Did I miss something?
I just purchased a product that bills itself as being "natural walnuts". Have I missed all the artificial walnuts that must, clearly, be out there?
As You Like It, Act II Sc. 7
JAQUES
O worthy fool!
...in his brain,
Which is as dry as the remainder biscuit
After a voyage, he hath strange places cramm'd
With observation, the which he vents
In mangled forms. O that I were a fool!
I am ambitious for a motley coat.
I just purchased a product that bills itself as being "natural walnuts". Have I missed all the artificial walnuts that must, clearly, be out there?
I'm getting ready to head to Canberra on the weekend for Conflux, an annual conference (mainly) for writers and writing hopefuls interested in speculative fiction. Last year, I arrived on the figurative doorstep knowing no-one, recognizing very few names, and holding a very meagre portfolio of spec fic indeed. This year I'll be among friends, I'll be able to at least drop a name or two myself, and I'll have quite a few stories in the electronic trunk (many of which are out in the world seeking their fortune, and one of which actually won this year's Conflux short-story competition and will appear in the conference booklet, woo-hoo!). So I suppose I'm no longer a Wannabe, although I'm not sure yet that I've confidently assumed the title of an Is. Still, it's an interesting indicator of some genuine progress in my writing career, which is heartening.
Tomorrow (September 19) is International Talk Like a Pirate Day. Aaaarrrr!
This host, blogger.com, has just launched an absolutely spellbinding site: play.blogger.com. It's a real-time slideshow of the photos people are posting to blogs RIGHT NOW. It's...it's unbelievable. Watching the images go by, image after image after image, loves and passions and sudden interests -- if you don't marvel at the wonder that is each human being, then you never will.
I'm working on a piece right now that JUST WON'T FINISH! I poke at it with this stick and that stick, trying to find one that will intimidate it into rolling over and DYING, but it just won't oblige. I'm about to start HITTING it with the sticks. (After all, what's 20+ years of martial-arts training for, if you can't apply it once in a while?)
Turns out yesterday's pasta dish is so popular, people keep going back for seconds. So it does not deliver sixteen person-meals; more like ten or so. Still, it works out to less than $2 per meal, even including the seconds. And nobody has to cook tonight.
Man, this is a good feed:
Many, many years ago, my college housemates gave me a fountain pen. It was solid, well-made, and elegant and spare in style. I loved it. But for a while, instant expedience became more important to me. My writing dreams, which the pen symbolized for the givers as well as for me, retreated further and further away as I focused on my workplace jobs, one after the other. The pen came with me wherever I moved, and I always knew where it was, from apartment to house to apartment to house. But I didn't use it. It was big to carry around, unsuited for scrawling at awkward angles in meetings and conferences, heavy to use when I was in a rush. And there was always the threat of leakage. (Although, to be sure, it leaked a whole lot less than the cheapie fountain pens I was so fond of in high school.) At any rate, it languished, loved but unused, for years.
There's a point in every story or play I write where the characters start to feel like house guests who have stayed just a day or two too long.
We've been having to re-learn this week how to cope with being carless. Not careless, carless. The car's in the shop until at least Wednesday, which will make it a week and a half of coping without a car.
My husband has a nasty upper-respiratory-tract infection at the moment, so I made him some medicinal chicken soup. Now, people will tell you, oh, you must make chicken stock this way, or oh, you must make it that way. Baloney. Put a chicken carcass or two in the pot (you may, as I did, have them stashed in the freezer from the last time you procured a store-bought roasted chicken) along with onions, ginger, garlic, whatever. Boil it up for a while. Serve it to someone you love.
I'm in the process of finishing a Neil Gaiman book that I just don't like. Neverwhere has some lovely imagery, but the characters are tiresome, the writing lacks subtlety, many plot elements and character reactions are trite, more than one major character lacks any clear motivation, and it just drags on...and on...and on....