Not Dead, I swear

October 4, 2011 Uncategorized No Comments

I can vow to fellow Papernauts out there, I am not dead – just working on book stuff, music stuff… and you know, WORK stuff. But I’m still trying to read when I can, and there are a few books I read that I really dig recently:

- N.K. Jemisin’s second book in The Inheritance Trilogy – The Broken Kingdoms is awesome. Loved it even more than the first book, and can’t wait for the final book, The Kingdom of the Gods. 

- John Scalzi’s The God Engines: balla. That’s a good thing.

- Stephen R. Boyett took 25 years to write the sequel to Ariel, but I will tell you this much… I’m enjoying the shit out of Elegy Beach. A world where the introduction of magic to Earth has pushed mankind to extinction, the friendship between to two boys can change the fate of the world. My regular subway read these days.

More stuff to come soon, promise. In the meantime, the twitter feed get slightly more updates. Slightly more.

Dreadnought Review

February 3, 2011 Book Reviews, Books 1 Comment

Looking back, I admit I was a little too harsh initially on Boneshaker, Cherie Priest’s zombie/steampunk hybrid novel. While it turned out to be a good book, I thought the story started too slowly for me; probably because I was too anxious about the zombie swarm goodness I knew was bound to happen. With Dreadnought, the second entry in the Clockwork Century series, I am happy to report I have no complaints about this gunslinging sequel. Priest expands and builds on her wild take on Civil War America, complete with train heists, battling mechs and of course, more zombies. … Continue Reading

Yeah, Write – Champagne Wishes

December 10, 2010 Musings, Yeah Write. No Comments

NaNoWrMo was kind of a bust… kind of. While I spent most of November laying out templates and character arcs/ideas – some good, some utterly worthless – the actual concept of writing month slipped away from me. I was just supposed to write, dammit. Mistakes, typos and all. I really only got one particularly good thing out of it all, and even good is a subjective term at this point.

I got a novella started.

I know. Because that’s exactly what I needed added on to my goals: another book, right? While contextually speaking it is canonical to the overall novel, the theme, subject matter and even the culture of it is entirely different. Pieces of it will be in another language. It definitely calls for some research (which thankfully I have already enlisted in the form of a person). There’s nothing better than personal experiences to add some life to a story.

This thing is going to be written in big chunks, just to keep me from devoting too much damn time to it. Plus the plot is simplistic in nature, so I’m hinging all the value on character and dialog emphasis. Fingers crossed that I can get this thing going somewhere, because I’m kind of excited by it.

The Way of Kings Review

November 8, 2010 Book Reviews No Comments

I just finished the first book in Brandon Sanderson’s Stormlight Archive series – his magnum opus – and let me tell you, The Way of Kings is serious. Twenty years from now, young newcomers to fantasy and aspiring writers will look up to this series the way we look up to late Robert Jordan’s Wheel of Time series. I suppose that makes it all the more fitting that Sanderson has been named his literary successor, as well as the man to finish Jordan’s absurdly epic series. Sanderson in his own right has laid the foundation for something I will be pleased to share with my own children someday… when I have children, that is. … Continue Reading

Yeah, Write – an introduction.

November 7, 2010 Musings, Yeah Write. 1 Comment

About 15 years ago (about as close to accurate as I can get), I shut the pages on a novel, knowing for sure in that moment I would write one of my own, “before I die”. I put that in quotations because it’s the one thing from that age that I know I said out loud.

I’m 26 now. That novel has yet to be written.

That is (I hope) until now. A myriad of triumphs as well as an assortment of disasters have waylaid any attempt to get that book off the ground. This is the attempt to give something I’ve always dreamed about wings.

A year ago, I decided I would actually do it: I would churn out that great idea for a novel bottled up in my head and have that gigantic monkey flung from my back, hoping that he screamed as he hurtled into the darkness. I was drafting up story ideas, characters, plot threads and outlines, even ordering textbooks on making narratives stronger and more fluid. I started looking into buying a domain name for a writing blog, and I felt a little excitement stirring a part of me I’d forgotten exists. But something else happened a year ago as well: I got a new job.

Not a dream job, mind you, but a good job. A job some people (me not being one of them) settle into for the rest of their lives and retire. Comfortable. I started working absurd hours. I took shifts that no one else wanted, and before long I was the guy people called a workaholic. I’m talking spans as long as 42 days straight in the summer, only taking a day off to go to a wedding. Even my best friend told me I needed to slow down but I didn’t care; I’ve always tackled new challenges that way, with some primal need to dominate whatever it is I do, trying to become a perfectionist. Still, in the moments when I actually took a minute to catch my breath, the book would call to me. I kept working.

Eventually, I finally started to break down from the work load. Despite the fact that I consider myself disciplined (and irrationally invincible), things started to catch up to me. I had to finally admit I was… normal. I needed rest. It was probably the best thing I ever did.

I spent a few days flipping through my old moleskine notebooks, reading the sporadic ideas that appeared to come from a complete stranger. I would look at a passage and say, “I could have done so much more exposition here”, or “this whole section should go” and then I realized something: I had changed. Not my personality, but just the way I percieved things.

Turns out all those crazy hours I had put into working on building maintenance and learning snippets of engineering technology had actually rubbed off. I could approach the same ideas from new angles, with fresh insight and perspective. Not only that, all the time I’d spent conversing with coworkers made me realize I’d never had much life experience to write off of when I was younger that I could now call upon. I wouldn’t say it was equivocal to Neo rising from the dead, but I certainly felt hopeful again.

I stopped working 7 days a week. Or, at least I’m trying; I work a lot less than I used to.

Then I answered the book’s call, finally. I blew the dust off of old character concepts and ideas and started putting them together with themes that had been running through my head, and I almost laughed at how easy it was to draft a plot. I actually had a story to tell. It felt amazing. Still, I knew it would only get me so far.

I needed motivation. It’s cool for someone to be all talk and no sizzle, but that just doesn’t work for me. I need a fire lit under my ass every now and then, and I needed no excuses to not do it. So I actually started taking care of myself again. Eating a little healthier, working out again, and actually finding time for a social/dating life. Then, I took a vacation… a real vacation – with beaches and stuff -just so I couldn’t complain about being burned out. I’m looking into joing a writing group at the moment, but this blog is the final piece.

Yes, I am finally writing a blog about… well, writing. This is to remind me of the promise I made to myself at age 11 after reading Battlefield Earth and The Elfstones of Shannara back to back. Don’t bother looking up the books; I can just tell you they’re both nerdy, but they mean a lot to me. It’s also a thank you and a promise to the friends who have supported me as I make a headlong rush into the burning building I call love… er, I mean writing. At this point, I equate both scenarios to be identical.

This blog is also a reminder that I remain skeptical of my ability to finish this especially in my predicted timeframe of spring 2011, hence the title.

Yeah, Write.

NaNoWriMo is here!

So it’s November, which officially means it’s National Novel Writing Month! The generally accepted practice is that you dedicate the month to writing a work consisting of no less than 50,000 words. While it sounds like a lot, it is definitely possible to accomplish if you’re actually willing to put in the effort involved. Still daunted? Well, I’ve done my best to assemble a few resources that will be helpful to any writer interested in participating in NaNoWriMo. Here they are:

NaNoWriMo: This is the official site to sign up and participate in NaNoWriMo. Jump in!

Scrivener: A seriously kick-ass program for writers, and generally considered the best out there. I personally just started using it and I’m falling in love with the chapter note insert options, as I tend to have a lot of rambling thoughts I like to jot down that don’t immediately fit as I write. It really helps scrambled-brained as well as the well organized (I fall somewhere in-between). Scrivener has a free 30-day trial for Macs and is about $45 for the paid version. Personally, I think it’s worth it. There is a Windows version now available, but it’s still in beta testing, and expires at the end of the year.

PageFour: Pretty similar to Scrivener, as it helps making organizing your story elements waaay easier. If you’re using Windows, this is your lover. Embrace him/her now.

And please, try to remember that the point is not to write a perfect story. It is more to just to put aside excuses and write something. No writing is ever wasted; I always compare it to a good workout at the the gym. Don’t spend too much time debating whether or not you’re going to do it, because the month is ticking away! We can always improve as writers, and there’s no time like the present, right?

Stay tuned, as I will be posting PS new feature column this week… as soon as I stop fussing over it.

Here’s to Halloween, with an eye on November!

Vampire Hunter D, drawn by one of my favorite artists, Yoshitaka Amano.

As I don’t forsee much work being completed this weekend, let me fire off a shot before this mad weekend begins… HAPPY HALLOWEEN!

Now that I got that out of my system, let me say that if I don’t dress up as War Machine this time next year, my life can be summed up as an all-around failure. Until then, we got some good stuff coming in the near future. I’m charging through Brandon Sanderson’s The Way of Kings (literally 75% done), and hope to have a review done for the coming week. I also have something major to announce on the site next week in honor of NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month!), as well as some tips to get my other aspiring writers on their grind.

Good things are coming folks, so stay tuned!

p.s. – we’re also looking for a few good writers for the site, so if you’re interested, get in touch with me at shaka@paperspaceships.com

And since I actually have been using it lately (to stalk great writers), hit up the twitter account and we’ll make fun of the internets. TOGETHER.

The Name of the Wind Review

October 24, 2010 Book Reviews, Books 4 Comments

Subtle cover, major tale.Before you read this, just know that it took me an absurdly long time to finish this review. I’ve written this over for the third time, and I still feel that I can’t quite adequately describe how much I loved this book. Suffice to say it is perhaps one of the best books that I have ever read. Take my last statement with a grain of salt; some of the emotions described in Patrick Rothfuss’ The Name of the Wind seem to have an extra amount of resonance with my life right now. It is essentially about a hero telling the story of how he became a hero, something that sounds routine, yet never would I have expected it to be pulled off with such skill. Rothfuss certainly has a gift; a talent with words I would sacrifice a limb to have for myself. Most amazing to me is the fact that this novel is only the first day of his retelling, and only covers his life from age eleven to fifteen. Maybe that doesn’t impress you, but when put in the perspective that the memoirs are being told by a man who only looks to be 25, it’s clear Kvothe has lived a lot of life during that span. … Continue Reading

The Desert Spear Review

September 27, 2010 Book Reviews, Books No Comments

I loved The Warded Man, start to finish. It took me back to a feeling I haven’t had since I was a kid; I stopped analyzing novels for research, and just read it for fun. Of course I immediately had to purchase a copy of the sequel, not wanting to let the feeling of enjoyment go by so quickly. Brett starts off the book with a heck of change that will surprise some, and will probably upset the obsessed. If you were keeping up with the news, you know that a good chunk of the beginning of The Desert Spear is about Jardir – a treacherous antagonist in The Warded Man -  and how he becomes the most powerful man in Krasia. It’s understandable; why would you care about the origins of a man who you have no reason at all to like?

I’ll try to sum up The Desert Spear in as few words as possible… here we go: Simply Amazing. … Continue Reading

The Red Wolf Conspiracy Review

September 20, 2010 Book Reviews, Books No Comments

Yeah, that is a picture of a big ass ship, where most of our story takes place.

Robert Redick’s Red Wolf Conspiracy was a purchase made as part of my Amazon.com boredom browsing, looking for books that aren’t typically on my radar. I sat on it for a little while before actually reading it (while on vacation). Understandably, I can see where the comparisons with George R.R. Martin’s Song of Fire and Ice books comes in. While I had a few issues with certain areas, I really grew attached to some of Redick’s characters quickly, and can honestly recommend this one to anyone looking for something different in the fantasy genre.

The Red Wolf Conspiracy in my eyes doesn’t have a main character; it is told from multiple perspectives as the story moves along (a la Martin). It focuses around the two most powerful nations in the land, the empire of Arqual and the Mzithrin empire. Thasha Isiq, the daugther of a legendary Arqualian naval commander, discovers that she is to be married to a Mzithrini prince to unify the warring nations. To escort her there is the Chathrand, last of the mighty ships (mighty as in absurdly huge) that sailed the Ruling Seas long ago. As Thasha prepares for the journey, other characters in the story are also making their own ways on board the Chathrand as well: A prisoner of war cursed by magic now living his days as a tarboy (deckhand), an army of miniature warriors, and a self aware rat who’s sometimes a little too brave for his own good. Yes, the array of different cast members here can be mind-boggling.

Yet somehow, it all works together. … Continue Reading

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