Summertime, when my life is one big glamourfest

June 29th, 2009

I’ve had a crazy week, crazier weekend–both crazy good. I started a day job as a community management consultant for Projectline, who recently made the list of Washington’s 100 Best Companies to Work for (by Seattle Business Magazine)! That’s been a bit all-consuming, but pleasantly exciting. My co-workers are very smart, engaged, and interesting people, the work is going to be challenging, the best of what I could hope for, really. I feel super lucky for finding this gig, especially in such an unlikely economy.
Friday was the combo Locus Awards/Clarion West party in honor of John Kessel, who just finished teaching week one. I went to Kessel’s reading at the University Bookstore Tuesday night, and was too awestruck to introduce myself–I am the hugest John Kessel fan in creation. Seriously. When I was writing lit fic, banging my head against walls, I read Kessel’s story “Buddha Nostril Bird,” which singlehandedly made me reconsider genre (I grew up a fan, as most of you know/guess, but somehow never thought, for some idiot reason, I could do serious literary work in SFF. Dumb). But that story led me to seek out more of his work, which got me reading again in the genre, which was the kick in the head that I needed. Anyway, Kessel = ROCK STAR in my head, so Friday, pal Todd Vandemark (a current CW student and author of this week’s excellent Brain Harvest story) introduced me and I managed to effuse without creeping him out. I even got to buy him a drink.
Saturday was the Locus Awards/Science Fiction Hall of Fame Induction. So.many.writers.and.artists. Got John Kessel and Nancy Kress to sign battered copies of their books for me, then walked around and just goggled at people with my CW fam (Maggie Croft, Chris Reynega, Carlton Mellick III, Rose O’Keefe and friends were up for the event). I even talked to quite a few other people, including Elizabeth Bear, who is super funny and really nice, and got a signed print for my Chris from Michael Whelan (who was also very, very, very nice!).
I was publicly shamed for not wearing a Hawaiian shirt, as required, but was sufficiently penitent, so I think Connie Willis (my teacher, my heroine, and now, 2009 SF Hall of Fame-r) forgave me.
Is your head swimming yet? Mine is.
Sunday, I missed the Pride parade, but did have a pho breakfast with Chris and Maggie before they took off back to the Bay Area. Then, seriously, I can’t remember anything else I managed to do, of any note, aside from watch a bit of “Ninja Warrior” with husband, have a Brain Harvest editorial meeting, and eat ice cream for dinner—one of the few truly awesome things about being an adult—I mean, if I have to deal with gravity and taxes, then I should treasure my ice cream dinners.
Now the week turns back on itself and I am at my day job again. Tonight—CW writeathon writing time—tomorrow, the Karen Joy Fowler reading at the University Bookstore (7pm, free!). Come! I’ve never seen her read, but I have heard piles and piles of great stuff about her.

The writeathon is underway…

June 21st, 2009

There’s still plenty of time to sponsor me. I diddled around with ideas for my first story, which I think will have to do with comedians, integrating organic and inorganic substrates, a failed love affair, and lightning.
It’s hard to think about new folks over in the Clarion West house, getting ready, setting up their wi-fi, meeting each other and their first instructor–it doesn’t feel like a year’s gone by since that was me doing all that. But I am so excited for them and can’t wait to meet them–and pass along the CW lore handed down, class to class, over beers at the weekly parties. Plus, I know what a tough, inspiring, incredible challenge will unfold for them over the next six weeks, and I look forward to cheering them on.
I get to meet them first at the first reading in the summer reading series that CW does in conjunction with the University Bookstore: John Kessel, this Tuesday the 23rd, at 7pm, upstairs in the University Bookstore. The readings are free, but everyone is encouraged to buy books to sign and to donate to CW while they are there (or sponsor a writer in the writeathon), but there is no pressure or anything. I will be there, at all of them, but especially this one–I am a wicked Kessel fan.
This week’s new Brain Harvest story, “I Like to Tease People,” by Martin Meiss is live. It’s a great piece, really clever, mean spirited with a heart of gold. Also, be sure you are prepping for the super awesome Brain Harvest Mega Challenge, judged by the amazing Jeff VanderMeer (I go all fan-girl a-flutter when I remember that VanderMeer is the judge. Hoo boy. VanderMeer is so fucking awesome).
OK, off to bed with me. I have work in the morning (A job! Me! Finally! Doing a really amazing project for a company I am so happy to be a part of–a company that values its smart, creative people–works ‘em hard, but truly supports them trying to live a whole life. I am excited to go to a day job now, for the first time in a very long time).

3 reasons Sunday may not suck

April 19th, 2009

1. Off to the Friends of the Seattle Public Library book sale (it’s 1/2 off day on already cheap used books. JOY) and then to my crit group filled with smarty-pants. 

2. Brain Harvest has its newest story up, a crawly piece by the uber-talented Jeremy Shipp.

3. Yes, I completely threw away 5000 words of the story I’ve been working on. Painful. But this is why I said what I did in my posting about slush (reiterated by the very talented and dashing D. Zumsteg, who, in unrelated news, is next week’s Brain Harvest pick). Now, hopefully, the little crazy Jewish lady who runs my subconscious* will get cracking on helping me right all the wrongs that spewed onto the page the first time.

 

*CW ‘08 in-joke. Apologies.

The power of positive thunking, etc.

March 25th, 2009

I’m a big old sack of angst lately. That’s my only excuse for remissive blog posting. There’s plenty of awesomeness going on, however, so I am going to force myself to type words about that:

1. I had a story accepted at M-BRANE SF for issue 5. I am really excited about that. It’s the second story I wrote at Clarion West to find a home—this one is the one I wrote for Cory Doctorow’s week, and it is appropriately geeky. Plus, I think Chris, the editor of M-BRANE, has been doing a great job with other stories, and I’m proud to be in the roster now.
2. I found out I am entirely susceptive to self-coercion. I handed my keys to my husband and told him not to let me back in the house until I wrote 1000 words. I sat at my new favorite coffee shop and wrote 1004 words, some of which don’t suck too badly.
3. Brain Harvest is going really well. We’ve been publishing some great stuff, and this week’s selection is from one of my favorites (in person and on paper), Cat Rambo. I’m also thrilled that we’ve been doing a lot of buying out of the slushpile as well, including an excellent one slated for next month sometime by yet another CW alum and crit group colleague, Derek Zumsteg.
4. Also, check out my first book review for Brain Harvest, on Eraserhead Press’ first foray into Bizarro children’s lit.
5. Sunday, bunches of the cast of ST: TNG are guest starring on Family Guy. I have never been so excited for a Family Guy, and I really love Family Guy.
6. The Seattle Public Library used book sale is April 18 and 19 at Magnuson Park. I love the book sale, and this is the first year I have managed to write down the dates so it doesn’t sneak up on me, as it usually does.
7. I have a presentation and reading this Friday evening, the 27th, at Hugo House as part of my graduation ceremony from the first ever Artist Trust EDGE Professional Development Program for Writers.  It’s 7 – 9:30 p.m.at Hugo House, 1634 11th Avenue, Seattle, WA 98122
8. Nancy Kress is also reading at Hugo House as part of the Fantastic Fiction Salons. Monday the 30th, 7pm, 5 bucks. I am really thrilled. I love Nancy Kress, for many reasons—including that I believe she is one of the few non-Rom to use Rom characters in her stories and get it right. I hope I get to babble all verklempt and fangirl-y at her afterward.

Leslie sez (and I concur): Seattle SF writers sit up and take note

September 3rd, 2008

The ever-talented, multi-ball juggling Leslie Howle  is bringing more SF goodness this Fall.

Directly from her mouth: “It’s September and I’m bringing a new Fantastic Fiction series to Richard Hugo House under the auspices of my NW MediaArts hat. I hope that some of you might be able to attend one of the workshops I’m offering beginning this month with Mary Rosenblum, who did a terrific job teaching the Clarion West workshop this summer. Returning this fall by popular demand are Charles de Lint and Connie Willis, who both taught Fantastic Fiction workshops in 2007.
Clarion West alumni will be discounted the same as Richard Hugo House members.
 
Mary will teach a workshop called “Bring the Reader to the Party, What Show Don’t tell Really Means” on Sunday September 21st from 10 – 4:30 and will read at Richard Hugo House at 7pm Monday night, September 22nd. 
 
Charles teaches “Heroes and Villains” October 26th and will read Monday night at 7pm.
 
Connie teaches “The Plot Thickens: The Art and Science of Plotting” on Sunday, November 16th, and reads at Richard Hugo House on Monday night at 7pm.
 
Please pass the word to anyone you know who might be interested in attending, and I hope to see some of you at the readings and workshops.  Feel free to email or call if you have any questions!   Here are the links to my website and the registration info at Richard Hugo House.
http://www.nwmediaarts.com/2008Event-Workshops02-Sep-Nov.html
http://www.hugohouseservices.org/home/Class/DisplayClass.aspx?ClassID=165
Warmly,
Leslie”
If I weren’t so butthurt broke, I’d take all three (or even one–that’s how butthurt broke I am), but you should (I will be at the readings though. All three.).

I studied with Mary and Connie this summer at Clarion West, and I don’t think I could possibly gush enough about them. Mary was super supportive and really detailed with her crits, while Connie was just a wellspring of amazingly great information and a million examples to illustrate her points. I loved every minute with them; they were two of the big reasons I keep saying I learned more in 6 weeks at Clarion West than I did in two years of grad school.

Go on. Register.

Pillow Talk: The Fucking Daphne blog tour Q&A

June 14th, 2008

 Fu*king Daphne Welcome to my stop on Pillow Talk, the offical blog tour for Fucking Daphne.
When Daphne Gottlieb first found herself the character in someone else’s story she was intrigued; over time, as she appeared in more and more stories, she started to wonder about the implications of what was real and what wasn’t. Did it matter that there were published stories of her having sex in bathrooms, vacant parking lots, on the balcony at a party in an old bordello? Did it matter whether or not they were true?

This question sparked the idea for Fucking Daphne, a collection that blurs the lines between reality and fiction and begs the question “who is the real Daphne?” A pill-popping wild child? A soft place to fall with a broken heart? A dreadlocked vixen?

And so, the book was born.

To celebrate, I’ve decided to give away a copy of Fucking Daphne to a random commenter who posts a comment here on spitkitten dot com today.
This giveaway is totally unassociated with the tour or anything. I’m just so excited about what a fabulously filthy-smart book this has turned out to be that I want to share the love (heh).
How will I choose? I don’t know. Will I be swayed by the content of the comment? Probably. Are there ways to better your chances? Be funny. Be insightful. Make me laugh and/or swoon. Get a free book.
Are there any rules as to who can win? Only that you’re over 18, please, and leave an email address as part of your comment so I can contact the winner.

I got to ask some of the contributors a question for the tour.,and they were generous enough to answer. I posed this:
Writers are known for cannibalizing their own lives for material (using lovers’ quarrels word for word in a poem, for instance), and in the case of this book, spinning out a character from bits and pieces of the real Daphne Gottlieb. Do you have guidelines from stealing from life in your work? Boundaries? If so, what are they…and if no, how do you get away with it?

(I asked this because I have a huge issue with this. Even when I write sci-fi, everyone I know finds themselves in it)

Their answers:

Jamie Berger
When I write from life and call it fiction, I show the victim the story and ask if he or she is okay with it. So far, they all have been. I’m not sure what I’d do if they weren’t. When I write nonfiction, I try to get as many parties mentioned to vet for accuracy as I can, and ask for their approval. I don’t think of writing from life as stealing, per se, but I also am not willing to take down relatives, friends, lovers, in the name of literature or literary success. That is, I worry more about the insult or hurt I could cause than the theft.

Hanne Blank             
I generally don’t kiss and tell. It’s an ungentlewomanly habit. There have been a few exceptions when it was impossible for me to get a story to do the work I want it to do without getting autobiographical in some
degree. My piece in Fucking Daphne may or may not be one of those exceptions.

R. Gay          
One of my most successful stories is about one of my worst relationships. My ex, and the woman she left me for, who are prominently featured in the tale, have actually read the piece, recognized themselves and not hired an assassin, as far as I know. They were not, however, thrilled and they felt there were inaccuracies (which is entirely possible given that anger clouds memory) and the confrontation was pretty damn awkward, particularly because (overshare) I was thinking, you bitches had an affair and you are angry with me? But you know what, if you don’t want me to write about a shitty break up, don’t contribute to a shitty break up because you knew I was a writer when you started dating me. That story was written and published nearly seven years ago. These days, I do mine my life, but I also try, as I grow older and somewhat more mature, to be discreet about the imperfections and failings of those I love or once loved. I also am pretty circumspect in any details I might include about family because I actually like them. And when I do think something treads that fine line, I allow the subject to read the piece before it is published and if there are any strenuous objections I address them. I’d like to think I’ve learned a thing or two.

Marlo Gayle  
My only guideline is that it’s interesting.  My boundary it that it doesn’t have hurtful effects to the person I wrote about.

Sarah Katherine Lewis          
I change everyone’s name.  That’s how I keep from being punched out constantly, though I’m still watching my back from my first book (“Indecent: How I Make It And Fake It As A Girl For Hire“).  Also, I’m a big fat liar when it comes to a good story:  I exaggerate and change details to make the story more interesting.  This drives the people I write about crazy, but I just tell them to write their own damn books.  Until then, it’s my version that’s on public record.

Jared Jacang Maher  
I think authorial objectivity is an illusion and that every piece of writing, from a news blurb to experimental poem, is to some degree shaded in tones derived from the author’s life. That said, there certainly are boundaries every writer sets for themselves when it comes to how raw you’re willing to go. My main mode of writing, Non-fiction narrative journalism, is similar to novel writing in the sense that both are convenient ways to explore the author’s inner demons through the vehicle of outside characters, whether they be real or made-up. The times that I have written about my own life, I think I’ve consciously avoided scenarios were I might hurt the feelings of someone close to me. Other times, I’ve tried to do it the way all good writers do it – by employing scenes or metaphor to suggest to the reader what’s going on rather than swinging a bat with sentences like, “My father was a wicked, rapist asshole.” I mean, not that my father was a wicked, rapist asshole. Shit. He’s a very, very nice man!

Nick Mamatas          
No guidelines, no boundaries.  I’ll use anything and everything that comes to mind, and I often don’t get away with it.  There’s been a number of angry phone calls, broken friendships, huffy declarations, and all the rest.  But it is not as though people who encounter me don’t know what, and who, they are getting by this late date.  Caveat emptor.

Lori Selke     
I always try to change the names, and I usually chop the real-life bits up finely enough as to be unrecognizable to anyone but me. I hope. I have been known to write complete fiction that’s so convincing, though, that everyone is sure they know exactly who I’m talking about – and I’m not sure what to do about that!

Eric Spitznagel          
I have no guidelines or boundaries. Anything that’s happened, either to me personally or on the periphery of my life, is fodder for writing. And as you might expect, I don’t get away with any of it. Remember how Augusten Burroughs was sued by the foster family he wrote about in “Running With Scissors?” Yeah, that’s totally going to be me in the next few years. Did you know I have a cousin who’s dating the granddaughter of Adolf Eichmann? Seriously. Adolf fucking Eichmann. The guy who came up with the “Final Solution.” The dude who thought concentration camps would be a swell idea. I find it a little disturbing that pure evil might be introduced into my family’s gene pool, and I have no problem expressing my reservations in print. That just goes to show you how much I’m lacking in the “maybe-we-shouldn’t-share-this-with-the-outside-world” department. And as long as I’m being completely honest, I should probably admit that roughly 85% of what I wrote for “Fucking Daphne” is true. Sadly, not the part about fucking Daphne, but the rest of it, particularly the bits about my dead father possibly being reincarnated as a dog. There are those in my inner circle who don’t agree with my decision to share these far too imitate details in an anthology that contains the word “FUCKING” in the title. While I may agree in principle, I happen to believe that sex and death are wrapped up in a big burrito of emotional complexity, and I enjoy that I’ve finally written about my dad in a context that most people might perceive as completely and utterly inappropriate. I like that my family will have to read the honest account of my feelings of loss about my father alongside a pretty lurid account of my sexual relations with a woman I’ve never actually seen naked.

Carolyn Turgeon       
Oh, I think I have some big boundaries when it comes to writing about my own life. In fact I usually write so far outside my own experience – I wrote a novel about a 4 foot tall trapeze star and another about a centuries-old fairy godmother – that it’s not an issue. Or at least I didn’t think it was. I worked for many years on my first book, convinced that it had sprung up straight from my glorious imagination, before realizing in a moment of profound horror that the story I was telling had everything to do with my own life. I guess you can’t change the basic fact of what writing is. But at least I ain’t offending anyone other than myself along the way.  

Be sure and stop by Sarah Katherine Lewis’ blog tomorrow for more of the tour.

Missed yesterday’s questions? No worries. You’re not too late.

Pillow Talk: The Fucking Daphne Author Blog Tour

June 6th, 2008

I warned you that we’d be a stop on the tour!
The tour begins this Monday at the blog of editor/subject Daphne Gottlieb (she is also the last stop), and then progresses daily from contributor to contributor. Although I’ve asked/answered questions at every stop, the tour arrives here at spitkitten dot com on Saturday, June 14. To celebrate, I’ve decided to give away a copy of Fucking Daphne to a random commenter who posts a comment here on spitkitten dot com that day.
This giveaway is totally unassociated with the tour or anything. I’m just so excited about what a fabulously filthy-smart book this has turned out to be that I want to share the love (heh).
How will I choose? I don’t know. Will I be swayed by the content of the comment? Probably. Are there ways to better your chances? Be funny. Be insightful. Make me laugh and/or swoon. Get a free book.
Are there any rules as to who can win? Only that you’re over 18, please, and leave an email address as part of your comment so I can contact the winner.

Here’s the official schedule for the tour:

June 9
Daphne’s question to contributors
postmaudlin.livejournal.com

June 10
Jamie’s question to contributors
www.man-ifesto.com

June 11
Hanne’s question to contributors
misia.livejournal.com

June 12
Marlo’s question to contributors
black-pearl-10.livejournal.com/

June 13
R.’s question to contributors
www.pettyfictions.com/detritus/

***June 14
Caren’s question to contributors
www.spitkitten.com***

June 15
Sarah Katherine’s question to contributors
www.sarahkatherinelewis.com

June 16
Jared’s question to contributors
blogs.westword.com/latestword/

June 17
Nick’s question to contributors
nihilistic-kid.livejournal.com

June 18
Lori’s question to contributors
pantryslut.livejournal.com

June 19
Eric’s question to contributors
www.spitznagel.net

June 20
Carolyn’s question to contributors
carolynturgeon.blogspot.com/ (official) and lillianleitzel.livejournal.com/ (unofficial).

June 21
Contributors’ questions to Daphne
postmaudlin.livejournal.com

If you are in the San Francisco area, we are all jealous of you, because you can attend some of the live release parties. And you should too (and report back, so that I can live vicariously through you):

June 17, 2008
Joint Release Reading for Kissing Dead Girls and Fucking Daphne with:

Charlie Anders
Guy Gayle
T.R. Moss
Gabe Scelta
Lori Selke
Susan Steinberg

261 Columbus Ave
7:00 p.m.
Free

***
June 26, 2008
Book Release for Fucking Daphne
Center for Sex & Culture
with:
Charlie Anders
Justin Chin
Tristan Crane
Stephen Elliott
Guy Gayle
T.R. Moss
Gabe Scelta
Lori Selke
Bucky Sinister
Susan Steinberg

1519 Mission Street
8 p.m.
Admission TBA, NOTA

***
August 12, 2008
Joint Release Reading for Kissing Dead Girls and Fucking Daphne
with:
Tristan Crane
Guy Gayle
T.R. Moss
Eric Spitznagel
Justin Chin

Modern Times
888 Valencia St
7 p.m.
Free

Fucking Daphne is available!

June 1st, 2008

Fu*king Daphne She’s finally ready to go home with you!* Contributors include Hanne Blank, Stephen Elliot, Sarah Katherine Lewis, Ariel Gore, Nick Mamatas, Carolyn Turgeon, and me!

Check back here in the next few weeks because we are a stop on the release party’s blog tour! Happening soon! Filthy-good, postmodern fun! Worthy of all these !’s!

Read the Seal Press release here.
Fucking Daphne’s in the LA times!
Great interviews with Daphne at hotmetalbridge and Good Vibrations’ online magazine (work-safe).

————————————
*Rumor has it that Barnes and Noble won’t stock it in the brick-and-mortar stores, because of the title. Seriously?
They’ll sell it online, though. Blegh. I’m not including the link here because I think they’re being ridiculous (and I usually like BnN, as far as chain stores go). My link from the book cover leads to my Amazon associates account (I get a cut), but you can also buy it at Powells or other retailers that aren’t being completely absurd.

Clarion West for me, Nancy Kress for all

May 15th, 2008

Unless you talked to me directly in the past few weeks, you have no idea that I was accepted to attend this year’s Clarion West Writers Workshop (six weeks working with, among others, Connie Willis! Cory Doctorow! Chuck Palahniuk!). I’m really honored—the competition this year was really stiff– and really, really, really excited (even though I’m a local, I get to live at the program and sleep and breathe writing all summer).

So, this Monday, I am definitely going to go check out Nancy Kress’ reading. She’s a much beloved Clarion instructor, and I have Beaker’s Dozen at the top of my reading pile (my knee-high reading pile). If you’re in Seattle and have any interest in science fiction, I definitely encourage you to come with me. Nancy Kress is an east coaster, and I think this may be a rare opportunity to hear from one of the female future giants of the genre.

Nancy Kress will be at the Richard Hugo House Cabaret, this Monday, May 19, 2008, at 7:00 p.m. I think there’s a donation of five bucks, or so (bargain! I spend more on coffee runs avoiding my own work).