Archive for November, 2008

Just a quick note. I took a typing test last night, and it turns out that I can type 70 words a minute. This is when I’m just tearing along, no thought, just typing relatively simple words from the screen.

That makes my theoretical words per hour a MAXIMUM of 4200. Divide by about half, since I write fantasy and sci-fi and therefore have to type names like Norstrilia and Tk’tk’tk and my theoretical maximum is 2100 words. Right now, I’m at about 800 words an hour of first draft. Obviously, there’s room for growth.

So what’s your theoretical maximum vs actual output?

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It seems that my re-introduction to blogging post is generating quite the discussion.

In that post, I basically said that it was a waste of time for new writers to keep a blog, and that they should focus on writing fiction instead. Since I’ve stirred up a little controversy, I’d like to elaborate:

Writers are basically small business owners with a product to sell: their words. A blog should really be a sales tool, and I think even beginning writers acknowledge this when they say they blog to “get their name out there”. However, if you’re writing short fiction (or have written an unpublished novel), you are not selling to the public (the people who will be reading your blog), you are selling to editors (who very likely do not read your blog). In any case, a cleverly written blog post will not make them accept a poorly written story. Therefore, writing a great story will sell your work more than writing a better blog. QED.

However, if you DO have a product to sell to the public, as Robert Swartwood pointed out in the comments, now it makes sense to keep a blog. The target audiences are the same. People might read your blog, like your writing, and go out and buy your book. This has been demonstrated time and again by John Scalzi, Cory Doctorow, and Charles Stross (of course, it helps that they all wrote terrific books).

So, from a business point of view, new authors should not write blogs and newly-published authors with novels to sell should.

From a personal point of view, as Deven Atkinson and Suanne Warr mentioned in the comments, if you like keeping a diary, by all means put it on the net. Just be honest with yourself about how much it will really impact your career.

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This blog will now post entries automatically to my Live Journal feed.

I’ve been annoyed for quite some time that I had to have an LJ account to post to any blog on live Journal. If people followed my link, they came to a dead LJ page instead of to Wordpress. I’m happy to say that’s no longer a problem.

Head on over to http://jlapp.livejournal.com/ if you’d like to see the result of a cross post. Worth checking out.

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One of my favorite bands when I was growing up was Alice In Chains. Though the primary songwriter was always guitarist Jerry Cantrell, the lead singer, Layne Staley, was the true force behind the band, especially in its later years.

Layne sang a lot about drug addiction, which was natural for a lifelong heroine addict. What was different about Layne was that he never fooled himself. He knew he was dying and there was nothing he could do about it.

This was a man who knew suffering like no one else, and he channeled it into his music. You could listen to him and think, “You know, no matter how bad I have it,  that guy has it worse.”

Near the end of his life, he reconnected with his high school sweetheart and he got her addicted to smack. They used to do everything together, and I mean everything. One day she caught an infection from a dirty needle. The infection traveled to her heart, and she died.

After that, Layne basically surrendered to his addiction. He retreated to his apartment and saw no one but his dealer. By the time he sang this song, he was wearing long gloves (which I believe you can spot in the video) to hide the fact that his arms were rotting from the needles. He died April 19, 2002–eight years to the day after Kurt Cobain.

If you’re looking for more information about the life of Layne’s Staley, and I recommend it, you can find it on the radio show (streaming) the Ongoing History of New Rock hosted by Alan Rock. The episode is called “The Rise and Fall of Alice in Chains” on page 17.

The video below is Layne channeling his life. Pure and simple.

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So, I subbed a piece to Clarkesworld and get a rejection in four hours flat.

Four hours.

That is a huge plus in their favour. Less of a plus is that they no longer do personal rejections, which were a definite highlight for me. I was getting really encouraging feedback from former editor Nick Mamatas, and I was sure this piece would suit his style. Of course, he has since moved on, and now I’ve got to go back to the drawing board to see what kind of fiction they’d like to publish.

Jim Baen’s Universe will probably be my new first market to sub to (because of the personalize comments at the Bar), but Clarkesworld will remain high on the list, not the least of which because I’ve had several conversations with Publisher Neil Clarke and the man is a class act.

In any case, I will leave you with a short poem posted by Brian K Lowe on the Codex forums. He couldn’t remember the original author, so step forward if it’s you, and I’ll attribute it.

There once was an editor named Bright,
Who read slush much faster than light.
He judged stories all day
In a relative way,
And returned them the previous night.

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