http://mumpsimus.blogspot.com/2012/05/blogging-caine-prize-2012-love-on-trial.html

This is my third post for the great 2012 Caine Prize blogathon. (See my first post for some details.) 

My initial response to "Love on Trial" by Stanley Kenani (PDF) was: This is a terrible story. Preachy, obvious, awkward, tedious.

But then I thought about a letter I wrote to one of my college teachers back in the '90s, when people still wrote letters.

I had transferred from New York University after putting in three years toward a BFA in Dramatic Writing, and was now an English major at the University of New Hampshire. There were a few reasons for my transfer, mostly have to do with money, with a sense of disillusionment with the world of New York theatre, and with a crisis in confidence in my abilities as a writer of much of anything, dramatic or not. I got involved with the student theatre group at UNH and was cast as the lead in Paul Rudnick's play Jeffrey. I was coming to this after having spent three years trying to write the most obscure, abstract, confrontational, and bizarre theatre I could imagine. I had also spent a lot of time exploring various ideas of sexuality. My favorite teacher had been an avant-garde playwright and actor who often wrote difficult, complex, and sometimes sexually-explicit plays and monologues, generally from a very queer sensibility. I remembered him saying something in class about Jeffrey as a shallow play, or a reactionary play, or something like that. (He was a very kind and gentle fellow, and I think that's why I remembered his comment, or at least the general import of his comment: Jeffrey is not a good play.)

Our production of Jeffrey was, as far as anybody knew, the first gay play to be performed at UNH, and certainly the first play to be performed there with an opening scene in which men are in bed together talking about condoms, sex, etc. We easily sold out all of the performances and I've never, before or since, experienced the same sense of a community needing a particular piece of theatre so much. It was very much the right show at the right time in the right place.

And so that's what I wrote to my teacher. It was a revelation for me — it wasn't, I said, that Jeffrey is necessarily a bad play, but rather that it is a play that needs particular sorts of audiences, and the work it will do is different depending on those audiences. For a downtown New York theatre crowd, it's really not much. For the University of New Hampshire in the fall of 1997, it was just the catalyst necessary for all sorts of conversations that had been festering beneath the surface of the university's culture. (My teacher replied that he thought it was a very good insight, and also highlighted one of the unique virtues of the theatre: people enacting stories for each other in a specific place at a specific time.)

Which brings me back to Kenani's story, and not just because it, too, is about men who have sex with each other. (Basic plot: a local drunk in a Malawian village stumbles upon two young men having sex in a bathroom. The event becomes a national news story, the one man who can be identified is put on trial and sentenced to jail, and a TV news reporter has a long interview with him in which the young man expresses no shame in his gay identity and argues with the interviewer about the Bible, etc. Western countries find out what happened and impose economic sanctions on Malawi, causing much hardship across the country, including for the drunk who now can't afford alcohol and so has the DTs, as well as HIV, which he can't get medicine for because of sanctions.) I can imagine that there are probably audiences for whom this is a very good story — a story that dramatizes various perspectives on homosexual behavior, and ends with a sort of fable that suggests ignoring threats to the lives of people different from yourself is not, in the end, a winning strategy.

As a reader of this story, I'm in a similar position to that of a chic, über-post-postmodernist downtown New York audience watching Jeffrey. The central section of the story, the interview, feels to me like a Cliff's Notes version of Heather Has Two Mommies.

But as readers we sometimes need to get over ourselves. The sorts of questions and answers in the interview may seem embarrassingly basic to me, but they are also ones I've heard all my life, and ones that could be, for all I know, entirely plausible within the setting of the story. (I know very little about Malawi, sadly.) None of the arguments made by the interviewer are exotic, none of them require anything other than a certain type of religiosity and a certain type of ignorance. Neither is in short supply throughout the world. (Sometimes, too, the religiosity is just a camouflage. I vividly remember my own childhood feelings against what my father called "the queeries" being founded on the idea that the Bible said it was an abomination. Despite the fact that I and my father, from whom I'd gotten this idea, were not at all religious and never resorted to the Bible for any other information. For both of us, the argument covered a deep homophobia: in myself, from fear and confusion over my own nascent desires; for him ... well, I don't know. But he hated nothing and no-one more than gay men. They were the only monsters worse than anti-gun liberals.)

Perhaps I should try instead to make the best case I can for the story. To argue against my initial feelings and perceptions, which are, I know from experience, sometimes untrustworthy.

The argument I would find most convincing in this story's favor would be one that reconfigured its didactic elements, because it is the didacticism that I respond most forcefully against. I do not like fiction that tries to teach me lessons, not because I think fiction has no ethical power, but because didacticism short-circuits the ethical strengths available to fiction as a form.

From such a view, then, the interview would exist in the story not to convey to us an argument, not to appeal to our compassion for the character of Charles and his plight, not to convince us that homosexuals, in fact, deserve respect — but rather, the interview would exist for its inherent dramatic qualities. The story would then more be about the power of surveillance, curiosity, ignorance, and the power of media than it would be about The Value Of Being Nice To The Homosexuals. Instead, what we should look at in the story is the way one of the least respected people in a village is able to manipulate the village's vulgar curiosities and ignorance to his own advantage, and then how his advantage becomes the TV's station's advantage, and how the situation fuels the arrogant pride of the self-righteous throughout the country, but then how all of this ends up having terrible effects for just about everyone involved. (Though why it has terrible effects is worth noticing, too: Not because, from your own perspective, it is bad to punish homosexual behavior, but rather because rich countries may not like it if you do so, and they will punish your little, vulnerable country in response.)

The story remains didactic, but more complicatedly so in that interpretation.

If all of this feels like strained justification ... well, it is. Nothing is going to make me see this as a good work of fiction, even if I can imagine that there is an audience somewhere that could value it. Didacticism, after all, doesn't have to destroy a story. Kurt Vonnegut's work is profoundly didactic, but it's also, at its best, complex and a heck of a lot of fun to read. There is just nothing in "Love on Trial" that I can see to offer any readerly pleasure. No particular depth of thought to set our philosophizing minds a-spinning. Flat attempts at humor. Straightforward, functional, reporterly prose that not only offers little aesthetic pleasure but also keeps us generally distanced from the characters, so we don't have any of the pleasures of detailed characterization. As with the didacticism, no one of these elements is at all a guarantee of a bad piece of fiction, but all of them together pretty much doom it in comparison to more lively, skilled, and complex work.

One of the negative effects of the Caine Prize is that it sometimes puts too great a burden on stories that can't bear such a burden. The Caine Prize stories gain an international audience. They are no longer merely stories. By being nominated for The! Caine Prize! for African! Writing!, they suddenly must bear the burden of being seen as Exemplary African Stories by all sorts of different audiences.

Most stories from anywhere can't bear such burdens. "Love on Trial" certainly can't, and it's unfortunate the Caine Prize judges thought it could.


Other bloggers on "Love on Trial":
Method to the Madness
Stephen Derwent Partington
Backslash Scott
Cashed-In
aaahfooey
Black Balloon
City of Lions
Practically Marzipan
Ikhide
Loomnie
 
 
27 May 2012 @ 03:52 pm

Originally published at John Joseph Adams. You can comment here or there.

GUEST OF HONOR
New Orleans, LA
Learn More

Tags:
 
 

Originally published at John Joseph Adams. You can comment here or there.

From the official website of the Horror Writers Association:

The Horror Writers Association is proud to announce prolific anthologist John Joseph Adams as the Editor Guest of Honor for the World Horror Convention (WHC) 2013. In 2013 the HWA is hosting WHC as part of the Bram Stoker Awards™ Weekend in New Orleans from 13-16 June. [...]

HWA President Rocky Wood said, “John Joseph Adams is the type of anthology editor readers love – they know each of his books will be filled with well written, interesting tales to captivate them during their precious reading hours. We are very pleased that John has accepted our invitation to be World Horror Convention Guest of Honor, where he is likely to find 300 horror writers, all eager to impress him with their wares!”

Adams joins previously announced Guest of Honor Ramsey Campbell and Toastmaster Jeff Strand on the Guest list.

Obviously I’m thrilled and grateful to be selected for such an honor, and the timing couldn’t be better with Nightmare scheduled to launch in October. I’ve never been to a World Horror or to New Orleans, so it should be quite a trip!

In related news, it just so happens that I have a story in inventory by my co-GOH Ramsey Campbell, scheduled for issue #2 of Nightmare!

Tags:
 
 
27 May 2012 @ 04:24 pm

http://notesfromthegeekshow.blogspot.com/2012/05/end-of-act-one.html

Apparently the big finish to Act One of Sodom! The Musical is a disco number. It's certainly got a beat not unlike that of "Disco Inferno" in my head. I'm sure the opening's riffing off something in particular actually but I'll be damned if I can think what.


*


"Fuck Me Again (And Again And Again)"

CUNTIGRATIA
To the grotto, come, help me unwind.
Got a General running through my mind.
Hear
 
 
27 May 2012 @ 03:21 pm

Originally published at John Joseph Adams. You can comment here or there.

As of 9:24am Pacific Time yesterday, the Nightmare Magazine Kickstarter is funded! Due to the $245 pledge by sf author and all around great guy John Scalzi, we’ve now reached 100% funding. So a big thanks to John, and to the rest of you who pledged. (Also a special thanks to Arachne Jericho, who obviously had the same thought as John, but was about two seconds too late to be the one that put us over the top.) A big thanks too, to our largest donor, George Peyton, who purchased a lifetime subscription to Nightmare and to Creeping Hemlock’s entire list of books.

Although we’ve reached our goal, there’s still time–11 more days–to pre-order an issue or a subscription, or to get one of our limited edition chapbooks (which will only be available to people who pledge via the Kickstarter).

For more information about Nightmare, you can visit www.nightmare-magazine.com or follow us on Twitter @nightmaremag.

***

Note to writers: We’ll be opening to submissions soon. Stay tuned for updates.

 

 
 
27 May 2012 @ 12:39 pm
For my birthday, I got ... misgendered. Constantly. Everywhere I went. And it was almost all in queer spaces, and it was all done unintentionally and as kindly as could be, by well-meaning folks, so I couldn't even work up a righteous head of indignation; I just got depressed.

I am not making progress. Part of it is that I haven't been able to afford my full doses of testosterone -- the treatment runs a little over $300 a month, which I pay completely out of pocket -- and so I've been stretching it out to half-doses, figuring some T going into my system was better than none. (Medically speaking, this isn't wholly unsound, as many trans guys start off on low doses.)

Thanks to Grey, I had a wonderful birthday weekend anyway. When we're alone together, the rest of the world recedes to the point where even gender seems relatively unimportant. And he can always boost my confidence, and he's so romantic, and he even seems to think I'm interesting. I know, the man must be deranged, but I sure do love him.

Re: misgendering, there was a good moment of comic relief at the drag show we attended last night. Local drag diva Bootsy DeVille was talking to us at the bar at Michael's on the Park before her show, and she turned to me and said, "I have a question for you. Now it's hard for me to phrase this right ... " Grey and I were both bracing for The Question, which I wouldn't have really minded answering for Bootsy, but instead she said rather hesitantly, "Did you use to be the boyfriend of a famous writer? Because we were googling Billy Martin, and there seemed to be some connection ... "

After collapsing with laughter, we explained as best we could, and only later did I realize I should have said, "Why yes, I used to date Stephen King, but I dumped him for Grey!"
 
 
Current Mood: recumbentrecumbent
 
 
27 May 2012 @ 02:57 pm

http://whatever.scalzi.com/2012/05/27/graduation-song/

http://whatever.scalzi.com/?p=18708

Away from the Internets for most of the day because my niece Cecilia is having her high school graduation ceremony. See you all tomorrow. In the meantime, here’s “The Paper Chase,” one of my favorite graduation-themed songs, from the (now defunct) The Academy Is… (the ellipsis is part of their name).

I wrote about Fast Times at Barrington High, the album this song is on, here.

Have a good Sunday.


 
 

http://glendalarke.blogspot.com/2012/03/house-for-sale-bungalow-in-bandar-baru.html

 BARGAIN!! HARGA MURAH!

WE ARE REDUCING THE COST PRICE BY A QUARTER OF A MILLION RM from the estimated valuation

SALE PRICE NOW $1.4 million ringgit 
for 5 bedroom house and 12,000 sq ft land area. 
REDUCED FROM $RM 1,650,000.

Yep, our house is up for sale. (NOTE: click on photos to enlarge)


THE WHY

...because there are only two of us and this house is BIG and the garden is even BIGGER. We are downsizing our lives...









THE GENERAL AREA
  • Within walking distance of a primary school and a secondary school -- our own kids attended  both, many years ago.
  • Within walking distance of mosque and Darussyifa
  • 3 min drive to wet market (in fact, we walk)
  • 5 or 6 minutes drive from Universiti Kebangsaan, the North-South Highway exit, the new shopping centre coming up at the moment.
  • 9 kms from Kajang town
  • 8 minutes drive to the Komuter Train stop at UKM
  • Easy drive to Universiti Putra, University Tenaga and Putra Jaya
  • Serdang Hospital a mere 10-15 mins away
THE LAND
    <--- a view of the front garden from the driveway
    <;---- A view of the side garden looking towards the garage and front drive

    • As with almost all land in the area, it is leasehold. However, the lease does not run out for another 74 years! (April 2086)
    • The area is 12,004 sq feet. Yes, it's huge. You can't buy blocks that big these days.
    • It's on a rise with a view, very stable solid soil (the house has no cracks!)
    • The land over the back fence is a green area that belongs to the Bangi Golf course and has not been developed
       <---the goose pen/rambutan trees
      • The house has large, established back and front gardens.
      • The house outer walls are a minimum of 11 feet from the fence on both sides, offering privacy and quiet. 
      • Part of the back yards has been fenced off to provide a goose pen, complete with cement pond. It also contains two rambutan and one nangka, all trees that fruit prolifically.
      • Other fruits include bananas, breadfruit tree (buah sukun), longan (another prolific fruiter), an avocado (starting to flower for the first time) and a number of passionfruit vines (buah markisa).
      • The neighbours are great! 
      • Over the years 70+ species of wild birds have been sighted in or from the garden. You too can wake up to birdsong...
      THE HOUSE

      We built and moved into the new house in 1981. We will be sad to leave...
      We built it one-storey, thinking it would last us into old age when our knees start objecting to steps...
      Great house for young children too, when there is no upstairs.

      • Four large bedrooms + large maid's room (or storage area)
      • Three bathrooms
      • Large lounge (Italian tile floor
      • Large dining (will take a 10  or 12 person table) Italian tile floor
      • Large dry kitchen (we eat in the kitchen)
      • Family room (with servery from kitchen, room large enough for family dining table)
      • Large laundry area/wet kitchen
      • Long side verandah with  built in flower boxes
      • Wide front verandah
      • Orchid/fern pergola built as part of the house
      • Much of the house flooring is laminated tropical hardwood board
      • Under-roof garage area will take two cars and there is room to park 3 more in the driveway. Street parking is also ample. 
      LOUNGE ROOM
      LOUNGE ROOM
      DINING ROOM
      DINING ROOM
      MAIN BEDROOM
      BEDROOM 2
      BEDROOM 2 ( & BEDROOM 3 same size)
      BEDROOM 4
      KITCHEN, AS SEEN FROM FAMILY ROOM
      FRONT VERANDA
      FAMILY ROOM
      LAUNDRY/WET KITCHEN
      LAUNDRY/WET KITCHEN AREA

      STORAGE AREA/MAID'S BATH

      MAID'S ROOM
      MAID'S ROOM








        


      MAIN PASSAGE FROM FRONT DOOR

        ADDED ADVANTAGE: A GOOD ALARM SYSTEM

        Sophisticated day or night alarm system with an interior infra-red motion alarm, as well as alarm circuits on all grilles and doors and ceiling. All this will still function even if the power is off. Tripping the alarm will register on your handphones and can be activated or de-activated by your phones. 


        INTERESTED?

        Contact our estate agent, En. Rohizat at IM Global (h/p 017 903 4650)
        or see here: Bungalow
           
           
          27 May 2012 @ 06:26 am
          So the whack factor ran a little higher yesterday. All to the good. After sleeping quite late (by my standards) and a morning workout, I met up with @howardtayler for a leisurely lunch off-site. We had a terrific conversation about writing, life and the value of kindness. Howard also did nifty caricatures of both our waitress and her manager. It was hilariously fun to watch them react with such delight.

          Walking back from lunch, we passed a pretty radical steampunked car.

          Steampunk car

          More photos later when I have the bandwidth to upload them. (That would not be right now, unfortunately.)

          Back inside, I hooked up with Ellie Copperbottom of the League of S.T.E.A.M. to host a High Tea. Which was a blast, and very odd at the same time. After that, I recorded a brief podcast interview with them. Then I wound up down in the Vendor Room signing books, where we all but sold out of my stock at the table of Off the Beaten Path Books. Gail Carriger and I crossed paths there again.

          Dinner consisted of me and a very helpful concom rep making a White Castle run. Sixty dollars later, the League and I were pigging out hard. From there, things devolved into an evening of music, hot tubbing (well, warm tubbing), drinking, and electroshock therapy. I managed to enjoy an electric kiss with a lovely young woman, as well as try out the new sport of electric motorboating. Plus people were doing shots off Boba Fett's icy head, but I eschewed that particular pursuit.

          Today I have an author panel and a reading and a day of hanging out.

          So, yeah. A lot of fun here. A lot of fun.




          Photo © 2012 Howard Tayler, used with permission.

           
           
          27 May 2012 @ 06:10 am
          Your Sunday moment of zen.

          100_3159.JPG

          San Francisco houses, 2006. © 2006, 2012, Joseph E. Lake, Jr.

          The current photo series is from my 'favorites' file, hence the dates jumping about

          Creative Commons License

          This work by Joseph E. Lake, Jr. is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.
          Tags: ,
           
           
          Easter Island statues had bodies — Did no one ever think to look?

          CSR project aims to create a high-speed, carbon-neutral steam-powered locomotive — Oh, cool. (Thanks to David E. Vincent.)

          Egos and Immorality — Paul Krugman on the Wall Street fairy tale.

          Scientist: Evolution debate will soon be history — This is stupid. The evolution debate has been history for a long time. What you have today is a combination of religious willful ignorance and conservative political opportunism. It's not a "debate" in any meaningful sense of the word, as the anti-evolution side has no evidence, logic or credibility.

          Conservatives used to care about community. What happened? — They lost their fucking minds.

          ?otd: Ever been electric motorboated?




          5/27/2012
          Writing time yesterday: 0.0 hours (Con time)
          Body movement: 30 minute stationary bike ride
          Hours slept: 6.5 (solid)
          Weight: n/a
          Currently reading: Shattering the Ley by Benjamin Tate; Of Blood and Honey by Stina Leicht

           
           
          27 May 2012 @ 08:41 pm
          More procrastination today. This is because I have a hefty week ahead and I need to stop being ill. Eurovision helps, I must admit. I couldn't not work (it's a personality flaw) so I used my have-to-be-quiet-or-pay-for-it time to read from my must-read-or-else pile. I'm two books down and have paid most of my bills and now I'm doing bits and pieces of things while singing along at home.

          It wasn't precisely a big day's anything, but it was worthwhile. I'm shaking off the foul lurgie (without even having to say "Begone foul lurgie!") and haven't entirely lost a whole weekend.

          I still feel bad about it. I was going to do a big catchup and be on top of most things by Tuesday, and life keeps interfering.

          I possibly need a 'reset' button.
           
           
          27 May 2012 @ 09:21 am

          http://kjbishop.net/2012/05/27/a-clockwork-loki.html

          http://kjbishop.net/?p=4931

          In that scene where Loki is at the museum/theatre, whacking that guy with his magic stick and then getting all ultraviolent on the other guy, how badly did I want the background music to be The Thieving Magpie? (Not, of course, that Loki would say thinking was for the gloopy ones.)

          Well, ask and ye shall receive, or close enough. Drawn perfectly by clownkid666:  The God of Mischief in A Clockwork Orange/Night Porter.

          two_lokis

          The artist also has another Night Porter picture with Thor and Loki. Coincidentally, the inimitable Fyodor Pavlov has recently visited The Night Porter too. I haven’t seen the movie — I really should have a look at it.

           
           
          27 May 2012 @ 12:00 am

          http://www.quotationspage.com/quotes/Albert_Ellis

          "The best years of your life are the ones in which you decide your problems are your own. You don't blame them on your mother, the ecology, or the President. You realize that you control your own destiny."


           
           
          27 May 2012 @ 12:00 am

          http://www.quotationspage.com/quotes/Emmet_Fox

          "Life is consciousness."


           
           
          27 May 2012 @ 12:00 am

          http://www.quotationspage.com/quotes/Tom_Nolan

          "In the absences of a decent time machine, fiction remains the most sturdy vehicle for visiting other eras."


           
           
          27 May 2012 @ 12:00 am

          http://www.quotationspage.com/quotes/Patricia_Sampson

          "Self-reliance is the only road to true freedom, and being one's own person is its ultimate reward."


           
           
          27 May 2012 @ 02:55 pm
          Back again. What was meant to be two three-day business trips to Canberra turned into two and a half weeks. Whee!

          Kate came down to join me for one weekend, which was lovely. But I'm off again for another three-day trip (allegedly) on Wednesday. Here's hoping the cats remember who I am by the time I get back...
           
           
          27 May 2012 @ 02:41 pm
          I have finally, finally worked out why the burglar unstrung my violin bow. When I was sorting my scarves this week, I noted them all and decided which to keep. It was only today, when I took out the violin, that I realised that its protective scarf was one of the ones that had been flung around the floor ie that I had sorted it along with the others. He must've thought I was hiding money in my violin case and been frustrated.

          I didn't realise how much that floating horsehair had worried me until now.
           
           
          27 May 2012 @ 01:23 pm
          I was feeling a bit overworked and fatigued last week, as you know, for I complained about it. I was feeling more and more tired and my legs kept saying to me, "Give me some rest!" On Friday the symptoms became just a bit grander than feeling run over by a truck and now I know what' wrong. The latest virus. Which is a gastro. I'm taking travel sickness pills and sleeping a lot and doing work (like yesterday) in the interstices.

          This is a seasonal thing (at least half of Canberra has some sort of virus) and I'll be through it soon.

          Like yesterday and Friday, I plan to get one big block of work done and to watch Eurovision. Everything else can wait. The last two days I didn't plan to spend the day like this but today I'm heading towards recovery and things look clearer.

          And now it's nap-time!
           
           
          26 May 2012 @ 10:00 pm

          http://www.pepysdiary.com/archive/1669/05/26/

          To White Hall, where all the morning. Dined with Mr. Chevins, with Alderman Backewell, and Spragg. The Court full of the news from Captain Hubbert, of "The Milford," touching his being affronted in the Streights, shot at, and having eight men killed him by a French man-of- war, calling him "English dog," and commanding him to strike, which he refused, and, as knowing himself much too weak for him, made away from him. The Queen, as being supposed with child, fell ill, so as to call for Madam Nun, Mr. Chevins's sister, and one of her women, from dinner from us; this being the last day of their doubtfulness touching her being with child; and they were therein well confirmed by her Majesty's being well again before night. One Sir Edmund Bury Godfry, a woodmonger and justice of Peace in Westminster, having two days since arrested Sir Alexander Frazier for about 30l. in firing, the bailiffs were apprehended, committed to the porter's lodge, and there, by the King's command, the last night severely whipped; from which the justice himself very hardly escaped, to such an unusual degree was the King moved therein. But he lies now in the lodge, justifying his act, as grounded upon the opinion of several of the judges, and, among others, my Lord Chief-Justice; which makes the King very angry with the Chief-Justice, as they say; and the justice do lie and justify his act, and says he will suffer in the cause for the people, and do refuse to receive almost any nutriment. The effects of it may be bad to the Court. Expected a meeting of Tangier this afternoon, but failed. So home, met by my wife at Unthanke's.

           
           

          http://whatever.scalzi.com/2012/05/26/musical-synchronicity-of-a-certain-miserable-sort/

          http://whatever.scalzi.com/?p=18704

          It may just be me, but I think the lead characters of these respective and currently popular songs deserve each other. Listening to the lyrics will help to explain why.


           
           
          26 May 2012 @ 05:08 pm

          http://whatever.scalzi.com/2012/05/26/dont-go-into-the-basement/

          http://whatever.scalzi.com/?p=18701

          If you’re a vegetarian, that is, because the standing freezer down there is now full with roughly 250 pounds of beef. Krissy went in with a co-worker on half of a locally bred and butchered steer, and her quarter of a steer is now taking up several shelves in the freezer. Athena, who is our resident vegetarian, registers her (entirely posed) horror.

          Actually, this is a fine moment to note that Athena recently passed her one year anniversary of being a vegetarian a few weeks ago. She started doing it to see what she thought of it and has kept at it ever since, with all of us doing a bit of research to make sure she’s getting all the nutrients she needs and so on. It does take some effort to keep a vegetarian lifestyle around here — Athena is one of the very few in her school who does — so I’m pretty proud of her for making the choice and sticking with it.

          Massive purchase of beef notwithstanding, we’ve all cut down our consumption of meat here at the Scalzi Compound (the massive purchase will last us quite a long time), and Athena’s commitment to not eating the stuff is the major reason why. So good on my kid.


           
           
          26 May 2012 @ 07:55 am
          Yesterday was even more entertaining that Thursday. I cracked my happy ass out of bed extremely late by my own standards, hit the health club for some time on the stationary bike, then caught breakfast in the Green Room. After some bloggery and email time and whatnot, I had my massage — And how cool is it that World Steam Expo has a masseur on retainer for the pros!? — and then went exploring. This eventually involved use of the hot tub, among other things.

          I spent a decent chunk of the day hanging out with the inestimable Howard Tayler, who created a truly impressive steampunk caricature of me. (When I get home, I shall scan and post this, but at the moment it is my badge art.) Howard is his own self hanging out in the Aegis room, which is basically a camp for combat geeks. Inside the Con hotel, these cats have a rappelling tower, weapons training with actual pointy objects, a bunch of Nerf weapons, and a Victorian encampment. They are pretty much a real life incarnation of the Black Briar group in J.A. Pitt's Black Blade BluesPowells | BN ]. The Aegis group helped me make a notable entrance to opening ceremonies.

          Also spent a lot more time partying with The League of S.T.E.A.M. and a whole bunch of other folks, including briefly running across the few people besides Howard that I actually knew before I turned up here. Specifically, Gail Carriger, G.D. Falksen (who has an important planet named after him in the Sunspin universe) and Evelyn Kriete (who is responsible for me being invited to this convention). I caught the last part of the The Men That Will Not be Blamed for Nothing concert.

          I even got a bit more work done on Going to Extremes.

          Today I have lunch with Howard, a High Tea to host, and a plan to hear some more excellent performances. A bit more programming tomorrow.

          Interestingly, I am way off my normal schedule here, even my normal convention schedule. I'm not sure what clock I'm living on, but it's neither Jay time nor Con time. I'm just going with the flow. Which it turns out is remarkably difficult for me to do. I feel twitchy about not being up at 5 am exercising (hard to do when you're going to bed at 2 am) and why I'm not writing more.

          But I'm here to have fun, which I am decidedly doing; and to see and be seen, which I am decidedly doing.

          Is this what time off feels like?

           
           
          26 May 2012 @ 07:35 am
          Your Saturday moment of zen.

          IMG_3052.JPG

          Playground equipment, 2006. © 2006, 2012, Joseph E. Lake, Jr.

          The current photo series is from my 'favorites' file, hence the dates jumping about

          Creative Commons License

          This work by Joseph E. Lake, Jr. is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.
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          Book Review: Grants Pass, edited by Jennifer Brozek and Amanda Pillar — A review that includes an interesting comment on my story "Black Heart, White Mourning".

          The Nebula Awards 2012: A Look Back And A Look Forward — James Patrick Kelly and John Kessel in HuffPo.

          Calvin and Hobbes on unfettered creativity as a writer — Hahaha.

          War of the Worlds: The True Story — A new indie flick coming out that looks pretty cool.

          Star Wars Turns 35: How Time Covered the Film Phenomenon

          Red Planet Becomes Blue In New Mars Image

          Astronauts enter world’s first private supply ship

          Impacts Spreading Life through the Cosmos?

          Colonel Sanders resembles Confucius — Chicken, anyone?

          ?otd: Charles Darwin: Man or monkey?




          5/26/2012
          Writing time yesterday: 0.5 hours (Going to Extremes proposal)
          Body movement: 30 minute stationary bike ride
          Hours slept: 7.0 (solid)
          Weight: n/a
          Currently reading: Shattering the Ley by Benjamin Tate; Of Blood and Honey by Stina Leicht

           
           
          26 May 2012 @ 01:40 pm

          http://notesfromthegeekshow.blogspot.com/2012/05/of-all-pricks-to-choose.html

          From Sodom! The Musical. Again, following on directly from the previous post. Yes, that's two posts in the space of ten minutes or so! Well, I had both songs written, and the other one's only wee. Anyway


           *


          "Of All the Pricks to Choose"

          [Scene: A portico next to a garden adorned with naked statues of both sexes in various postures. In the middle of the garden is a woman representing a
           
           
          26 May 2012 @ 01:24 pm

          http://notesfromthegeekshow.blogspot.com/2012/05/comfort-my-cunt.html

          From Sodom! The Musical. To follow on directly from the previous post.



           *


          "Comfort My Cunt"


          [The stage is dark. Soft music is played. A small voice, in a mournful key:]

              VOICE:
          Unhappy cunt, oh comfortless,
          From lavish slurps to sad distress,
          Comfort my cunt.
          Comfort my cunt.

          Now shorn of ornamental hair,
          And starved to gasp at empty air.
          Comfort my cunt.
          Comfort my cunt.

          In exile
           
           
          26 May 2012 @ 07:56 am

          http://kjbishop.net/2012/05/26/a-strange-moment.html

          http://kjbishop.net/?p=4961

          Location: a certain amazing cemetery with a  jogging track through the graves. I’m running behind an old guy. Another old guy is running past in the opposite direction. He raises his hand as if to wave at the man in front of me. Except it isn’t a wave. He holds his arm straight out and says, “Heil Hitler!” The man in front of me returns the salute and the words. The man running towards me must have seen my jaw drop, because he laughed and waved in the normal fashion and said “Sawasdee” (hello). Maybe they’d just watched Iron Sky. Or were fans of Slur’s Hitler song?

           
           
          26 May 2012 @ 12:00 am

          http://www.quotationspage.com/quotes/Julia_Sorel

          "If you're never scared or embarrassed or hurt, it means you never take any chances."