Columns
Showing 3538 Columns
Showing 3538 Columns
July 17th, 2014
O say, can you read by the dawn's early light What so proudly we hailed as a poem-turned-anthem, Whose broad themes and bright lines through a rhyme scheme so tight, O'er the airwaves we've heard before many sporting games? And masses unaware there was poetry there Gave proof through the night that their love was still there; O say does that star-spangled poem yet wave O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave?
Read Column →July 16th, 2014
I blame the bad reputation of lawyers on two things: ambulance chasers and American popular culture. Having worked in a jurisdiction with limited compensation claims and advertising of personal injury cases, moving to North America was a bit of a shock. Lawyers… advertise? No win, no fee? Lawyers need to beg for work on billboards in Vegas?
Read Column →July 16th, 2014
Q: “How many lawyer jokes are there?” A: “One. The rest are true stories.” Lawyers have a rotten reputation. On that point there’s no argument. But I’m here to tell you why writers in particular should view lawyers as a human form of the plague and avoid them at all costs. No, I take that back: they’re not quite as bad as a disease that causes buboes full of blood and pus to break out all over the body and kills its victims in a matter of days. I misspoke.
Read Column →July 15th, 2014
I don’t know if anybody really tells writers this anymore, but if anybody tells you to “write what you know,” kick them in the shins and run away. I seriously can’t imagine any worse advice to writers than “write what you know.” Maybe “always write from the point of a view of a monkey,” or “only write when you’re super drunk.”
Read Column →July 15th, 2014
LURID: vivid in shocking detail; sensational, horrible in savagery or violence, or, a guide to the merits of the kind of Bad Books you never want your co-workers to know you're reading.
Read Column →July 14th, 2014
It's that time of the month again, and like a menstruating uterus this editor bleeds red ink all over some prose...yeah... First up, Only2be gives us a paragraph on parenting:
Read Column →July 13th, 2014
There's a moment in your novel's lifespan where it's done, but not quite out yet. People can order it, but they're not going to be receiving their copy for weeks or even months. It's pre-order, the hype period, the time in which you're pumping up this thing that no one has seen or read yet. You're in dire need of press, reviews, and maybe even an interview or two. Bottom line: you've got to put on your public relations hat and solicit some attention. This is where the press release comes in.
Read Column →July 11th, 2014
At first glance, neuroscience and fiction may seem strange bedfellows. But as it turns out, when you hook up the average human being to functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and give them a novel to read, a veritable Fourth of July goes off in some niftily specific areas of their brain. Which should be of particular interest to any bona fide lit geek.
Read Column →July 11th, 2014
The words “character building exercise” sound approximately as fun as changing the cat’s litter box or cleaning the gutters. Exercise is rarely enticing until you actually begin doing it, even when it’s for storytelling muscles instead of glutes or biceps.
Read Column →July 9th, 2014
Disclaimer: I assume most people nowadays are familiar with the twist ending to this narrative, so I discuss it freely here. Even if you've never read the book or seen either movie, you probably know how they end. But just in case you don't, go watch the Polanski film at least. It's even on Netflix Instant Watch, so you have no excuse.
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