Oct 23 2012

Wuv, True Wuv

Because Sam and I celebrated an anniversary yesterday, I’ve been thinking about this whole concept of “soul mates.” On the one hand, it’s not true. People don’t have to sort through the seven billion potential partners on the planet in order to find deep and abiding love; they manage to do it with pretty much whatever selection is on hand. Widows and widowers remarry. People can have more than one great love in their lifetimes.

On the other hand, the longer I’m with Sam, the harder it becomes to imagine that anybody else could ever understand me so well or be so nice to live with. I think there’s a mechanism underlying long term relationships that kind of feeds into the soul mate myth. Basically, the longer two people spend together, the more they adapt to each other’s idiosyncrasies. They develop their own daily rituals, linguistic shorthands, cultural touchstones, in-jokes, and odd habits. They cover for each other’s weaknesses. They work around each other’s sore spots. Their lives become a shared island away from the rest of the society, and it becomes more and more difficult to imagine ever sharing that life with an “outsider.”

In short, people get weird when they spend a lot of time together. Every family is weird in one way or another. In fact families are more or less defined by their shared oddities. I think this might be part of what sustains the soul mate myth—we can look at old married couples and think, wow, it’s a good thing they found each other because nobody else would put up with that.

I guess what I’m saying is, I love you, sweetie. Let’s get weird together.


Oct 21 2012

Book Reviews: Grimspace, The Collegia Magica trilogy

First, a quick sales note: Amazon’s mysterious algorithms have priced the paperback version of my book at a 36 percent discount. I don’t know how long the discount will last, but for the time being, the price is a pretty reasonable $8.29.

Next up, a couple of reviews. Unfortunately, I haven’t really loved any of the books I’ve read lately.

I really wanted to like this book. I feel like we need more swashbuckling sci-fi with a feminine perspective, and so I was very ready to root for down-and-out starship navigator Sirantha Jax. Unfortunately, the writing struck me as lackluster, the plotting choppy, and the characterization…well, I guess I’m pretty sick of hearing about the sheer alpha-male dominance that Romantic Hero #10,567 exudes, and how Our Heroine instantly decides she hates his guts even as she is drawn to him on a primal level, blah blah blazzzzzzz…huhwah? Sorry, I think I fell asleep for a minute there.

Don’t get me wrong: I find the whole realm of male strength to be a fascinating topic, and I’m as happy as the next gal to read in-depth excavations of the subject. Particularly if the “subject” is frequently sweaty and/or shirtless. But I guess I feel like strength is more convincingly signaled through discipline and quiet courtesy than through bluff and bravado: I’d rather read about the scientist’s focus, the artist’s dedication, or the soldier’s stoicism than hear at length about how “dominant” some dude is while he stomps around the ship displaying his not-so-hidden manpain at every opportunity. I abandoned this book about halfway through.

The Spirit Lens is the first book in a trilogy, and the fact that I continued on to the second and third books is mostly a testament to the power of the “whodunit” plot. I was initially irritated by the book’s narrative style: the setting is a Renaissance-style fantasy world, and the point-of-view character tends toward a wordy, circuitous locution that only exacerbated my tendency to skim. But he’s given a mystery to solve, and I was drawn deeply enough into the plot that I was dismayed when the book ended without fully resolving the central conspiracy. I had my suspicions about the villains, dammit, and I wanted to find out whether or not I was right!

As it happened, I liked the second book (The Soul Mirror) a lot better, mostly because the narrative point of view shifted to a character I found much more sympathetic. But the third book was a disappointment again: repetitive in structure and kind of weirdly plotted out, introducing new characters to do important things while the fates of important figures from earlier books were forgotten. A love triangle was introduced, and shattered, in the book’s last twenty pages. The world-shaking conflict that had built across three books was ultimately resolved off-screen. I’m not sure if there are more books intended for the series, but I won’t be reading them. Still, I don’t want to be too harsh in my assessment: the setting was original and interesting, the pacing was strong, and at least some of the characters were likable. I can easily see how this series has won its fans, even though ultimately it didn’t work for me.


Oct 18 2012

Robin at the Pumpkin Patch

Robin with pumpkin

Isn’t this a great picture? Robin’s whole school took a field trip to a pumpkin patch, and one of the other moms snapped this photo.

This morning Robin announced: “I need to talk to the pizza man.”

“What would you say to him?” I asked.

“I would say, Pizza Man! Can you bring me some pizza?”

“You know what he would say? He would say: Little boy, can you give me some money?”

“Okay!” Robin cried, and chortled with satisfaction. “Oh, but wait, I’m not a little boy yet. I’m just a big boy.”

So there’s a flaw in the plan, I guess? But it does seem like he’s grasped the essential principles!


Oct 17 2012

Mi Pueblo In Peril

This just sucks all around:

Mi Pueblo, a Latino supermarket chain with humble roots, faces the prospect of a mass layoff, a boycott and a federal investigation — all because of questions about its employees’ legal status and right to work in the U.S.

The Northern California grocery chain imports and produces a full spectrum of foods from Mexico. Its 21 stores, and counting, pop up in urban food deserts that stores like Safeway don’t touch.

http://www.marketplace.org/topics/business/latino-grocery-chain-faces-immigration-audit

We love Mi Pueblo. It’s the nearest grocery store to our house, and I wrote about how happy we are to have it in our neighborhood. It is absolutely, definitely, POSITIVELY serving a big demographic and a vital need in our area.

At first blush this story like a straightforward, fuck-our-immigration-policy sucks story, nicely and neatly fitting into an existing liberal thought-box. But because this is the Bay Area we get an extra little piece of insanity that also reflects poorly on left-wing orthodoxy. There’s a union that’s actually calling for a boycott of Mi Pueblo…because they have been forced to follow the law.

It’s ironic for Mi Pueblo to defend itself from charges of betraying employees and siding with the federal government. The company was founded by Juvenal Chavez, a former janitor who came to the U.S. from Mexico without legal documents.

Now the grocery chain faces a boycott from the United Food and Commercial Workers Local 5.

So there you have it. A mid-size local business, serving a HUGE local need, is under threat both from a bullying union and from anti-immigrant federal policy. And all I really know is that this is going to make my life so much worse.


Oct 12 2012

Paperback Available Now

Quick announcement: the paperback version of my book is up on Amazon now.

I’ve had people ask if there will be a hardcover version, and the short answer is “no.” The profit margins on hardcovers are too slim for POD; Amazon won’t sell them. They will allow me to special-order hardcovers if I want to, but there’s a $99 “setup fee” for this service, on top of which the per-book cost is quite high. So no, there won’t be hardcovers—but my family members can all expect to get copies of the paperback with their Christmas presents.


Oct 10 2012

A Boy and His Dog

002


Oct 7 2012

Our First Egg!

005

Robin produced this blood-curdling grimace when told to “hold up the egg and smile.” I think it’s probably for the best that we cut short his modeling career! (On the other hand, he wants to be “an evil scientist” for Hallowe’en, and I think this expression will serve him well.)

Sam discovered the egg in a corner of our yard today. I don’t know if it’s the first our hens have produced, but it’s the first we’ve found—they’ve been making a lot of noise lately, so I was wondering if they might start laying!


Oct 7 2012

Miscellany

  • Davy is potty-training himself. Just…out of nowhere, he started asking to sit on the potty. The first few times nothing happened, but we praised him for it anyway. Lately he’s been actually using the potty for its intended purpose, about once a day. I’m delighted but also baffled. Can it really be this easy?
  • The Millennial Sword is now at #45,107 in the Kindle bestseller list, which is…not very high, except that yesterday morning it was at #162,077. So that actually represents something of a meteoric rise!
  • I feel like there ought to be a third item to put here, but I can’t think of one.

Oct 6 2012

Book Review: Graceling, Fire, Bitterblue

I read very quickly, which at least in my case is not really something to brag about. When I’m reading, what I’m doing most of the time is skimming. I don’t seem to have conscious control over this: I fall into a sort of reader’s trance, where I’m building the images of the book in my mind, and I’m not aware of every word as it goes by. (I do seem to slow down for dialogue, which I “hear” in my head, word for word.) I only know that I do this because when I’m reading something that requires careful attention—dense or very stylistic prose—I’ll keep getting tripped up by my tendency to skim ahead. I’ll blink “awake,” out of that reader’s trance, and find that I need to go back half a page to pick up from a point that makes sense. And for a while I’ll go slow and pay attention to every word, but then I drop back into the deep-reading state and I start skimming again.

As a tangent, I think this is the reason that I kind of hate watching videos online. I’m not a big fan of YouTube, and when people link to video clips, I’ll rarely watch them. (Otters are the exception. Always click for otters!) I hate video tutorials too. I was always the kind of student who would have benefited much more from being left in a quiet room with the textbook than from being forced to sit through lectures. I just can extract information so much faster by reading—there’s something kind of painful about being forced to slow down to the speed of video or speech, and my attention tends to wander. Still, I would be a better reader if I could make myself slow down a tad.

Anyway, I finish most books in a few hours. When I’m done I’ll have good recollection of the major points of characterization and plot, but I can easily miss subtle details. What’s more, sometimes my memory of books fades almost in the same way that dreams fade, once you wake up.

When I picked up Bitterblue, which is the third book in a trilogy, I found that I had pretty good memory of the events from the first book (Graceling), but could recall almost nothing of the second book (Fire). Fortunately, Bitterblue is a continuation of the story from the first book; characters from the second do show up near the end, but the setting and important players are mostly carried over from the first.

The world of Graceling is kind of a standard Euro-medieval one (I remember feeling like the worldbuilding was a bit thin, in the first book) except that some people are born with special powers, or Graces. These people always have eyes of different colors, like one blue eye and one green, so it’s obvious who the “gracelings” are. Graces can be very specific: there is for example a character in the books who can determine what anybody would most like to eat at a given moment. (I adore this power and want it for myself.) But some people are born with broader Graces. Katsa, the main character of Graceling, has a Grace for killing. This makes her an extraordinarily useful asset of the crown, and while she’s given some status as a result, she’s also not free. The first book follows her struggle for independence and the consequences of her rebellion, and I remember it being a fun, quick read with some genuinely harrowing parts near the end.

I obviously liked Graceling well enough to pick up Fire, which I am going to classify as “forgettable,” as I have forgotten nearly everything about it. (I only remember enough to be sure that I actually did read it!) Bitterblue, though, is something more ambitious. It’s an extended meditation on the aftermath of trauma, almost an elegiac book, where the tension builds less through physical confrontation and narrow scrapes (though there are some of those) but through the nagging, abrasive feeling of things out of place, secrets festering, puzzles lacking pieces, doors lacking keys.

Bitterblue is the young queen of a kingdom that, after the climactic events of Graceling, is recovering from an intense shared trauma. Nearly everyone in the story is scarred in some way. Bitterblue herself lacks parts of her memory. The story follows her struggle to lead her people to healing, while also confronting the growing evidence of a conspiracy within the kingdom to obscure important pieces of the past. I liked Bitterblue as a character, and I found the book a compelling—though, again, sometimes harrowing—read. I’d recommend the trilogy as a whole.


Oct 6 2012

People Like Free Stuff

Final promo stats: 1314 free copies of my book given away over the past four days. I briefly cracked the top ten in Amazon’s list of most popular free e-books in the Contemporary Fantasy category, peaking (I believe) at #9:

no9

It’s even possible that I climbed a spot or two after I went to bed—there seemed to be a surge of last-minute interest in the book, which I think is an excellent sign, as it suggests that people were sharing the link with their friends. On the list of all free e-books The Millennial Sword was at #373. Now it’s switched over to the paid e-books ranking, starting out near the very bottom: #162,077 with a bullet, baby. Woooo!