greygirlbeast: (white)
The snow is going to be with us a while, slowly morphing into a glassy rind of ice. Today has already seen its high of 30˚F and has begun sinking into the twenties, and the high tomorrow is forecast at a mere 26˚F. So, yeah. White out there for a while yet.

I'd planned to take the day off and leave the house for an expedition to photograph cemeteries in the snow. But, FedEx is supposed to deliver the new iPod today, even with our street looking more like the Beardmore Glacier, so here I stay. Maybe we'll take cemetery photos tomorrow.

Yesterday, I wrote 1,129 words on Chapter 4 of The Drowning Girl: A Memoir, which got me to manuscript page 174. I'd have written more, but I reached a point where Imp is typing a list of bad dreams she had between July 10th and July 17th (2010), and after describing the first two, I was afraid they were beginning to sound like me on autopilot. So, I stopped, to let it all percolate. Also, I'd already planned to divide the book into two halves— "The Drowning Girl" and "The Wolf Who Cried Girl" —but now I think I see that each section has to be six chapters long. Which means that when I finish 4, I'll be a third of the way to THE END.

If you haven't yet ordered a copy of Two Worlds and In Between, the platypus says this is a good day to do just that.

Thanks for all the comments the last two days. Keep them coming, if you can. They are mossy stones that help me cross the stream of days. There is something seriously wrong with that metaphor, but I don't have time right now to puzzle out what it might be.

When I was done writing yesterday, we bundled up and went out into the white world. The streetlights were coming on, the oyster day going to a slate twilight. We crossed the great stillness of Dexter Training Grounds. The wind whipped up clouds of snow from the ground, and a little fresh snow was still falling from the sky. At the southern end of the park, a small crowd was busy building persons of snow. In the shadow of the statue of Ebenezer Knight Dexter, a couple had constructed a modest sort of igloo-like shelter, and the ground outside was littered with goggles, a snowboard, hats, etc. We watched a very happy white dog running to and fro. The clouds had thinned, and overhead we could just make out the waxing quarter moon. There were lampposts straight out of Narnia. The air temp was in the low twenties, with the windchill at about 15˚F. I lay on my back in the snow, gazing up at the moon through the icy boughs of a fir tree. The cold hardly bothered me at all. It was dark by the time we headed back home.

In response to the thoughts I posted two days ago, regarding my constant struggle not to second guess my readers, a number of you have said you read my books precisely because I don't pander, and that helped, hearing that. Last night, this thought came to me and I wrote it down: Whores pander. Whores are paid to give you what you want. If I want someone to pander to me, I'll go to a whore, not an artist. Of course, obviously, not pandering limits my audience (though pandering absolutely doesn't guarantee more readers). It's not that I'm trying to make things hard on readers. It's not like I'm trying to do the opposite of whatever they might want (though, I have met writers with that particularly perverse streak of contrariness), it's just that I am my own ideal audience, and I write my books for me. And if other people like what I write, that's grand and wonderful and I can pay my rent, but I simply can't write for anyone but me. I've tried.

Last night, we watched Joel Schumacher's Falling Down (1993), which I'd not seen since the year it was released. It's aged very well, and is certainly one of Michael Douglas' finest moments. We also (FINALLY!) finished the Vashj'ir region in Cataclysm. No, it didn't really get any better. To make matters worse, it ends with a dungeon that you can't do unless you have five players, which means two players don't actually get to see the end of that part of the story (such as it is). This is an old gripe with WoW, their insistence of forced socialization and refusal to take into account those of us who don't have the opportunity and/or inclination to play in groups. Spooky and I never get to see endgame regions. Regardless, it's over and done with, and now we move on. No more Horde vs. the Sea Monkeys.

There are photos from yesterday evening, behind the cut. Mine are first, then Spooky's. Hers are much better, because the Lamictal makes my hands shake too much to take photos in low light without a tripod:

12 January, Part Two )

deep magic

Dec. 10th, 2005 01:41 pm
greygirlbeast: (kermit!)
There's not much good that can be said about the writing yesterday. No, that's not true. There's nothing good that can be said about the writing yesterday. I struggled with Secret Project B. I did hear from Ted Naifeh. That was nice. He says he'll probably have the illustrations for Alabaster, the Dancy Flammarion collection, finished by January 15th. And I'm getting ready to begin writing the last story for the book, "Bainbridge."

You're likely to have heard already, but Robert Sheckley died on Friday. My first editor at Vertigo was his daughter, Alisa Kwitney, who worked with me on much of The Dreaming. The world is truly a poorer place for the loss of his wit and talent. I'm sorry that we never had the opportunity to meet.

Spooky and I made the 4 p.m. matinee of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe yesterday, and I am very, very pleased to say that I was in no way disappointed. I went in with high expectations. Like The Lord of the Rings, Watership Down, and Something Wicked This Way Comes, Lewis' Narnia books, especially the first three, were particularly important to me as a child and teenager. The film is just shy of perfect. I even liked the bit added onto the beginning, the bombing of London as prologue. The casting was superb, especially Georgie Henley as Lucy and Tilda Swinton as the White Witch. As always, I am in awe of Tilda Swinton. I've been in awe of her since Orlando (1992). Her presence in Constantine went a long way towards making up for Keanu Reeves. And now I will probably never be able to see anyone else as the White Witch. She was beautiful and terrible, especially in the climactic battle sequences. Oh, and Jim Broadbent, who can generally do no wrong, was a perfect choice for the Professor. The creature effects were very good (and I'd had my doubts about fauns and centaurs on the big screen), thanks to Weta. The score was magnificent. I know that in this Age of Irony and Affected Indifference, gushing is generally frowned upon. But I really don't care. This film warrants gushing. I have very few complaints, and they're all fairly minor. Liam Neeson did a decent enough job with Aslan, but I couldn't help but think a deeper, more resounding voice was called for and that perhaps Aslan might have been a little larger. Anyway, yes, if you're a fan of the novel, do see the film. I doubt you'll be disappointed. But do not go expecting an adult fantasy. This is a film for children, as it should be, and for admirers of the novel. If you hate children, it will likely drive you mad, which is fine, as it wasn't made for you. Even Lewis' rather heavy Xtian allegory, which I've long since outgrown, was only a very minor distraction. In the end, I think the film comes off as something concerned with far greater and grander things than the doctrine of any one religion. Okay. Enough gushing for the moment.

I should probably be working. Take a moment, please, to look over the current eBay auctions. You might find something you'd like. Also, both the Candles for Elizabeth and Aberrations #27 auctions will be ending today.

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Caitlín R. Kiernan

February 2012

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