About This Author
I am SoCalScribe. This is my InkSpot.
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Blogocentric Formulations
Logocentric (adj). Regarding words and language as a fundamental expression of an external reality (especially applied as a negative term to traditional Western thought by postmodernist critics).
Sometimes I just write whatever I feel like. Other times I respond to prompts, many taken from the following places:
"The Soundtrackers Group"
"Blogging Circle of Friends "
"Blog City ~ Every Blogger's Paradise"
"JAFBG"
"Take up Your Cross"
Thanks for stopping by!
January 7, 2017 at 11:39pm January 7, 2017 at 11:39pm
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NONFICTION PROMPT for 1/6/17: Several writers have had their careers made when a famous person read their work, notably when President Ronald Reagan praised Tom Clancy's first book and catapulted Clancy to international fame. If that were to happen to you, which celebrity would you want to be the catalyst, and why?
As much I'd love the praise of a literary hero of mine or someone super-successful in publishing would tell the world how great my stories are (my list in that category include, among others, Joe Abercrombie, Lawrence Block, Lee Child, Ernest Cline, Michael Connelly, Janet Evanovich, Neil Gaiman, John Grisham, Stephen King, Scott Lynch, George R.R. Martin, James Patterson, Patrick Rothfuss, and Brandon Sanderson), I think I'd want my celebrity advocate to be someone who isn't known for their connections to literature.
A head of state or other world leader would definitely be cool... not our incoming President-Elect necessarily, but I would be totally floored if President Obama or Angela Merkel or Pope Francis said they enjoyed one of my works. Hey, as long as we're dreaming, why not have newly-appointed United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres start up a General Assembly book club to read my work?
If not a world leader, a movie star would be pretty cool too. The paparazzi endlessly follow around A-list celebrities like Jennifer Lawrence, George Clooney, Harrison Ford, and Scarlett Johansson... it'd be really fun to look on TMZ one day and realize that Chris Pratt and Anna Faris took their family on a vacation and were photographed buying a copy of my book at the airport, or reading it on the beach.
So without naming specific names and only narrowing it down since there are so many choices, I think I'd go for a world leader first, then a movie star celebrity second. Basically, I just want someone not known for reading and/or writing to say, "I'm not known for being a voracious reader, but I simply couldn't put this book down!"
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NONFICTION PROMPT FOR 1/7/17: If you could afford to live anywhere in the world, where would it be and why?
If I could afford it, I would live in multiple places throughout the year. The Pacific Northwest of the United States is probably my favorite region that I've visited so far, and I could easily see that being my regular home throughout the year. But as much as I love rain and overcast weather, I worry that I'd get tired of that weather the same way I get tired of the sun and lack of seasons living in Southern California. So I'd want to have a couple other options where I could live for parts of the year when I wanted a break from the Pacific Northwest.
Of all the places I've been, I'd love to have vacation homes on the island of Maui in Hawaii, and Paris (mostly for the history and the food). There are a bunch of places I've always wanted to go but have never been... I have a feeling that I'd probably be pretty excited about living in Italy (again, the history... and the food!), Australia or New Zealand, or even Japan or Thailand. Part of me thinks it would even be fun to live on a remote island nation, like Seychelles or the Maldives or Iceland or Fiji... although, who knows, I could go stir-crazy after a few months.
Based on where I've been and what I've already seen of the world, I think it's be the Pacific Northwest for me.
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January 6, 2017 at 2:15am January 6, 2017 at 2:15am
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Kool & the Gang's "Celebration" is one of those songs that's enjoyed perpetual popularity since its release in 1980. I don't think a single year has gone by where I haven't heard it play at a sporting event, wedding, awards ceremony, as part of a soundtrack to a movie or TV show, or something along those lines. Apparently those close to the band predicted its success, with lead singer J.T. Taylor's mother reportedly telling him upon hearing it, "You're going to play this song for the rest of your life, so get ready!"
While the song can definitely get annoying when it's overplayed (like that year where my wife and I went to eight wedding... toward the end we were rolling our eyes when it inevitably came up on the DJ's playlist), I don't know anyone who flat-out doesn't like the song or doesn't start tapping their toes when it starts to play. Like "Walkin' on Sunshine" by Katrina and the Waves, it's one of those iconic upbeat songs that always put a smile on my face and brightens my day.
As I was thinking of what to write for this entry, I did a little research and, being the trivia junkie that I am, found the following tidbits worth sharing:
The Q'uran (specifically a passage about the angels celebrating and singing praises when God created Adam) is rumored to have been the inspiration for the song.
The song "Ladies Night" (also by Kool & the Gang) was also supposedly a source of inspiration. Its lyrics "Come on, let's all celebrate" toward the end of the song inspired the "Celebration" spinoff.
If you're looking for another connection to the song "Ladies Night," both songs featured backing vocals from the female group Something Sweet.
While the song is routinely used for special occasions like weddings and conventions and the like, one of the most prominent early uses of the song was in welcoming home the fifty-two captives held during the Iran Hostage Crisis in 1981.
Eventual frontman J.T. Taylor used to go to Kool & the Gang concerts as an attendee, even trying to sneak backstage and being turned away at one point.
Contrary to its enduring popularity since, "Celebration" was only a #1 Billboard Hot 100 hit for two weeks before getting booted by Dolly Parton's classic "9 to 5." Not to worry, though... it also hit #1 on both the Billboard Dance and Billboard R&B charts, and featured heavily on radio rotations for nearly the entire year.
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January 3, 2017 at 2:45am January 3, 2017 at 2:45am
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NONFICTION PROMPT for 1/1/17: Anaïs Nin wrote that, "The role of the writer is not to say what we can all say but what we are unable to say." Write about an author or piece of writing you feel does a particularly good job of saying what others have been unable to say. If you haven't read anything yet, write about an author or piece of writing you'd like to read that fits that description.
Last year, I really enjoyed Counting by 7s by Holly Goldberg Sloan , which was a fantastic book that told the story from the perspective of a child with special needs. The main character, Willow Chance, like many children with special needs, is remarkably competent, even gifted in some areas (numbers, nature, medical conditions) while simultaneously really struggling in others (social norms, interacting with others).
My wife is a special education teacher and often talks about how misrepresented this population is in fiction, if it's represented at all. Kids with special needs are either shown as deficient, or as some kind of savant. It was refreshing to see a character who acted like a normal person... someone who has a sharp mind for things that keenly interest her, and has trouble understanding why other people think her behavior is odd or unusual when that's just how she sees and interacts with the world.
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NONFICTION PROMPT FOR 1/2/17: What are your writing desires? Take the time to put those goals in writing. Or better yet, write an entry for the "Dear Me: Official Contest" and put yourself in the running for a lot of gift points while you're at it!
Fortunately, I already did this one earlier this week: "Dear Me (2017)"
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FICTION PROMPT FOR 1/3/17: person about to pawn an heirloom, neglected sibling, wish comes true, wrong side of the tracks
I wrote a little limerick inspired by today's prompts: "Fishful Thinking"
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NONFICTION PROMPT FOR 1/4/17: Do you consider yourself a good editor of your own work, or do you prefer to have someone else do it?
I consider myself a good developmental editor and an okay copyeditor. I like to think that my years of reading and reviewing scripts, books, and other creative material has given me a good sense of story, character, dialogue, and the other elements of creative writing, and I've got a pretty good eye for crafting a good sentence. That said, I fully recognize that everyone benefits from outside opinions, especially because writers are so close to their own work, and I know I have a few technical issues that I always seem to muddle (lay vs. lie, tense shifts, unnecessary punctuation).
My thoughts on editing my professional work can pretty much be summed up as "prefer to have an outside editor, will do it myself if necessary." There isn't always time or money to do all the things you want, so I'll do everything myself if I have to, engage a copyeditor if at all possible, and maybe a developmental editor (or at least alpha or beta readers) when schedule and circumstance permits.
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NONFICTION PROMPT FOR 1/5/17: Have/would you ever consider using a pseudonym for your work? Why or why not?
The only time I would ever really consider a pseudonym is if I were to self-publish drastically different types of work. I've heard a lot of people say that it can be more difficult to establish a presence and build a following if your author identity is all over the place with multiple genres, both fiction and nonfiction, etc. because people coming to you for your nonfiction, for example, are suddenly wondering why they have to sift through a bunch of mystery novels... or a sci-fi/fantasy author might confuse their following if a bunch of literary fiction titles are popping up alongside their space operas and sword and sorcery epics.
I don't think I'd ever adopt a pseudonym in order to keep my work a secret or separated from my real life, but I would definitely consider one to make it easier for audiences to find my work. I still haven't decided whether I'll actually use pseudonym(s) or not since I do have aspirations in multiple different genres and types of writing, but I suppose that's a bridge I'll cross when I get to it.
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January 2, 2017 at 4:02pm January 2, 2017 at 4:02pm
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NOTE: I'm not technically eligible for the "Invalid Item" anymore, but I decided to write a letter anyway and post it here since it's a worthwhile exercise at the beginning of a new year. So without further ado...
Dear Me,
I think it's safe to say that 2016 didn't turn out quite like we expected. It started out promising and ended up being rewarding in a lot of ways, just not the ways that we were anticipating. The new job, my dream job as it happens, started in January has been really great, but took long hours from the get-go through most of November for me to get up to speed since I took over a position that had been vacant had gotten backlogged for months prior to my starting. That gave me precious little time or energy to work on my writing, and as a result, I have basically nothing to show for the entire calendar year of 2016.
Therefore, my plan is to basically import last year's writing goals into 2017. They are:
1. Get my screenwriting business advice website off the ground. I got the site up and running in the last few weeks of 2016, so my goal is to continue writing blogs and building the platform. My goal is to eventually self-publish writing business books, but success with those will require an audience, and an audience requires time to develop properly. I've already built a modest Twitter following with tweet series on the topic, so this year is about expanding that awareness and building trust so that when I do eventually publish the business books, I've got a built-in audience ready to purchase.
2. Write one pilot and one feature screenplay. Even though I'm starting to focus more on self-publishing, my first love is still screenwriting, and it's where I have most of my connections and have had previous success. I haven't written anything since the rewrites my partner and I did in 2014 for the movie we sold, so it's high time I get back on the horse. I started a pilot in December of last year, so my plan is to finish that pilot in the first couple months of 2017, then write one more feature screenplay at some point before the end of the year.
3. Outline and start working on my novel series. My big plan is to make a push into self-publishing... on the one hand with writing business books... but on the other hand with fiction. Like #1 above, though, I've given a lot of thought to a plan of attack; if there's one thing I've learned from listening to so many self-publishing podcasts, it's that you have to have a plan. Mine is to get a lot of product under my belt before I publish anything, so that I can release a steady, initial stream of releases without stressing about finding the time to keep up a prolific output. I'm still trying to figure out what the end of 2017 will look like and whether I'll have actual book(s) completed or just a lot of detailed prep work, but hey, gotta start somewhere, right?
4. Blog regularly. All of my writing goals are going to require extremely disciplined schedules and output... and if there's one thing I've learned from this year of not writing hardly anything, it's that it takes me a long time to get back into a flow state when I take extended breaks from writing. I have a whole bunch of writing inspiration-type things that I can use for prompts; I'm going to use " Blog Harbor from The Talent Pond" to post daily prompts (or at least as often as I can), so that I and others can have some motivation to write.
5. Be more active on Writing.Com. I only did 20 reviews last year, and only created one work of fiction. In order to change that, my goal is to average one review per day and enter at least one writing contest per month. One short story per month should be easy enough, and I'm going to try to do much more than that; I miss writing short stories. And I fully acknowledge that the reviewing will be sporadic; there will be days where I review nothing and other days where I review a bunch, but I think 365 reviews for the year is a reasonable goal.
Taken together, this is a pretty ambitious set of goals for 2017, but I like setting ambitious goals. I like setting my sights high... not unrealistically high, but high enough to require A LOT of work to achieve... because even if I fall short, I'll have still accomplished a lot, and if I don't fall short, it'll be one hell of a productive year.
It's now January 2nd, Me, so you better get to work! You've got a lot to accomplish this year.
Sincerely,
Me
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