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[personal profile] greygirlbeast
In defiance of Reason, the New Consolidated March continues apace. Yesterday, I wrote a very respectable 2,105 words.

Dreamsick this morning, and if I believed in such things as "souls," I'd say soulsick, as well. I would kick against the pricks, only it seems my legs have been firmly bound, and I can but continue to drag this plow forward.

Late yesterday, Vince sent a preliminary sketch for "Untitled 25" (the werewolf story) which is to appear in Sirenia Digest 15 later this month.

A very kind and somewhat intriguing e-mail yesterday from Jacob Garbe, regarding Daughter of Hounds

I have no idea what my opinion is worth to you (this is Jacob, I comment occasionally on your blog) but I wanted to tell you that Daughter of Hounds is the best I've read from you so far, and the best writing I've read for a long time from anyone. Your book was so good that anything distracting me from picking it up after a day of pencil-pushing was met with annoyance and many times outright dismissal. It's been a long time since I've been absorbed like that, and for that I must thank you.

Your characterization in this novel is easily its strongest point. Your attention to detail borders on the taxidermical, but critically rings that bell of truth for the reader. Amazingly, your writing is still rapidly maturing, which is wonderful.

It would be easy for me to believe you've put more of yourself into this piece than any before. I can draw pale conclusions based on your journal and the work itself: the fight between reductionist logic and scientific skepticism, your characters' struggle through a world constantly threading them along an unknown path, shadowed by events caused by forces just outside of their reckoning. For what it's worth, this piece struck a particularly resonant chord with me because of a strange period in my life punctuated by dreams of a pale woman with yellow eyes (others called her the Sphynx) and a grossly overweight, completely hairless man. The influence of dreams in the work, along with the descriptions of Esmeribetheda and the Bailiff, gave me a Jungian pause. Cool.

Thanks for the good art, and thanks for opening it up through your journal. As a writer myself, I appreciate it.


Thank you, Jacob. The opinions of intelligent readers are always of interest to me. And to everyone else reading this, if you have not already purchased a copy of the novel, I would ask you please do so ASAP. If your local bookshop does not have it in stock, they will order it for you. All you have to do is ask. It is also available all over the web. You may get it from Amazon.com for a mere $11.20 + postage and handing. In this blighted future of ours, we do not have to rely on the books stocked in any given bookshop. There's always the web. Anyway, I cannot stress enough how much my continued existence as a novelist depends on the performance of Daughter of Hounds. Please pick up a copy (or three).

We had a good walk yesterday, as far west as the intersection of Sinclair and Elizabeth, where we discovered the Inman Park Petworks, a very fine little pet supply shop that will help us stay clear of the big-box chains. There was still more of a nip in the wind than I'd have preferred, but the air was warm — 49F when our walk began, 56F by the time we returned home. Today is overcast, and we'll not be walking. At least it's warm (presently 52F, with a forecast high of 57F).

Late yesterday, when the writing was done with me for the day, I went with Spooky to Whole Foods (where shadows are permitted) to get stuff for dinner. First we stopped at Borders, to get Mitch Cullin's A Slight Trick of the Mind and Book Two of Jim Butcher's Dresden Files series, Fool Moon. As for the former, Cullin may be my new favourite author. As for the latter, the TV series has prompted me to give the novels a try, and there were no copies of Book One in stock, so I figured I'd just start with Book Two. After dinner and Heroes, we read more of The Terror, chapters 42-45, which gets us to an unknown latitude and longitude on 4 July 1848. By then Spooky was sleepy, but I needed something more to put me down for the night, so I read Chapter Nine of In the Wake of Madness ("That Direful Madness"), which did the trick.

But now it's time to march.

Ah, I almost forgot. The new round of eBay auctions.

Date: 2007-02-20 06:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] highway-west.livejournal.com
I am very much enjoying Daughter of Hounds right now. I wish you the best of luck with the sales.

Date: 2007-02-20 06:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eldritch00.livejournal.com
I've made arrangements to acquire a copy of Daughter of Hounds (and the reissued Threshold), but the bookshop has yet to get back to me with a confirmation of my order.

In the last few days, I finally got to read "Riding the White Bull," and it's a fantastic story. While I don't think I've ever read anything by you that was in the least bit disappointing, it's your SF work that most interests me these days.

That in no way takes away from my thrill at having finally received my copy of Alabaster. I was worried that they would run out, even of the trade hardcover, but I'm absolutely stoked that I managed to snag a limited edition.


Questions:

First, where does "Highway 97" fit in the Dancy chronology? Am I right in assuming that it's the latest story you wrote about her?

Second, I may have missed your entry about this, but what's up with that project about Tales of Pain and Wonder, the one where several of your readers picked out stories to work on? (Mine was "Estate.")

Third, to go back to your SF, any news on the ebook of The Dry Salvages? I already own the trade hardcover, but I'm excited at the thought of linking to it once it's available online, so that others may have the chance to read it, too.

Date: 2007-02-20 06:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] greygirlbeast.livejournal.com
First, where does "Highway 97" fit in the Dancy chronology? Am I right in assuming that it's the latest story you wrote about her?

"Highway 97" occurs immediately before "Bainbridge," by only a few hours.

Second, I may have missed your entry about this, but what's up with that project about Tales of Pain and Wonder, the one where several of your readers picked out stories to work on? (Mine was "Estate.")

It's on hold, pending the end of the March.


Third, to go back to your SF, any news on the ebook of The Dry Salvages?

Also on hold pending the end of the March.

Date: 2007-02-21 03:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eldritch00.livejournal.com
Thanks for all of that.

I'm still trying to find a block of time when I can immerse myself in Dancy's world, and I think I'll read the stories in chronological order. (Alternate TOCs was a great idea, by the way.)

And oh, cf. the comment below, a collection of your SF? I think I missed that bit of news, too!

Date: 2007-02-20 09:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nykolus.livejournal.com
you've mentioned 'Riding the White Bull' will be appearing in your upcoming sf collection, yes?

Date: 2007-02-20 09:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] greygirlbeast.livejournal.com
you've mentioned 'Riding the White Bull' will be appearing in your upcoming sf collection, yes?

Yep.

Date: 2007-02-21 06:32 pm (UTC)
sovay: (Rotwang)
From: [personal profile] sovay
After dinner and Heroes, we read more of The Terror, chapters 42-45, which gets us to an unknown latitude and longitude on 4 July 1848.

You might be interested in John Clute's review:

If we are to take literally everything that happens, we need to think of ourselves as inhabiting another kind of story. It is a tale of wrongness—the sort of wrongness that, in a novel of the fantastic, augurs and manifests an amnesia about the true nature of the world. Franklin and his officers—even the supple-minded Crozier at the start of things, before he begins to learn the score—are not simply white men who don't get the point, though it is blindingly clear that their contemptous and culture-bound refusal to adopt any of the techniques the Inuit use to survive in the far North constitutes a fatal failure to get a very practical point, that you cannot make the world do your bidding by bullying it. But that's not the whole of it. What the white men of The Terror also manifest is another, far more terrible and terminal fact, a 21st-century fact, that maybe you can't make the world do your bidding by bullying it, but you can certainly kill the world trying to.

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Caitlín R. Kiernan

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