social studies
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social studies

Entries in writing (3)

Sunday
17Jan2010

Rejected by McSweeney's I

Excited to announce that I've already knocked out one of the To-Dos on my New Year's Accomplishments ... 

5) Write a story, submit it somewhere for publication and get my first real rejection letter out of the way.  

So I wrote a list for McSweeney's Internet Tendency.  

I've been listening to librivox's free recordings of books in the public domain, specifically the third collection of Sherlock Holmes stories The Return of Sherlock Holmes; it was the inspiration for

 Twelve Suppressed Adventures of Sherlock Holmes

1. The Case of the Bawdhouse Midget
2. The Finaler Solution
3. The Crooked Merkin
4. The Case That Wasn’t Really a Case So Much As it Was Yet Another Instance of SOMEone Showing Off His Powers of Deduction and Making Someone Else Look Like Quite The Ass
5. The Case of the Twatford Jugglers
6. The Albermarle Menses
7. The Spoilt Spotted Dick
8. The Washerwoman’s Pessary
9. The Case of the Patient Knife Grinder
10. The Account of the Thrice-Violated Scullion
11. The Workhouse Matron’s Awful Sausage Machine
12. The Baker Street Abattoir

 

 

After about two weeks, I received word back from McSweeney's.

Yay me!  2010's is off to a great start.  Seriously.  This was a big step for me. Who knows where this will lead?  

What I'd like to do is keep submitting, though I wonder how often one submits before one's emails get summarily routed to the Trash rather than getting read and considered?

I'll make a point to post the rejected ones here once I receive word that they've been rejected so you'll get to watch.  Lucky you, right?

 

Friday
01Jan2010

The Similarly Obligatory New Year's Eve/Day Post

Hear that low-pitched hum accompanied by the high whining shriek of locked-up mental gears?  It's the sound of the (self-imposed) pressure on People of the Blog everywhere to make their last/first post of the old/new year pithy/somber/witty/reflective.  The older I get, the less interest I have in parading my failures for the whole world to see, especially if I can'y squeeze any comedic value out of them.

So instead of resolutions, I'm going public with some guidelines for 2010 ... some personal milestones that, for one reason or another, I've decided are important to me.  Take 'em or leave 'em.  I pay the registration and hosting fees on this bitch and I can do as I choose.

1) Get started on my Music City 1/2 Marathon training and keep it going post-race.  When I finished last year, the multi-month endorphin rush made me talk crazy talk ... wanted to run it next year, wanted to run 5Ks for kicks.  If you were one of the people I said this to, my apologies.  I was out of my head.  My goal is to finish, maybe with an even better time.

2) Keep an accurate list of the books I read.  I don't know why this is such a big deal for me.  But I want to do a better job of tracking how much of the written word I take in.

3) Learn how to use a flash, and start taking pictures of people.  Don't get me wrong.  I love shooting 300 frames of a pile of rusty metal as much as the next OCD fauxtographer out there.  But a recent visit to the Memphis Books Museum of Art and viewing a collection of WPA photos (disappointingly fewer than I would have liked to have seen) suggested that what my oeuvre has in obsessive detail it lacks in soul.  @griffintech photographer @bradleyspitzer publically set out last year (or the year before that) to "learn how" to shoot people.  I think he's more than succeeded.  It's time for me to nut up and ask people if I can take their picture.

4) Be a better friend.  Facebook friends are fine, but few of them would actually pick you up at the airport late at night on a rainy Sunday.  I want to give more time to the people who really matter.  And spend way less mental and emotional energy on those who don't.

5) Write a story, submit it somewhere for publication and get my first real rejection letter out of the way.  To celebrate my 20th college reunion, why not actually write some fiction and send it off somewhere to have it looked at and summarily rejected.  "I haven't written in way too long.  I need to get back into that."  Or "Well, the New Yorker rejected a story about middle-class white suburban angst I sent them.  Said something like "did not fit their needs at this time."  Which sounds better?  

6) Let my kids grow up.  They're going to whether I want them to or not.  

 

Sunday
22Nov2009

Tellng stories to explain technologies. 

Cory Doctorow, one of my fave authors and techknowledgeists, has this to say about the role the writer must play in explaining and contextualizing new technologies.

" In a time of great change, fiction can sometimes provide better understanding than facts alone. "As the pace of technological change accelerates, the job of the science fiction writer becomes not harder, but easier—and more necessary," [Doctorow] writes. "After all, the more confused we are by our contemporary technology, the more opportunities there are to tell stories that lessen that confusion."

Does the writing I do eliminate questions? Or create new ones? Do the words that I put in a package help someone see how easy it can be to solve a problem or I'll a need? Or have I slung a bunch of crap at them that makes them feel like they've purchased yet another piece of plastic they have to learn how to use and be worthy of?

I know what I try to do when I get up each morning. But it's critical that if I'm to be entrusted as a teacher/knowledge provider, that I'm constantly on the lookout for "techcreep," information that seems like it would be really cool to share, but ultimately doesn't provide any additional clarity to the issue the buyer purchased my product to solve in the first place.

Quote Source: L. Gordon Crovitz, Wall Street Journal http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704888404574550264045617406.html?mod=rss_opinion_main