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Showing 3538 Columns
Showing 3538 Columns
March 18th, 2014
My debut novel, New Yorked, will be published by Exhibit A Books in January 2015. Until then, I'll be writing about the path to getting that book published... My original plan for this installment was to address the daunting task of writing a follow-up to New Yorked. That feeling of, "Oh shit, I have to do this again." But also my unbridled excitement at revisiting the world of my protagonist, Ashley McKenna, as he struggles to find his moral compass.
Read Column →March 17th, 2014
The adaptation of The Hunger Games was okay. It wasn’t a bad film, but it wasn’t the kind that inspires article writing — even though I <cough> did write one. But I wrote that article because I pitched it before I’d seen the film. I was obligated. This one I pitched after seeing the film (repeatedly) and re-reading the book (twice).
Read Column →March 17th, 2014
Two years ago, I went on a month-long tour of Ireland. During that trek, I reviewed the famous Irish writers, spending time with their work and the famous places associated with them. I was taken aback by just how many talented Irish writers there are, especially given that half as many people live in Ireland as live in New York City. Something about the Emerald Isle yields a disproportionately high number of talented writers.
Read Column →March 14th, 2014
There is going to come a time when you have to say: Fuck it.
Read Column →March 14th, 2014
Commas are a touchy subject, having divided writers of the English language into two distinct camps for many years. On one side of the battlefield are those in favor the Oxford or “serial” comma, which is endorsed by Oxford University Press and the Chicago Manual of Style. In the other corner of the ring are the Associated Press and New York Times, ever skeptical of any unnecessary punctuation.
Read Column →March 13th, 2014
Writers have an abundance of avenues for self-publishing their work, with Amazon and SmashWords perhaps being the two most prominent. So when I was first clued in to TowerBabel, an online eBook self-publishing platform founded in 2013, I was admittedly a bit skeptical. I mean, between Amazon and SmashWords, that's it, right? What more do you need? But after investigating the website further, I think TowerBabel is definitely worth a look. Why?
Read Column →March 13th, 2014
Remember that talk we had? No, not that one; the other one. No, not the seahorses; the other other one. The time we talked about how creativity is based on the combination of existing ideas. It’s time to revisit that topic because — as with all good ideas — someone has managed to mess it up by taking it to the extreme.
Read Column →March 12th, 2014
Well, this column hasn't been canceled yet, so apparently there are enough of you out there who truly are interested in poetry. I'll raise a toast to that! Be right back... ::actually going to get a drink to help me write this column:: ...okay, hey. Full disclosure, I only had scotch, so I went out to the store to get something Irish. I'm a Guinness man normally, and there's a nice Irish Beer Discovery Pack with Guinness, Black Lager, Smithicks, and Harp, so that's what I got. Sláinte!
Read Column →March 11th, 2014
When Alexander Chee was asked in a Pen Ten interview what his favorite place to write was, he responded with: I still like a train best for this kind of thing. I wish Amtrak had residencies for writers. And after trains, libraries at night, especially empty ones.
Read Column →March 11th, 2014
From Dionysian celebrations in Ancient Greece to vision quests and well beyond, the idea that altered states lead to creativity is an established cultural "wisdom." Many writers treat the Ernest Hemingway saying of "write drunk, edit sober" as a commandment from the Muses. But do altered states really expand our creativity? What are the limits? And, perhaps most importantly, what are the reasons? I'll explore all that in this article, but I'll also be doing something more: Drinking.
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