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Showing 3538 Columns
Showing 3538 Columns
June 5th, 2015
Every week starts the same. "This week, for real, for sure, for serious, I'm going to get some writing done during my lunch break." Every week ends the same. "Wow. I for sure, for serious, got approximately NONE writing done during my lunch breaks this week." It's not a huge loss. Until you do the math on about 5 hours of work time per week. Multiplied by weeks in a year. I'm no numbertician, but I know enough to see how all of that time maths up to a whole hell of a lot of missed opportunity.
Read Column →June 5th, 2015
Last summer I posted a Facebook status about Walt Whitman and social media which evolved into a lengthy discussion on how deceased authors would utilize social media today; I eventually uploaded the Facebook exchange to Tumblr and, to my surprise, the post got some attention. The post resurges every month or so and people continue to add their own social media author headcanons, much to my delight.
Read Column →June 4th, 2015
Big books are increasingly a thing. Some people love them. Some people hate them. As an editor, I say, if you've written an epic novel that requires 110,000+ words to tell its epic story, go on with your bad self. But before you send that beast out for consideration, make sure you haven't just included 30,000+ extra words.
Read Column →June 4th, 2015
First things first, if you haven't seen Ex Machina yet, there will be MAJOR spoilers ahead. By this I mean, I'm going to give away the entire plot.
Read Column →June 4th, 2015
Where do I even begin with this one...
Read Column →June 3rd, 2015
Mad Men finished its run on May 17. I'm super bummed out, man. One of the things that made the show shine was its attention to detail. From the wardrobe to the set design, everything felt real, as if it had just jumped out of a 60s magazine. Like the show's characters, the creators sold the 60s to us pretty well. I'd love for someone to do some research on how many people started smoking since the show came on the air.
Read Column →June 1st, 2015
Flash fiction: A style of fictional literature marked by extreme brevity. Welcome to LitReactor's Flash Fiction Smackdown, a monthly bout of writing prowess. How It Works We give you inspiration in the form of a picture, poem, video, or prompt. You write a flash fiction piece using the inspiration we gave you. Put your entry in the comments section. One winner will be picked and awarded a prize.
Read Column →June 1st, 2015
There comes a time in every author's life when she picks up a printed copy of what, so far, she's only seen in pixels — a hard copy of the words she's worked so long and hard to craft. It can be a beautiful moment — it really can — but it's also a moment that leads to more work. So much more work. So much work, I forget, each time, exactly how much more work this step can be.
Read Column →May 29th, 2015
Collectively speaking, we as a society accept that horror novels and movies not only reflect universal fears, but also contain critiques of contemporary—and, eventually, present day—social issues. Whether or not the creators of horror had an agenda in mind, we can retroactively root out evidence of Dawn of the Dead as a critique of consumerism, Videodrome as an equation of television addiction to insanity, Alien 3 as a warning against pro-life politics infiltrating the government, and so on.
Read Column →May 28th, 2015
Back when I was writing for Spinetingler Magazine on a regular basis, we ran this cool feature called “Conversations With The Bookless.” (The concept was borrowed from Jeff VanderMeer by Spinetingler head honcho, Brian Lindenmuth.) It was a very cool feature which highlighted short story writers who had yet to publish a book. It included writers such as Frank Bill, Todd Robinson, Chris Holm, Patti Abbott, Kieran Shea, and a couple of dozen others (myself included).
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