The questions thread is still active, if you want to drop in and ask me something. First batch of answers here:
jeffsoesbe asks:
"the day job"? I thought writing was the day job for Jay Lake, Gentleman Adventurer.No, actually, I have a full time job working for a very nice telecommunications company based in Omaha, Nebraska. Hence my 10-12 trips a year to Omaha. I work from home, but every three or four weeks spend a week at the office. I am also co-parenting
the_child, so my writing career is compressed into a fairly narrow band of hours out of my waking life.
(In case you're wondering, I am a technical marketer and sales support guy, which means I do an enormous amount of writing there, but of a completely different sort than my fiction. I view this as cross-training.)
nymwae asks:
How old were you when you decided writing was your passion? That's on my mind this morning, so since you're asking for questions... ;) Was there something specific that inspired you to begin?
Also, what were some of the doubts you had while writing your first novel? It's such a large project, and really intimidating at times.
dandyfunk asks:
Could you elaborate on the process of cultivating a blog being parallel to cultivating a writing career? Which should start first? When I said they were parallel, I was mostly thinking of the process of breaking in -- that is, slowly building a readership, improving one's own quality and consistency, finding a voice (or voices, in my case), then expanding. You could apply that template almost exactly to either blogging or a fiction career. The primary difference is that blogging is aggressively democratic -- you the content provider interact directly with consumers who vote with their clicks. Fiction is more like a republic -- you the content provider interact with editorial intermediaries, who then channel fiction to the people.
As to which should start first, that's a chicken-and-the-egg question. Write like you're always going to sell, blog like you always have something to say, and see what develops. The beginnings of my fiction career (slightly) predate the rise of blogging as a popular medium, so in my case that obviously came first. There's a handful of writers out there (
scalzi,
scottlynch) for whom blogging was what launched their fiction careers.
Also, only blog if you want to, not because you should. And if you feel like you're choosing between blogging and writing, choose the one that's more important.
~Matt asks:
How do you manage to have so many ideas to churn out a story a week? I have a good dozen or so that I *will* work on--after the current project, natch--but I don't think I've had that many story ideas in all my time as a writer. Granted, nine years isn't that long, but still, you've got me wondering.This is one of those "your mileage may vary" answers, but for some writers, myself included, ideas are by far the easiest part. I can riff five story ideas in a minute. Execution is what's tough.
One thing that muddies the waters of this particular discussion is the definition of the term "idea." For me it can be a thin thread indeed -- a felicitious turn of phrase, a strange visual image -- and I'm off and running. For some writers, an "idea" must have a character in a setting with a problem and some notion of the plot resolution before they'll consider it an idea.
This may be worthy of an extended post of its own soon. Thank you. You'll see a better answer then.
hoosier_red asks:
How many batteries did it take to power that shirt? Enquiring minds need to know!I just want to say one word to you - just one word.
Are you listening?
Bioluminescence.
yourbob reminds me (politely):
I had asked for a neighbor updateI'm very sorry, sir. We have attempted to assist
the Neighbor in selling her house, but I think she's daunted by the complexity of the task. Mother of the Child and I talked this out, and decided we don't have the right to push her.
The older granddaughter has started community college with the intention of becoming a massage therapist, and seems to be on track. The younger granddaughter is finishing her junior in high school and continues to be difficult to herself and her grandmother.
jeff_h asks:
How many rejections would you have to get for a short story before deciding to stop sending it out? What about a novel? Just curious.My most-rejected short story sold on its 21st submission. Many of my stories sell on first send-out. (I might do a statistical post later.) I don't retire stories based on rejection count, but I do sometimes retire them if in reviewing them I realize they no longer stand for my best work.
Novels...different question.
The Murasaki Doctrine has been rejected four times (I think), but I still like it a lot. It quite likely needs a major rewrite. Everything else I've submitted has been accepted (five novels, now), though there are several sitting on my hard drive that have never been submitted. Only one of those is in a kill folder, my very first,
The January Machine.
blackaire asks:
Is it true that the rotation of the earth is due to a giant hamster running on his wheel, and if so, who cleans the hamster's cage?Ask not who cleans the cage, ask whom the cage cleans.
lt260 asks:
I have read posts and heard some folks mention this at the cons: doing work as slush pile readers and copy editors. How does one acquire one of these positions? Will publishing houses hire neophytes or do they genrally stick to published authors, people with lit degrees, and so forth?I believe the usual path is to work as a volunteer slush reader at one of the independent print or online magazines. I know that a number of them have distributed workforces, such as
Abyss and Apex and
Shimmer. You might start by hanging around on the blogs or chat boards of some of those magazines and getting to know the regulars and staff, so that you can be in the network the next time there's a call for volunteers.
I also know some editors, copy editors and slush readers follow this journal, so perhaps some of y'all would care to comment?
princejvstin asks:
IF you were approached to do a two-novella book with another current F/SF writer of your choice, intended to be a complimentary writer to your own, who would you pick to have their work alongside yours, and why? I am thinking of a modern version of the old Ace Doubles.Ooooh. Nice question. Where to begin?
Well, I'd pretty much have a stroke if anyone every asked me to stand up next to Gene Wolfe. In the terms you phrased the question, I'd have to say I'd burst with pride to be paired with Jeff VanderMeer, Jeffrey Ford, K.J. Bishop or China MiƩville, just to name a few examples.
cithra asks a question that I'll answer without reposting it here.
Of course, you silly person. How couldn't I?
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The Neighbor's benefit auction has gone very well indeed. I'll post a longer summary with detailed thank-yous in a couple of more days after we've closed out the last of the eBay details, but the main auction made over $1,000, while
mizkit raised another $500 on the side. I gave the first $570 to the Neighbor this morning, who was beyond overwhelmed.
She said, "'Thank you' doesn't seem to be enough." I told her, "'Thank you' is perfect."
So from her, and from me, thank you to everyone who participated, who donated, who supported, who bid, who bought, who sent good thoughts. Thank you all.
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The benefit auctionlet for the Neighbor is cooking along nicely, thank you very much.
For sundry reasons there's several items which did not make it into eBay. I'm featuring a gallery under the cut below, with links to separate posts for a bidding thread for each item. We're keeping this on the honor system, so bid over whatever the last bid on the thread is, by timestamp. I'll close these auctions at 6 pm Monday, Pacific time -- the last bid with a timestamp prior to 18:00 PDT will be the winning bid. Any additional items which turn up in the next day or so will be added to this grouping.
Donated by
mizkit ( A photo print from Ireland entitled Celtic Cross, St. Michaels )
Opening bid: $15.00, please bid here.
Donated by
ramurphy ( Hand-embroidered Celtic knot tea towel straight from Ireland. )Opening bid: $15.00, please bid
here.
Donated by
the_child ( Original artwork in crayon )Opening bid: $15.00, please bid
here.
Donated by
mme_publisher ( Needle pointed tree ornaments )Opening bid: $15.00, please bid
here.
Donated by the Neighbor's younger granddaughter,
( Hand-written original poem by the granddaughter of the Neighbor, one of the recipients of this auction's benefits. )Opening bid: $25.00, please bid
here.
Donated by Tobias Buckell
( Two signed copies of Crystal Rain, each made out with any special inscription also desired and mailed to desired recipient, gift wrapped if desired as a Christmas present for someone. )Opening bid: $20.00, final two bidders will each win one copy, please bid
here.
Donated by
jaylake ( Pre production dust cover of Mainspring hard back with hand-written story on blank reverse. )Opening bid: $15.00, please bid
here.
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To our Dear Neighbors and Friends,
I want to say thank you for taking my family to your hearts.
I have been so disillusioned, depressed and sad at what seems at times to be be almost insurmountable circumstances for what is left of my family to overcome. I guess I forgot there are still very good and caring people out there.
Your kindness and generosity has been both a blessing and an eye opener for me, so once again thank you and our very special neighbors.
-- The Neighbor
The first few auctions in the
benefit auctionlet for
the Neighbor are up now. The rest will be up over the next day or so, if eBay is kindly.
"Stormbreak": Hand-dyed silk scarf (Donated by
wolfsilveroak)
Limited Edition print: Floral System II, Jane Patterson (Donated by
jeliza)
One of a Kind Needle-felted Bejeweled Bear (Donated by the Mother of the Child)
Photograph: "Buddha Emerging from Lotus (Donated by
khaybee)
All the auctionlet items can be viewed from
scarlettina's
seller page.
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