Saturday, July 30, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 34: KO BABY!!!!!

HEY GUESS WHO JUST FINISHED THE ROUGH DRAFT OF HER NOVEL??????

Today's word count: 7857 (NEW RECORD!)
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 99231
Average daily word count: 2918.56

OH YEAH BITCHES

I DID IT WOOOOOOOOOO! I haven't written anything novel-length since Throne of Nightmares in 2007. And I admit, I was scared - maybe I couldn't do it any more. But I just did it! And I finished my write-a-thon goal with a week to spare! Now to let it stew and percolate a bit, give my head time to clear, and the dreaded editing process will begin. I feel like this one will edit a lot faster than ToN (which took three years), because if nothing else I think I've grown a lot as a writer since then and have a much clearer sense of how I want to put this bad boy together.

Soundtrack for writing this was primarily from Serenity, Firefly, and the three Transformers movies. Yet in spite of the latter, my novel contains only one explosion, and it doesn't happen in slow motion. And no one runs away from it. So yeah. (What can I say... didn't much like those movies, but I think they have excellent scores.)

And yeah. That's all I have to say. Because my brain has now lost its ability to produce words.

EXCEPT OH YEAH YOU SHOULD TOTALLY PLEDGE MONEY NOW THAT I'VE DELIVERED THE GOODS! :D


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Favorite sentence I've written today: The rocks snarled like living things and then the world cracked, lightning and gunshot and bone, a sound that touched her at the base of the brain and told her to fucking run.

Polecat Bench Pictures and Videos

I have been remiss - I posted all of these on twitter, but never collected them in to a blog post. Also, some additional pictures, and even some from Basin Substation, the site I wasn't involved with. So:

Pictures
My Polecat Bench photo album
Elizabeth's night 1 pictures
Elizabeth's Basin Substation day 1 pictures - She worked a 24 hour day on the first day. Crazy!
Elizabeth's Basin Substation pictures July 15-18
From the BBCP Facebook page

Video
Coffee sloshing in the pot in the RV, just to show how freaking windy it got
Bringing up core at Polecat Bench - what happens every core barrel. Video super noisy due to drilling rig and wind.
The last core at Polecat Bench - you can really hear how darn noisy the rig is on this video...

Friday, July 29, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 33

Today's word count: 3427
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 91374

It's much harder to write thinky, feeling-ish scenes instead of action-y ones. Particularly when one of the characters is all, I DON'T HAVE FEELINGS, DAMNIT. I think she's still bitter because I made her murder her first ever boyfriend when she was a teenager. (I totally had a good reason. I promise.) The exciting part is that I wrote up to the start of the FINAL EPIC BATTLETM and after that, it's just basically a bit of tying up loose ends and general plot post-mortem. The ending is so close I can just taste it! GO TEAM GO!

Favorite sentence bit I've written today:
"You called me with blood."

She snorted, then gently probed at the back of her head with one hand. Her fingers found stitches, which was story enough for her. "Didn't work the last two times I tried to do that."

"You used a lot more blood this time." He looked down pointedly toward the gun still pressed against his side.

"You should be more careful about how you wake a body up. Some folk get mighty sensitive about it."



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Thursday, July 28, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 32

Today's word count: 4142
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 87947

Tonight was a bit tougher to write, and I got kind of bogged down between point A and B for this section. It's definitely something that'll require some smoothing over when I edit. If I end up keeping it at all, since once again I feel like it's stuff I wrote just so I made sure I knew what was going on. But it's moving on. Ticked off another plot point. It's going to be hard, but I still feel like I can get this thing finished before we start drilling at Gilmore Hill. I mean, it's okay if I don't, but it'd be nice to not have to do this crazy level of writing while drilling, when you only get like 5 or 10 minutes at a stretch.

Favorite sentence I've written today: Raff pulled a dusty deck from his pocket; the cards scraped and scratched as he shuffled and dealt them each a five-card hand.



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"Make Sure That Your Question's a Question"

Whether you're a skeptical person or not, atheist or not, carbon-based life-form or not, if you have ever in your entire life gone to a convention/conference/seminar/large meeting, you want to go listen to this week's Geologic Podcast. Particularly the bit that starts at 26:25.

George Hrab was the MC for TAM this year. He kicked off the conference with a little musical medley, and the bit at 26:25 was my favorite part - "Make sure that your question's a question." The essence of this little musical ditty should be squeezed into spray bottles and handed out to moderators and MCs at every convention. Or perhaps it could be crafted into a branding iron with which to mark the worst offenders. Or maybe George should just be personally sent to every convention ever, and he'll be able to soon retire on the proceeds of just being paid to sing this song by grateful attendees the world over.

I understand that there's a real desire to engage in dialog with the (at least locally) famous people on a panel, and impress them with the wit and thought behind your own opinions. Goodness knows, I've had my more psychotic moments where I've imagined that, if I could just make it into a Presidential Townhall, I could totally straighten every policy in the goddamn country out with the 1000-watt beam of my scintillating political thought.

But then I punch myself in the face until I stop hallucinating, and it's all better.

Seriously. No one else in the audience wants to hear your long-winded and grandiose story of personal experience that normally culminates in a question that sounds like, "Having said that, what's your favorite color?" Most of the time, it just sounds sad and tacked on, like you desperately wanted to tell a story to a large (and ever more hostile) captive audience and just had to come up with a question at the end so you didn't feel completely dishonest.

That's what blogs are for. With a bonus of not even needing to come up with a faux-question for the end.

Also, since audience members aren't the only ones that can bogart a microphone and make innocent bystanders contemplate the possibility of crafting some sort of hangman's noose from the pages of the program book, there's this too: About conventions, panels, and bad panelist behaviour: a rant

Looking back, I wonder how much I was guilty of this sort of awful behavior at anime conventions. My ego is particularly ravenous, and that can lead to all sorts of unfortunate conversation topics that absolutely no one but me gives a shit about.

And this blog. Hey. All I can hope is that my boundless reserves of sarcasm provide some kind of cushion for times like that.

So if you were ever at an NDK or Yaoicon or AnimeFest where I bored you to absolute tears, I would like to take this opportunity to apologize. And I hope that some day I will have an opportunity to show off just how much I've grown as a person and a writer since those days. My ravenous ego demands it.

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 31

Today's word count: 6226
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 83805

A new, new daily word count record! I'm pooped. And sadly, I didn't tick a point off of my outline, because most of this was stuff that happened between my major plot points. Unexpected stuff, which is nice. Editing this bad boy is going to be mighty interesting...

Favorite sentence I've written today: Its head was bigger than his, its breath a meaty furnace.



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Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 30

Today's word count: 5744
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 77579

New daily word count record! This one was really dialog heavy... I feel like some of it's a bit shaky, but I'm mostly pleased. I just have to firm up a couple of plot decisions in this section, but I think that'll need to wait until I've given the whole novel time to percolate. I also ticked another plot point off my outline! :D

Favorite sentence I've written today: "Stupid happened."



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Monday, July 25, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 29

Today's word count: 1247
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 71835

Had a rough time of it. Can't seem to sleep since it's not my bedtime yet, but couldn't buckle down to write at all this night. Bleh. Anyway, my goal is still to finish this bad boy up this week if at all possible. Hopefully I'll get more writing done tomorrow since I won't have been trying to get all my sleep in a car. I think it's do-able. I've only got five major plot points left.

Favorite sentence two sentences I've written today: "Ambition is a laudable quality in man in our business, Mr. Rolland. Curiosity, not as much."



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Sunday, July 24, 2011

My BBCP: Night 4, Which Wasn't Hard At All


My fears of interrupted and awful sleep yesterday were unfounded it seems. The people at Americas Best Value Inn actually let us check in immediately, at 9 in the morning, and we were all able to get a good night (day) of sleep. Woot!

And then tonight was a short shift, as shifts go. When we got to the site we were down to our last three sections of drill pipe, which basically meant at most an additional 24 feet of core (I think that's right) could be drilled. So that went fast. I took a little video of the last Polecat Bench core being brought up, so that will hopefully end up on youtube sometime soon. Dr. Gingerich came back to the site after dinner just so he could put the last of the core into the truck, which was cool. The site is totally finished, and now we're all off for at least another week until we start at Gilmore Hill on August 1. And some of us are done with drilling (everyone on the night shift but me, actually :/ ) and we won't be gathering up again until we meet in Bremen in January.

After we had the last of the core (which was, I'm sad to say, a fairly unexciting mix of gray sandstone and gray mudstone from the Paleocene, no final red bed for Dr. Gingerich) buttoned down, the rest of the night was all site cleanup. We got everything ready so people can just go up to the Bench in the morning and haul all the trailers out.

It'll be fun to be the experienced hand at Gilmore Hill. We also have the same drilling crew for that site, so I'll be seeing AJ again. He seemed a little nervous about it being mostly new people again now that he's just gotten us trained up, but at least I'll be there! Until then, I'm just going to try to get all this mud out of my boots...

Also, just a little progress report from Dr. Will Clyde, on the project in general:
To date we have completed two 450 foot (138 m) cores at Basin Substation, one 425 foot (130 m) core at Polecat Bench, and one 790 ft (240 m) core from Polecat Bench. All of these cores should span the PETM.

Just so you have all the numbers. The 790-footer is the one I was there for most of. :D

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 28

Today's word count:
2827
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count:
70588



Two thirds of the way done and still going strong! Ticked another plot point off on my outline tonight and made headway into another. I'm very pleased. I'm hoping to make a big push this next week and get the entire thing done before I go back out to Wyoming on July 31. It would be nice to just write whatever during night shift and not be trying to concentrate on a gigantic Plot Of Doom. So we'll see! No favorite sentence tonight either, I'm sorry... I don't have time to hunt one down.






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Saturday, July 23, 2011

My BBCP: It's Been a Hard Day's Night 3

It was a busy night, though not as busy as last night. We only did about 25 meters of core, which is a major drop off from last night. This is because the hole is getting deeper, so that means it takes longer to drill, and longer to trip in and out of the hole.


It was also a night where we had a LOT of problems with slipped core. Which was probably partially because of the depth and partially because of the sands and muds we were drilling through. Other than one core that had some red banding in it, it's been nothing but gray sands and gray-green mudstones. Which makes it really hard to tell where the contacts are through the liner, so that's been frustrating. We also came across some really neat things in the sands, though - some bits of coal, and we found a fossilized leaf as well, so that was exciting.

The sad news for us night shift people is that it's been decided we're going to drill past our intended depth, so we'll probably have another shift tomorrow night. This wouldn't be a big deal except no one has a motel room past today, so we're all having to move to a different motel. In the middle of the day. So that's going to make sleep rough, which will in turn make work even rougher.

Tonight felt tougher than last night, though, because it was so cold! And windy! And it rained! So we had to race outside around midnight and take all the core on the drying rack and put it in the truck. That was not fun.

But hey, it's after sunrise, the day crew is here, and it's time to get some sleep! After Sander makes us a crazy huge bacon and egg breakfast, that is. :)

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 27

Today's word count:
2908
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count:
67761



Tonight was calmer, so I got some good writing done! I also did a third draft of my outline for just the ending portion of the story this morning, so I'm following that now. I'm pretty excited about this. :)
Still no favorite sentence today, since I've got to get this finished up so I can go back to the motel and sleep!






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Friday, July 22, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 26

Today's word count:
1283
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count:
64853



Today was rough just because we were getting slammed all night shift with core after core. Drilling was going fast. So I didn't really get to sit and write for more than a few minutes at a time, and it really shows in what I did produce. Also, I've hit a plot issue where I need time to sit and think about what sequence things ought to happen in - logically - and I can't really do that sort of thinking when I'm running back and forth. And tired. So tired. The tired doesn't help. So I'm just going to give up on the writing for the day since I managed to do *something* and there's less than an hour left in my shift. After which I'm going to go collapse into bed.

No best sentence today. It was a lot of fucking around with something I'd already written and then adding to it, and I'm not happy with the quality of what I came up with. Thankfully, it looks like we may get done with this hole sometime tomorrow night, so I might get part of my shift as writing time while we log it.






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My BBCP: It's Been a Hard Day's Night 2


Anders says: Oh noes they've brought up ANOTHER core barrel!!!

In the very brief breaks between cores, Anders and I have been sitting across from each other in the RV with a slowly diminishing block of cheese between us. Because when you're working around heavy machinery, it can't be something classic like whiskey - so cheese is the next best thing when it comes to drowning one's sorrows.

Seriously, yesterday gave me no idea what I was signing up for. We spent most of the night sitting around while logs were run and the location moved. Tonight has been a different story entirely. We've been processing core constantly, outside of the drillers' midnight break. Aaron actually asked them to please take another 30 minutes off because we're just running ragged.

We've brought up 45 meters of core already, and we've still got three hours left before day shift takes over. Now that they've started using a polymer additive and bentonite in the drilling mud, they're even cutting through the mudstones fast. (The sandstones, they cut through crazy fast.) Basically, we'll finish labeling and describing and whatever else the core. I'll sit down for about two minutes, look at an e-mail, and then there's that change in the sound of the rig that says they're pulling up a core barrel, which takes about 3-4 minutes to run up. Then we do it all over again. And I swear the cores are getting heavier and heavier as we go through the night.

The downside of the polymer and bentonite is that it makes the cores harder to handle. The polymer is extremely slippery, and the bentonite tends to make everything more or less mud colored. The polymer stuff reminds me a lot of the "animal birthing agent" that was featured in the episode of Mythbusters where they try to slip on a banana peel. Now consider how awesome it is to pick up a core liner and have that stuff draining out all over your hands. ICK.

We've had a couple of big sand bodies. Normally I like sand, but in this case we want as little sand as possible since the paleosols are going to tell us a lot more about the chemistry and other stuff. Lots of gray mudstones, and then we've had some really big bright red paleosols, and a little bit of purple and brown. Some of them have huge (3cm in diameter or more) carbonate nodules in them, which is really exciting.

I'm going to sleep really, really well as soon as I get back to the motel.

(Remember: You can follow my adventures as they happen - if you're up WAY TOO LATE - on Twitter)

Thursday, July 21, 2011

My BBCP: Night 1


My first evening shift has been uneventful so far. Drilling is way ahead of schedule, and they had about 400 and some feet of core drilled on Polecat Bench when the hole started to collapse. So this meant that this evening has pretty much been dealing with the collapsed hole and then moving the rig over to start on the second hole for the site, which we're hoping we'll get a full core out of. We'll be drilling the second hole with polymer additives instead of just straight water, so that ought to keep things more stable.

The funny part is, all the trouble is coming from poorly cemented sand collapsing into the hole. Which was not something that we were all that worried about in planning - everyone was more focused on the abundance of swelling clays. But it's not something I find particularly surprising, since we had a similar problem with some gas wells when I worked for Noble. Sand can be a bitch.

So I've spent most of the evening hunkered down in the RV on site. It's pretty windy out on the Bench (because gee, it's a treeless plateau, in the middle of Wyoming) and there's not really anything much to do until we start getting core out of the second hole. And now that the rig's been moved, we have to drill through the cap of Quaternary gravel to get to the good stuff that we actually want. Apparently on the first core, the gravel took something like six hours to get through. We're hoping that it'll go a little faster with the additives in the water, but we'll see. It's a very real possibility that I'll go through my first shift without seeing any action at all.

This isn't a surprise, though... everyone already knew that tonight would be uneventful due to the collapsed hole, etc. I just chose to come out to the Bench anyway because the other option was just puttering around in Powell (which rolls up its sidewalks around 9, I hear) or in the lobby of the motel. I'm sharing a room with my advisor, which is great, but she needs to be sleeping while I'm awake, so I couldn't very well hang out here. So instead I got to meet the other night shift people. We played a game of Dominion, listened to The Book of Mormon, and did some other silly stuff to entertain ourselves. I wish I had some pictures of our beautiful crew, but most of them aren't looking too lively right now, and I have a policy against taking picture of people who are asleep.

Four hours left to go until shift end. The motor on the rig is going now, which means they're drilling slowly through the gravel. We'll see how far we get before it's time for the day shift to take over.

Clarion Write-a-thong Day 25

Today's word count:
3422
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count:
63615



Got a good amount of writing done while we waited for the rig to move to the new site for drilling. And we're still waiting but I think I've done enough for now. The next part, I'll hopefully get to work on tomorrow. Preferably in my motel room, but beggars can't be choosers.


Favorite sentence I've written today:
Mr. Green smiled like the warping of half-melted wax.






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Wednesday, July 20, 2011

I'm Going to Wyoming, for SCIENCE! (and this is why you should care)

In a few short hours, I'll be on my way to the Bighorn Basin in Wyoming, to participate in the coring portion of the Bighorn Basin Coring Project. Things are moving much faster than expected - the rig is already at Polecat Bench, where it wasn't planned to be until Friday, because coring went so quickly at the first location, called Basin Substation.

(All of the amazing pictures for this post taken from the BBCP Facebook page.)


This was kind of a surprise, but a good one. It also means my advisor and I are scrambling to get up to the Basin as soon as we can. And that instead of one two week stretch, I'll be coming back to Denver with her, and then flying back out to Wyoming on July 31 to help out at the third site. (The third site, Gilmore Hill, is on BLM land and we're literally not allowed to start until August 1.)


I've set up a twitter account for just BBCP-related stuff. I don't know how many good pictures I'll get, since I'm on the nightshift, but here's hoping! Please follow and spread the word. It's a chance to see some science in action.


So why should you care about this project? Two words: climate change. In geology, the present is often the key to the past - we can observe processes today and use them to figure out the how and why of ancient rocks. During the PETM, the Earth's climate changed remarkably, and in a fairly short period of time. I've written about it in more detail here, and you can also get more information on the project's website. While the Bighorn Basin Coring Project is focused on understanding the PETM and many related issues, there is also this to consider:
This will allow us to investigate, in an unprecedented way, the high-frequency climatic and biotic variability of a continental depositional system during greenhouse conditions.

There are no guarantees in science, but there's a possibility that this time, the past might provide a key to the present. Climate change induced by a rapid influx of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere? While it's not a perfect parallel (for the PETM it was methane, rather than our own carbon dioxide), it still could be very relevant. And I would think it's something we want to understand well before our personal contributions of carbon get anywhere close to the rather voluptuous 6800 gigatons of methane that went into the atmosphere during the PETM. (As of 2004 we were at ~500 Gt.)

One thing we're hoping is that we'll not only capture the PETM, we'll also maybe get some data for the other, smaller hyperthermals in the Eocene. How much carbon input equals how much climate change? As part of a species with a vested interest in climate not changing much, that's a question I'd personally like to examine, and I'm hoping I'll get my chance.

(And don't worry, Mom, I'll watch out for snakes!)

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 24

Today's word count: 4149
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 60193

New single day word count record! I got to tick two points off my outline. I am pleased.

Favorite sentence I've written today: Because it was those little, silly similarities, so easily dismissed by someone who was overworked and focused on a different goal, that could be the difference between a living spy and a 'We regret to inform you' letter to one's parents.



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Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 23

Today's word count: 3725
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 56044

The time period for the write-a-thon is now half over, and I'm feeling reasonably certain that I'm going to meet my goal. I'm still adding ever more notes to my outline, but I think it's not adding too much plot bloat and I seem to be on track. Also, the schedule for my field work got changed around in a kind of annoying way - but on the bright side, it means that I'll have almost a week at home between two separate trips to Wyoming, and that ought to give me ample time to work on finishing up all of the points on my outline before the end of the write-a-thon. At least I hope so.

It's been so long since I've written something of this length that I'd almost forgotten how much fun it is. I did a crazy amount of word count tonight. And I didn't even actually hit all the plot I was hoping to finish up tonight, but I'm starting to feel kind of punchy now and I could tell the prose was really starting to suffer and I was kind of straining to keep going.

Had a fun discussion with my dad over dinner in Las Vegas about the technology on the planet. I've got a nice little MacGuffin that explains why the tech level has to stay low in certain regards, and my dad made an offhand comment about how silly something was in Road Warrior, where they were burning ridiculous amounts of gas just to get a little bit more gas. So then I realized that while I've got my beloved ZOMG MOTORCYCLES IN THE DESERT, it really made no sense to have them be gasoline-powered... and there are plenty of other options available for a place with a ridiculous abundance of solar energy. So yeah, that was kind of fun. I've also had to go back and leave myself notes in previous chapters to fix certain inconsistent technology things, such as GPS shouldn't be able to work.

So that's fun. Considering my other novel was pretty much fantasy and more fantasy, it's been nifty to have to think hard about technology, and what makes sense and what doesn't within the limitations of the world. (Not that you don't do that with magic if you build a world with consistent rules, but it feels a lot different when you're doing it with tech.)


Favorite sentence two sentences I've written today: Mag stared at the little square made by the cigarette case in the pocket of Hob's coat. "Don't know what could be givin' his lungs fits," she said, tone edged with sarcasm.



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Monday, July 18, 2011

New Spec Tech Article Online!

Actually, it's been online for a few days, but there was this whole TAM thing (you may have heard of it) and I had no real internet access for four days because the Southpoint Casino is run by vampires1.

It's 1000+ words about tuff, which is a good example of how geology influences culture. And there are also bad puns. Because, you know, tuff: The Whole Tuff and Nothing But the Tuff




1 - Leave my non sequitor alone. Something about bloodsuckers. I'm tired.

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 22

Todays word count: 3105
Cumulative word count: 52319

I have successfully stayed up through the night in preparation to getting on night shift for drilling. And wrote a lot in the process! Next hurdle: sleeping through the day when I get home.

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 21

Todays word count: 2061
Cumulative word count: 49214

More than I expected to get in today thanks to an extra long lunch break. Stopped early since I'm feeling punchy and would rather be in full possession of my faculties before I write the next conversation.

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 20

Todays: 1087
Cumulative: 47153

Not my best effort but I'm just too tired. Tomorrow will likely be bad too. Will just have to catch up next week.

Friday, July 15, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 19

At a hotel with ridiculously expensive internet access so I am posting from my phone. That means no fancy post format, and no favorite sentence since it's too much of a pita to retype it.

Got an okay amount of writing done. Surprising really since I'm at TAM and I had to say no to drinking with friends to write. And because I was already tipsy. And sleepy.

Today's word count: 2133
Cumulative word count: 46066

Almost a highly amusing number, considering one of my characters is named Old Nick and another is named Hob (though she isn't old yet).

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 18

Today's word count: 3396
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 43933

I did a second draft of my outline today, since I was starting to drift pretty badly. At which point my plot underwent a terrifying sort of mitosis; it would be almost impossible to fit so much plot into one book, I think, without it being an absolutely ridiculous length. So I think I may have two novels on my hands. We'll see how it looks when I get to the first major endpoint, what length the thing is. I threw together a rough outline for what would happen in the second half of the plot, and it's sort of horrifyingly long.

Favorite sentence 2 sentences I've written today: "Girl bit him when he was little. Never got over it."



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Clarion Write-a-thon Day 17

Today's word count: 2352
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 40537

I feel very, very bad for one of my characters now. Enough said.

Favorite sentence I've written today: People ate chicken with dirty fingers, wiped dust from their faces with the corners of tablecloths.



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Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 16

Today's word count: 2871
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 38185

Finished up a really long section that's probably multiple chapters. This part, I'm very pleased with. I think the next set of things I need to write will be from the viewpoints of several different characters, which should be pretty cool. Not that I'm tired of writing for Hob, just the other people are going to be doing some interesting things. I hope.

Favorite sentence I've written today: "You smell like blood," he whispered, his tone almost flirtatious.



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Monday, July 11, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 15

Today's word count: 3888
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 35314

So much for just planning to write like 500 words and go to bed. I'm sleepy, and I have a headache. But instead, I just kept going and going. I would say that this section is probably the worst writing I've done so far. It's going to take a lot of work to make it satisfactory. Though that will obviously be work that I do later. I also think that the section is much too long, and I'm going to end up cutting a lot out of it. But I'm starting to feel like half of this is just overthinking/overexplaining what's going on to myself so I can make sure everything actually makes sense. And then later, I can remove all that crap because it's very behind the scenes anyway.

If that makes sense. I'm not sure, considering just how sleepy I am. Sleeeeeep.

Favorite sentence I've written today: The mark she left on Newcastle was three corpses in a huddle and a trail of red footprints that vanished at the city's edge.



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Saturday, July 09, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 14

Today's word count: 1455
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 31426

Day 14 and still going strong! (Please, feel free to reward my persistence with a pledge at the Write-a-thon page! :D) I didn't quite make my word count today, though that's more because I really need to go to bed soon (so I can wake up in time for kung fu in the morning) and not because I'm actually at a place where I really want to stop.

It's all feeling adventure-y at the moment, and I feel like I've had a little humor today. Which is odd, since I haven't had much funny up until now. But then again, a little funny is necessary; I don't like it when a story is nothing but grim.

I'm trying something a little different this time, in that I'm making notes in previous chapters as I write. As things develop I'll find scenes that need to be changed or modified or added; before I just tried to hand write the occasional note about it. Hopefully this will work a little better.

I'm also still trying to figure out how I'm ultimately going to put this story together. Right now I'm just writing it all out in chronological order, but I think ultimately it would be better to rearrange things a little bit. I'm just not sure how, yet. And I'm thinking probably some of the stuff I wrote about Hob's (the main character) childhood is way more detailed than it needs to be, so streamlining that should help too.

Having so much fun!


Favorite sentence three sentences I've written today: "You're not crying. Or screaming. Those are the reactions I've seen most often."



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Clarion Write-a-thon Day 13

Today's word count: 2746
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 29971

Had a rough time getting going today, but I think it worked out alright. After kung fu in the heat and humidity, my brain felt pretty melted. Still, good progress, even if I'm not really happy with much of my prose. I'm still moving forward and getting the story together, and that's the important part. The rest, I can fix later with editing.

Favorite sentence I've written today: At the cellar pit, he unrolled the severed finger from the handkerchief and stuck it into the sand, holding it under as if he expected it to come alive and struggle.



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Thursday, July 07, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 12

Today's word count: 3410
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 27225

Got on another roll tonight. I'm very excited about the scenes I've been writing, which is funny since they aren't really even in my outline. But I like this direction the story is taking. Hopefully it keeps coming this easy, though I think I may be in for a few tough days while I figure out what happens after this, and if I'm going to bridge it back to my outline or just have to come up with something completely different.


Favorite sentence I've written today: Hob held Phil's hand between hers for a moment, fingers gently touching his knuckles as if that could urge him to un-die somehow, to erase the horrors of a body left for days in the sun.



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Clarion Write-a-thon Day 11

Today's word count: 3457
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 23815

What can I say... I was on a roll tonight. Must be the two helpful kitties. And the full-size keyboard.

Favorite sentence I've written today: When she'd finished reading the pamphlet, just hungry for the words, she tore it up and started playing games with the disassembled bits.



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Wednesday, July 06, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 10

Today's word count: 1235
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 20358

Short chunk, since I need to go to bed... and since it was a scene that had me feeling completely creeped out and gross and I just don't want to write any more tonight. Ew ew ew.


Favorite sentence I've written today: But after three years, Hob was just another goddamn fairytale like smiling Mr. Rollins, family friend and good man.



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Tuesday, July 05, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 9

Today's word count: 2388
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 19123

This novel is turning out different from the other ones I've written because now I'm starting to use multiple characters to tell the story. It's fun, but also a little scary. Life is easier when you only have to worry about one viewpoint, I think.


Favorite sentence I've written today: He stacked the money on the kitchen table, then spilled the little blue crystals from their burlap sack again, stirring them around on the wood with one blunt finger.


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Monday, July 04, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 8

Today's word count: 967
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 16735

Another day of almost not writing, but this on was worse since I didn't even start until after two. Not that I'm complaining, since the late hour is because I was hanging out with Michelle and Julie. Really, I only wanted to get in 500 words just to have something on the calendar for today, so I did almost twice that. Wrote a scene that I'm kind of on the fence about. I'm not entirely happy with it, though some of that is probably because I'm just so tired. But as such, no favorite sentence from today, because I don't have one.


Favorite sentence I've written today: None :(


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Don't Use This Argument Because OMG Children Are Starving in Africa

Raise your hand if this is a familiar source of tooth-grinding frustration: "Shame on you for being concerned/upset/worried about thing X, because thing Y is way worse."



(This post started as a comment over at a post Jen wrote about comments Richard Dawkins made. But this annoys me enough, I want to just make it a post all its own. And also, I want to detach it from GettingHitOnInAnElevator-gate. Because really, it's a more general complaint and what Richard Dawkins said is just one example.)

Now, I've run across this faux-argument mostly when I bring up an issue as a feminist, but I'm sure that it happens on other topics1. In one instance (among many), a couple of years ago I got in to the middle of a dogpile on the World of Warcraft forums because several of us female type humans had the audacity to say that we thought there was a particular thing in the game that was probably intended to be cute, but we found it sexist, creepy, and insulting. And immediately, that argument got pulled on us. We're not allowed to complain that something in the game sexist and insulting because women in less socially liberal countries are under the thumb of some really horrible misogynists.

There are a multitude of reasons that this "argument" is a steaming pile of bullshit:

1) We are capable of being concerned with more than one thing at a time. And we can be concerned about an array of both large and small issues and speak out about them. Feminist women and our feminist male allies are - and this comes as a shock, I know - capable of multitasking.

2) You (directed at the general "you" that uses this ridiculous argument) do not have any way of knowing what I have and have not done toward the cause of women in less privileged countries. And further, it does not matter because you have no right to dictate to me what I can and can't be concerned about.

3) You may think that thing X is less important than thing Y, but you must also acknowledge that I am directly affected by thing X, and that potentially gives me more power to do something about it. There is a limit to what one of us can do on our own about a giant issue in a far away place; we can donate money, we can volunteer, we can work to raise awareness. A "smaller" issue that affects you personally is something that you can act much more directly on. So you know what? I cannot personally end the practice of female genital mutilation. But I can personally try to change something that affects me directly - to use the WoW example, as a paying customer of the company that's doing something offensive, I can make a stink about "Hey, I think this is BS."

4) EVERYONE performs this sort of mutlitasking and issue triage. Everyone. Trying to tell someone they shouldn't is frankly hypocritical.

5) Also, if you are that concerned about thing Y, why the hell are you wasting your valuable time and energy arguing with silly wrong-headed feminazis on the internet instead of combating thing Y?

6) Every time I hear this argument, this is what I hear: "The issue you have chosen to speak about is one that I dislike or makes me uncomfortable, and I don't really have a good answer to it. Therefore I will try to shame you with my powers of sarcasm in to shutting up because OMG children are starving in Africa."

Ultimately, it comes across as almost less insulting if your "argument" is just a baldly stated "go make me a sandwich," because at least then it doesn't sound like you're pretending to be on our side.

Please, just let this argument go; it's not going to convince anyone, and is frankly going to fan the flames of anger because it sounds so damn condescending. There are a lot of other ways to deal with something you think is turning in to a tempest in a teapot. Ignoring it could be one course of action, since for some reason basically telling people to shut the hell up on the internet doesn't work unless you have the power to simultaneously kill everyone's broadband and melt their smart phones. Maybe just saying "I don't consider this an issue so I'm going to go do something else" would come out as more positive, and you can have a smug little thrill that you're totally the only adult in the room as you go flouncing away.

Or hey, maybe trying to understand why people are freaking the hell out about something you consider to be a non-issue could be worth a shot. You never know.




1 - Hm, maybe along the lines of "You shouldn't whine about 'under God' in the Pledge of Allegiance because there are countries where being an atheist will just get you executed!" And so on.

Sunday, July 03, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 7

Today's word count: 2183
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 15768

I almost didn't write today. I was completely exhausted after sleeping less than three hours last night, and then of course I needed to catch up with my friends. Michelle let me catch a three hour nap on the couch in the afternoon, though, and that carried me through until now. Even then, I was thinking about just going to bed, and she convinced me to write a little bit, just so I wouldn't miss a day. Well, I got on a roll, and here I am, with another chapter finished. I'm pleased with it. Or at least as pleased as one can be with a rough draft.

And now, bed. For realz.


Favorite sentence I've written today: “That's because I don't have a name, dear one.”

(Not impressive in and of itself, but I like the conversation it's part of...)


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Saturday, July 02, 2011

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 6

Today's word count: 2190
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 13585

I love it when my story jumps off the outline, when the characters decide that they're going to do something completely different. Particularly when I realize that it makes a lot more sense this way.

Would have loved to keep writing longer, but as it is, I should have been in bed hours ago. I'm flying to Salt Lake City in the morning, and will have to head to the airport in about, oh, four hours. So yeah, I'm going to be pretty worthless upon arrival.

Favorite sentence I've written today: But it still had that wolfish tilt to it, the predatory glint in his eye that said he was just waiting for her to fuck this up.



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Friday, July 01, 2011

Bighorn Basin Coring Project Website!

I'm less than a month away from my Wyoming adventure, and it's getting exciting. The Bighorn Basin Coring Project now has an official website, and there are some great pictures there if you want to take a look at where I'll be spending two and a half weeks of my summer. Check it out!

Clarion Write-a-thon Day 5

Today's word count: 3114
Cumulative Write-a-thon word count: 11395

Wow, that was intense. There was murder. Heartbreaking murder.

Favorite sentence I've written today: And she cut off those words, that lie, before they made it all the way through his throat.



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