A reference tool I'll be using a lot in the coming months

Also, a good-morning present for everyone who can't believe "how much caffeine" (Coke Zero) I drink.

That large americano you're clutching? Yeah. That's a six-pack of Dr. Pepper, packed into about 5 minutes of sipping.

Heck, even a cup of tea is two of my sodas.

http://thumbnails.visually.netdna-cdn.com/the-buzz-vs-the-bulge_50290aa0e3634.jpg

thumbnails.visually.netdna-cdn.com/the-buzz-vs-the-bulge_50290aa0e3634.jpg

It seems to me that crime and noir authors have taught me the most, using the fewest words

Here's to Elmore Leonard, a man that knew his craft.

Originally shared by +Northwest Institute of Literary Arts

RIP, Elmore Leonard. Here, his 10 Rules for Writing: http://www.nytimes.com/2001/07/16/arts/writers-writing-easy-adverbs-exclamation-points-especially-hooptedoodle.html

WRITERS ON WRITING; Easy on the Adverbs, Exclamation Points and Especially Hooptedoodle – New York Times
These are rules I’ve picked up along the way to help me remain invisible when I’m writing a book, to help me show rather than tell what’s taking place in the story. If you have a facility for

Look, here's how it works for me

"Welcome to the dystopian present. I always thought it would be a lot more foggy and rainy. "

Originally shared by +Jerome Comeau

Look, here's how it works for me.

I don't want my government to protect me from terrorists; protecting me from terrorists is basically impossible anyway.

I want my government to protect me from corporations. Because those motherfuckers are straight-up trying to kill me every fucking day and not for ideological reasons, but for cash. I can generally converse with an ideologue, one way or another, but mercenaries just don't give a damn about anything but money.

"od: a hypothetical force formerly held to pervade all nature and to manifest itself in magnetism, mesmerism, chemical action, etc."

Huh. I thought that was something they made up for Atomic Robo (at least whenever Thomas Edison reared his villainous head).

Dictionary.com Word of the Day
Tweet a hypothetical force formerly held to pervade all nature and to manifest itself in magnetism, mesmerism, chemical action, etc. “I studied mind-cure, or metaphysical healing, which strikes at the root of disease; I went into hypnotism, mesmerism, and phreno-magnetism, and the od force—I …

Nailing Down Magical Realism

This isn’t going to matter unless you are a bit of a lit nerd.

I’m participating in a “Directed Reading” for the rest of the year, focusing on Magical Realism. (The air quotes are in there because the ‘reading list’ includes stuff like Pan’s Labyrinth and Big Fish, with which I otherwise have no problem.) The goal of the DR is basically to sort out what the term even means in modern literature – there’s some historical examination – looking at where the term originated and why, but mostly the goal is to work out for ourselves what the hell this creature even is.

I think everyone participating will come up with an answer. I very much doubt we’ll all agree. Magical Realism is a bit of mess. From a literary criticism point of view, it’s functionally useless – it isn’t a real thing when looked at with any academic level of rigor. It’s just a term that gets thrown around a lot, applied to many things it shouldn’t, some that it should, and is often dismissed out of hand by those who see only the sloppiness with which the label is usually applied.

So, the first assignment: list four ‘core’ elements that (first) make a story Magical Realism and (second) not anything else. This is my list.

  1. Magical elements. This almost goes without saying, given the term “magical realism”, but it needs specific mention as a prerequisite: magical or fantastical elements appear in an otherwise objective, realistic story. If this isn’t happening there’s no point in looking at the latter criteria.
  2. The magical is mundane. When magical elements are introduced, the story proceeds as if nothing extraordinary took place. 
  3. Antinomy is accepted by the characters in the story. Contrast this with standard contemporary fantasy, where magical elements are remarked upon or explained at length and usually in detail. In fantasy, the presence of the magical or supernatural is something that draws special attention; in magical realism, the natural and supernatural are equally ‘valid’ elements the story, neither one more (or less) deserving of attention.
  4. Authorial reticence. This is a central element, for me – especially when it comes to setting magical realism apart from standard fantasy. In short, the narrator does not provide explanation for the magical elements in the story. Explaining the supernatural world reduces or destroys its magical nature. You would no more stop to explain why one of the characters floats three inches above the ground than you would stop and explain why a character’s car starts up when they turn the key in the ignition.

This list is my starting position. I fully expect it will change – in fact, I’ve rewritten or revised the thing four times while writing this post, moving bits from #2 to #3 and from #3 to #4, and I’m still not happy with it. I strongly suspect that points 2, 3, and 4 are describing different parts of the same elephant (introduced via point 1). A shorter list might read:

  1. Magical elements in an otherwise objective, realistic story.
  2. Antinomy within the story is accepted by the characters/narrator; both ‘sides’ are seen as equally valid, important, (un)remarkable.
  3. Explaining the supernatural elements reduces or destroys the power they bring to a story told in this style.

I like this list quite a bit more than the longer one, but the instructions say four points (for now), so what can you do.

We’ll see where I end up by December.