Category Archives: Just Stuff

Just my babbling, website related stuff — or whatever doesn’t fit in the other categories ;)

Pure Spec

ScareCROW

Do you see this guy? He’s a crow who is a scarecrow. Dude. It was so perfect I just had to have him, but I couldn’t figure out a way to justify it. We aren’t really the kind of family who uses seasonal decorations in their house, he’s not really outside-friendly and I’m trying to purge as much stuff from our house as possible. Still, despite all that I really wanted to bring him home. Then I hit on an idea–pure gold. I could bring him with me to my vendor table at Pure Spec and he could hang out there as sort of a mascot for Corvidae and Scarecrow. What’s more, I could hold a contest for people to help me name him. So that’s what I’m doing.

I have a vendor table at Pure Spec this year. If you’ll be attending you ought to stop by, not only to check out all the amazing titles I will be selling but also to suggest a name for my friend here. Every person who suggests a name gets $1 off any of my books.

I’ll announce the winning name here next week 🙂

Giftmas Blog Tour

giftmas_rectangle

Last year I invited my friends to share guest blogs with me about their winter holiday traditions. It went pretty well, but was quite rushed because I left it until the last minute (or very near) before putting things together. I don’t want to repeat that this year and there are like ten weeks to Christmas. (I KNOW! How did that happen? Holy whack this year has gone by quickly. Anyway…)

Would you like to participate in a blog tour this December?

I’m calling it the ‘Giftmas Blog Tour’ because at my home we celebrate a secular version of Christmas that I like to call Giftmas but you’re welcome to join in no matter what December holiday you celebrate.

Participants will be asked to write two separate blog posts about whatever they want as long as it touches on a winter celebration. Those posts will be shared here on my blog and also on other participant’s blogs. You are not required to host a guest post but if want to, you are welcome to do so.

Participants are also welcome, but not required, to donate something for our big Giftmas Giveaway. All donated prizes will be pooled together and given away at the end of the tour.

If you’d like to join in please email me at rhonda.l.parrish@gmail.com with the subject ‘Giftmas Blog Tour’. Include in that email:

  • Your blog URL (if you have one)
  • If you’d like to donate a prize (or prizes) to the giveaway
  • If you’d like to host a guest post (or two) and, if so, any days in December you cannot host on

I will accept sign-ups until November 15th 

If you have any questions shoot me an email and I will get back to you as quickly as possible.

*Awesomesauce graphics courtesy of Amanda C. Davis.

Octobers

Anne of Green Gables

“Oh, Marilla,” she exclaimed one Saturday morning, coming dancing in with her arms full of gorgeous boughs, “I’m so glad I live in a world where there are Octobers. It would be terrible if we just skipped from September to November, wouldn’t it? Look at these maple branches. Don’t they give you a thrill–several thrills?”

~ Excerpted from Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery

 

I share Anne’s excitement for October, which is why I pre-scheduled this post waaaay back in January. As I write this my yard, my world, is covered in fresh-fallen snow, my breath would fog the air outside, and I wouldn’t venture out without full winter clothing… as we read it, however, October is just beginning which around here means crisp air, colourful leaves, golden light and that special feeling that comes with knowing that winter is coming and we need to appreciate every day, every moment, between now and then.

I’m so glad I live in a world where there are Octobers 🙂

 

Leafs - Photograph by Rhonda Parrish
Leafs – Photograph by Moi

Books for Blood

Last year my friend Scott Burtness decided to donate a portion of his Oct royalties from his novel Wisconsin Vamp to the American Red Cross which is awesome, but he didn’t stop there. He invited also other authors to join in. Four authors and a Facebook page later the first annual Vampire Books for Blood was uh… born.

This year not only does he have a website but he’s also included Canadian Blood Services 🙂 If you’d like to participate or support those who are participating check it out here:

Vampire Books For Blood

I hope to be participating as well, so I asked Scott how tricky it was to join in. He said the steps are:

1- Contact their local branch of the American Red Cross or Canadian Blood Services and set up their own individual donation agreement (3rd party agreement).
He has information about how to do this on his website, it looks pretty straightforward
2- The author submits their book info to the site. I display the book on the site and link to where the book is sold
3- The author promotes the event and their involvement during the month of Oct (#VampBooks4Blood)
4- After Oct 31st, the author fulfills their individual donation to their local Red Cross.
So there you have it. Now I just need to get my butt in gear and do it. How about you? 🙂
The book that started it all...
The book that started it all…

What Do You Do Again?

“So like, you just fix all the typos and then you get to have your name on the cover?”

A few months ago I was talking with someone close to me–let’s call them Jack–about an anthology I was working and they asked me that question.

In complete sincerity.

“So like, you just fix all the typos and then you get to have your name on the cover?”

At first I was angry–No. No I don’t just fix all the typos and then I get my name on the cover. That’s not how this works–but eventually I got over it, because Jack wasn’t trying to minimize the amount of work I put into an anthology, he honestly just didn’t know.

Thinking about it afterward it became pretty clear to me that, actually, a lot of people don’t know. When they see a book that says ‘Edited by NAME’ on the cover, they don’t understand what that means. And why should they? I’ve been a writer for quite a long time and even I didn’t know what that meant until a couple years ago, so I want to talk, just briefly, about my process when I’m editing an anthology. What do I do? Why is my name on the cover?

Things change from anthology to anthology, but the basic process can be broken down into twelve steps.

One: I come up with an idea for an anthology. This has to be something that I think readers will be interested in but also something I like well enough (or in the case of Metastasis am motivated to work on) to not grow tired of it over the many months it is going to consume my life. Because they do. Anthologies consume your life LOL

Two: If I’m not self-publishing, like I did with the Alphabet Anthologies, I write a pitch for the anthology, submit it to an appropriate publisher following their guidelines and then cross my fingers and wait. Occasionally this step has to be repeated multiple times.

Three: Once a publisher has accepted the anthology we sort out all the less-than-exciting (but very important) bits such as how everyone is getting paid, how much we’re getting paid, when submissions will open and close, how many stories I can include, what the final word count is going to be, etc. etc. etc.

Four: Details sorted, the publisher and I announce the anthology and try to put it on as many writer’s radars as possible even before submissions open. I increase my efforts to spread the word once submissions are open. It’s incredibly frustrating (for me and the disappointed author) to announce your completed table of contents or the anthology’s release and be told, “Oh, I wish I’d known!”*

Five: During the submission period, I continue to try and spread the word about the anthology and make reasonable efforts to let people know if my story needs have changed or refined. For example, with the Sirens anthology I’m aiming to have an equal number of sea-based sirens as sky-based sirens. If 80% of my submissions are for one kind of siren I will try to let potential submitters know (via blog posts and social media) that I’m seeing a lot of that type of siren and thus am hungry for the other variety.

Six: That brings us to reading submissions. I read subs throughout the open submission period and separate the stories into those I won’t be using and those I might be. The former receive rejection letters (Even though most will say similar things I type each individually, no copy/paste form letters) and the latter are shortlisted for further consideration.

Seven: Once submissions close and every story has received an initial response I re-read the shortlisted pieces and cut them back further until I have my table of contents. I could write a whole series of blog posts about this step alone but for now let’s just say it’s a long, complicated and anxiety-producing decision-making process but I work very hard to ensure I have a strong, diverse collection of stories.

Eight: After all the rejection and acceptance letters have gone out, it’s time for the editing to begin.

Most stories go through at least three separate editing stages. First is the substantive editing stage. It’s at this point I send the author an email pointing out any trouble spots I’ve noticed–plot holes, endings which don’t work for me, stories beginning in the wrong place–that sort of thing. Sometimes I offer concrete suggestions on how to correct the problem, sometimes I just ask questions to help the author sort that out themselves. Occasionally we repeat this step several times before the author and I believe the story is the strongest version of itself that it can be.

Nine: Next we begin line editing. This is where I use track changes to mark up the story. Moving things around, tweaking word choices, cutting all those extra thats which seem to sneak into so many people’s work… After I’ve marked up the manuscript with my suggestions it goes back to the author for them to approve or reject every single change.

But wait! There’s more!

Ten: After all the stories are fully edited I figure out what order they should appear in (this is another process I could write a whole series of blog posts about and it’s definitely a learning process for me. I’ve gotten better and better at it with each anthology), write an introduction, bundle it all together and pass it up to my publisher.

Eleven: The publisher does all sorts of things including formatting it and providing a cover and then proofs are sent out to every contributor, myself and (usually) an independent copyeditor. This is the point where the typos are caught, corrected and then the whole book goes back into the publisher’s hands to work the rest of their magic with.

Twelve: And then, at some point later, the book is published and we begin the process of promoting it.

Phew!

That’s incomplete, of course, but it does give you an idea about what I do to earn my name on the cover of each anthology I edit. Though I don’t write a single word of the awesome fiction you’ll find inside them, I work very hard to make each anthology the best it possibly can be. And then I work just as hard to get it into the hands of as many readers as possible. But that is most definitely the subject for another post on another day.

*On a related note, my anthology SIRENS is currently open to submissions:

SIRENS submissions banner 2

 

A previous version of this post was originally posted on Nathanael Green’s website, here.

Nate has a brand new book out called Through the Narrows.

Staycation 2015

Canoe

That photograph is from our last family vacation when we went to Nova Scotia in 2012. I can’t believe it’s been three years already, time has started doing crazy things in these past few years… Anyway, the reason I’m sharing that photo is because I don’t really have a more appropriate one to use to announce this year’s staycation 🙂

For the next couple weeks though I will be at home and working a (very) little bit, I will mostly be on vacation. It’s a very awkward period to take off, coming as it does between book launches, but it was the only time I could find a couple weeks on the calendar that Jo and I both felt comfortable taking off. So there you have it.

I’ve got a handful of pre-scheduled blog and Twitter posts and I will be checking my email to make sure there aren’t any urgent matters that need my attention but between now and the 28th my goal is to be online as little as possible.

I’ll see you on the other side where I hope to be rested, refreshed and ready to get back to work 🙂

 

 

ISSS 2015 Graduation Speech

This is my amazing husband.

He is my best friend, biggest supporter and I love him more than I could ever tell you (or, than you’d want to hear about, really).

He also teaches in the Biochemistry department here at the University of Alberta. Occasionally that means he’s asked to make speeches. This year he was invited to speak at the ISSS graduation ceremony and I liked his speech so much I asked him if I could post it here. He said yes 🙂

Jopa

ISSS 2015 Graduation Speech

by Dr. Jonathan C. Parrish

Good evening, graduates, family, and supporters. I’d like to start by thanking ISSS for inviting me to speak here again. Graduation speeches are daunting things, there are some fantastic and inspirational speeches out there to hold up as standards, from the “Always Wear Sunscreen” speech – never delivered, usually attributed to Kurt Vonnegut, actually written by Mary Schmich – to the “Make Good Art” speech by Neil Gaiman. If you have not heard either of them I encourage you to find them. If you want, you can imagine me saying them, that would be swell.

Last year I thought I’d provide some of the lessons I feel have been important, punctuated by stories that illustrated them, this year I wanted to try something a little more coherent. I debated how to approach it, and what to discuss, without feeling that my own advice was overinflated or invaluable as opposed to amusing with brief insights. As a sign of how serious I am taking it, I even wrote it down!

As I only have a few minutes, what I’d like to offer is some small portion of my own philosophy. I’d like to talk today about the big picture. The mountain. The goal. The end of the rainbow. What is the big picture? I can’t tell you, because we each have our own. Some of us love the avant garde, some of us are realists, some of us are firmly couched in classical themes. The picture changes from day to day. From week to week, from year to year. We change, we adapt, we get bored, we move on. Changing is not a de facto failure nor a success, it’s just change, and that’s ok.

Choose your own path, follow your own counsel. Is it ironic for me to suggest this to you? You bet! Be unreasonable. George Bernard Shaw is quoted as saying, “the reasonable man adapts to the world; the unreasonable man persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore, all progress is made by unreasonable men.”

Within reason, of course, and feel free to change pronouns as you wish. But ask yourself this – do you want to be the next someone else or the first you? Keeping the big picture in mind will help you choose when to adapt and when to be unreasonable. You only have a finite amount of time and energy, especially the former, and you may find that things you change are changed back by someone else.

Christine Miserando, who suffers from lupus, uses spoons as an analogy to how much energy she can spend in a day. She starts with a limited number of spoons; everything she does uses one up and that determines how much she can do in a day. It helps her explain why some days it’s enough for her to get out of bed and brush her teeth, but the idea can be expanded to everyone.

In my field, structural biology, we have an analogy related to lysozyme – the basic idea being that each scientist only has so many structures in them. Lysozyme is easy to grow and solve (which is why it was one of the first proteins to be crystallized) and this is why we use it as training for novice crystallographers. But there are those who say if you can only solve so many structures, don’t waste one of them on lysozyme. Put your energy, when you do have it, into things that get you closer to where you want to be. Or away from where you don’t want to be. Or somewhere else, if you’re not sure. And that means keeping your mind on the big picture, so you know which way is which. And be unreasonable when it’s called for.

The next thing I’d like to discuss is purity of motive. Purity of motive is something I can’t think of as anything but a good thing. It means not just doing the right thing but doing it for the right reasons. Sometimes, I tell my classes that there are two ways of beating the curve: study and work hard and bring up your own grades or confuse everyone else in order to bring theirs down. Purity of motive then informs this choice – focus on what the point of education is. What the big picture is. It’s not the curve, it’s not the grade, it’s (hopefully) understanding, learning, growing that is the goal.

As much as I’d like to reassure you about this, it doesn’t end, either – in my work I am expected to justify everything I do each year, to compete for limited resources, to beat the curve. There are things I could do just to add content, to check off boxes, tick off to-do items on my annual report. But that is not purity of motive. What did you do at work today? I ticked off a box. That’s not focusing on the big picture, that’s being reasonable. If you are doing things solely to meet someone else’s criteria, you’re not having as much fun. And if you’re not enjoying yourself, then you need to re-focus on the big picture and find the path that takes you closer to that fantastic work of art, that big picture, in your head.

Things happen, day by day, week by week, we get into a state where we feel like we are constantly putting out small fires that keep starting, and it’s all we can do to check off the items on our to-do list. It’s hard to focus on the big picture, let alone think about being unreasonable. But even on those tough days there may be a moment to think about where you are headed and how you could work toward that goal even as you are putting out all those tiny fires.

Because there are much bigger fires waiting – and when those ones are out you can tell stories about the great fires you helped to extinguish and the ones you helped to start. You are university graduates, you’ve been given lighter fluid and a fire extinguisher. It’s up to you, now, to choose how unreasonable you are going to be.

And so to you, class of 2015, I congratulate you and I wish you the best, biggest picture to work towards. Go out there and be the best, first you. Give ‘em hell.

 


Personally, I am paying especially close attention these days to make sure I’m doing something each day beyond putting out fires and checking off boxes. That’s the part of this speech which spoke to me the most. Some days I do better than others, but by keeping the images of the fires and the checkboxes in the back of my mind, I’m finding it easier to stay on the path toward the ‘big picture’ that represents my larger life goals.

🙂

Poise and Pen

Poise and PenI’m super stoked to announce that I have finally got the Poise and Pen website up and running. Yay!

I’m using Poise and Pen as an umbrella that encompasses the Alphabet Anthologies as well as my self-publishing projects. I have zero plans to expand it beyond that, but I really wanted it to have a clean, professional face. Right now I’m still puttering around adding and removing spaces but the website is up, functional and (I think) lookin’ pretty spiffy just in time for the launch of B is for Broken on Tuesday.

Take a peek at it — I’d love to hear any feedback you might have 🙂

B is for Broken Giveaway & Schtuff

Cover design by Jonathan C. Parrish, original artwork by Tory Hoke

B is for Broken is coming soon and there are two great ways you can make sure you’re among the first people to get a copy of it.

Are you feeling lucky? Then perhaps you want to enter our Goodreads Giveaway for a chance to take home a signed ARC copy –> Enter to Win. The giveaway ends on May 13th.

Or, if you’re more interested in sure things and polished copies (or if you’re reading this after the giveaway has ended), B is for Broken is also available for pre-order now from both Kobo Books and Smashwords.

Whatever you do, be sure and mark May 26th on your calendar and consider joining us at the B is for Broken Facebook Launch Party. It’ll be a good time, you won’t want to miss it 🙂

Best Laid Plans

The best laid schemes o’ Mice an’ Men,
Gang aft agley,
An’ lea’e us nought but grief an’ pain,
For promis’d joy!

~ Robert Burns

Robert Burns by Alexander Nasmyth, 1787

Holy crap has this week been… well, one of those weeks.

Some of my friends have been concerned about how busy I’ve been of late and my truthful response has been that I’m at a very happy level of busyness. I’m juggling precisely the right number of balls to keep me focused and productive without it becoming overwhelming. But, I’d say, it’s also that exact level of busyness that means if anything goes wrong, if I get sick or my computer explodes, everything is going to tumble down around me like a house of cards in a hurricane.

Tuesday night when I went to bed everything was okay. Wednesday when I checked my email, the wind began to blow.

I use two different web hosts to host my various domains and email. In addition to the email addresses hosted by those hosts (holy crap I need an editor to cut the use of the word ‘host’ in this sentence!) I also use Gmail (two private and one shared account) and keep a Hotmail account for nostalgic reasons. Wednesday morning all of the email addresses associated with a specific web host could receive email but not send it.

Correcting that issue has consumed my week. I won’t bore you with the details, but I will say it is both frustrating, depressing and strangely satisfying to remotely give an expert control of your computer and watch them do exactly the same things you’ve been doing, over and over, and get exactly the same results.

As of half an hour ago things appear to be fixed and back to normal (*touch wood*), but I’ve thought that at several points throughout this process and been wrong, so we’ll see. In the end even the support guy who eventually fixed the problem (Thank you, Mike!) doesn’t have a clue what caused it or why his fix worked, just that it does. Or seems to. For now. (See how confident I’m feeling? LOL)

So if you got an email from me this week with a weird reply-to address, I apologise.

If you sent me an email on Wednesday and Thursday that I should have replied to by now and haven’t, please re-send it.

If I told you I’d send you something by the end of this week, please forgive me if that actually turns out to be by the end of next week.

My house of cards is lookin’ a bit blown about, but the foundation is good so I’m going to start rebuilding it… on Monday.

Have a great weekend!

Karma

I don’t usually post micro blogs, and especially not ones which are mostly about a single tweet, but I’m making an exception today. Because.