The Less Clear We’d Be

“It’s true that the basic way we know the personality of others is by their behavior, but we are often aware of a discrepancy between our own horrid actions and our own nice selves, and we can sometimes extend this realization to make a similar distinction between the behavior and the self of another, particularly when we know him well.  If it’s true that depth-of-characterization in fiction is analogous to degree-of-acquaintance in life, then it would be similarly true that the deeper the characterization achieved, then the less clear we’d be about a character’s motivation in a story.”

— Rust Hills, Writing in General and the Short Story in Particular

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Contrast

I am reading this:

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This is my book mark:

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Hey, Look

I’m going to be at Salt Lake City Comic Con.

 

ComicCon

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The Fascination

“[T]he fascination of the heavens is as old as man’s ability to think; as ancient as his capacity to wonder and to dream.”

— Robert Burnham, Jr., Burnham’s Celestial Handbook

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Slick Fiction

“[S]lick fiction — whether of the ‘romantic’ sort or the ‘hard-boiled’ sort — always partakes of the daydream, while quality fiction — as Jung said of Art — always partakes of the night dream.”

— Rust Hills, Writing in General and the Short Story in Particular

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The Trouble with Mystery

“The trouble with mystery as a structure is that the writer enters into competition with the reader instead of partnership.”

— Rust Hills, Writing in General and the Short Story in Particular

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Because I Love You

Audiobook coming.  Very, very soon.

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Logo

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Spent last night at a rehearsal, for Space Balrogs Present: BRAIIIINS, a Zombie Interactive Rock Opera, featuring Paul Genesse and Carter Reid.

I don’t have enough thumbs to put up.  But go over to the site and sign up for updates.

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Bookshelf: Chain of Evil

Chain
ChainI sat down with a .pdf copy of this book, annotation functions turned on, intending to highlight the tidbits I imagined I’d glean from Dr. Collings. Collings is, after all, a master of the horror genre as novelist, as commentator, as poet, and of course as teacher. This is an unusual combination of excellences; I’m working on two short stories in the horror space right now, and I thought I’d winnow out an applicable tip or two.

So now–and I’d show you this, but it would be too much like giving away spoilers–my whole copy is highlighted in yellow. Okay, that’s hyperbole. Really, I’ve only highlighted about a quarter of the text. There were, in fact, one or two things I already knew.

Chain of Evil’s subtitle, Journalstone’s Guide to Writing Darkness, should be understood expansively and taken seriously. This book contains: essays focused on the mechanics of writing, including laser-focused advice on such specific subjects as semicolons, adverbs, and ellipses; meditations on staple motifs of speculative fiction (vampires, werewolves, apocalypses); reflections on reasons to write horror in the first place; analyses connecting horror to pre-modern metaphysics and tracing the changing role of, e.g., ghosts, as things have fallen apart and the center has not held; discussions of horror and Mormons (!); and actual poetry (!!).  And more.

It even, to my surprise and delight, quotes me.

From the perspective of the first step on the journey of reading Chain of Evil, not all of the essay’s titles seem equally promising as tools or lore about “writing darkness”; from the perspective of the end of the road, each essay strikes me as indispensable.  Dr. Collings wants to teach us to write literature that matters, because it grapples with the blackness behind the backs of our eyeballs and in the depths of our hearts, and to do that he sets forth a guide that is purposeful and oriented from the highest perspective, is detailed and tactical in its nuts and bolts specifics, and is replete with concrete examples.

Essential, topical, meaningful, and urgent. If you’re a writer or reader of horror fiction, get this book as soon as you can.

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Few Words

“Words not only have lexical (that is dictionary-based) meanings, but they also have a sphere of emotional suggestions attached to them. Few words outside the mostly functional terms in English—is, are, was, were, to, from, and, but, and others—mean only what the dictionary says.”

— Dr. Michael R. Collings, Chain of Evil

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