Magpie Monday

Here are some shiny things that caught my eye recently:

I’m really rather obsessed with shelves, particularly for books, of course, but I like a nice-looking shelf no matter what. Oscar Nuñez designed some shelves inspired by comics speech balloons, available (for a not-so-funny price) from Groopti. Below is the larger of the two shelves:

Via.

♦ io9 put together a list of 10 totally psychotic fairy tales Hollywood should film next. I was glad to see that they included “The Juniper Tree” and two variants of the Handless Maiden tale, some of my favorites (yes, I like the weird stuff). Speaking of weird, io9 also had a fascinating piece about the Victorian practice of binding a book with your own dead skin, and I learned a new term: anthropodermic bibliopegy!

♦ Theodora Goss had a really interesting post wondering what happened to modernism. Definitely worth a read, but here’s my favorite part:

This [modernism, via an excerpt from Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man] is a way of writing that leaves spaces, quite a lot of spaces, for you to fill in. It’s a writing with gaps. And so it allows you to breathe, to put in something of your own, to participate. In fact, you have to. You can’t read it lazily. (I would argue that you can read Harry Potter lazily. At least, I have.)

The issue for me is, I don’t want to write in the tradition of [George] Eliot. I don’t even particularly like Eliot. I want to write fantasy, but not like that. Luckily, I have Jorge Luis Borges and Milan Kundera to show me different ways.

(Twice in my life, I’ve dated men who told me they were in love with me, but did not like Borges. And I’ve thought, how is that possible? Because if you don’t like Borges, there are some things about me you will never understand. Some of my stories wouldn’t exist if it weren’t for Borges.)

I too have wondered similar things. Is it possible to be in a truly intimate relationship with someone who doesn’t understand you, at least the most fundamental levels of you, through that which you love? I have things I love and things I love, but if someone can’t at least appreciate what I love, then how could I myself ever be loved?

♦ I don’t know if I’ll ever read Nick Harkaway’s Angelmaker, but I love the book trailer:

Via.

♦ Ran across this remarkable photo this week: Alibi 2 (1971) by Shomei Tomatsu:

Via.

♦ For you writers:

Chuck Wendig posted a list of 25 things you should know about story structure.

At The Millions, Alan Levinovitz recounts a brief history of blurbs. Watch yourselves!

Janice Hardy offered up her top-10 self-editing tips at The Other Side of the Story. Familiar ground if you’ve been writing a while, but it’s good to be reminded about some things.

At AuthorCulture, Johne Cook posted a list of indispensable writing resources, which you might find of interest. Via.

♦ For you readers:

Over at Salon, Laura Miller has an interesting essay on why stories don’t need morals or messages. Even though half of my job is to help students unpack meaning from literary texts (the other half is helping them write texts), I am opposed to this idea of fiction that it must inherently teach us something, that some moral message must be encoded within its words. That said, I find a lot of meaning in what I read but still tend to think of art as amoral—in and of itself, art is neither good nor bad; meaning is constructed not by the artist but by the reader/viewer. Go figure.

Damien G. Walter posted the 7 literary sci-fi and fantasy novels you must read. Maybe one of these days I’ll read The Road.

Book Riot asks the question, Should you be reading? and answers it with a flowchart. Will the answer surprise you? (Click to embiggen)


♦ I’ve been enjoying this mash-up of the themes to Downton Abbey and The X-Files.

Via.

♦ A little Zelda, CBC? This animation was made by Joel Furtado in the style of The Wind Waker.

A Month of Letters challenge update: I have been on top of this challenge so far, dropping something in the post every viable day of February (birthday cards, postcards, and today a t-shirt). If you’d like me to send you something in the post this month, let me know here or on Facebook!

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Magpie Monday

Here are some shiny things that caught my eye recently:

♦ I love seeing how other bibliophiles organize their home libraries (indeed, a section of my own library is dedicated to books about libraries, home and otherwise). On his tumblr this past week, Neil Gaiman shared several links about his home library, which is certainly swoon-worthy and worth a look. First, check out a 3D view of his library (photos by Kyle Cassidy), then have a peek at Shelfari’s post (which is where I first saw Gaiman’s library a few years ago), and top it off with some close shots of his shelves here.

Speaking of filling a house with books, Domythic Bliss has several tips for decorating with books, which you should check out (two of my favorite ideas are below). That post also linked to a website I hadn’t heard about, but I’m all over it now: Beautiful Libraries, which has galleries of all kinds of libraries, including Modest, Larger, and Truly Grand Home Libraries; Church Libraries; Royal Libraries; Academic and Research Libraries; Hotel, Cruise Ship, and Restaurant Libraries; Libraries in Art and Film; Libraries of History & Myth; and Destroyed Libraries (many more types besides!).

♦ io9 lists 10 Writing “Rules” they wish more science fiction and fantasy authors would break. It’s a good list to mull over. Writing “rules” should never be considered absolutes; you just want to make sure you know why you’re breaking the “rules” you’re breaking (yes, I realize my refutation is in the form of an absolute).

♦ Speaking of writing, I came across three, quite fine articles about writers this week. The first is a lovely piece in The Guardian about Angela Carter, written by her literary executor Susannah Clapp, who’s just recently published A Card from Angela Carter, a collection of the postcards Carter sent to Clapp over the years. (I thought I could wait for the American edition to come out, but probably by the time you’ve read this I’ll have already ordered it from the UK. What is this thing called “self-restraint”?)

The second, in The New York Times, is about Jonathan Galassi, president and publisher of Farrar, Strauss, and Giroux, who has a new book of poetry, Left-handed, coming out in March. I wasn’t familiar with Galassi before reading the article, but I’ll buy the book based on these lines alone:

… our real poems are already in us
and all we can do is dig.
We can work for years and never find them
or miss them when they stare us in the face.

The third is Larry Nolen’s analysis of Julio Cortázar at Weird Fiction Review. I taught Cortázar‘s story “Axolotl” for many years, so I particularly enjoyed reading Nolen’s take on it.

♦ Mary Robinette Kowal has issued a challenge I may try to meet: The Month of Letters. The rules are that “(1) In the month of February, mail at least one item through the post every day it runs. Write a postcard, a letter, send a picture, or a cutting from a newspaper, or a fabric swatch. (2) Write back to everyone who writes to you. This can count as one of your mailed items.” (Kowal even has a website dedicated to the challenge.) A follow-up post asks the question, Why are letters more daunting than email? You can even write to (and expect replies from) Jane of Shades of Milk and Honey or Kowal herself.

I have a long-abiding love of the post; while I’m happy to receive mail, I really love to send it. In the past, I traded journals with friends through the post (we’d each write a few a pages and send it to the other), and sometimes I’ve just saved up clippings and other tidbits to send to folks. With so much of my time committed to work in the last couple years, I have fallen away from that kind of correspondence, and I miss it (though, truth be told, long stretches of writing by hand have become too uncomfortable). My friend Adam Mills has written a longer and more eloquent post about Missing Letters, so I know I’m in good company. Will I be able to do it? Tune in to find out (or check your mailbox).

If you like receiving letters in the post and don’t mind paying for them, you might consider two subscription options I follow:

Catherynne M. Valente’s The Omikuji Project, which I’ve subscribed to since its inception a couple years ago. Each month I receive in the post a short story (or sometimes a long poem), written by Valente. She’s also released a collection of the first year of the Project, This Is My Letter to the World: The Omikuji Project, Cycle One. You can receive the Omikuji letters via email, as well. Here’s the basic description:

The Omikuji Project is an experiment in cyberfunded art. It is an old-fashioned approach to new-founded literature, the shortest path from author to reader. It is a secret and marvelous communication, a unique way for you to read stories unavailable in any other venue, in any other way. It is a network of tales, a community. It is whispering in the dark; it is a fireside confession.

Recently, The Rumpus, an online literary magazine, started Letters in the Mail (which I’d read about here, via Poets & Writers—and, yes, I signed up as soon as I read about it):

Almost every week you’ll receive a letter, in the mail. Letter writers will include Dave Eggers, Tao Lin, Stephen Elliott, Janet Fitch, Nick Flynn, Margaret Cho, Cheryl Strayed, Marc Maron, Elissa Schappel, Wendy MacNaughton, Emily Gould, and Jonathan Ames. Think of it as the letters you used to get from your creative friends, before this whole internet/email thing. Most of the letters will include return addresses (at the author’s discretion) in case you want to write the author back.

♦ I feel like I should write a poem about Barnard 68, “possibly the loneliest, darkest, coldest place in the entire cosmos.”

Over at The Beat, I learned about the upcoming April Avengers Art Appreciation variant covers. I know the inspiration for some of these covers but not all—hopefully, Laura can help me out! In related news, Irene Gallo posted at Tor.com about Art History through Sci Fi-Colored Glasses, which features book and comic cover art inspired by famous art (with a side-by-side comparison).

♦ Two webcomics that deserve your attention:

Over at Tor.com, you can read “The Situation,” based on Jeff VanderMeer’s short story and illustrated by Eric Orchard. It’s phenomenal! If “The Situation” is never made into a book, I shall be very sad.

Juan Santapau’s webcomic The Secret Knots returned this week with “The Spirit Cabinet,” which is all about a most unusual 90s television show. Go check it out!

♦ Cinephiles like Cameron will enjoy this infographic by Anne Rhodes (click to see larger, though it’s easier to read if you go to the link). From the website: “The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) claims that SOPA and PIPA are aimed at stopping online piracy. But as this infographic demonstrates, it’s really about fighting innovation.”

Via.

I was completely charmed by The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore, the short animated film by William Joyce and Brandon Oldenburg (which, if you’re interested, is nominated for an Oscar). I defy my fellow bibliophiles to not also be utterly enchanted:

Via.

And for something completely different: Beto Gomez’s animated short, Reading Kills (seriously):

Via.

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Magpie Monday

Here are some shiny things that caught my eye recently:

♦ You know how much I love the miniature, and German artist Frank Kunert’s miniature art makes me think twice about what I’m seeing (they’re also really funny, as the image below demonstrates—click to embiggen). You can check out more of his work in a gallery at Behance Network (which also has some behind-the-scenes shots); also, check out his official Facebook page for more images.

Public Toilets by Frank Kunert

Via.

I discovered the artist exit deer through Super Punch, and I’m entranced by the work. What gets me in is the contrast of the whimsical and the macabre, and how each piece is clearly part of its own larger, strange narrative. Love love love this stuff. Here’s my favorite piece I’ve seen so far (the competition was fierce), “It’s there! Beneath the water, under the bridge” (how can you not love it for the title alone?).
I’d better watch out, or I’ll be neck deep in prints.

Tor.com posted about Emil Johansson’s The Lord of the Rings Project, an ambitious exercise in fictional genealogy. The mammoth family tree isn’t finished yet, as Johansson is still working on the lesser known characters, but it’s nonetheless impressive (well, if you’re a genealogical geek like me).

I found the Bookfession tumblr via a link Hannah posted on Cameron’s Facebook wall, and I’m glad I did. A lot of these “confessions and/or thoughts of a book lover, bibliophile, book addict, reader, lover of literature, nerd” really speak to me, especially these two recent bookfessions:

♦ In case you missed it, Will, science confirmed that gossip is basically the only thing holding society together.

Shortlist Magazine put together some spectacular Alternative Hitchcock Movie Posters last week. My favorite is below (you know how I feel about things turning into birds). Take note, Gosling fans: Shortlist also presented some cool Alternative Drive Posters recently (my favorite of those is also below, though the poster with the scorpion is a close second). By the by, the Drive poster below, by James White, is available for sale. Definitely click the images to see the larger versions.

Via.

♦ When I was younger, I used to read books about writing like they were going out of style. Now that I don’t have as much time for reading those kinds of books, I really appreciate the blog posts that cut to the chase with advice for writers. My surfing this week produced three good advice lists:

Chuck Wendig followed up on his list of “25 Things Writers Should Stop Doing (Right F**king Now)” with “25 Things Writers Should Start Doing (ASAFP).”

In “Things I Know?” Jeff VanderMeer gives writers some tips about professionalism.

My favorite advice list this week comes from Nick Mamatas with “Ten Bits of Advice Writers Should Stop Giving Aspiring Writers.” Those bits are eminently practical, as one has come to expect from Mamatas. Have you read his book on writing, Starve Better, yet? No? Go read it right now; I’ll wait.

Back? OK, then. The thing to keep in mind about writing advice (or, I suppose, any kind of art advice) is that any writer’s experience usually tends to be so singular and particular that general advice is only helpful if you take it for what it is—someone else’s experience. When I give writing advice, I tend to give multiple perspectives on the same bit of advice with no absolutes, ever (except, of course, that you must write sometime to be a writer…). It’s probably because of my misspent youth reading tons of different books on writing.

Edward Gorey had it right, I think (click to see larger):
Via.

♦ All right, Cameron—how many of the 64 films in this 5-minute Horror Portfolio can you name?

Via.

Also, I think this documentary sounds fascinating:

Via.

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Magpie Monday

Here are some shiny things that caught my eye recently:

♦ My friend Eljay Daly sent me the link to this article on Wim Botha’s Beautifully Grotesque Book Masterpieces—and they are!

♦ A new blog about “fairy tale, mythic, and otherwise enchanted decorating” has arrived: Domythic Bliss, which looks like it will be a fun and inspirational site to visit, if you’re into that kind of decorating. Outside of “Cabinet of Curiosities,” I’m not sure yet how I would describe my own decorating style, but I like the idea of a room telling a story (something Grace addresses in the blog’s first post), so I’ll be following.

I follow Grace’s other two blogs, Catty-Corner Cottage (about the process of decorating her own house) and The Beautiful Necessity (about the Pre-Raphaelites), both of which I enjoy quite a bit.

♦ Katherine Langrish writes about The Value of Mythical Thinking, as well as hosting a guest post from Susan Price about the worldwide web of fairy tales.

♦ For Will Ludwigsen: Simone Preuss explored the remains of Spain’s creepy abandoned doll factory at Environmental Graffiti. Delightfully disturbing.

Via.

♦ Writers, Inkpunks has put together a list of Writing Workshops for Everyone you might find of use.

Also for writers: via Elizabeth Hand on Facebook I found this Guardian UK article on Twitter: The Virtual Literary Salon. As interesting as I found that article, I’m afraid I’m still not interested in tweeting. (Sorry, Amanda!)

I am, however, interested in style, so how could I not link to Chuck Wendig’s 25 Things Writers Should Know about Finding Their Voice?

Speaking of style, Pico Iyer discusses the point of the long and winding sentence, which I myself often employ. I found the article through a post at Theodora Goss’s blog, who also gives a thoughtful response to Iyer there.

Via Tor.com, I learned two things last week: (1) a reading and writing website community called figment exists, and (2) figment just started a new series of daily writing prompts from famous writers. The Daily Themes are delivered to your email inbox, so you do have to sign-up, but these prompts may be just the nudge you need, eh?

Dancers Among Us, an on-going photography project by Jordan Matter, just added Alex Wong to the mix. Amazing stuff (and Workman Publishing will release a book of Matter’s Dancers Among Us photographs next year—woo hoo!). Maybe this is how I should start taking out the trash?

Via.

♦ I can’t tell anything about the upcoming Norwegian movie Thale from this preview, but any flick that focuses on the huldra, a creature from Scandinavian folklore that has a cow’s tail and a hollow back (or a back made from bark), has my interest. The film shows up in Norwegian theaters on February 17th.

With the success of Troll-Hunter last year, a lot of buzz suggests that Norwegian horror seems to be on the rise. Cameron, what do you think?

Via.

Almost everyone I know posted last week about The Joy of Books video, either on Facebook or their blogs, but here it is anyway, for your late enjoyment.

♦ Here’s a video you might not have seen but really ought to: the music video for “Two Against One” by Danger Mouse and Daniele Luppi, featuring Jack White and Norah Jones (from the album Rome). Very, very cool.

Via.

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Magpie Monday

Here are some shiny things that caught my eye recently:

♦ This week’s book news: Steve Almond at Salon.com posted an interesting article about how independent bookstores are battling Amazon by becoming publishers. I’m a big fan of small presses, and I think this is definitely a positive trend. Found via a Facebook post by Hub City.

In other book-related news, and via Theodora Goss on Facebook, I read 25 Reasons Real Books Are Here to Stay, which was a fun read. Personally, I think there’s probably enough market to bear both physical books and electronic books, although the publishing industry will need to change to accommodate the new technology. (And, no, I’m not converting to an e-reader anytime soon, don’t you worry.)

The following link isn’t really about books, but The King of Elfland’s Second Cousin posted a review of Tzvetan Todorov’s The Fantastic: A Structural Approach to a Literary Genre in which he also posted a picture of his remodeled Library Annex (also his dining room), and that picture made me happy. Where did he get those great bookcases, I wonder? Incidentally, the review of Todorov is also quite good.

Eduardo Rolero's Surreal 3D Street Art Illusions

♦ My friend Andy sent me the link to the 10 Most Awe-Inspiring Projects of 2011, which I quite enjoyed. Longtime readers of this blog will even notice that a couple of Magpie Monday items made it onto the list. At left is one of my favorites from that list (minus, of course, the ones I posted about previously). Click to see it full-size, ’cause it’s pretty awesome.

♦ My friend Marnie Dresser posted a great blog entry titled “Getting Off on Not Putting Off (Procrastination, Part 2).” I’ve always been a procrastinator about grading, but Marnie’s inspired me to get more on the ball. Or at least try.

♦ Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips have a new comic book, Fatale, that just started last week. Based on the 5-page preview over at Warren Ellis’s site—and the premise of horror noir—I’m sold. Check it out!

♦ io9 has an amazingly comprehensive list of 70 Science Fiction and Fantasy Movies to Watch Out for in 2012. I hadn’t even heard of some of these. Will any of these grab me enough to make me go to an actual theater to watch them? Tune in to find out….

While we’re talking about film: for multiple reasons, I think Cameron will want to know What’s the Deal with David Lynch’s Unproduced Science Fiction Screenplay Ronnie Rocket.

♦ In The New York Times Magazine, Tara Parker-Pope’s “The Fat Trap” is both fascinating and a little depressing, considering, as some of you know, I’ve been working on losing weight so my high blood pressure doesn’t kill me sooner rather than later (since May I’ve lost about 35 pounds, give or take).

For you writers out there, I have a couple of links you might find enlightening, fun, or useful. First up, Chuck Wendig posted 25 Things Writers Should Stop Doing (Right F*cking Now), which is a great list to incorporate into your New Year resolutions (if you do that kind of thing). Here are the five things on that list I definitely need to stop doing:

  1. Stop Waiting
  2. Stop Deprioritizing Your Wordsmithy
  3. Stop Playing It Safe
  4. Stop Listening to What Won’t Sell
  5. Stop Being Afraid

My MFA friend Kevin St. Jarre posted Some Writing Stuff: some good advice for writers to think about.

If you ever wondered about the answer to Lewis Carroll’s riddle, “Why is a raven like a writing desk?” wonder no more: io9 has the answer.

Yesterday was Charles Addams’s birthday (that link has a bunch of his classic New Yorker cartoons), and because of that someone on Facebook mentioned a quote by Morticia in the 1965 episode of The Addams Family, “Morticia, The Writer,” which rang true for me: “All work and no play gets books done.” I also then went to Hulu to watch that episode, which you should, too. Good Addams fun!

Relatedly, at GigaOM, Michael Wolf tells us Why 2012 Will Be The Year of the Artist-Entrepreneur:

While 2011 was a big year for political unrest, another uprising was afoot in the world of content creators and artists. Everywhere you look, artists are taking more control over their own economic well being, in large part because the Internet has enabled them to do so. You see it in all forms of content, from books, to video to music.

The Beat has a response to Wolf’s article, which also discusses the idea of the artist-entrepreneur in the comic world. (Louis CK fans, take note: he’s mentioned in both articles.) Given my belief in artisan capitalism, I can get behind this kind of movement.

♦ In addition to being an artist I really enjoy (check out his Union of Superlative Heroes and Order of Nefarious Villain trading cards to see why), Chet Phillips features a lot of great artists on his website, as you may have noted from past Magpie Mondays. This past week he featured several artists that captured my eye, particularly Sol Sallee, Anton Semenov, and Markus Reugels (click the thumbnails below to see larger images).

Sol Sallee

Anton Semenov

Markus Reugels

Two music videos for you this week. The first is just kind of quirky, but it made me smile: Jack Barrowman singing a mash-up of the Spider-Man and Wonder Woman television shows. I don’t know what to think of the dancers, but it’s fun. Via.

The second is “In My Mind” by Amanda Palmer, which is really addictive. Plus, she knows how to rock a uke. Via.


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