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2009 Hugo Award Winners

Posted on August 18th, 2009 by desert rat
Posted in Joss, Neil, SaturdayScribes, writing/books | No Comments »

Copying over a post from Saturday Scribes. Feeling lazy today. Besides, it’s great news for two of my favourite writers!

Winners of the 2009 Hugo Awards are up, as of August 9th:

http://www.thehugoawards.org/2009/08/2009-hugo-award-winners/

I have to say, I think it’s totally awesome that Dr. Horrible’s SingAlong Blog won for Best Dramatic Presentation – Short Form. Way to go Joss! And another one of my favourite guys, Neil Gaiman, won for best novel. I’m not sure, but it might be the first time that a YA novel has won in that category.

Now I have to start scrounging around in the local book stores and start doing some serious reading. It’s been far too long since I bothered to check out new SF authors (I’ve been a bit of a creature of habit, genre/reading wise lately).

How to know when a story’s done

Posted on August 6th, 2009 by desert rat
Posted in Neil, writing/books | No Comments »

Since many of us are in the midst of that oft-dreaded novel (or short story) editing phase, I thought I’d pass on a bit of advice from Neil Gaiman, culled from a couple of different blog posts back in ‘05.

 When asked, how do you make friends with your own writing, and overcome the urge to be a perfectionist?

Well, it’s hard to be a fan of your own work (I’m not a fan of my writing). You’ll always see how far it was from what you had in mind when you sat down to write. (The only thing that seems to fix that is time. But time still won’t make you a fan of what you’ve written, and when it does — when you find yourself laughing at a joke you’ve forgotten that you wrote a long time ago — it normally just makes you worry that you used to have it but you probably don’t any more.)

If people you trust say they like it, they probably like it, but that doesn’t make you respect them any the more or like the story. (It’s one reason that editors buying stories is so important for beginning writers. Anyone can say they like it, but sending a cheque and then printing the story — that’s love.)

 Also, once it’s written, the writer is just one more person with an opinion about the work. It’s certainly an informed opinion, but that doesn’t make your opinion more right than anyone else’s, I’m afraid, whether they like it or they don’t.

 It’s best make art and not to worry. I’ll take the satisfaction of having built something that did what I hoped it would do over being in love with my own voice any day. It’s safer. Make good art that says sort of what you set out to say and then, when it’s good enough for jazz, go on to the next thing.
(Jan. 16 ‘05, http://journal.neilgaiman.com)

When asked, how do you know when a book is done?

How do you know when your book is done? Hmm. I forget who it was that said that art is never finished, only abandoned, and that’s true up to a point. I’m never satisfied, but normally there’s a point that feels like you’ve reached the end of a story, that the journey begun is now over, and another point, somewhat later, where you feel like something’s been fixed and changed and polished as much as it’s going to be fixed and changed and polished — not that nothing more can be done with it but that any more changes are going to make little difference to the end result and might just make it worse.

“It’s good enough for jazz,” I think. And besides, by that point I’m normally getting much more interested in the next project, which is another indication that the last one is probably done.

(Right now I’m at the point where I’m suddenly embarrassed that I sent the zeroth draft to anybody, wish that no-one had read it, and am really looking forward to trying to get the first draft done — my deadline is April the 1st, which seems very appropriate for this book. Mostly at this point it’s a matter of writing about six or seven more scenes, and making a few things clearer, polishing a couple of themes until they shine.)
(March 9 ‘05, http://journal.neilgaiman.com)

Then again, some of us start getting interested in the next project when we’re still on the first chapter of the first project, and end up (like me) with three or four novels on the go instead of one. In which case the advice would probably be, rule #1 is to Finish the Damn Thing. And when that thing is done, Write Something Else. I think “finish the damn thing” should be my morning mantra every day.  Also, “One thing at a time, Kiki.” (Kiki being the ferret in Sluggy who’s always being distracted by shiny things).

Pick a story. Finish it. Move on. Maybe if I put it to music…

Neil Gaiman on…

Posted on June 25th, 2008 by desert rat
Posted in Neil, musings/misc, writing/books | No Comments »

Neil Gaiman: official audio / video clips.

Update: Back in ‘08 I posted a link to an ABC “First Tuesday” video interview with Neil on books, writing, and children’s fiction (his observations about the differences between what scares kids versus what scares adults were spot on). It seems that video has vanished (I tried searching their archives to no avail), but you can find other cool video clips of Neil by following the link above.

Neil’s Magnificent Oracular Journal

Posted on April 15th, 2008 by desert rat
Posted in Neil, musings/misc | No Comments »

Be warned: This is not a toy, but a serious instrument of divination:

http://www.neilgaiman.com/oracle/

(Guaranteed to be perfectly applicable to your situation. Or not.)

Neil Gaiman on Lovecraft

Posted on January 4th, 2008 by desert rat
Posted in Neil, music/art/media, musings/misc, writing/books | No Comments »

[formerly cool interview video no longer accessible to the public]

Pretty succinctly summed up why the stories work (almost despite themselves), why the mythos persists, and why the movies always suck.

Update: Unfortunately the video was taken down due to copyright issues (don’t you just love the litigious world we live in?). Status here. If it ever makes its way out of copyright jail, it’s worth checking out.

In like a polar bear

Posted on January 1st, 2008 by desert rat
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Even more fierce than a lion, and much chillier. 2008 has blown in on a great gust of flying snow, blanketing everything in white, encouraging extended hibernation everywhere. I’ve taken advantage of my still-semi-incapacitated-yet-slightly-improved state to get caught up on my writing over the past three days, and I’m happy to say I made my updated goal for 2007, ending the year with a whopping 321,348 words written in total, which averages out at around 642 single-spaced pages. Somewhere around 200 pages of that went towards continuing my now-13-months-old novel Sleeping Underwater; the rest was divided between my new novel (the John Dresden story, title pending, now at over 130 pgs long, and the main project I worked on this month), and various and sundry shorts and snippets when I wasn’t feeling novellish.

Here’s to another year of furious scribbling and typing, not to mention a whole whack load of editing (I’m lining up my red pens now).

To quote Neil Gaiman:

“May your coming year be filled with magic and dreams and good madness. I hope you read some fine books and kiss someone who thinks you’re wonderful, and don’t forget to make some art — write or draw or build or sing or live as only you can. And I hope, somewhere in the next year, you surprise yourself.”

TV mythos as virus

Posted on May 19th, 2007 by desert rat
Posted in Neil, musings/misc | No Comments »

Great little bit up on Neil’s blog about the infectious nature of Dr. Who:

http://www.neilgaiman.com/journal/2007/05/nature-of-infection.html

Also, I’ve been hearing some scritch-scritch-scratching in the bird house lately, and I think (although I don’t want to jynx it), that Magpie might actually be getting back into that whole posting thing – written words even!  I’ll be sure to add an update note here if that is indeed the case, and not just an hallucination on my part.