greygirlbeast: (Ellen Ripley 2)
[personal profile] greygirlbeast
It's raining here and overcast. The rain came in the night (like Trogdor the Burninator, I suppose —— only wet and cold...and lacking the one big, beefy arm). The temps are in the high forties F, and there might be snow showers tonight and tomorrow. Spooky says it's too early for snow in Providence, but she's already lied about the mooses and the polar bears and the mastodons, so I'm expecting a blizzard. Anyway, the rain is nice. It hides the sky, which has been absolutely crippling in the vasty blueness department of late.

Ernest Hemingway said to write about the weather.

If you've not yet pre-ordered A is for Alien, please do so. Cover by the sublime Jacek Yerka, interior art by Vince Locke, and an afterword by Elizabeth Bear. Remember, the limited comes with a very thick chapbook, B is for Beginnings (which has a cover by Richard A. Kirk). Also, Subterranean Press is now taking pre-orders for the forthcoming trade paperback edition of Alabaster (which will reprint all of Ted Naifeh's artwork from the long-since sold-out hardback edition). I'll plug the Penguin books tomorrow.

---

I tend to grow complacent. I tend think that I'm rather well versed in perversity and kink. But then, inevitably, I stumble across something unsuspected, something I should have known about, and I am humbled. Or at least astounded. Or amused. For example, given the subject matter of various bits I've written for Sirenia Digest, Frog Toes and Tentacles, and Tales from the Woeful Platypus, I'd expect people to expect me to know about "vore" (shortened from vorarephilia, and see also phagophilia). But you would have been wrong, before yesterday. Here's this whole fetish I missed somehow. Well, no, I didn't miss it. It's all over the stuff I've been writing. I just missed that it was a fetish. I always think these things are just me. This is why we have the internet. The real reason, I mean. So that perverts don't feel so all alone. And perusing websites devoted to the whole vore thing led me to discover "unbirthing," which I find truly fascinating, and which may have inspired a story for Sirenia Digest #35. And, if I temporarily adopt a Freudian worldview, a paradigm generally alien to me, both vore and the unbirthing fixation make perfect sense. What did not, at first, make perfect sense was why the unbirthing fetish is so closely allied with furries. But there might be an odd sort of logic here. A return to the wild combined with a return to the womb, perhaps? Some psychological aspect of ontogeny recapitulating phylogeny, or, rather, a sexual manifestation of neotony? But then you run up against the problem that most furries seem fixated not on genuinely becoming less human, in any realistic sense, but with some sort of bent for cartoon animals (anthropomorphic "funny animals," i.e., Mickey Mouse, Daffy Duck, Omaha the Cat Dancer, etc.). And that rather short circuits the explanation, unless one posits that cartoon animals are first encountered when we are very young, and then it all starts to make sense again. Anyway...I ramble. I find it very odd that, these days, it's actually "my job" to think seriously on such matters.

---

I've been listening to a lot of old R.E.M. lately, and, frequently, it's almost painfully nostalgic. Each album is a different year. Of course, I didn't actually come to R.E.M. until the summer of 1986, when I moved to Boulder, Colorado and discovered college radio. That was the same summer that Life's Rich Pageant was released. It will always be my favourite R.E.M. album, partly because it was my first. And R.E.M. always sound like they're singing about the South, even when, say, they're singing about Guatemala. I'm finding myself inevitably, and somewhat annoyingly, homesick. I am so much better off in Rhode Island than I ever was in the South. It's simply a far more tolerant environment, and, the security guard at Swan Point aside, I've not had a homophobic encounter since we arrived. Oh, I'm sure that I would, if I were not careful about where I go. But in Georgia and Alabama, one could not be careful enough. It was inevitable and frequent (though far less so in the part of Atlanta where we lived). I find myself missing the South. Not so much the people, but the landscape, the history (which is, I suppose, the people), the architecture, the food, the Dinosaur of Sinclair Avenue, magnolias. When this homesickness begins to manifest as physical pangs —— when I'm listening to Fables of the Reconstruction (1985) or Automatic for the People (1992) —— I try to focus sharply on particular unpleasant things: NASCAR, the Confederate battle flag, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the football religion, and so on and on. But. Yes. I will admit it, as much as I love being in New England, and knowing I will never again live in the South, I also admit that I find myself missing the place. I think this might be a weird permutation of Stockholm Syndrome.

---

I seem to have drifted back towards working on paleontology articles for Wikipedia. For example, day before yesterday, I did this one on the parareptile Colobomycter. And I'm sleeping more than usual, another eight hours last night. I figure it's all part of the post-novelizing thing.

The platypus says it's time to go. And the platypus...well, you know the score.

Date: 2008-10-28 05:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] amygdalafruit.livejournal.com
Alabaster pre-ordered (from amazon.co.uk)...!!! Should keep me busy next spring/summer with both The Red Tree and Alabaster due for release. Looking forward to them both enormously, but in the meantime I might re-read Threshold to reacquaint myself with Dancy!

jay

Date: 2008-10-28 08:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] greygirlbeast.livejournal.com

Alabaster pre-ordered (from amazon.co.uk)...!

Thank you!

Date: 2008-10-28 05:32 pm (UTC)
sovay: (Default)
From: [personal profile] sovay
I will admit it, as much as I love being in New England, and knowing I will never again live in the South, I also admit that I find myself missing the place. I think this might be a weird permutation of Stockholm Syndrome.

I think it is legitimate to miss places you lived, if only because you lived there.

New Haven in no time
Loisaida, a grey and grimy horror
Bombed-out buildings in 1981

But that girl, she loved it
She loved it fierce and quick
They slept sweet on a dirty floor
Just once in that tiny flat
That first night of sirens


—Consonant, "That Boston Life"

If I remember it objectively, my apartment in New Haven was a firetrap, but I still miss it.

Date: 2008-10-28 05:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] greygirlbeast.livejournal.com

I think it is legitimate to miss places you lived, if only because you lived there.

That's what Spooky says.

If I remember it objectively, my apartment in New Haven was a firetrap, but I still miss it.

As per "Retrospective," I assume.

Date: 2008-10-28 07:51 pm (UTC)
sovay: (Psholtii: in a bad mood)
From: [personal profile] sovay
As per "Retrospective," I assume.

At least I never actually set myself on fire . . .

Date: 2008-10-29 12:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jmoyer.livejournal.com
In my last apartment the heat didn't work very often and when it did it kept the place only from freezing. The water went out often and for days at a time, and the gas stove had a leak that kept on for two years until it was fixed. I miss it just about every day even though I am better off in nearly every way where I am now.

Date: 2008-10-28 06:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] stsisyphus.livejournal.com
I just missed that it was a fetish. I always think these things are just me. This is why we have the internet. The real reason, I mean. So that perverts don't feel so all alone.

Not that I really want to invoke certain spirits of the digital world, but you have apparently just discovered an application of Rule Thirty-Six (http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/RuleThirtySix) of the Internet.

I am mildly curious (but more accurately terrified) of Rule Thirty-Four, and whether/when it was applied to characters in the CRK-verse. There are a few more, some more disturbing (http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/RuleThirtyNine) than others.

Date: 2008-10-28 06:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] greygirlbeast.livejournal.com

Not that I really want to invoke certain spirits of the digital world, but you have apparently just discovered an application of Rule Thirty-Six of the Internet.

Exactly!

I am mildly curious (but more accurately terrified) of Rule Thirty-Four, and whether/when it was applied to characters in the CRK-verse. There are a few more, some more disturbing than others.

Indeed.

And as regards Rule 39 ("It's not furry if I like it."), that opens up a very fascinating can of worms. I was actually discussing it with Spooky yesterday...though it may be a matter of semantics, or of fuzzily defined concepts, or a failure to recognize "furry" as a subset of paraphilia and/or polymorphous fetishes.

Date: 2008-10-28 09:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] stsisyphus.livejournal.com
And as regards Rule 39 ... that opens up a very fascinating can of worms.

I'm just saying that I really don't want to see some sort of Catboy-Deke/SexyWolf-Soldier pr0n any time soo...well, any time ever. Don't protest! Now that I've said it - it just means that it's out there somewhere... *screams and stabs eyes, exit stage right*

Date: 2008-10-28 10:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] greygirlbeast.livejournal.com
Don't protest!

Oh, I shan't. I share your horror. Not that that's much consolation, to either of us.

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