Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 12/2004

some of my work

Journal

Seaborn Notes

I have a character in Seaborn, Michael Henderson, who's a minor character with a background in science, and I've sort of left it up to him to try to explain how people can live and breathe under the sea.  He has the "curse" himself, all the abilities the Seaborn have.  He writes pages of notes, sketches the things he sees in the deep, imagines why things work the way they do with the Seaborn--all with a scientific mind.

I've written and drawn a bunch of stuff in the character of Michael Henderson, which started out as part of the worldbuilding exercises, and just kept going.  I wrote the chapter headings in Seaborn from Henderson's perspective, taken from his notes, his journal, his "conversations" with various notable characters. 

Here are some samples from my journal:

Seaborn Notes
Michael Henderson

SeabornI have been to the deep ocean, the Very Deep, and I have set my feet down in billion year old sand.  I have kicked through the dark with blind animals that change shape with their moods, with fish ten meters long that glide through the deep sea without fear--and only eat microscopic food, with arthropods made of glass, and creatures that defy classification, I have touched the bioluminescent lures of fanged ambush predators in the abyss, and I still have all of my fingers.   I have done all of this without equipment, without SCUBA, without feeling the pressure, or need for air.  I am no longer a surface human--or as the Seaborn, say--a surfacer, a Thinling.  I have become one of them.

I have experienced, l’ivresse des grandes profondeurs, Jacques Cousteau's "rapture of the deep," but not as the nitrogen narcosis that Cousteau described in Silent World.  Say, rather, that I have experienced the rapture of the unexpectedly normal in the most unexpected place on earth: the deep sea.

The Seaborn do not suffer from any of the affects of breathing compressed gases, for example the squeeze of barotrauma on descent, because presumably, these do not exist in effective amounts in their bodies.

SCUBA stands for Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus.  This is a device enabling surface-living humans to recreate, as near as possible, and within well-defined limits, everything the human respiratory system needs above the ocean surface, in the air.  While in the water, it appears that the Seaborn do not--or even need to--breathe in the same manner, possessing a different, possibly more advanced system for taking in the same gases and nutrients directly from seawater.  Out of the water, the lungs of a Seaborn human appear to function the same way as the lungs of any surface human. 

Lungs:  Alveoli are the small grape-bunch like structures that line the lungs and take up oxygen, CO2, Nitrogen--gases the human body needs to survive, with oxygen fueling so many of the processes.  The Alveoli are highly susceptible to damage from heavy substances like seawater, which really shouldn't be in the lungs.  Damage then leads to low blood oxygen levels (hypoxemia) , low tissue oxygen levels (hypoxia), and then death.  The alveolar-capillary membrane is a delicate, one cell thick membrane through which the gases we breathe are exchanged.  It appears to be the case that the Seaborn possess a more rigid surfactact--a sort of stiffening coat for the alveoli to prevent them from collapsing under the weight of heavier substances like water in the lungs.

Sick...

Img_0123 Four years of blogging and I have never done a cat or sick post.  I'ts about time.  Here's our cat Niki, with our German Shepherd, Keia.  She's the coolest cat.  I'm sick as a dog, a bit of the flu.  We're talking about full on...no, not going to go there.

Before it set in, I was having one of the best times I have ever had at a con.  Speaking from my fairly newby con-going experience (World Fantasy, Boskone, commercial pub cons like BEA, and now WisCon).  This is my first WisCon, and I will be back next year, on some panels, doing a reading or two.  Here's me and Kathy Sedia (Secret History of Moscow).  I'm in other pictures, just not on my camera.  Will post when I get them!

Img_0163

This year, we’re pushing Argon

Argon’s the element with the atomic number 18.  18 is the only number that equals twice the sum of its decimal digits (I'm not counting zero).  18 is a wonderful number, the Hebrew word for "life" is חי (chai), which has a numerical value of 18.  (Amazing what you can learn from Wikipedia).

18 is the number of years Alice and I have been married. 

It sure doesn’t seem that long—nearly two decades—a beautiful April day in Morgan Hill, California.  We were married in an old two-room school house with a bell, Machado School

I love you, Alice. Here’s to eighteen more!

(btw, this is my 1000th blog post on http://theophrast.us )

Arthur C. Clarke

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) -- Arthur C. Clarke, a visionary science fiction writer who won worldwide acclaim with more than 100 books on space, science and the future, died Wednesday in his adopted home of Sri Lanka, an aide said. He was 90...more from The New York Times

Heinleincentennialarthurclarke Sad.  I saw him at the Heinlein Centennial last summer, live from Sri Lanka, and he joked and told old stories.  Brilliant. 

My favorite couple lines from the AP article at NYT:

He moved there [Sri Lanka] in 1956, lured by his interest in marine diving which, he said, was as close as he could get to the weightless feeling of space.

"I'm perfectly operational underwater," he once said.

Links

http://www.clarkefoundation.org

WWKW (What Would Kassandra Wear?)

Chloe (my daughter) and I created some cool stuff with the theme, What Would Kassandra Wear (for jewelry).  Kassandra's one of the main characters in SEABORN and the sequel.  We hit the Michael's beading section, going a bit overboard. 

Chloe's also created a new kind of accessory that she's going to market test with a couple friends who have hair long enough to braid.  More on this when she has some results. 

I'm also putting together a contest on the idea making Seaborn jewelry.  More on that when I've got it together. 

Speaking of contests...the Seaborn sequel title contest is going to wrap up soon--in the next couple weeks.  The titles are with the people who will make it happen, along with my own favorites identified (I'm only one of the judges).  Hoping to announce the winner soon.

Here are a few of our creations:

Earrings2 Earrings3

Earrings1

What's going on?

I'm heads down on Seaborn's sequel, even starting to look forward to the next book.  (Alice will be thrilled).

I haven't been checking MySpace, and just did, to find out that after accepting some libraries as friends, I'm up over a 1000...uh...friends!  Crazy.  I know there are many many authors and publishing industry people on MySpace, and I think it's worth it to keep a profile there.   Facebook is looking like the new new thing for editors, agents, and authors.

http://www.myspace.com/the0phrastus
http://www.facebook.com/p/Chris_Howard/605431666

If you haven't been here in a while--actually visited my blog (http://theophrast.us) if you're using a reader, then click by and check out the new extreme makeover.  I'm still tweaking, but all the dust has nearly settled.  Let me know what you think of it.

I've been posting (mostly cross-posting) stuff over on the Juno Books authors blog, Fiction Beyond the Ordinary.  Go check it out.

And I vote

Ivoted Not just in the general election, but in the New Hampshire primary.  It's almost like getting two chances to make a difference.

Here's a scan of my sticker--they hand them out at the exit.

The Wolf

Here's Alice and Lykeia --"Keia," our 12-week old German Shepherd.

Aliceandkeia

Making Mayhem, and then napping

Here's a video of Penny (Jack Russell / Australian Herder) making mayhem with Lykeia ("keia"), our new German Shepherd puppy.  Plus some pics of Keia resting after endless days and nights of rough housing.

Longday Norest

Leavemealone

The famous Penny:
http://the0phrastus.typepad.com/the0phrastus/2005/06/mans_best_frien_1.html
http://the0phrastus.typepad.com/the0phrastus/2007/09/make-him-squeal.html
http://the0phrastus.typepad.com/the0phrastus/2007/06/doggies_gone_wi.html

"I have no recollection of remembering that recollection..."

SenatejudcommhearingroomI really wanted to say that , and then cover the microphone to discuss my next brilliant response with my legal team.  Okay, that's just my imagination.  But I was there yesterday, in that very room where people have been known to say things like that. 

We met in the Senate Judiciary Committee Hearing Room--you know, you've seen it on TV, newspapers, C-SPAN.  I was in Washington D.C. yesterday with a couple colleagues meeting with staff from members of the Senate Judiciary Committee, the House Subcommittee on Courts, the Internet and Intellectual Property of the House Judiciary Committee, the Library of Congress, and the U.S. Copyright Office.   Washington is such a cool place. 

Here's a pic of me standing behind the chair of Senator Leahy of Vermont (Majority Leader)--because if you're the chairman, you get the cool chair right in the center.

Senatejudiciarycomhearing1_2 

http://www.c-span.org
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Senate_Committee_on_the_Judiciary
http://www.uscourts.gov/ttb/dec05ttb/legislationwaits/index3.html

.

What's up?

Got some painting done this weekend, what promises to be the first of a six part set, one for each of the kings, queens, nutjobs inside Kassandra's head.

I ordered some prints of Tim Lantz's cover for Seaborn through deviantArt.  Get yours!  (Link)

Got a start on a Seaborn web site--SaltwaterWitch.com and some feedback from Carole (Wind Follower) and Tia from Fantasy Debut over on Fiction beyond the ordinary.

After several weeks revising, taking in a bunch of edits, errors, suggestions from my agent and early readers, I'm going to print out the manuscript for SALTWATER WITCH (YA fantasy) and send it back to my agent. 

I was up early writing a scene for The New Sirens--current WIP.  This story is really rolling along.

.

The Rain in Maine...

...falls humanely in the drain.  Okay, so me and Alice and the kids drove around southern Maine for a few hours this afternoon.  Let me back up and say this all started on my birthday when Alice--kind and wonderful--gave me a zoom lens for my Nikon D40X.

Maine1_2 

We've been busy and haven't had time--until today--to run out to take a bunch of close-up shots of long range things--and the best place to go for that?  That's right.  We hit the road for Maine, which is like 8 miles away from us, so not really a journey, but more of a way to spend a few hours, catch an early dinner at Wild Willy's Hamburgers, one of the best hamburger places around, and cruise along the beautiful York coast, snapping photos.

Maine2

Maine3

Brenda's Bloomers (http://brendasbloomers.com)

Maine4

Maine5 Main6

Main7

Main8_2

Whaleback light...in the pouring rain:

Main9

Looks like a really bad dinghy, skiff and rowboat pile-up...

Main10

And here's the cause.  The light's always green!

Main11

Finally, some important information for those mooring (or planning to dive from the boats) in Kittery Harbor. Click any of the pics to see them larger.

Main12_2

Mildly Significant Dates

Okay, today's my birthday, so I'm going to keep it short.  One question: do you use your birth date or any other significant dates in your life in your fiction writing?  It could have been any date in the year, but I made Kassandra's birthday September 2nd.  It came up in the middle of a sentence, and I had to pull a date out of my hat.  I also used Chloe's birthday for another somewhat important date.  What about you?  Any of your characters have anything going on on your birthday, anniversary?

Writing tools

A couple questions before I start rambling:  What tools do you use when you write?  Do you pull out different gear for long form and short form, fiction and non-fiction?

I'm more interested in the tools that work rather than which ones don't, but I'd like to hear about the experiences you've had with any writing application or method.

Digital

First, I don't think it matters if you use Windows, Linux, Mac, or any other OS.  I'm not even sure the tools matter as long as they get the job done and you're comfortable using them.  What may matter is the availability of some tools on some operating systems, but even that's up to you.  If you're like me, you'll find those story boarding/crafting/outlining tools interesting but ultimately unnecessary.

Operating Systems

I have been using Ubuntu for months, not just for work, but as my secondary writing machine.  I'm loving the performance--although like all OS's it seems to have slowed down over the months.  I've always run Linux (used to run RedHat and then Fedora) on older machines, but this is the first time I'm on a new fast core duo notebook.  Ubuntu: it's quick, it's easy, it has a very active community that has provided me with a lot of answers and advice, and it's pretty.  It's a good looking, smooth UI, a really comfortable environment.

I have divided my world into Linux and Windows, and there are many tasks I will always have Linux handy to perform.  For now, though, writing isn't it--and I think this is because I move between the two worlds.  I don't know, but I suspect I would have the same issues if I was trying to write on Windows machines and Macs, moving docs back and forth, converting docs into different formats. Just asking for trouble.

Some good discussion on this--and on Microsoft--over on David Louis Edelman's blog.

Word Processing and Editing

One solution to this--pushed by my colleague and fellow author Skott Klebe (http://textiplication.com)--is Google Docs, which I admit is a very compelling service.  It's entirely online, auto-backed-up, usable from any machine, and with most of the editing/word processing functions needed by writers.  Not all, however.

I primarily use Microsoft Word, XP, 2003 and 2007, different version on different machines, but they all work well together.

I know there are plenty of writers who use Open Office--and have used it for years.  And there are many reasons to use it exclusively. 

I've tried to use Open Office for my documents, and as impressed as I am with the app suite on its own, I'm moving docs between MS Office and Open Office and have encountered all kinds of weirdness, wiped out styles, inserted multiple carriage returns between paragraphs. I'm not going to argue about which app is doing it wrong, MS Office or Open Office. I just need consistency across machines. I need to be able to copy a DOC or an RTF file from my desktop machine to my notebook, edit it, save it, copy it back, and have it appear the same on both machines. I can't seem to do that outside of Windows and Microsoft Office.

One feature I wish Open Office Writer and Google Docs had is the Doc Map, a feature in Microsoft Word I never seemed to need until I started writing 30 chapter books.  The Doc Map allows me to one-click-jump to any chapter.  You can probably get around this by using chapter length docs and opening them individually, but that's not going be as convenient as the Doc Map.

Ultimately, I don't think the word processing software matters as long as you can type, search within the doc, operate quickly inside five hundred page documents (very important), and print out standard manuscript format.  There's at least one of these on every OS.

Story Crafting and Structure Utilities

There are a lot of them out there, but I can't say much because I've only used Writer's DreamKit 4--and that's off and on, and it's been at least a year since I last used it.  I have repeatedly tried to get into the Dramatica story structure theory.  I find the process fascinating, but it's effectiveness is still up in the air.  The two times I dug in really used DreamKit, it forced me to build a summary for the stories, and I later used some of that material for creating synopses. 

So, perhaps it does lead writers down the good habit path with summarization exercises, making it easier to see the whole, character development, adding depth, establishing general motivations for their type as well as individual needs that can drive the character.   

Analog

I've already posted on journaling.  Read about how important I think that is.

I love big paper.  There's something about a thick stack of 11x17 paper that gives me a creative edge.  I want to make big plans, plot farther, develop characters that push the edge.  You can mind map, link ideas, draw characters, connections, conclusions easier on big paper.  I recommend 11x17 or 13x19 and a good pen anytime you need to spill ideas.

It really works.

So, what do you use and what do you recommend for writing tools and methods?

.

Blue Heron

Well, the tail end of one.  I had a few seconds to get this shot off after a murder of crows swooped cawing and screeching out of the trees to spoil everything.  Love crows, but these were a pesky bunch, and I had such a beautiful clear shot of this gorgeous bird.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Blue_Heron

Blueheron Click the pic to see it larger.

Here's where I took the shot, Stratham New Hampshire along the creek that runs under the east side road of the 33/108 traffic circle:

Blueheronshot

Your writing future

Writers look into your futurescopes and tell me what you see? 

Where do you see yourself in five years?  Another two, three, four novels completed, a whole new series, short stories, anthologies, awards, movie options or whole movies made from your stories and premiered by then?  Do you see yourself entering new genres or focusing only on one?  Agent changes, publisher changes? Any unexpected turns in your writing career? 

Where will you be as an author in five years?

I have to think about this myself.  I'll follow up with a post on where I think I'm going.

How do you write?

I have been a terrible typist from day one--and I have been designing and developing software for almost twenty years, on VAX, Windows, DOS, Linux, Mac, and I've been using computers (i.e., typing) far longer.  You'd think I'd be able to type faster than I do.

I still do the majority of my writing on a computer.  I've tried a pile of word processors and editors, Open Office, AbiWord, Google Docs, etc., and occasionally retry them, but I always come back to Microsoft Word.  The Doc Map, it's like heroin.  I can't live without it.  I neeeed it.  If you write multi-chapter or just really long written work in Word and you're not using the Document Map, then...it's like you're trying to convince me that you're alive without ever having taken a breath of air.  The Doc Map, it's just that necessary. 

Now, writing while traveling is tough.  I've always had a laptop of some kind, giant Dell's--9.5-pounders, a Casio Fiva sub-notebook, a small Dell, and a couple other brands, Toshiba, etc.  I run a variety of OS's, Windows, Vista, Linux (mainly Fedora and Ubuntu). 

I have given up trying to write on the laptop while traveling.  I can't concentrate with people craning necks to get a look at the screen, over my shoulder, three seats behind me on the plane.  It just doesn't work for me.

So, when I don't have a computer or I'm traveling or it's late at night and I need to get an idea down quickly, I hand write everything.  I've been a Moleskine (mol-a-skeen'-a) fan for years, and I've gone through three or four of them in my journaling. 

I don't understand writers who don't keep journals.  They must have unlimited storage and retrieval services built into their memory.  Not me.  I'd forget every great world-shattering idea I come up with the next day if I didn't write it down.

I know the Moleskine people will be upset me...mind you this is just an experiment...but I have changed journal formats, something a little smaller in paper dimensions, but fatter in pages.

I picked this one up at Barnes & Noble in Massachusetts, and so far I'm pretty happy with it.  It came with a fancy metal medallion embedded in the front cover, which I have since pulled off and modified.  It's made in Italy, a thin leather binding, and hundreds of blank cream-colored pages with enough weight to draw on and even do some light watercolor. 

Here's the new journal with a Skull Candy cover mod.  The nice circle impression lends itself well to stickers.

Journal1

Here's an inside shot with the start of The New Sirens chapter 4 all blurry and unreadable--although I don't know why I bothered.  You'd have trouble with my handwriting anyway.

Journalinside_2

_COMIX - or what do you listen to when you write?

I listen to music when I write, or when I sit and think and plot, and I even posted about how that sort of happened.  Music used to be a distraction.  I couldn't have it playing while writing.  Somewhere along the way that changed, and I now jack into my iPod all the time.

This is the playlist I used while writing and editing my novel Captive Ocean, which has been renamed Seaborn.  The post title is how it appears on my iPod, Captive Ocean MIX = COMIX with an underscore so it sorts to the top.

It's an eclectic set.  Someone give me some stats on the possibility of Enya being in the same playlist as Angelspit.  Anyone? Some of the tracks have an oceany mood, some are actually about the ocean, and most of the others have something to do with the mood of a particular chapter, the struggles of a particular character, a turn in the plot.  Some just sound to me like the action at a particular part of the story.

Birthdaymassacre2Yes, I'm a total Dandy's fan--and yes I totally dig Birthday Massacre.  I have Nothing and Nowhere, Violet, and I'm going to get Walking with Strangers in September.  (Half the tracks off Violet have this very eerie underwater feeling).

The fourth track, Beethoven Opus 130 second movement, is the actual piece of music that Corina (main character) is playing in her head in chapter 3, the one she calls the AYBP, Alan Yeater Breakup Presto.  She's a music composition major in college.

From Charlaine Harris' writing FAQ:

I’ve never understood why anyone would want to know, but an astonishing number of people do. I listen to movie soundtracks, mostly historical epics like "Last of the Mohicans," "Troy," "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon." I also listen to bagpipe music. And Yo-Yo Ma. Make of this what you will.

From Karen Miller's interview with Lois McMaster Bujold:

Like many other writers, I sometimes find that music supplies inspiration for work in progress, either triggering ideas, or coming along to support them. At one time or another all sorts of music has worked this way for me -- instrumental, classical, rock, folk -- an old Steeleye Span song, "King Henry and the Grisley Ghost", updated to SFnal terms, once supplied a character and entire subplot for a novella.

_COMIX:

Track - Artist, Album/CD

The Sea, - Morcheeba, Big Calm
The Dream - The Birthday Massacre, Violet
Mohammed - The Dandy Warhols, Thirteen Tales from Urban Bohemia
Presto (Opus 130 second movement) - Beethoven - The Yale Quartet, The complete masterworks, Beethoven Disc 34
Ana - Pixies, Bossanova
I Was Never Young - Of Montreal, The Sunlandic Twins Disc 1
Zombie - The Cranberries
Philosophia - The Guggenheim Grotto, Philosophia
Get Off - The Dandy Warhols, Thirteen Tales from Urban Bohemia
Boadicea - Enya, The Celts
Combat Baby - Metric, Old World Underground
True Affection - The Blow, True Affection
Stars - Lacuna Coil, Halflife
ocean - Collide, Chasing the Ghost
Is She Weird - Pixies, Bossanova
Precious Things - Tori Amos, Little Earthquakes
Hidden Spaces - The Morning After Girls, Prelude EPs 1 & 2
Saltbreakers - Laura Veirs & Saltbreakers, Saltbreakers
Gentleman - Prototypes, Prototypes
Cannonball - The Breeders
Dangerous Type - The Cars, Candy-O
I Want to Marry a Lighthouse Keeper - Erika Eigen, A Clockwork Orange, Soundtrack
The Dandy Warhols T.V. Theme Song - The Dandy Warhols, Dandys Rule OK?
Cloudburst on Shingle Street - Thomas Dolby, The Golden Age of Wireless
What Are You Afraid Of - West Indian Girl, West Indian Girl
All They Ever Do Is Talk - Earlimart, Treble & Tremble
Captain - Ween, Quebec
Stupid Girl - Garbage, Garbage
Make You Sin - Angelspit, Krankhaus
Inside - Moby, Play
Après Moi - Regina Spektor, Begin to Hope
Ocean Night Song - Laura Veirs & Saltbreakers, Saltbreakers
Under the Stairs - The Birthday Massacre, Nothing and Nowhere
Sour Girl - Stone Temple Pilots, No. 4
Believe E.S.P. - Deerhoof, Friend Opportunity
Dig For Fire - Pixies, Bossanova
Keep Hope Alive - The Crystal Method, Vegas
Only Shallow - My Bloody Valentine, Loveless
The Iron Sea - Keane, Under the Iron Sea
24 - Jem, Finally Woken
Happy Birthday - The Birthday Massacre, Violet
My Lover's Gone - Dido, No Angel
Three Friends - Gentle Giant, Three Friends

scrumptious centipedes

GummicentipedesWhile in Littleton, New Hampshire at a candy store called Chutters, I found out that I have a taste for Gummi Centipedes--along with several other buy-it-by-the-pound candies.  Yeah, it's a bit creepy.

http://www.chutters.com/

Northern New Hampshire Roadtrip

We need some help with names, a German Shepherd female with a name that begins with "L."

Me and Alice and the kids spent most of yesterday driving up the far reaches of I-93 to the Littleton area of the Granite State, to see the beautiful White Mountains of course, but especially to see a German Shepherd breeder.  I'm a total dog lover, even if some of them really are alien invaders decanted into dogs and bent on seizing control of our world.  I just can't help myself.

So, the plan is to have a German Shepherd pup by the end of the year, something with an "L" name.  My first choice is Lysistrata, but we've started lining up a bunch of them, including Lykeia, Lydia, Lucenza, Lysandra. 

Thanks, Dave, for pointing me to Lori Lemaris, Superman's mermaid girlfriend from Atlantis.

Man's best friend conspiring with aliens to seize control of our planet!

Some pics of the area, Cannon Mountain, Littleton:

Cannonmountain Cannonmountain2

Littletonnh Whitemountains

I feel cartwheels

Okay, I'm a pretty low-key guy, but I just sent off the final manuscript of Seaborn to the publisher, and, well...I have the urge to run screaming into the backyard to do cartwheels across the grass.  Maybe after that, I'll sing in Italian and climb out on the roof to shout the whole first book the Iliad to the rest of the neighborhood.

SING GODDESS, THE WRATH OF PELEUS' SON ACHILLES!

…in Homer's own words...

μῆνιν ἄειδε θεὰ Πηληϊάδεω Ἀχιλῆος!

You may not be aware of this...

Ibanezar250 ...but I am really lucky, I mean freakishly lucky.  I'm like a luck sink, I draw it towards me, a gravity well of luckiness.  I generally don't win things, like bingo and the lottery, but weird cool reality-bending lucky things happen to me sometimes. 

For instance, I come home last night and Alice (most wonderful woman in the world and proof of my luckiness) has bought a guitar for me, an Ibanez electric (AR250).  Lucky or what?

So, next time I have Clint Eastwood breathing, "You feel lucky, punk" at me, I'm going to nod and say, "Yeah, I do."

Blogging and connecting

I posted a week ago about our trip to Seattle, and trekking across the state of Washington to Idaho.  While in Seattle, we spent several hours at the Pacific Science Center.  A day after mentioning this here, I get an email from a VP at the Pacific Science Center, thanking me for mentioning it. 

Now, the tech is fairly trivial, and has existed for a while.  Anyone can use Google alerts to get an email anytime anyone mentions anything with the specified keywords, but I still think it's cool that individuals at some companies, organizations, and not-for-profit educational institutions that inspire "lifelong interest in science, math and technology by engaging diverse communities through interactive and innovative exhibits and programs in every county of Washington state and beyond" take the time to email a thanks to people who mention or link back to their site.  Bravo Pacific Science Center.

Link: http://pacificsciencecenter.org/

Manuscript printing

Saltwaterwitchms I just finished printing out two of manuscripts for Saltwater Witch, a YA fantasy novel that's basically a very new rewritten version of the old Wreath story, but 12k words shorter and with a lot of changes, including the whole thing being in first person from Kassandra's POV.  These are going off to my agent in the morning.

What am I working on now?  Up to my neck (chapter 13) on the sequel to Seaborn (used to be called Captive Ocean) which I've titled, The New Sirens.  I just sent chapter one to the SF&F writing group to which I belong, with chapters 2-5 ready for critiquing this week.

Washington and Idaho

Seattle

Spaceneedle We flew into Seattle last week, spent a couple days drinking coffee, riding the elevator to the top of the Space Needle, touring the Pacific Science Center, trying to follow the lines of the wavy colorful metallic amorphous structure of the Gehry-designed Experience Music Project, drinking coffee, walking along the wharf with my sister's family, eating at Ivar's...more coffee.  We stayed at the MarQueen Hotel on Queen Anne Ave., a really cool old (1918) brick apartment building that's been turned into a hotel in the last decade.  It was like staying at your grandmother's house, but with a doorman and someone to park your car and with really comfortable beds and a secret guest-only back door into Caffe Ladro.  Yes, more coffee consumed there.

Then the party really started.  We caravanned across the state of Washington with my sister's family, my brother's family, and my uncle and aunt from Texas, and met my dad at Stoneridge, a resort in northern Idaho.  Then it was three days at my aunt and uncle's place on Spirit Lake, a stunningly beautiful house right on the water with a dock and jet-skis and kayaks.  Three days of reminiscing, boating, eating really good food, meeting new additions to the family, cousins I hadn't seen in decades, and I can't remember the last time we got together with my sister's and brother's family at the same time--but I'd guess the late '90s.  It's been a while, too long really.  My Aunt Sharry put it all together, and we had a wonderful time.  (I'm not going to post family pics because there's a mix and I'm not sure how everyone feels about having their pictures--or their kid's pictures posted on the Internet).

Harrypotter_2 We were there at the Coeur d'Alene Borders to get Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, showed up around 10:15 PM and didn't get out of there until 1:45 AM.  All worth it, of course.  Chloe finished around 10:15 the next day.  I think this is the best of the whole lot--and I like them all.

On the way back to Seattle, we stopped off to see the Columbia River and petrified Ginkgo trees.

Columbiariver

a few of the cool Seattle Pigs on Parade:

Pig2 Pig1 Pig3

Redefining Paranormal Romance - Publishers Weekly

Check out Paula Guran's quick Q&A on romantic fantasy, challenges for publishers, readers, and the future of the genre:

Link: Redefining Paranormal Romance - 7/16/2007 - Publishers Weekly.

Way out northwest

We're packing today, heading out of Logan early tomorrow morning for Seattle for a few days, and then it's a drive across the state to Idaho for another four or five days.  We're going to see brothers, sisters, aunts, uncles, cousins--some we haven't seen since our wedding in 1990, some we haven't seen for longer.  Going to be great.  I'm also looking forward to getting a bunch of writing in, some editing of a complete YA book that I'm sending off in August, and reading.  I'm reading Richard Morgan's Thirteen at the moment, but I've packed a few others.

I'll get some blogging in when I can.  Cheers!

I had this crazy dream...

Heinleincentennial_writing_contest1 ...that someone called my name and I had to get up on this stage in front of a bunch of brilliant SF writers and industry luminaries and aerospace pioneers and Heinlein fans, and say thank you.  Of course, I couldn't see a thing with all the lights, but I knew they were out there, you know, Frederik Pohl, Ben Bova, David Gerrold, John Scalzi, James Gunn, Allen Steele, Eleanor Wood, Robert Charles Wilson, Spider Robinson and countless more.   

I'm walking back to my seat, gripping my framed certificate, and one of the writing contest judges calls my name, I turn, stunned--deer in the headlights sort of stunned.  He shakes my hand, and says something really nice like "Great job.  Keep writing" and I say something lame like "okay!" or "I plan to."

And then...

Oh, wait, that was Saturday night in Kansas City. 

The Heinlein Centennial was a blast, with great panels, and a tremendous gala dinner and ceremony.  Arthur C. Clarke up on the big screen with some personal Heinlein stories, and Peter Diamandis passionately telling us to get off planet, explore the wide worlds out there--and make money.

HeinleincentennialarthurclarkeMy dad flew out from California, met me at KCI on Friday.  We took in Peter's full preso and hour before the dinner, and he stepped through the history of the Ansari X Prize, and some of the cool projects he's rolled out, like Zero G--zero gravity experience on a Boeing 727--how cool is that?

The gala reception ended beautifully with a raised glass from LTC Chuck Coffin, "2107 in Luna City. See you there!"

Susan Satterfield, author, teacher, organizer extraordinaire, and contest coordinator, handed out the writing contest awards. 

Blooddrive Of course, there was a blood drive, and I gave a big bag of it--and got my pin.

Note:  I had no trouble bringing the framed--with glass--award through security at the airports.  I showed it to them, and a few were Heinlein fans, we chatted and they thought the whole thing was cool.

Kansascity

Links:
http://www.heinleincentennial.com
http://www.gozerog.com/history.htm
http://www.scalzi.com/whatever
http://www.frederikpohl.com
http://www.benbova.net
http://www.gerrold.com
http://www.allensteele.com
http://www.spectrumliteraryagency.com
http://www.robertcharleswilson.com
http://www.spiderrobinson.com

I'm off to Kansas City

The Robert Heinlein Centennial kicks off tomorrow, and I'm heading out of Boston at 6 AM to get to Kansas City around noon--with a stop over in beautiful Atlanta.

A bunch of new stuff up at the centennial site.  Here's the latest schedule.

Last thoughts?  I need a damn clone!  I really wanted to get to Readercon this weekend.  If you're in Burlington Mass. for it, stop by the Withywindle Books booth, buy books, and say hello to Cynthia!

Links:
http://www.heinleincentennial.com
http://www.readercon.org
http://www.withywindlebooks.com

Horseshoe crabs in New Hampshire

Dsc_0085We (the whole family) spent an hour or so down by the shore of the Great Bay at Sandy Point, watching dozens of horseshoe crabs glide into the shallows and swing back into deeper water.  High tide was on its way in and they occasionally pushed themselves right up onto the beach.  We found one on its back three feet above the waterline.  Really sad.  (The crab did seem to move when we placed it back in the water).

See the whole set on Flickr

Dsc_0144

Dsc_0147

Subscribe to a feed of Chris Howard's photos Feed – Subscribe to chrishoward.author's photos

Looking forward to the Heinlein Centennial

I just booked flights (hopping through Atlanta because there seemed to be no way to get a direct to Kansas City) and a hotel room for the Heinlein Centennial.  I'll be there the 6th - 8th of July, meeting my dad for the weekend.  He's flying out from the other coast.  Really looking forward to this. 

http://www.heinleincentennial.com/

An agent!

A week and a half ago I was an author writing novels and short stories.  Now I'm an author with an agent.  Jack Byrne of Sternig and Byrne Literary Agency is working on a publishing contract for my novel CAPTIVE OCEAN.  This all happened very quickly beginning of last week, and I am very excited--along with predictable effects: late night revelry, fits of jumping for joy, etc. (Cartwheels forthcoming).

Links:

Sternig & Byrne Literary Agency
http://sff.net/people/jackbyrne
http://www.sff.net/people/jackbyrne/clientlist.htm

Agency Profile: Sternig & Byrne Literary Agency
http://www.absolutewrite.com/markets/jack_byrne.htm

SF Canada - An Interview With Jack Byrne
by Celu Amberstone
http://www.sfcanada.ca/autumn2005/byrne.htm

Add to: Yahoo Add to: Google Add to: Digg Add to: Del.icio.us Add to: Reddit Add to: StumbleUpon Add to: Blogmarks Add to: Technorati Add to: Netscape Window Live

I won!

I just received an email from the coordinator for the committee of fiction judges at the Robert A. Heinlein Centennial.  It looks like I have won the Amateur Category of the Heinlein Centennial Short Fiction Contest with my 6500 word story, "Hammers and Snails."

Crazy.  They're sending me $175 and a cool certificate!  There's the big event out in Kansas City in July.  Some highlights I ripped out of the program:

David Gerrold, John Scalzi, Buzz Aldrin, the Campbell Conference & Campbell Award will hold their 2007 annual event under the He