Shawn L. Bird

Original poetry, commentary, and fiction. All copyrights reserved.

25 things September 3, 2011

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 8:34 pm
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This is an interesting article that hits on quite a few interesting points about the new realities of self-publishing.  I like that he applied the exchange student mantra:

Not better.  Not worse.  Just different.

Oh- language warning.  The diction is a little blue.

http://terribleminds.com/ramble/2011/08/30/25-things-you-should-know-about-self-publishing/

 

symbiosis August 27, 2011

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:58 pm

Today, I’m feeling particularly thankful for symbiosis. You remember the term from high school biology: two organisms of different species live together to the advantage of both. (Very interesting article here- check out the barracuda!)

I’m thinking how great it is when people can pool their talents to create something amazing.  Each member of the group has the skills to be amazing at a component of the project, but not the whole thing.  How fantastic it is to be part of the magic of people working together, whether it’s a theatre production, a Rotary project, or a novel.  Many people have parts to play to make the magic happen.

How glorious to be a cog in the wheel!

 

 

writing struggles August 24, 2011

“Writing a book is a horrible, exhausting struggle, like a long bout with some painful illness. One would never undertake such a thing if one were not driven on by some demon whom one can neither resist nor understand.”

— George Orwell

I kind of feel sorry for George when I read this.  Perhaps it was the subject matter he chose?  Or the onerous nature of writing by hand or typing on an old typewriter?

Personally, I don’t feel like I am compelled to write by any demons.  I feel like I’m invited to enter a new world, that comes into being as I step through.  For me, writing is kind of like the scene at the end of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows when Harry finds himself in the train station. His awareness of need calls things  into being.  That concept  is a wonderful metaphor for the writing process.

I don’t find writing to be horrible at all, and most certainly not an exhausting struggle.  It’s more like an invigorating adventure, where surprise waits around every corner.

I can see how writing Orwellian books would be completely soul destroying though.  Living in the head of  1984’s protagonist, Winston, for the time needed to craft that novel would be enough to suck the life right out of you.  Fatalistic visions of a horrible future don’t make for a positive outlook.  I hope George had some antidepressants.  It’s always better to be doing a task you enjoy.

 

Farewell Jack August 22, 2011

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 3:45 pm
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I was so sorry to hear today about the death of Jack Layton, the leader of Canada’s New Democratic Party.  Layton was a statesman whom people trusted and respected.  His personal integrity made him one of the most popular politicians in Canada, and when the NDP became the official opposition in the last election,  it was a first for the party, and it was mostly because people trusted Layton above the other options.

Layton’s battle with cancer was public.  At a recent press conference when he announced that he was stepping down to concentrate on treatment for new cancers, the nation was shocked to see how ill he looked.  Today our nation is flying flags at half-mast in his honour, and a movement is afoot to put a candle in your window at 9 pm to celebrate his life.

He left his wife Olivia with a letter to Canadians.  His parting words are

My friends, love is better than anger. Hope is better than fear. Optimism is better than despair. So let us be loving, hopeful and optimistic. And we’ll change the world.

Jack Layton

Farewell, Jack.  We’re going to miss your integrity, values and abilities.  We’ll do our best to follow in your footsteps and change the world for the better.

 

field of dreams August 21, 2011

Filed under: Commentary,narrative,Writing — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:01 am
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I’ve never responded to a short story prompt, but why not?  Here is something new for this blog!

An offering for the Short Story slam prompt: http://bluebellbooks.blogspot.com/2011/08/short-story-slam-week-8.html

My grandmother looked over the field of ripening grain and saw into her future.   She saw my grandfather driving his beat up ’46 Ford pick-up down the dusty road, saw six babies, saw  two funerals, four weddings, and then she saw me.

I was wailing in a cradle, waiting and wailing.  The house was filling with smoke.  She saw two more funerals.

On the day of the fire, my grandmother phoned my mother.  “You be careful, hon.”  Grandmother could feel the fire coming.

My mom, she told me later, had laughed dismissively.  “Yes, ma.”  She had set out the candles and was enjoying the twinkling.  She fell asleep on the couch.  Dad was in bed, gone to bed early because he was on the early shift the next day.  One candle had caught the drapes.  The house was engulfed in moments.

Grandmother felt the flames grab the fabric, and phoned.  When there was no answer, she called the fire department.  They didn’t ask how someone 400 miles away knew there was a fire.  They went.  They found me, waiting for them and wailing to tell them where I was.  My door was shut.  The master bedroom door was open.  Two more funerals.

And so I came to live with my Grandmother, and to look across the same fields, and to glance into my own distant future.

But that is another story.

 

bilingual brains August 18, 2011

In these years of educational cut backs  to programs like music and languages, here’s a fascinating article about the value of learning foreign languages.  Knowing more languages improves understanding in your own language.  How cool is that?

I know that when I started learning Italian, I started to make all sorts of connections between Spanish, French and English words that added nuance to all of them.  For example, in Italian fog is nebbia.  Suddenly the word for a foggy idea, a nebulous idea, got an added layer of meaning.

In Italian left is sinistra.  The evil side.  The sinister side.  The good sit at the right hand, but evil is waiting on the left.  Bwah ha ha!!! (you could already hear that evil laughter, right?)

So not only does your brain forge new neural connections when you learn a new language, which is good in itself, but it is also improving your skills in your first language.  Win win!  I love happy endings.

Check out the article here:

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=bilingual-brains

 

letting go… August 14, 2011

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 10:11 pm

I’m not very good at letting go…

I once read that only children regard their toys as their friends, and so they tend to keep them around until adulthood, because it seems disloyal to get rid of them.  This explains the Barbies (plus van, clothes, etc) in my storage room yay these many years past the playing time.

I also spend a lot of time with books, and I have difficulty get rid of them as well, because books become old friends, and who wants to lose the opportunity to re-visit an old friend? I’m an English teacher.  I earned a degree in English.  Can you imagine how many books were involved in just that BA?  And I’ve been teaching for  almost two decades.  I own most of the novels or plays I’ve taught in those classes as well.  Oh my.   Needless to say, my bookshelves are very, very crowded.

Recently I discovered http://www.goodreads.com and it has opened up an interesting possibility.  As I record and rate each of the books on my shelves, I might be able to let them go, knowing they remain on a virtual book shelf.  Hmmm.  It might work.  If I could get down to 1000 books in the house, that’d be a huge improvement.

How about you?  Do have trouble letting go of anything?

 

more readers, fewer books August 11, 2011

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 3:41 pm

Here is a fascinating article about how reading is increasing even as traditional bookstore go out of business: US publishing upheaval 

I was particularly interested in the stats the article links to showing that e-book readers read more than they would have if they were reading print books.

 

 

 

 

 

Where did it all begin? August 10, 2011

I was asked this question yesterday, and I figured you might be interested in the answer.

Short answer: it began with a poem.

Long answer: it’s been a long journey, but it began with a boy, a poem, and some books.

When I was ten, I developed a crush of epic proportions. Since I was an avid reader, I was also a writer. I’d been making up stories and writing poetry since I was in grade three. The unexpected, overwhelming emotions involved in this crush, led to outpourings of poetry. The theme was common: where had this emotion come from? Surely something this intense couldn’t just have happened? Surely such emotion must have been in the universe forever?  The year I was twelve, I wrote this poem, which summarizes this sensation:

When I look at you
I see sunshine in darkness
Passion through naïveté

I think that we were lovers once
In another life
You and I belonged
And that is why we were drawn

That is why I love you so much
And why your name
Brings happiness through sorrow

A wisp of a smile
When day dies
I remember you and I smile

You are my day and my night
Your face is a memory
That time cannot erase,
And someday
In another life
We will be lovers
Once again

It’s the poem Grace’s hand writes in the library. She is shocked and dismayed by what it reveals to her.  I know it isn’t a great poem, and I would tighten it up if I was writing it now, but I wanted it to be here as an authentic voice, flaws and all.

That poem begged to be a novel. There was a need to explore that sense of infinity that comes with a profoundly intense relationship like a first love, and like a lasting love, as well.

I tried to write it a few times over the years, but it didn’t go anywhere. I could get a narrative, but there was no hook to hang the story on. It was boring. If it was boring for me, it’d be boring for readers. Still, that love story wanted out, and it waited.

Then one day, I was reading some questionaires I”d given my students. In answer to the question, “What is the best book you’ve ever read?” About a quarter of my class had answered, “Twilight.” I’d never heard of it. I mentioned this to one of my older students and she told me she had all three of the books that were out, and that I needed to read them. The next day I had Twilight. A few hours later I was dying for the next books. They were delivered, and I read between work, dance classes and way too many Rotary meetings. I adored the story and I adored the characters. I was making connections like crazy- the key to one’s enjoyment of a book- and I had an epiphany.

Myth could be the hook. I started writing the week after Thanksgiving 2008. The characters started introducing themselves. I tried to move them in one direction, they chose to go another. The book was done the week before April. And it was good.

It wasn’t perfect, of course. The first readers picked out weak scenes, slow spots, confusing things, etc, but they loved it. They wanted more.

And that’s where it all began…

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If you’re visiting from Poetry Potluck 48, please include the link to your poem in any comment you leave!  Thanks and thanks for coming by!

 

My candle burns at both ends. August 8, 2011

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:57 pm

Becca Givens offered this prompt for Carry On Tuesdays the beginning of July:

Edna St. Vincent Millay’s poem was the original prompt.

Her version goes like this:

My candle burns at both ends

It will not last the night;
But ah, my foes, and oh, my friends –
It gives a lovely light.

.

My version goes like this:

My candle burns at both ends

Past midnight sees it burning

but morning comes and tends

to make me wish some learning

Would make my schedule match

the rest of my time zone

but in a silent house I catch

adventures of my own.