"Gather up the lost and sold."
Apr. 4th, 2011 01:47 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Rainy and cold here in Providence. The sky is the color of the way I feel.
Comments always welcomed, especially on Mondays.
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To-do list for April (with three days already behind me):
1. Story for Dark Horse (TBA)
2. Story for sf anthology (TBA)
3. Sirenia Digest #65
4. All that other stuff.
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Yesterday, I pulled the manuscript for The Drowning Girl out again and added a new page of text to the "epilogue." It's not actually a conventional epilogue; it's a section at the end called "Back Pages" which contains various oddments and loose threads, after which I(mp) typed THE END. Then I rewrote and expanded a portion of pages of 281 and 282. And then I read aloud to myself the section of the novel which I think of as 7, though I think the actual title of that section is:
7/7/7/7
7/7
7
seven
7
7/7
7/7/7/7
Then I read aloud to myself all of "Random Notes Before a Fatal Crash," and I made a great deal more line edits than I'd have expected would be necessary.
Today will be spent pulling together Sirenia Digest #64, in hopes that I can get it out to subscribers this evening. I have Vince's illustration, which I'm very pleased with.
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A preview of the photos taken by
kylecassidy on Saturday. This is undoubtedly the best photograph anyone's taken of me since...2003, I think. The creature behind me is Kronosaurus queenslandicus, a gigantic short-necked plesiosaur from Australia.

Dr. Caitlín R. Kiernan, Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology & Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology*
Photograph Copyright © 2011 by Kyle Cassidy
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The evening was spent with roast turkey, recreational Vicodin use, and more Californication re-watching, and then, late (or early), because I couldn't sleep, Rift on Spooky's laptop. I played my Eth warrior, Indus. I think I got to bed about 4:00 ayem. There were elaborate, apocalyptic nightmares I thankfully can't now recall. I think the only time I actually sleep restfully these days is when I doze off in the car or take very short naps directly after work. Oh, also last night, lots of listening to the new Radiohead, The King of Limbs, which is, as expected, brilliant. Thanks, Steven.
Now, time to edit and format, and also write a prolegomenon.
Probably the Last Martian,
Aunt Beast
* A little wishful thinking never hurt anyone.
Comments always welcomed, especially on Mondays.
---
To-do list for April (with three days already behind me):
1. Story for Dark Horse (TBA)
2. Story for sf anthology (TBA)
3. Sirenia Digest #65
4. All that other stuff.
---
Yesterday, I pulled the manuscript for The Drowning Girl out again and added a new page of text to the "epilogue." It's not actually a conventional epilogue; it's a section at the end called "Back Pages" which contains various oddments and loose threads, after which I(mp) typed THE END. Then I rewrote and expanded a portion of pages of 281 and 282. And then I read aloud to myself the section of the novel which I think of as 7, though I think the actual title of that section is:
7/7
7
seven
7
7/7
7/7/7/7
Then I read aloud to myself all of "Random Notes Before a Fatal Crash," and I made a great deal more line edits than I'd have expected would be necessary.
Today will be spent pulling together Sirenia Digest #64, in hopes that I can get it out to subscribers this evening. I have Vince's illustration, which I'm very pleased with.
---
A preview of the photos taken by
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)

Dr. Caitlín R. Kiernan, Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology & Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology*
Photograph Copyright © 2011 by Kyle Cassidy
---
The evening was spent with roast turkey, recreational Vicodin use, and more Californication re-watching, and then, late (or early), because I couldn't sleep, Rift on Spooky's laptop. I played my Eth warrior, Indus. I think I got to bed about 4:00 ayem. There were elaborate, apocalyptic nightmares I thankfully can't now recall. I think the only time I actually sleep restfully these days is when I doze off in the car or take very short naps directly after work. Oh, also last night, lots of listening to the new Radiohead, The King of Limbs, which is, as expected, brilliant. Thanks, Steven.
Now, time to edit and format, and also write a prolegomenon.
Probably the Last Martian,
Aunt Beast
* A little wishful thinking never hurt anyone.
no subject
Date: 2011-04-04 05:50 pm (UTC)Nice frames. Flattering.
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Date: 2011-04-04 07:00 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2011-04-04 08:05 pm (UTC)The King of Limbs was typical shining Radiohead glory, but for some reason it didn't excite me as much as In Rainbows did. I am, however, totally hooked on the track "Little by Little".
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Date: 2011-04-04 08:05 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2011-04-04 08:09 pm (UTC)It's a damn handsome photo.
I'm glad you're writing more sf - don't know if the The Last Martian is an upcoming story, but it sounds like a long-lost Bowie track.
Browncoatpunk?
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Date: 2011-04-04 08:26 pm (UTC)Kyle is such a good photographer!
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Date: 2011-04-04 08:36 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2011-04-04 08:42 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2011-04-04 08:45 pm (UTC)I picked up the Ironside trilogy by Holly Black per your recommendation on this blog some several months ago. I'm in the middle of Valiant now. I like it quite a bit better than Tithe, but that was good too. It's nice to see queer characters in YA novels, even if they're only secondary characters.
I don't know if you have Netflix or not, but there's a Criterion Collection version of Chronos out now. It's beautiful. I highly recommend it, especially if it's been a few years since you've seen it.
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Date: 2011-04-04 08:55 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2011-04-04 09:19 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2011-04-04 09:30 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2011-04-04 09:43 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2011-04-04 10:28 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-04-04 10:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-04-04 11:38 pm (UTC)I really like that.
It doesn't hurt, you know, that you're photogenic.
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Date: 2011-04-04 11:39 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2011-04-04 11:49 pm (UTC)Your post the other evening about our youth-worshiping culture got me thinking, and I realized something: I like to look at people who are more mature (not mature as in old, which is what mature seems to have come to mean, but more in the sense of someone who has had time to develop, to ripen). Young people are pretty, sure, but I've been looking around since your post and have realized that they just don't look interesting - they don't look quite done. Our little bags and sags and freckles and spots, they are the badges of our experience. They tell the world that we have gone forward and LIVED!
The photo is wonderful, and you look wonderful in it. You are certainly attractive, but you also look interesting. You look like a person someone would cross a room to talk to, because you look as though you'd have something to say.
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Date: 2011-04-05 12:09 am (UTC)You look adorable.
Re: love the picture
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Date: 2011-04-05 12:55 am (UTC)The symmetry of the "Seven" header is very nice. It sort of looks like a 7 with a line through the stem.
PS - I took "The Red Tree" out of the Horror section at the book store today and put it on the "Hot New Reads" table (would have put it in SF/F but decided to go whole hog). One can only imagine what sorts of trouble it will cause there amongst the light summer reading...
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Date: 2011-04-05 01:44 am (UTC)I found lovecraft unbound this weekend. What a great anthology!
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Date: 2011-04-05 01:59 am (UTC)Now I'm wondering, thanks to the plesiosaur fossil: are any fossils you helped excavate on display? How have your fossils been used? Stored and studied? Waiting to be studied? (I hope they're not being used to prop up crates in that warehouse where the Ark is...)
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