They worked until the work was done – not until they tired,
or until their unions compromised they break, or until they got a raise. They
were paid exactly what they asked for the work and they asked nothing for the
work. When the work was done, they stood still or found a decent place for
sitting and sat like ladies and gentlemen. They were the best the world had to
offer, and he was always adding to their offered numbers, so that there was
always a new person to meet and work alongside. He didn’t hate living society. The
necromancer simply preferred to work with professionals.
Pages
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Saturday, September 22, 2012
Friday, September 21, 2012
Bathroom Monologue: Executed
Marianne Smythe murdered two people and assisted in the
murders of at least five others. When she was arrested, she had the hatchet,
the circular saw and the rope in her trunk, and the DNA of one victim under her
fingernails. She refused to assist the police in pursuing her fellow cultists.
She never feigned innocence or regret, and at her sentencing hearing, seemed
almost giddy for the coming needle.
I’ve told you about Marianne Smythe so I can tell you about
the two people who went to her execution. No relative of any victim attended,
as the business was something of a mess, and a massive hailstorm pelted the
state that night. Solomon James had no interest in the case, other than being
the temporary guardian of Jedidiah Smythe. Jedidiah was the second person in attendance,
his interest being that his mother was being executed. He was seven years and
two months old at the time. He was not known to act out, or to speak with any
frequency.
Many people in the institution, the state, and even the free
press feared the boy would get the wrong impression from the viewing, but he
could not be barred and willingly arrived twelve hours early to beat the hail. Upon
his arrival, the warden gave him a grim tour of the facility, assuring him of
how humane it was.
As they waited, Mr. James explained how law enforcement
didn’t always catch wrongdoers, but pursued all those they could, and
always did take care of the innocent.
The District Attorney arrived at noon and gave him a highly
redundant lecture on the legal system, its checks and balances, and how many
wise people had set up many ways to defend innocent people from punishment.
The warden avoided Jedidiah after that, and the D.A. left
early for a fundraiser. Mr. James was obligated to stay with the boy. Marianne
Smythe declined to see him, which made sense, as she had declined to see Jedidiah
for seven years. For none of this did he act out, and he spoke only to answer “Yes”
to the occasional rhetorical question.
I’ve told you about Jedidiah Smythe’s day to tell you about
his evening. He sat in one chair for three hours straight, watching the
second-hand on a clock. At a specific juncture he was moved to the viewing
room, where he sat in another chair watching through a plate of glass. Someone
snuck him a cup of coffee. It went cold and stale on his armrest, the top
unpopped. It remained on his armrest as he departed the room after the injections
finished their course. He did not act out, and did not speak.
It was only as the institution let out a collective sigh that
Jedidiah Smythe initiated anything. He paused by an officer’s leg, touching his
trouser for a moment.
When the officer bent to ask if he needed help, Jedidiah
Smythe reported, “I know this place only executes the guilty, and that the law
finds the guilty, prosecutes them until they’re dead. My guardian and I are both
witnesses to a gang of doctors killing my mother. They’re all still here, so it
won’t be hard to catch them. How long will it be before we can kill them?”
Thursday, September 20, 2012
Bathroom Monologue: Death to Rainbow Heathens
Ours is the Holy Orange Empire, and we have always been at
war with Green. It is only Green who have always been splintered, and the
cracks in the world began with them. Third sliver from the east of a continent
of Orange, we know in our hearts we are truly the center, and the Holy Orange
Empire has always been the center of the world.
All Orange
is our right, and once Green is chipped away, we will surely reunite. Believe
not what you‘ve heard from the Coast of Red or the Isles of Turquoise – they
were never part of a whole, and their blending with the Orange
slivers is unholy. They spread the fractures that have broken our glass world.
Once we were a window into like alike the sun, and we will be again once this
war is won.
Death to rainbow heathens.
This was written in response to a photo prompt Catherine Vibert and Lascaux Flash.
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Books That Changed How You Saw Fiction
Readers, writers, extraterrestrials – today I have a query for you.
Give us the author, the title, and how. The “how” can be any significant way you choose. Doubtless there are many books that affect you, but pick the one that comes to mind first or that you’d most like to share. If Finnegan’s Wake challenged the validity of linear narratives, or Among Others validated autobiographical fiction, or The Color Purple made you demand authors write deeper women, or Cat’s Cradle left you with an indelible love of tangents – please, share.
I’m fascinated by the lasting effects of literature. We hear about canons, but reading is often a much more individual thing, and we all have books that cast a shadow over libraries. All I ask is that you keep it honest and brief. You can tweet your answer if you like, though some people may want a few sentences. Here’s an example:
So: what book changed fiction for you? And how?
NAME A BOOK THAT CHANGED THE WAY YOU SEE FICTION.
Give us the author, the title, and how. The “how” can be any significant way you choose. Doubtless there are many books that affect you, but pick the one that comes to mind first or that you’d most like to share. If Finnegan’s Wake challenged the validity of linear narratives, or Among Others validated autobiographical fiction, or The Color Purple made you demand authors write deeper women, or Cat’s Cradle left you with an indelible love of tangents – please, share.
I’m fascinated by the lasting effects of literature. We hear about canons, but reading is often a much more individual thing, and we all have books that cast a shadow over libraries. All I ask is that you keep it honest and brief. You can tweet your answer if you like, though some people may want a few sentences. Here’s an example:
Richard Matheson’s Hell House had the gall to seemingly end
and then drop a complete second twist ending in ten pages.
He executed it so quickly that I expected what was still in my right hand would be the typical blank pages and publication notes -
until I read the pages. It played with expectations of what novelists
do in page-lengths in a way that begged me to experiment.
and then drop a complete second twist ending in ten pages.
He executed it so quickly that I expected what was still in my right hand would be the typical blank pages and publication notes -
until I read the pages. It played with expectations of what novelists
do in page-lengths in a way that begged me to experiment.
See? Not so tough, though now I’ll have to think up another. In a couple
weeks I’ll compile everyone’s answers into a megapost. If you can beat
the above for brevity, you’re winning. If we’re lucky, we’ll all walk
out of this with a revealing reading list.
Goodreads, circa 1874 |
So: what book changed fiction for you? And how?
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
Please Don’t Be This Artist
In 2010 I saw a great movie that went totally under most
people’s radars. Even I barely watched it, but caught the trailer and was
intrigued enough to put it on my Netflix list. Among the movie’s many strong
points was its soundtrack, which mixed ambient sound, classical music and
modern instruments, turning some scenes very cheeky and others downright
disturbing. I was excited to hear it over and over, to write to it, and to promote
it to others. This is how I respond when I like music.
I’ve spent the last two years trying and failing to buy this
soundtrack.
I won’t name the movie or its distributor because I don’t want to
single out its composer for derision, nor will I name that composer. The day after I saw the movie, I searched for the soundtrack
through Google, Amazon, and eventually tried iTunes and Youtube. I couldn’t
find it for sale or streaming anywhere. I even resorted to the forbidden areas
of the internet, without luck.
Figuring it had limited distribution (if any), I tracked
down the composer’s recording label. Their website was a post-modern mess, so
minimalistic that it took me what felt like an hour to find a contact feature.
They never messaged me back, but I did find the composer’s social networks. When
I discovered his Twitter account, I was elated.
He didn’t respond to any of my tweets, and I found that he’d
set his account to Private, so I couldn’t read anything he said. I sent him a
request to follow him.
It was 2011 before he accepted my request. In 2011, I still
hopped on the opportunity. I tweeted at him that I enjoyed the score very much,
and was there a way to buy it?
There was no response that day, week or month. A month
later, I tweeted at him again. I couldn’t DM him because he wasn’t following
me, but I didn’t mind that. It was also then that I noticed his account only
tweeted every few months, when his music showed up in something. At that point
there would be a single tweet, telling his hundred followers to go watch this
movie or show. Because his account was set to Private, no one except his hundred
followers ever saw this. It couldn’t show up in any keyword searches or
conversations. And never in his accounts history had he actually responded to
anyone about anything. He was unilaterally marketing to almost no one.
Within the last month I entered the most desperate and
stupid ploy. Seeing that he’d tweeted within the last three minutes, I sent him
one more @ message asking if his work might become available eventually. He’s
never replied to it. Good chance, he never will. And that's fine - it's clearly a lost cause, and I'll leave him alone.
Maybe he doesn’t know how Twitter works. Maybe he can’t get
the rights to sell the soundtrack and is too frustrated about it to talk to
potential consumers. Maybe he’s almost blind and can barely use screens, or
maybe he’s in a cult, or maybe he’s secretly a dog. I don’t know and I don’t
want to judge this individual, but to judge this public appearance.
Specifically, everyone: don’t do this.
Maybe you’re so busy that you can’t reply to every fan
comment, or you can’t check into social networks daily. That happens. But come
on, the least you can do is:
1) Don’t
hide your promotion.
2) Don’t
refuse to engage with people who need help buying your stuff.
Now ideally, there’d be a 3), and to me, 3) is the most
important.
3) Be
courteous to the people who like your art.
Monday, September 17, 2012
Bathroom Monologue: Grandpa Defends Tolkien
“He should have just sent the eagles,” I said, making the
greatest mistake of my week.
“Oh, you like the giant birds?” asked Grandpa. “I’m sure
they would have been inconspicuous flying over several hundred miles of terrain
that’s populated solely by armies, flying reptiles and the ghost of The Devil.
That couldn’t go wrong.”
“Just fly straight to Mount Doom.”
“Because they wouldn’t look there?”
“They weren’t looking for the hobbits there!”
“Because they’re not twenty feet wide and flying overhead!”
“Then send the army.”
“Which is distinctly smaller than Sauron’s and lacks the
home field.”
“They went anyway!”
“And they only won because the little boys destroyed the
ring.”
“They could still go and distract him while the eagles fly
over.”
“Again, giant birds fleeing battle to dive into one of his
most sensitive locales would draw attention. Here.” At this point Grandpa made
a circle with his index finger and thumb. He held it midway between him and his
grandson. His left hand balled into a fist and loomed like a cobra preparing to
strike over his head. “Try dropping anything into this hole while I use this
hand to punch you in the face.”
“Grandpa!” He pushed all the way to the back of his bunk. “I
didn’t know you took Lord of the Rings
so seriously.”
“I don’t. Fantasy is for nancies. But Tolkien and I both
served in the European theatre, and I’m not going to let people badmouth his
work just because they like birds.”
Sunday, September 16, 2012
Bathroom Monologue: Round One, OR, Amateur Boxing Advice
“So, the first round's in the books, and I just wanted to
update you on what I learned about your opponent’s strengths. For instance,
he’s really good at punching you in the head. Looks like he was born to do it.
He’s got a great right, so maybe you should try dodging it next time so I can
get a look at his left. His left is presently an enigma. Could be a pure
southpaw for all I know.
“In terms of weaknesses, he really
likes hitting you when you don’t him back, which would be a weakness if he
seemed to get tired. But I don’t see how the human hand can be stronger than
the human skull, so if it’s your strategy to pop one of his knuckles with your
forehead, I mean, you’re the professional. God bless, and see you if you make
through round two.”