Putting things in perspective

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There are a great many things out there that I think I can do without quite easily: make-up, fancy clothes, high heels, T.V./video player, microwave, handphone, aircon, icecream, hot water and yes, even chocolate.

I was having that conversation with a friend from India, and then we got on to what we didn’t have when we were growing up, but had now and just couldn’t do without…

I said: The internet, because it is my way of keeping in contact with my scattered family – on a daily basis if we want – as well as a valuable tool for my work as a writer and a way of maintaining friendships.

My Indian friend said she had once posed that same question to an elderly Indian lady, to which the woman replied without hesitation: ‘Running water.’ As a child and young adult, much of her day had been spent getting water from the river.

I’m still grateful for the internet, but … yeah. There are other things which might be a tad more basic. Which many folk still don’t have.
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Aargh

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A tooth broke off – completely – at gum level. It is driving me crazy and the dentist can only see me on Wednesday.

There are times when I am tempted to get them all ripped out and replaced with stainless steel. Seriously.

Gnash! Gnash! Gnash!

Harlequin Horizons Horror Story

If you haven’t been following the Harlequin Horizons Horror Story, here are possibly the best accounts, written by Jackie Kessler, in order of writing:

They should be required reading of all want-to-be-published-writers who aren’t sure how to go about it. Although this is all about romance writers and a romance publisher, the principles apply across the board. If you aren’t a writer, you still might find the story interesting! All the elements of a good tale are there: greed looming large, self-delusion, scamming, corporate villainy in disguise, heroes standing tall in defense of the naive, smack-downs and …
Well, sort of.

John Scalzi has another good commentary here.

Working…and no, I don’t know what day of the week it is

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For those of you who don’t Twitter or Facebook, the lovely person doing the final, final proofing of Stormlord Rising for Harper Voyager contacted me to clear up a couple of points about the text. At the end of the email said she was being slow because she was distracted by the story … and she thought the book was fantastic!

So I’m happy.

Comments like that help, especially when I’m at the stage with book 3 where I am quite sure it’s terrible, no one will like it, and I can’t write for peanuts and should retire somewhere where nobody reads anything.

I shall put up the new total of words before I go to bed tonight…and I refuse to turn in until I am up over 100,000.

Has anyone in Queensland seen the Courier Mail review of The Last Stormlord yet?
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Podcast patter

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No writing done today, alas. No, not alas – I enjoyed the day. Time with friends, discussing books and a stack of other interesting stuff: what could not be enjoyable about that?

And I don’t think I have ever linked to this podcast I did way back for Bookbabble, an online bookgroup that spans the world. So if you want to know what I sound like…

Is this a Joke?

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Sites like the Writer Beware Blogs and Writer Beware have been around for ages, doing an excellent job, warning wannabe published writers about the countless scams that try to cash in on their dreams.

The last thing I ever expected to see was an established publisher with a long publishing history – in this case Harlequin – jumping on the bandwagon of getting money from wannabe writers for what up until now was pretty much a scam. (Note: I do not consider PoD books a scam, and I see nothing wrong with getting your unpublished book printed for the benefit of friends and family. What I don’t like is outright scams that encourage writers to believe they are getting something else for their money: a published book they will see in a bookshop.) I think what Harlequin is offering is sailing very close to scam territory.

And if that wasn’t bad enough, this turns up: fork out 20,000 USD and let’s see what you can get as a book trailer, apparently to entice genuine film makers to your book, complete with a spam email campaign? If it was anything except a reputable publisher, I would be screaming: ‘Scam, scam!!’

Please Harlequin, tell me this is not associated with you.
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Velvet revolution

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Today is the 20th anniversary of Czechoslovakia’s velvet revolution, which in the end resulted in the replacement of the Communist government by a democracy.

Actually the disturbances started slightly earlier, when we were in Prague.*

October 28th was the anniversary of the foundation of Czechoslovakia as an independent state in 1918. In the main square as I recall, they were putting up a viewing stand or something similar, as we strolled through the main square on October 27th 1989 – my husband and younger daughter, then aged 14, and myself. We left the next morning for another part of the country, which was probably just as well.

Here is an extract of a letter I wrote to my mother on Sunday the 29th October, after we returned to our home in Vienna.

We are safely back in Wien, having missed out on the riots yesterday (much to T’s disgust.) Looking at T.V last night here in Wien, I think the shots of the demonstrations and the police bludgeoning people into submission was taken from our hotel window – the very room – overlooking Wenceslas Square. Those young people are so brave; Czechoslovakia is an unforgiving country.

I was a great admirer of Vaslav Havel then, and later too, when he negotiated the splitting of the country without the horrors that were to come in Yugoslavia**.

I think my first real inkling of what the fall of the Berlin wall really meant to people was a few weeks later. I walked down to the tram stop in Nussdorf and caught a tram to Heiligenstadt U-bahn station. And there, in the station, was parked a train of a strange colour. I stared at the writing on the side and my jaw dropped. It was from Czechoslovakia.

For the first time – in how many years? – a train had crossed into Austria. And Vienna was full of people with no money but a boundless joy in at last being able to catch a train, or drive their noisy little Trabants and Ladas, to visit their neighbour.
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*which gave more fuel to the rumour that my husband dragged revolution and mayhem in his wake whenever he travelled. Either that, or he lost his luggage – and yours too, if you travelled with him. That expression “to be noramlyed” was not lightly earned.

**NOTE: I originally used the expression “when freedom came to Yugoslavia”. It has been rightly pointed out to me that Yugoslavia did not lack freedom. The country was non-aligned and in no way comparable to iron curtain countries in its politics, economics or liberalism. My sincere apologies for my moment of careless thoughtlessness. Not sure what I was thinking, as I did know this, having been living next door. Sigh. Sometimes I wonder what, um, doesn’t go on in my head…
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Of mad writers and crazy cows…

Day 16 of NaNoWriMo

Have reached 30,000 words – half way through my target of 60,000 words for the month.

And in weird news from Malaysia:

A villager was savagely attacked from behind by a predator cow that almost ripped his hand off. He yelled, ‘Tiger, Tiger’ in panic before he realised what his assailant was. That’s right, a tame domestic cow. The poor fellow is still in hospital, with a savagely mangled hand.

A new variant of mad cow disease?