen's.

Now go forth and enjoy.

I'm officially back from vacay (oh, vacay, I miss you already), and will be around this week. Promise.

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The Secrets We Keep From Ourselves

I already tumbled this fabulous quote from Terri Windling's blog, but I'm putting it up here too (not least because, um, cleanliness wasn't meant to stay at the top of ye old Shaken & Stirred for a whole week–oops):

"What you need to know about [your next piece of art] is contained in the last piece. The place to learn about your materials is in the last use of your materials. The place to learn about your execution is in your execution. The best information about what you love is in your last contact with what you love. Put simply, your work is your guide: a complete, comprehensive, limitless reference book on your work. There is no other such book, and it is yours alone. It functions this way for no one else. Your fingerprints are all over your work, and you alone know how they got there. Your work tells you about your working methods, your discipline, your strengths and weaknesses, your habitual gestures, your willingness to embrace.

"The lessons you are meant to learn are in your work. To see them, you need only look at the work clearly — without judgement, without need or fear, without wishes or hopes. Without emotional expectations. Ask your work what it needs, not what you need. Then set aside your fears and listen, the way a good parent listens to a child."    — David Bayles & Ted Orland, Art & Fear: Observations on the Perils (and Rewards) of Artmaking

First off, I'll definitely be seeking out Art & Fear, just based on this snippet.

Anyway, this quote immediately made me think of one of the wisest things anyone ever said to me about writing, one of those lessons that I come back to often. The advice, because I think it does qualify as advice, came from Tim Wynne-Jones (recent Horn Book award winner–yay!) in an early packet response my first semester of grad school. What he said was essentially that we give ourselves the solutions to the problems we encounter in our work. That when really and truly stumped, the answer is often to be found hidden, obscured, embedded somewhere on the page. The subconscious is a tricksy beast. I have found that this is a great and powerful truth.

When I really can't find the answer, no matter how much long dog walking and listening to playlists and banging head against desk and vacuuming I've done, I go back to what I have and I look at it and I think about it and I usually do find the answer in hiding there, right in front of me. Occasionally it's the absence of something that's the answer, or that something feels wrong, but often enough it's a grace note, an image or a line that appeared and that I didn't understand the importance of yet. When I give notes to someone else or talk out my own plots (Christopher is very patient on the dog walks where this happens, and sometimes we talk out his too), often that's what I come around to. It's that "OH! It's already in there! I just didn't RECOGNIZE it!" moment.

We give ourselves the answers we need, we only have to be willing to look for them.* Every piece is its own secret decoder ring.

Unrelated, but amazing, a feature slide show of photographs of aging dogs from Nancy LeVine's Senior Dogs Across America.

*Of course, for this to work you have to make pages where the answers can hide first. That is the Greatest Secret of All: Everything is possible once you make the pages.

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On Cleanliness

No, I'm not about to go biblical on y'all, but when I was fishing for a topic over on twitter, Paolo suggested: "How often should the average writer shower?"

This isn't going to go Dear Aunt G, though it certainly could. There are strong opinions.

First off, we're going to have to leave this whole "average" business out of things. Let's just get that out of the way now. Writers are too neurotic to get cozy with that word. "Me? I'm not *average*?" Or, ten minutes later, "I'm not even average. I'm below average. I can't even see average from here." And that leaves aside if we're talking about some mean of age/sex/race/etc. Which we aren't.

So, then we're left with just: How often should a writer shower? Scalzi proposed that if Paolo had to ask, he probably ought to go ahead and do it. This is true. If you're wondering, Do I need a shower?* The answer is almost certainly yes.

But, in my experience, it's the writers who don't wonder about this that truly need the guidance. In our house: I'm saying every one to two days. In your house: I don't care so much.

At any rate, Mr. Rowe (and Paolo and Catherine) can pretend it's about conservation all they want, but I know the truth of the freelance cave. It's the same impulse that leads people to grow beards until they finish a book, or to build elaborate sink pyramids. To order wingzone when the missus is out of town.

On a more serious note: Not completely losing touch with reality, even when you work at home, is important. Bathing regularly is part of that.

Hey, I made an entry. Now I'll just go hug my Lush bath products.

*I, personally, shower daily. At least.

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Tuesday Hangovers

Some links, old and new:

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