five links

Dec. 19th, 2009 11:17 am
adelaidesean: (gedosenki A)
I'm juggling two projects at once this weekend, which always hurts my brain.  Here are some recent happenings: If I hear one more Christmas carol, I swear I might have to kill someone.  Unless it's this one, of course:
adelaidesean: (earth ascendant)
I'm pitching a new space opera novel--big, fat, standalone--and it's about a very cool and unusual structure that may or may not be of human origins.

I want to call it Structure, but I'd like to know what you think. Is that title cool or lame?

Me, I loved the way Matter looked on the cover of Iain Banks' last book, but I'm prepared to be outvoted.

ETA - Thanks, everyone, for your thoughts. You're a wonderfully creative bunch! I've decided to drop the definite article and run with Structure for now, but lots of new alternatives are rattling around my brain, and one of them may yet shoot to the surface...
adelaidesean: (silent p)
At the end of this post I've listed the names of my current top twelve favourite ambient tracks. Their titles fascinate me. Underworld, by far the most famous of any of these artists, seems to be deliberately drawing attention to itself, or trying to, by rambling on and on and on, while four of the artists choose the untitled route, perhaps to achieve the same effect.

It must be extraordinarily difficult to find titles for music that at times resembles little more than a single-note drone or speaker hiss. The risk of sounding like a New Age tosser is ever present.

Finding titles has been occasionally problematic for me too, and never more so than when I was writing music in high school. I once composed a series of small pieces for piano with titles like "Voyage of the Automated Sprinkler," "Attack of the Killer Automated Sprinklers," "Lonesome Death of an Automated Sprinkler"...you get the picture. (Click here to download one of them, live from 1984.) One of my examination pieces was called "La Suite Acide", an equally silly title, and I've talked elsewhere about "Cowled They the Rampant Gargoyle Down", a piece that ended up winning the 1984 Young Composer's Award under the title "Release of Anger". Coming up with titles for novels is much easier, all things considered. At least there's a story to tap into, phrases to mine, and literary allusions to make.

Saturn Returns, like The Crooked Letter, has already prompted questions about what its title refers to. Here's the answer for The Crooked Letter. And below is the text I've added to the beginning of Saturn Returns. Hopefully this will clear up any mysteries.

I'm not trying to be obscure, honest.

The planet Saturn takes 29.46 years to circle the sun and therefore, according to Astrological traditions, to return to the House it occupied at the moment of an individual's birth. During a "Saturn Return", the light of this cold and distant world shines on our lives, encouraging us to examine our choices, our aspirations, and our disappointments. It is a time of endings as well as beginnings, and will be dreaded by those whose path through life has been ill-chosen.

see the list )
adelaidesean: (dog collar)
Gabe Chouinard has posted a thought-provoking treatise on The Crooked Letter and reviews in general here, in which I am exhorted to become "more purple, so to speak". It's a fair call. :-) Check it out. He has lots of interesting things to say.

(Late addition: the comments to this post include an explanation of the title of the The Crooked Letter. Anyone not wanting to wait until the last book of the series can get the answer now--not that it in any way constitutes a spoiler.)

Also The Library Journal has reviewed The Blood Debt:

'The second instalment in the author's "Books of the Cataclysm" series (after The Crooked Letter) follows the adventures of three companions who battle the unknown to save their families. Set partly in the modern world and partly in a fantasy environment drawn from archetypal myths and legends, this epic belongs in most fantasy collections.'

Nice.

Thanks, lastly, to everyone who came to my signing at Borders last night. It was great to see so many familiar and friendly faces. I'm heartened by the feedback. The Devoured Earth really feels like it's out, now. :-)
adelaidesean: (Default)
Because it hasn't had enough titles already, THE CHANGELING GOD is now THE DEVOURED EARTH. Thanks to numerous people for helping me work this out.

The decision was made in Queensland, at a writers' retreat with Rob Hood at Prue Mason's wonderful Rowan House. (How many plugs can I fit into one sentence?) Thanks to everyone involved for making it a wonderful experience.

Lastly, thanks to Deborah Biancotti for introducing me to Scrubs. So much good TV; so little time...

S

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