Magpie Monday

Here are some shiny things that caught my eye recently:

♦ Sutured Infection, a tumblr that appeals to the grisly in me, posted a lovely (non-grisly) image of Alfred Hitchcock in the Thames I’d never seen before (not that I’d seen any images of Hitchcock in the Thames previously):

♦ Some days (all the days?), I really don’t understand people. Amanda Palmer, whose music I’ve enjoyed (and who also happens to be married to Neil Gaiman, which is how I was really exposed to her music), started a Kickstarter campaign for her new album and tour that has been crazy-successful. My first thought when I heard she’d reached half a million dollars in two days? “Good for her!” Some other people’s responses? Rancor. To give you an idea of the vitriole, here’s photographer Kyle Cassidy’s response to people’s complaints about the limited edition book reward (which, by the by, includes more than the book) for Palmer’s Kickstarter project (via). Making art and living while making art takes money. I contribute to a lot of Kickstarter projects because I like supporting artists. If there is a reward I’d like to have but don’t feel I can afford, I do not begrudge the artist for setting the reward that high; I choose instead a reward I can afford and go about my business. Honestly, entitled people, get it together!

♦ Just because I love the house, the dog, and the tree (via):

♦ My friend Zachary Jernigan posted this link on Facebook, and I had to share because it’s really, really cool: The Scale of the Universe by Cary Huang. Here’s the description:

What does the universe look like on small scales? On large scales? Humanity is discovering that the universe is a very different place on every proportion that has been explored. For example, so far as we know, every tiny proton is exactly the same, but every huge galaxy is different. On more familiar scales, a small glass table top to a human is a vast plane of strange smoothness to a dust mite—possibly speckled with cell boulders. Not all scale lengths are well explored—what happens to the smallest mist droplets you sneeze, for example, is a topic of active research—and possibly useful to know to help stop the spread of disease. The above interactive flash animation, a modern version of the classic video Powers of Ten, is a new window to many of the known scales of our universe. By moving the scroll bar across the bottom, you can explore a diversity of sizes, while clicking on different items will bring up descriptive information.

♦ I’m digging this new piece by j*ryu (click the link for more images). Via.

Book Nook.

I was reading Mary Robinette Kowal’s blog the other day and found a link to an earlier post I missed, wherein she has a quiz about second lines (can you identify a famous book by its second line?). I think I missed three, though my second choice (which sometimes was my first choice and I second-guessed myself) was always right. Take the quiz—it’s fun!

If you want to hear Neil Gaiman read his poem “I Will Write in Words of Fire,” you can!

My friend Eljay Daly turned me on to the Bookshelf blog of Alex Johnson (whose book on bookshelves I bought after looking at the blog). Here’s a sample from the blog:

This flowchart of Eliot’s “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” by Brenna Clarke Gray at BookRiot is too, too perfect:

♦ I really enjoyed this article on how Lincoln High School in Walla Walla, WA, tried a new approach to school discipline and found that suspensions dropped 85%. Via.

♦ This xkcd cartoon cracked me up. Click here to see the caption. Also, check out “Forgot Algebra,” which also cracked me up (even though I never use algebra either, I agree it’s weird people do that!).

Writers’ Corner.

Rachelle Gardner posted some thoughts for writers’ significant others. Share it with your loved ones!

Chuck Wendig posted 25 realizations writers need to have.

I thought Malinda Lo’s post about writing about kissing was interesting.

My friend Cynthia Kraack had an interesting post about a writer’s worth.

Elizabeth Spann Craig had a number of good posts on this week’s Twitterfic. Here are a few I enjoyed or found useful/informative:

Curious about the difference between first-round edits, line edits, and copyedits?

The writer’s version of the seven deadly sins (and you can buy a t-shirt, too).

What not to do, or what Anna Elliott learned from watching season four of Castle (I stopped watching Castle in real-time a few months ago because I didn’t like how the writers were handling the relationship between Castle and Beckett; now I’m curious to see why Elliott thought the show went off the rails recently.)

The seven bad habits of insanely productive people (I don’t feel insanely productive, but I do have all of these bad habits, to some degree or another).

Writers, don’t be afraid to add drama to your work:

♦ io9 gave me the low-down on an optical illusion that explains the origin of imaginary monsters. Then io9 re-freaked me by telling me about bees that will drink tears from my eyes! But then io9 calmed me down with a great write-up on the French movie La Fée (Fairy). Check out the whimsical, wacky trailer (a second, longer trailer is at the link):

♦ For Beckie:

Via.

♦ Two of my most trusted film critics (Cameron Cook and Daniel Dye) gave a big thumbs up to The Avengers, so I’m hoping to see it in the theater. In the meantime, I’ll content myself with this fun Eclectic Method remix of the trailer:

Via.

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Video Friday

Today it’s all about horror, folks. Well, kind of. The first video is the short film Reverse Parthenogenesis, starring Buffy alums Amber Benson and Adam Busch, and it’s all about the antichrist. Written by Javier Grillo-Marxuach, Reverse Parthenogenesis is light-hearted fare (if you have my askew and irreverent sensibilities), based on the description:

Julie and Saul Winslow are a happily married couple thinking about having a baby… but when the two decide to have their genome mapped in order to know for sure that their child will be healthy, the test reveals a secret that will not only test their mutual trust and the integrity of their marriage, but also threaten the very future of humanity as they know it.

Co-starring Edmund Lupinski as Dr. Elias Kittridge, a family physician faced with an apocalyptic revelation hidden in the couple’s DNA, “Reverse Parthenogenesis” is is a darker-than-dark comedy about love, relationships, the pitfalls of potential parenthood… and the limitless capacity for evil at the pit of every living soul.

Via.

D is a short animated horror film written, directed, and edited by Rafael Velásquez Stanbury. How much murder can one pen hold, I ask you? Lovely stuff.

Via.


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Magpie Monday

Here are some shiny things that caught my eye recently:

♦ Today is the last day of National Poetry Month. Have you been taking your poems?

Tor.com closes out their celebration of NPM with “Aquaman and the Duality of Self/Other, American, 1985” by Catherynne M. Valente.

One poem I like and one I love: “You Are Not Your Bookshelf” by Jeff O’Neal and “In the House of Death” by Joe Bolton (one of my favorite poems).

♦ I’ve always loved Nigella Lawson—I mean, who wouldn’t? She’s smart, gorgeous, and loves food, plus that accent!—but now I love her even more:

Via.

♦ I don’t know how I missed Nadine Boughton‘s work before now, but I’m glad to have found it (thank goodness for Chet Phillips’ blog!). I’ve selected three pieces of hers that really spoke to me to share with you. The first two are from her “True Adventures in Better Homes” series, which are photocollages wherein “men’s adventure magazines or ‘sweats’ meets Better Homes and Gardens.” Click through to read more about this series.

Menace by Nadine Boughton

Sea Men by Nadine Boughton

The last picture is from Boughton’s “The Pleasures of Modern Living” series, where her “intention is to blend the nostalgia for the past with the darkness beneath ‘the pleasures of modern living.'”

Garden Shed by Nadine Boughton

Book Nook.

Check out a new Postcard Story by Will Ludwigsen, “Nannah’s Cats.”

If you’re looking for a new book to read, my friend Paul Kirsch has a review of Stephen King’s new Dark Tower novel, The Wind through the Keyhole. His Mid-World dialect is perfect.

Speaking of reviews, this week Cameron Cook took on the wildly misinterpreted and misunderstood film Wild At Heart, directed by David Lynch.

Found via my friend Adam Mills, this Atlantic article is a nice write-up on the novella (and particularly the Melville House novella series, which are lovely paperback editions). The older I get, the less inclined I feel to write sweeping, epic novels and the more enchanted I become with the novella form.

If you’re interested in book arts (of course you are), you’ll enjoy this tour of book artist Rhiannon Alpers’ studio.

♦ Harry Potter fans will enjoy this wedding invitation based on the Marauder’s Map, designed by onelittleM at etsy. Click through either link to see more images. (Via.)

Are creative people naturally more dishonest?

♦ I found this article about Harvard’s decision to stop paying for mega-expensive academic journal subscriptions quite interesting. I’m not surprised to learn how much academic journals cost, given the increasingly high costs of textbooks.

♦ Ah, me.

“The Death of A Librarian” by Faerie Girl

Via.

♦ I found E.O. Wilson’s overview of the origin of the arts fascinating (via Caitlín Kiernan on Facebook). Some of my favorite bits below, but click through to read the article in its entirety:

If ever there was a reason for bringing the humanities and science closer together, it is the need to understand the true nature of the human sensory world, as contrasted with that seen by the rest of life.

Such may be the scope of the humanities [he cites the definition of the humanities in congressional statute that created the NEH and NEA], but it makes no allusion to the understanding of the cognitive processes that bind them all together, nor their relation to hereditary human nature, nor their origin in prehistory. Surely we will never see a full maturing of the humanities until these dimensions are added.

The essential difference between literary and scientific style is the use of metaphor.

What counts in science is the importance of the discovery. What matters in literature is the originality and power of the metaphor. Scientific reports add a tested fragment to our knowledge of the material world. Lyrical expression in literature, on the other hand, is a device to communicate emotional feeling directly from the mind of the writer to the mind of the reader.

♦ The awesome Christopher Meloni reading—or, at least, trying to (via).

Writers’ Corner.

Chuck Wendig talks about 25 things he learned while writing his novel Blackbirds.

Speaking of Wendig, Caroline Whitney is breaking down Wendig’s post on 25 ways to become a better writer, step by step. In this weekly series, Caroline will “take each of the 25 tips Chuck Wendig proposes, show them to you, and then give you some resources that go along with the tips.” So far, she’s addressed Step 1: Practice Makes Perfect and Step 2: Just Keep Reading.

For those of you interested in graphic novels, you might want to check out the excerpt at Tor.com of Mastering Comics, by Matt Madden and Jessica Abel, due out in May. I’d actually like to teach a Creative Writing: Graphic Novel class some day, preferably team-taught with some in the Art department (hint, hint, Laura!).

Are you a writer who’s too busy to write? Krissy Brady has some ideas on how to finally get started writing.

Neil Gaiman posted the original version of his UK Sunday Times Magazine interview with Stephen King on his blog–worth a read, writers!

Annie Neugebauer has a series of posts on sonnet building (which are also useful for the prose writer). (Via.)

This USB typewriter cracked me up. You can use it with a PC, Mac, or an iPad, and the keyboard has all the modern amenities, including alt, arrow, ctrl, and esc keys. Pretty as it is, the price tag, though, is not so pretty. (Via).

♦ New Super Best Friends Forever short!

♦ Thought the end of this Volvo commercial was cute (via):

♦ If you haven’t checked out the debut album by Metaphorest, you really should. “Wanderer” is one of my favorite songs from the album, and the video by Maria Ivanova is pretty amazing.

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Video Friday

Today’s video comes courtesy of my friend Andy, who sent me the link to this episode of PBS’ Off Book, a webseries that explores experimental and non-traditional art forms. I was really taken by “The Art of Film & TV Title Design,” which features the creators of the Mad Men (Peter Frankfurt and Karin Fong), Zombieland (Ben Conrad), and Blue Valentine (Jim Helton) title sequences. The official description:

The credits are often the first thing we see when we watch a great film or TV show, but the complexity and artistry of title design is rarely discussed. Creators of title sequences are tasked to invent concepts that evoke the core story and themes of the production, and to create a powerful visual experience that pulls the viewer into the film’s world.

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Magpie Monday

Here are some shiny things that caught my eye recently:

♦ What poems have you been reading lately?

The fourth and fifth poems in Tor.com’s series in honor of NPM are “What the Dragon Said: A Love Story” by Catherynne M. Valente (April 21st) and “Jane Austen Among the Women” by Jo Walton (April 22nd).

Here’s a poem I really, really like: “Death Comes to Me Again, A Girl” by Dorianne Laux (I can’t stop reading it aloud).

♦ In honor of Cameron‘s birthday, why not check out to see which fictional character shares your birthday? Jin Kazama of Tekken was born today in 1986. Alas, if Cameron had been born a few days earlier, he’d share his anniversaire with Dale Cooper. Hmmm. Now I want some cherry pie. Via.

♦ I am unapologetically a book nerd, which is why Book Mania! has become one of my new favorite blogs, and this recent post—pairing Kyle Thompson‘s photograph and the Sagan quotation below—is a perfect illustration of why.

“Books break the shackles of time, proof that humans can work magic.” ― Carl Sagan, Cosmos

Here’s another perfect illustration of why:

The private bibliothéque of the Château de Groussay, Montfort-l’Amaury, France

♦ I really like Thomas Allen’s artwork. Some people might cringe at cutting up books, but when it’s for art this cool, I’m all for it. He has some new art up on his blog (he also reveals some of his process), but here are my two favorites (click to see larger):

Rhyme and Reason by Thomas Allen, 2011

Watchdog by Thomas Allen, 2011

♦ I thought this Wondermark strip was so funny because the conflict is so true for me. Well, minus the regret.

Book Nook.

Holy smokes, this is cool—Astronomical by Mishka Henner: “Twelve 506-page volumes printed-on-demand, representing a scale model of our solar system from the Sun to Pluto.” I would totally buy this set just because it’s so nuts. Check out the video below that pages through volume one (the Sun to the Asteroid Belt).

I feel like Wallace Yovetich and I should be friends. Her posts on BookRiot are my favorites and she likes library porn as much as I do. Check out her most recent post on Mouth-Watering Book Nooks (and they are), and here’s a teaser to whet your appetite:

Writers’ Corner.

Chuck Wendig shares 25 things you should know about transmedia storytelling.

I thought The Rejection Generator Project, which “rejects writers before an editor looks at a submission,” would be funny, but my final verdict was that it was cute. Via.

My friend Matt blogged about writing again, at long last.

The Editor’s Blog addressed how long your story should be. Via.

Michael Paulus makes some creepy but cool art with his skeletal studies of cartoon characters. Check out Buttercup of The Powerpuff Girls:


♦ This video is by the Book People Unite movement, which helps “get books in the hands of kids who need them the most.”  You can see a full list of the literary characters on youtube.

♦ Over at SFCB Blog, Naomi Bardoff posted this video of a pop-up Notre Dame de Paris Cathedral by paper artist Sheung Yee Shing (click on the link for Yee’s webpage for more pop-up architecture—and, yes, I did just order the book!). Also, check out the SFCB blog for some gorgeous still pictures.

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