Amber Sparks

Amber Sparks

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The Digital Book Wars

April 26, 2010

Interesting article in the New Yorker on ebook pricing wars and Apple’s pricing strategy re: iBooks.

These Are Some Blogs I Like, I Like, These Are Some Blogs I Like

March 31, 2010 — 8 Comments

When I read something I really like, I usually look up the author online. I imagine most writers do this. Even if I’m familiar with the writer’s background, or work, I like to check out their website or blog to see how they’ve chosen to frame themselves. Sometimes, usually with women writers for whatever reason, I find no website at all. This, I have to tell you, is unacceptable to me. I come from a PR background and I’m not afraid to use it. I tell anyone I meet—are you selling something? Then get a goddamn website. It’s not hard to do. In fact, it can be free. And yes, if you are a writer you’re selling something. Even if it’s just an image. Even if it’s just access to your work. Even it’s just you. Please get a website, writers. It’s so sad when you don’t have a web presence. You’re not a mystery. You’re just… not there. (Feel free to argue with me on this point. You should probably know what I do for a living includes the words “new media.” If that helps you understand where I’m coming from.)

Often, the website or blog is basically just a showcase for the writer’s work. Often it’s static and rarely updated. And that’s fine. I have no problem with that, as long as there’s a list of what you’ve published and how to read that stuff or buy it. Sometimes it’s totally psychotic and unreadable and looks like the virtual scribblings of a madman. Which is fine, too, if that’s the image you’re into projecting. And seriously–I know some writers are into that.

But the sites I really like are writers’ blogs. Not just the blogs where writers post a link every time they have a new story up. Those are fine, too. Even better than the static kind mentioned above. But no, I’m talking about the blogs that are updated regularly, that are interesting, that are well-written and nicely designed and contain lots of information that I or other readers would really like to know. They promote other writers and their work, they tell funny stories, they sometimes put up pictures, they link to stuff they think is cool, they tell you all about upcoming readings and tours, and maybe they even tell you a little about themselves.

But. As I said, kind of, a lot of writers’ blogs are just boring. So I’ve never posted a big list of links to blogs of writers I like, because why do I want to direct you to a static website? I’m not gonna clutter up my page with stuff like that. If I like a writer’s stuff, I’ll tell you and link to it in a post (and I frequently do.)

But again. I’ve been thinking. And I’ve decided that because really good writers’ blogs are so relatively rare, I’d actually like to showcase the ones that I like. I do have a bunch that I check regularly and like very much, and so I’m going to start a little series where I direct you to the writers’ blogs I like best, maybe five or six at a time as so not to overwhelm you. And then maybe at the end of that series, I’ll post the links to those blogs. If I feel like it.

Sorry for the long, long intro. One more thing, though. If you or some other writer you know has a great blog I haven’t talked about, post the link in the comments or email me, and I’ll check it out. Okay. Enough talk. I’ll dive into the first installment now.

Roxane Gay

Roxane is fearless and hilarious and blogs about rejection (usually the writing kind, but not always.) Nothing is funnier than her stream-of-conscious blogs on pop culture, writing, her own life, and everything else under the sun. What you wouldn’t know from her blog: Roxane is one of the most talented, prolific and successful writers around. But she never brags that up on her very (okay, probably too) humble blog, which makes you sort of feel better about life and the fact that you kind of dig Lady Gaga’s new video and is that so wrong? It helps to read about the rejections she’s received, because you think, Well, crap. If Roxane Gay can get rejected from Snooty Publication X, I feel a little tiny bit better about being rejected from the same.

Matt Bell

Matt is one extremely talented writer. He’s also one of the most generous; more often than not his blog is showcasing another writer’s work that he admires. Matt’s a true and tireless promoter of others in the indie writing community, and you can tell his props are for real and are well-deserved. A guy as successful as Matt doesn’t need to spend all this time promoting others, and yet he does it because you can tell it’s really important to him. I’ve discovered a lot of great stuff that I’d never have read if it wasn’t for his blog. That’s huge to me.

Ethel Rohan

Ethel is also gigantically talented and prolific. (Are we seeing a pattern here? No surprise that talented writers write…well. Even on the intertubes.) She’s always more than willing to share everyone’s good news, and direct others to great stories, books and poetry. She’s like a cheerleader for writers–but way smarter and nicer than a real cheerleader. Just like with Matt’s blog, I’ve discovered some great stories and writers I never would have known otherwise. Ethel also does this thing where she writes about the effect stories have on her, in the most personal way. I love reading these, and the fact that Ethel is so willing to share her life and past with others.

Steve Himmer

Steve is editor of the highly eclectic Necessary Fiction, so it stands to reason that Steve himself is highly eclectic. His blog, which he calls his “notebook of interesting things,” is chock full of things that interest me, anyway. Science, nature, history, architecture, tall tales—you name it and Steve’s probably pulled something interesting out of the subject and stuck it on his blog. Did I mention Steve’s also a fabulous writer? Who also happens to write about many interesting subjects in stories? Yeah, well. He is and he does.

Michael Kimball

Not only is Michael the insanely amazing author of Dear Everybody and a lot of other things that rock, he will also write your life on a postcard. And post it on his blog. Plus, Michael sometimes writes about the things that are going on in Baltimore, which is an awesome city that happens to be very close to me and so I like to hear what’s happening in the writing scene there as if I were absorbing it through osmosis. Plus, Michael writes about a lot of other interesting writers and writings, and he knows what he’s talking about so I just follow along and nod, metaphorically speaking of course.
Mel Bosworth

Mel is a great writer and just as energetic as hell and that energy translates into his praise and promoting of others’ good work. When I read Mel’s blog posts, I’m not only going to check out whatever he tells me to check out, I’m going to go and get all excited about it, too. Also, Mel posted a video of Carvel Ice Cream Cakes a few days ago and I’m not gonna lie, this kinda sort pushed the blog over the top for me. Oh my god I want a Carvel Ice Cream Cake RIGHT NOW.

So, that’s it for the first installment. Look for the next one sometime soon. If your favorite blog didn’t make it, for Christ’s sake settle down, because it’s probably on my list to write about. I’m out. I’m gonna go eat some ice cream and try to ignore the dudes drilling through the floor in the apartment next to mine.

New Issues of The Collagist and PANK Online

January 15, 2010

In The Collagist:

new fiction by Tina May Hall, Alan Michael Parker, Gabe Durham, and Gabriel Blackwell, as well as a novel excerpt from Louis Paul Boon’s My Little War, which is out this month from Dalkey Archive Press, an essay from Jennifer S. Cheng, and poetry by Mary Jo Firth Gillett, Reginald Dwayne Betts, Emily Kendal Frey, and Doug Ramspeck.

In PANK, fiction from:  Maureen Alsop, Andrew Borgstrom, Doug Paul Case, Mark Cunningham, Geordie deBoer, Sutherland Douglass, Dave Housley, Stephanie Johnson, Carolyn Kegel, Thomas Patrick Levy, Amy McDaniel, Carrie Murphy, Joseph Murphy, Alec Niedenthal, Ani Smith, Janey Smith

Multiverse Madness

December 18, 2009

As someone who’s constantly wishing for an expanded menu of choices in regards to, well, everything, I find this wonderful. I hope there are really are an unending number of universes out there, each with its own laws of physics and everything that follows.

Six (Not-So) Impossible Things Well After Breakfast

December 16, 2009

In honor of the new Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland trailer, which has me writhing with excitement to see the film, I’ve compiled of six things which, while obviously not impossible, are at least highly unlikely, or usually awesome:

Chanel Iman rides an elephant while dressed as Minnie Mouse.

At HTML Giant, Justin Taylor has compiled a vast and impressive list of various editors, writers, poets, publishers, and other literary lights’ favorite books of 2009. Read it and add to your holiday gift list.

The L.A. Times reviews a full-of-blood-sex-horror-and-gore (well, okay, allegorically speaking) new translation of Charles Perrault’s The Complete Fairy Tales. My favorite fairy tales were Perrault’s when I was little. I can’t wait to pick this up and read them again.

Ohmygodsocoolwhydon’twehavethishere…oh. Right.

How we live now, in a lovely comic nutshell by XKCD.

Via Pharyngula, a long list of secular charities that need your dough.

That is all. Now I think I’ll go watch that trailer again.

Zombie Mallwalkers

October 22, 2009

Yes, this is my first post. And yes, it is about zombies. So that should tell you pretty much everything you need to know about me.

Ever since I first saw the Dawn of the Dead, which is the best zombie movie ever of all time (and no, not the stupid remake, the original) I have desperately wanted to visit this mall.  Now that they have a zombie museum, complete with bloody zombie handprints, I think I’ll have to go.

Under Construction

October 16, 2009

I don’t suppose anyone in the world is looking at this site yet, but if they are, well, I’m working on it. Dur.