Friday, January 17, 2025

Low Battery

Is this even Bad Poetry? 

John climbed into the car to go
to the wedding. His. But the battery was low.
He took out his phone to let Jane know.
But once again, the battery was low.
He thought of all the times he had done a no-show
for less excuse than this. But he said "No!
I will not let this occasion go."
He pounded on his car. People paid no
attention to that. They'd seen lunatics before.
In desperation, John waved down 
a passing pickup truck. 
Dogs were in the front.
John climbed into the back, and so
he arrived at the church only five minutes slow.
He had moments of fear that Jane would say no
at the last minute. She didn't, though.
They were married on that day twenty years ago.
They saw the cell phone era come and go.
Will cars and trucks last? They don't know.
One thing they can tell us, though,
is that it's good to work around a battery that is low.

This utterly frivolous story popped into mind as I read the Poets & Storytellers United poems on the theme of "low battery." 

Book Review: My Billionaire Grump

Title: My Billionaire Grump

Author: Camilla Isley

Date: 2023

ISBN: 978 888 7269833

Quote: "I paid extra for a view. I should have a view!"

Lucy isn't poor; she's an accountant, so although she doesn't like her job she can afford to pay extra for luxuries on a vacation trip to Italy. But George Emerson, the billionaire, has been given the room with the view. Hearing Lucy complain to her buddy Jackson, he offers to trade rooms, in what seems to be the rudest way he can manage. Well, says Jackson, George can afford not to be polite...

Lucy doesn't think she wants to like George. Of course not. She doesn't want to get hurt. She has a healthy appreciation for billionaires as well as her full share of hormones. Lucy loves music, charms everyone at the hotel with her talent, wants to quit accounting and open a music school. It's a romantic comedy. You know how this must end. George will show a cheerful side, friendly with Lucy's brother and even sympathetic to Jackson (who found George attractive too, but also found two other men attractive on the trip to Italy), before it's over. Early in his acquaintance with Lucy he'll tell her that his favorite things include stealing flowers from old ladies' gardens and tearing the wings off butterflies, and he's been so obnoxious Lucy almost believes that, but of course he really likes art and poetry.

I'm not sure how the dreary real-life trope of "He has enough money, I can put up with his miserable personality; every time he yells at me I'll just buy something extravagant" morphed into the romantic-comedy trope in which all the rich lover has to do to be "grumpy" is be quiet in the morning, and then the other half of the couple is delighted when he (or she) shows a normal capacity for enjoyment of life... anyway, romance readers seem to like it. 



 

Petfinder Review Post #2

Once again we consider how it's possible that some of last year's photo contest winners were not adopted...and here comes our Nag:


A Nag is an old tired horse, or an old tired thing a person keeps saying over and over. This web site's Nag says: "If you don't want kittens or puppies, your cats and dogs need to be neutered and spay-ay-ay-ay-ayed! Make that appointment today-ay-ay-ay-ay! Now-ow-ow-ow! Huff!

These are animals who hadn't been adopted in 2023, who were being revisited last year and are being revisited again this year. We can see why some of them aren't for just any old body. Please help find the special people who will belong to some special cats and dogs.

FEBRUARY

Jordache and Melvin are still looking for a home together.
 



Melvin is gray and white. Jordache is in early middle age, believed to be about six years old. Melvin is older. They apparently did not grow up together and were not rescued together, but when they met in the shelter they instantly realized the advantages of the buddy system. They like to take their naps together, if not in a two-cat basket then in the bathroom sink. Jordy grew up in a feral cat colony and is somewhat social. 

Last year we observed that it was possible that people didn't want to adopt these neutered male cats because their buddying-up behavior was described in a way that suggested unhealthy role models for kids. Apparently the cats are good role models for kids and their web pages have been edited to make this clear. 

That said...well, they're tomcats. Nufsed. Some people say they like male cats. Those people should consider adopting this appealing unmatched pair. They chase or play-fight from time to time, but they are basically adoptive brothers. They are sweet, lovable, friendly cats who like being petted.

Grace and Chess may have found a purrmanent home together.

Mango, the adorable Staffordshire Terrier, is still looking for a home in New York. 


Her web page: https://www.petfinder.com/dog/mango-47564190/ny/long-beach/posh-pets-rescue-ny615/ looks the same as it did last year. Maybe "Posh Pets" demanded too much money for her when the basic-training teachers were saying they'd never seen such a clever puppy. Maybe they still are asking too much, now that she's two years old. She may weigh a little more than 39 pounds by now, or not. Staffs are one of the best loved, best trusted, kid-friendly breeds of dog there are, if they are tough little terriers that remind people of other breeds that are more often aggressive. Staffordshire Terriers are seldom aggressive, except when it comes to digging out rat colonies. 

Yang, the Tuxie kitten, was adopted.

Mocha, the plump Siamese cat, may have found a home.

Fergie, the big dog, may have found a home.

Miss Polly Toes, the sassy, bossy, polydactyl Queen Cat, is still looking for a home in New Jersey. (She has four paws; she's shown holding one up off the ground to give a clear view of her polydactyl paw.)


I can see why. Her web page: https://www.petfinder.com/cat/miss-polly-toes-41620994/nj/stewartsville/gateway-regional-rescue-nj-nj619/ makes it clear that this Queen Cat bosses other cats and expects to keep humans in line, too. She lets humans pet her, then swats their hands when she's had enough. She sounds like Serena, only, if she does have the capacity to feel love and loyalty,  which is what I think makes Serena's personality lovable, earning them will be up to you. 

Well...someone Out There likes a challenge and wants to try to adopt a cat other people wouldn't dare to try. Miss Polly Toes sounds like a challenge. Polydactyls tend to be intelligent, interesting cats whose humans feel that they've been chosen by somebody special. They don't pretend to be substitutes for a human baby. If they like you, they're your friends and working partners. Someone Out There wants to be Miss Polly's friend. If you want a cat you will respect, I'd consider offering to be her foster human for a year (you shouldn't have to meet a lot of people) and find out whether she'll accept you. If she does, my guess is that you'll love her. Affection grows slowly with some cats but, if you leave her in peace, one day she may decide to curl up next to you. 

Olive seems to have been adopted.

MARCH

Booboo and Lulu are still officially up for adoption in Pennsylvania.





Booboo is the fluffy one. Lulu is the black-and-tan one. They don't look as if they had many ancestors in common, but they were brought up as sisters. Tragically, because they're older dogs who need some special attention, they seem to have fallen into the hands of control freaks. They are not for adoption by people who have small children or who rent rather than own their homes. They really do enjoy running around in a big fenced yard, so that requirement makes sense. I think it's possible that these dogs have found a home, after all, with some beggarly people who want to say they're still in foster care. If you are in eastern Pennsylvania or New Jersey, you might want to meet these dogs, see for yourself whether they think they have a happy home, and offer them one if they don't. But their foster humans have been listing them for adoption for going on three years now, and they look pretty comfortable to me.

Scrappy, the beagle from Alabama, may have been adopted.

Ollie, the albino Australian Shepherd, may have been adopted.

Aveena, the chatty cat from New York City, is still up for adoption.


Control-freaky shelter staff sound like Aveena's main obstacle to having found a happy home. This is the third time this web site has featured her. She's the unusual pure white cat who hears words and talks back. She could easily work out a language and have real, if limited, conversations with her human. "Chirps constantly" is their phrase. She seems to want and deserve to be a Queen Cat but she's been only one of many foster cats, which has probably been wearing and stultifying to her mind. The problem is that the control freaks want to gather lots of information about you, and invite themselves to your home at their convenience, instead of even meeting you in town. They need to understand that this is not a realistic approach to animal adoption. They are not entitled to know where you live. If they want to meet you in town, prove that they do have custody of an animal you want to adopt, confirm that you are not a criminal, and sell the animal to you, it is up to them to convince you that they are totally innocent people who just want to see Aveena again, some time when it's convenient for you to let them sit in their car in your driveway.

Thelma and Louise have been adopted.

Dolly, the mixed breed dog from Peachtree City, is still up for adoption.


It is still remarkably uninformative. A dog as cute as this one deserves some information about any education or job skills she may have, how she reacts to children or cats, and whether she ever barks at night or puts her muddy paws on people. 

Thursday, January 16, 2025

Web Log for 1.15.25

Such as it was. The Internet was down for most of the day...

Book 

Since I'm not the Cthulhu type, but since I know this writer from a few different forums and like her as a person...drumroll...Here is a new Cthulhu Mythos novel all fans of the subgenre must read.


Here's another link to where you can buy the book...not Amazon. This is a book by a woman who works with sharks; the title is Sharks Don't Sink: Adventures of a Rogue Shark Scientist.


Butterflies, Save the 

Monarch butterflies do holiday sleepovers in style...


We need to protect them. They are among the most harmless, cheerful, lovable creatures on Earth. The rules are being written by the Fish & Wildlife Service; see the docket and add your comments at


Here's my comment: 

"
I strongly support the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposal to protect the monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) as a threatened species and designate critical habitat under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). Monarch butterflies are very congenial with humans, so only a few minor changes need to be made to protect them! They are compatible with human residence, even with construction, and even with agriculture, so long as their habitat is not destroyed by "pesticide" spraying. Please finalize this rule, this summer if possible, and add this species to the List of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife. 
"

California 

All I know is that all the gold in California is in a bank in the middle o' Beverly Hills, in somebody else's name. I only report these things. 


Gossip 

Mrs. Obama is bailing out of important ex-First-Lady social engagements. Does that mean trouble in the Obama marriage? Meh. She's old enough to have gone through The Change but she does look awfully tired. Almost as if photographed in the middle of her first experience of actually noticing when she has COVID, or something. Poor. Old. Dear. 

New Book Review: A Tight Knit Murder

Title: A Tight Knit Murder

Author: Bessie Hubbard

Date: 2024

Quote: "When Julia woke up that morning, she had no idea that later in the day, she would be sitting next to a dead body and a talking cat."

My goal here was to encourage writers, so can I find an encouraging word to say for this e-book? Yes: it's short. 

There are lots of things about a piece of knitting that could suggest that it's not all that it should be. If it's supposed to be old, it might have been knitted with a "double knitting" technique that could be made only on twentieth century knitting machines, or in a color that was available only after the mid-nineteenth century when aniline dyes entered the market, or of a material that...etc., etc., etc.

In this novel, Julia recognizes that an allegedly antique blanket is newer than it's supposed to be because it was made with finer hooks that were allegedly new. Hooks? Number one: nothing is handknitted with hooks. Hooks are used in crocheting and machine knitting. And, number two: fineness of weaving and knitting was prized in the Middle Ages. Antique knitting was worked at forty stitches to the inch or more, sometimes with single strands of silk. People knitted with single threads on wires finer than modern sewing needles, because they could. If anything, recent knitting might be coarser than an authentic antique--fragments of quite chunky knitting have been dated back to the sixteenth century, but they weren't prized and preserved so they survived only as fragments. Of course, a difference in gauge or in yarn handling technique could show an untold chapter in a piece's history without providing a precise date-stamp...but in this novel, the date-stamp chosen as a main part of the plot is not believable.

There's no suspense about the rest of the mystery, either, and the fantasy of the cat's talking adds nothing to the story. If we're going to fantasize about animals speaking perfect English, they should have something out of the ordinary to say. Or the author could have observed how real cats "talk"--with gestures, postures, body language generally, with cat noises the humans have learned to recognize, or even, as Elizabeth Barrette claims, with cat noises the cats have learned to use like standard English words: real cats can say "no," "now," "yah," "me," and similar words and, if their humans pay attention and reward their use of these words, they can learn to speak limited yet flawless English. The cat in this novel uses words real cats can't pronounce but he has nothing to say. He'd be better explained as "saying" the thoughts that are going through Julia's head while she brushes his coat or watches him eat, but no such luck.

There's nothing individual about the writer's voice, either. They're not really obtrusive--a human did at least edit this book--but there are some of the little redundancies and cliches that we find in documents "written" by robots.

It's a cozy mystery. Nobody's in danger; the mystery is about how and why a knitted piece was faked, and the one victim's death wasn't very violent. A Tight Knit Murder does fulfill its promise of a cozy mystery but fans of the better Book Funnel authors, like Fern Cooper (who I suspect hadn't read this book when Book  Funnel used her to "recommend" it) and Pamela Burford, probably won't like it.

Do Men Have a Complaint?

It is necessary that men be held to account for their actions. That means that they can be allowed to do what makes babies only if they are willing and able to take full responsibility for rearing the said babies; it means that any other sexual pleasure they enjoy must occur with the free and informed consent of any and all women involved; it means that they understand that "reasonable" is a word that has to be defined by women and "emotional, illogical, irresponsible" are words that, in reality, presuppose the masculine gender; it means that when human beings want to be in control of our lives, we don't even hold eye contact with other human beings, and when we want to interact with other human beings, we surrender at least half of all control of what goes on during those interactions to the other human beings, and we accept that we are hard-wired to feel that this shared control and interaction are fun. 

Yup. That's right, guys. If at any time you feel that you are in control of a situation, you should be at home alone. If you are on a date, trying to be in control of anything outside of your own skin is abusive, as is losing control of what's going on inside your skin. 

Men could always try to change the actual record on this...I don't see how it's possible to judge a situation objectively without being able to think about it in two successive weeks, in two different states of hormone balance, and see what, if anything, changes. I think the lack of a hormone cycle in early adult life prevents the male brain from developing the capacity for objective thought. "Testosterone-poisoned" may sound harsh but, although some men are intelligent, the fact is that men don't develop much ability to separate their emotions from their thoughts. They have relatively few emotional moods, so what they think is logical and reasonable is their emotionality. This has historically been how men have been able to "reason" their way into war. Too bad for them. Even when people try to change their physical sex, there is a half of humankind that have stronger arms, and there is a half of humankind that, if not universally more intelligent, are at least consistently more able to reason themselves away from violent reactions. That is the half of humankind we can reasonably describe as being rational. "Let's discuss the matter reasonably" means "Anyone with testosterone in their blood waits to be told what is reasonable by someone who's learned to judge between estrogen and progesterone moods." (The minority of women who have testosterone in their blood already know this.)

It would be pleasant if holding men to account for their actions could be done without an assumption that, if a man has any money, he must have had an abusive relationship with some woman somewhere. 


Sadly, although I'm inclined to suspect that the accusations against Bill Cosby were politically motivated while the accusations against Neil Gaiman are more about money, the historical reality has been that economic inequality did use to inject an abusive quality into all heterosexual relationships. If you were able to earn money because you were hired for a better job because the company didn't want to be responsible for a woman walking to and from the commuter train, there was in fact something abusive about your relationships with any and all of the people who were not hired for that job. "Not my fault"? That's what abusers always say, and tends to be understood to mean that it was. "Certainly seemed consensual, at the time, when she was calling me on my cell phone and heavy-breathing 'I want you now'," is plausible but non-consensually ending a relationship is also abusive, especially if the end of the relationship has something to do with a child. A man who did not take advantage of an abusive situation to have abusive relationships with women has been the Partner for Life of one wife who is not complaining. Of course the male culture of our youth taught men that, if they were becoming the Partner for Life of one wife who would never have a serious complaint, they were being cheated out of their share of "fun." Well...if you had fun participating in a culture that was abusive, that does not generate a lot of sympathy. Life is just full of trade-offs.

Some men today have taken the effort to make amends for the sins of their past, when society was positively encouraging them to sin. I used to know an older man who had some money and said he wanted to acknowledge all of his natural children before he died. In the Vietnam War years, when he was in the States he used to go into a local bar, play his guitar, sing sad songs about being in the Army, and be invited to spend the night with some sentimental young woman. In those years young women always wanted "The Pill" for birth control, although it was new and untested and had some horrible side effects for some users, but it did not actually work for all of them. After the war ended and the man settled down with one wife, he'd had several children, and acknowledged a few more in the neighborhood, but his obituary was quite shocking. He claimed, and left bequests to, about a dozen additional children besides the dozen people knew about. Only five of the children he claimed had ever used his family name. He claimed a child in California, a few on islands... I think it might be helpful if more survivors of the so-called "sexual revolution" did as much toward making amends as that man did.

I will say, though, that women should search their hearts before thinking "Well, it was an open-ended relationship, which were all inherently oppressive and abusive, and he's got money now, and I need some money." You knew men who did worse things than that. What about the company that thought it was acceptable to allow rapists to be on the street? The dating game as it was played in the 1980s and 1990s was set up to be all about what guys wanted with no real benefits for girls, but let's face it, if only because the social penalties for being mistaken for a lesbian used to be so much worse, we did play the game. Some of us had the confidence to set up rules that worked for us. Some of us took matters into our own hands to restore reason to scenes of male emotionality, stayed in the friendzone until men wanted to commit to being husbands and fathers, and stayed married once we were married. Some of us took the emotional risk and said, "No baby-making before marriage and I didn't say I was in any hurry to marry anybody," laughed at the boys who bolted, and waited confidently for men who wanted marriage. Some of us wore flat shoes and showed our real unpainted faces to the world, even in the 1980s, to tell the world "I'm not looking for an abusive, exploitative relationship." If you didn't, why didn't you? If you consented to an inherently abusive relationship, if you paid for pills that are 98% effective while you were at the age where that 2% failure rate occurs, is the person to whom you heavy-breathed "I want you now" really the person from the 1980s you need to be going after now? Are you sure going after the abusive bank and the exploitative utility companies and the oppressive insurance companies, who are gouging you for money now, wouldn't be more satisfying?

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Book Review: Perfekt Order

Title: Perfekt Order 

Author: S.T. Bende

Date: 2015

Quote: "I hoped whatever was growling was a herbivore."

But no such luck. Mia Ahlstrom is about to be sucked into her culture's folklore in an impossible way--sharing her house and her university experience with some of the more youthful Norse "gods"--and what's growling in the woods is Fenris Ulf, who is living in the woods in the custody of the war god Tyr, who can still pass for a student. Fenris bites, but Tyr and Elsa have healing powers. Mia  will acquire some healing powers of her own if she can keep up with Tyr as boyfriend, Elsa as buddy, and a Valkyrie called Brynn as housemate.  

She can, of course. What kind of story would this be if Mia, an ordinary math major at Redwood State University, weren't ready to hang out with a Valkyrie and a major Norse "god" any day? 

I don't think this one is as good as C. Gockel's novels with similar material, but it's an amusing, mostly wholesome romance with plenty of "Scandiwegian" pride.

Favorite Things to Do in the Winter

Today's Long & Short Reviews blog prompt invites book reviewers to share our favo(u)rite things to do in the winter. (Part of the fun is that participants live in places that get different kinds of winter weather...)

Right. Virginia has winter, well, right about now. Usually it's what most of the world would call a mild winter. We think any temperature below the freezing point of water is COLD and any snow on the ground is a WEATHER EMERGENCY. It does not take a great number of Southerners trying to drive on snow to make an emergency. It's not hard to enjoy our winter weather, though, if you maintain perspective. 

Here is a Top Ten List of things to do in winter, where I live:

1. Go to a place that does not have winter. This one never was my actual favorite because I'm sensitive to all the chemicals they spray into the air in Florida. However, it's definitely a popular thing to do in winter in Virginia and definitely identifies those who do it as privileged, and when I was a kid we had that privilege because we had relatives in Florida. So. Florida, Texas, California, Arizona, Puerto Rico, Jamaica, wherever you have relatives, here you come. When writing cheerful postcards on the patio, practice editing skills. Your friends back in Virginia do not want to hear about the palmetto roaches or your chemical sensitivities. Write about shells, winter-blooming flowers, tropical butterflies, migrating birds, and whatever other special attractions the place you visit may have. Perpetuate the myth that you are having fun. Who knows, you might manage to feel that this is true.

2. Alternatively, go to a place that has a "real" winter. This is not popular, but it may impress people. Maine, Vermont, Canada, Pennsylvania, or Michigan might be fun in summer. If you have actual business to take care of in winter, you're tough. I have an eighty-something relative who is taking care of business in Pennsylvania this winter. He is Something Else! I last went north for the winter during the Gulf War. Pittsburgh looks really pretty under a foot or two of snow. People in Pittsburgh don't wail about snow the way we do. They are downright inspiring.

3. Alternatively, go to Gatlinburg. Gatlinburg, Tennessee, is where Southerners go to practice winter sports. The weather does not naturally supply a great deal of snow, but the tourists go there to ski, so they make something for skiing on. They have places for skating, too. Gatlinburg also offers regular hiking, camping, fishing, golf and "miniature golf," and incredibly inane tourist amusements. I think the last time I was there someone was actually charging tourists money for a look at a "Paradise on Earth" (pair o' dice on earth). Gatlinburg is located in between Dollywood and Cherokee Town. Dollywood is best enjoyed with children. Cherokee Town offers entertainment for tourists with or without children. Both are usually visited in summer, but some attractions are open in winter.

4. Or just drive or walk around admiring the holiday light show. At the Bristol Motor Speedway, driving around to see the lights is a traditional charity fundraiser some people feel obligated to do every year. In many residential neighborhoods, too, people like to decorate their houses and trees in enough colored lights to become a cheap tourist attraction. Even little Gate City has its fairy light fanciers and is good for an evening's entertainment for light show fans. Kingsport and Bristol try to offer a day's light watching apiece. Asheville and Knoxville traditionally have their lights too, and for some people nothing will do but to spend a day in Helen, Georgia. For those who don't know, Helen is a consciously touristy German-American town and one of the German traditions they perpetuate is lots of decoration and celebration of the Christmas season.

5. Enjoy the midwinter thaw. Unfortunately for those who really do "dream of a white Christmas," the winter solstice is usually associated with a week or so of mild weather, often with afternoon highs in the fifties or even sixties Fahrenheit. You might as well enjoy it. Walk around without a heavy coat. 

6. Enjoy the snow, in years when we get some. Virginia is not covered in snow every year. When we are, we might as well enjoy that, too. Make snow sculptures. Enjoy the children's extra time off school. Light a fire. Pop corn. Tell stories. 

7. Enjoy your extended family. The winter holidays aren't the real anniversary of the birth of Christ; they are the time when families traditionally gather together. Shop. Cook. Reminisce. Putter around in the garage or the sewing room together. Make a family quilt. 

8. Repair the damage. Especially if there's been snow, a lot of repair work might as well be done now as later. 

9. Explore a cave. The Bristol Caverns are a nice, safe, tourist-friendly introduction to the cave country for which the Cherokee Nation was named. (The names used in English for many indigenous groups came from other ethnic groups' words for "enemies," but Chillukki was an allied group's word for "people from cave country.") Caving is fun in winter because it's almost totally independent of weather. Caves stay cool but never really cold all year. There are some other caves, open to the public but a little more of a challenge, that appeal to people to whom the Bristol Caverns  have become familiar. 

10. Listen to music. When I was growing up, music was one of our principal products. Everyone sang or played, and big-name musicians hung out at venues like the Carter Fold regularly. Two thirds of the kids in the high school chorus, which wasn't even considered to be for serious musicians, have been paid to perform or record music. Now a lot of our musicians have retired or died, and people wonder what will become of our musical traditions. Keep them alive. Play the old records, sing along, and encourage people who are recording new ones. 

Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Web Log for 1.14.25

Animals 

A farewell to North Carolina wildlife...I particularly like the young anhinga. For no real reason I've always been partial to anhingas.


Crime 

Seems this couple thought of an unusual distraction technique for large-scale shoplifting: One of them pushed a full cart right through the checkout line without paying for anything, while the other distracted everyone by defecating on the floor. Norovirus has been reported making the rounds this winter so the store staff had to work with the possibility that the woman might have been in real distress...rather than chortling to herself while her partner loaded provisions for a month into the car, free of charge. 

Is it racist to report this story? The thieves were Black, but would it be racist to report the story if they'd been White? 

Child. In the DC schools we used to have some teachers who could make students feel that it is racist, deeply anti-Black, an act of self-hate and hate for your family and your community, to shoplift while Black. I don't think they are on the Internet. They never used the'Net more than was required at work. But the Internet would be better off if they were here. 

"When you're Black you're just Black, you can't help but be Black,
But because you are Black, you don't have to stay back!
Be Black, be Black, and be conscious!"


Winston Peters of Trinidad: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QBlsfp-h4KA

Reading and Editing (Shameless Self-Promotion Found Here)

Outgrowing the Web Log...Last week Hope Clark published a very useful bit of clarification of the difference between a Beta Reader and an Editor. She didn't go (here) into the difference between a Copy Editor and a Developmental Editor...

"

A Beta Reader

1) Is not paid. 
2) Is familiar with you. 
3) Is familiar with what you write (and generally likes the work).
4) Is familiar with your genre.
5) Is an experienced reader (and maybe a writer, too).
6) Is willing to tell it like it is.  
7) Sometimes asks you to trade in beta reading each other.
8) Critiques in an assortment of styles, often informal.
9) Feedback is an impression, not educational or solution-oriented.

An Editor

1) Is paid. 
2) May not know you or your writing at all. 
3) Is familiar with your genre. 
4) Is a professional and willing to show credentials/testimonials of other editing projects. 
5) Will negotiate a contract with you, defining the documents to be read and the feedback format, as well as the type of editing (i.e., developmental, copyedit). 
6) Feedback is solution driven.

"

There are people for whom I'll beta-read any day and twice on Sunday. You've seen some of their books reviewed here. Barb Taub, Ellen Hawley, JD Edwin, Emily Dana Botrous, Priscilla Bird, come to mind...several dozen people whose books I've read only as regular printed books, and presumably they have beta readers already, but ooohhh, ooohhh, I'd love to be among their beta readers. (Isabel Allende! I read the ARC of her newest book, in English only, I still have the Spanish edition to look forward to, and even just the English version was a reward.) I already know that reading any of their books is going to be its own ample reward. 

Editing is what I'm really here to advertise and do, of course. Editing pays bills. So, a few words about the type of editing:

Developmental editing takes your manuscript apart and makes it better. Shortens it, if you tend to write too long and leave in too many details. Expands it, if you tend to write terse outline-type manuscripts that don't paint a pretty visual picture of a place. Suggests that, if your plot is a classic hero's journey (or isn't), something would traditionally happen to the mentor about here and the hero might fail on the first attempt here

Copy editing mostly just looks for spelling and grammar issues. If you send a copy editor a printed manuscript, you might get oldfashioned colored pencil marks right on the pages. If you send a Word .docx or Google Docs .doc, you might get it back with the Track Changes feature used to cross out and insert words right in the document. If you send a document in some other format, and you are very very lucky and I can actually read this format, you might get a full-length document with page numbers and suggested changes listed, thusly:

"
Page 1. "ths book" should be "this book"
Page 2. "3 pages" should probably be "three pages"
Page 3. "Shut up!!!" he explained,." should be "Shut up!!!" he explained." 
"

Sometimes a copy editor has an opinion ("If the character X is a professional, wouldn't X think of this point here?" or "The character Y is stereotyping X in an offensive way here"), but copy editing is generally humble work, often assigned to student interns and junior editors, paid something like a dollar a page. Developmental editing can be worth much, much more money if it's done right. Even traditional publishers these days don't feel confident about anyone's being able to do it right, and are likely to turn down manuscripts flat rather than offering developmental editing. 

I need to explain that what I do well is copy editing. I've not given great satisfaction as a developmental editor. I tend to look at other people's books with a humble, receptive attitude of "This is Tracy's book; it's probably better than any book I'd be likely to write!" This makes it impossible to suggest detailed improvements like "You need a plot twist to expand the manuscript in between Pilgrim's starting the quest and the first confrontation with the ogres," or "If Lovestruck Lolly says no to Tempting Tom, even once, and spends even one night seething with frustrated hormones, readers might respect her a little more," even when I'll agree, after the fact, that such changes have been improvements. 

I can quibble with things about a manuscript. "Did you really mean to suggest that it was a good thing, even after they've all achieved spiritual enlightenment, for Pilgrim to kill Pard, who's been his best friend all through the book?" "That photograph shows the most embarrassing wardrobe malfunction young women suffer. How DARE you feature it and use it as the 'evidence' for a claim that X is 'really' a man. You are obviously no gentleman, but as I am a lady you owe me an apology for that suggestion." "Those people aren't happy, they're stoned. Leave their religion out of it and don't ever suggest that the peace of true spiritual enlightenment comes in a bottle." "If all of the characters really are natural blonds, could one of them at least dye per hair purple to relieve the monotony?" "Since this adventure takes place on board a battleship I can't complain about the characters swearing like sailors, but could some of them throw in a few more specific words, now and then, to give readers the picture of what they're swearing about?" This is not real developmental editing since it's almost entirely negative. I'm unlikely to think of ways to improve your book but I can tell you whether something about it really reeks. Or you could spare yourself some drama by just thinking these things through before asking people to read your manuscript.

But what I do, usually faster and more ferociously than other people do, is copy editing...God willing and the Internet permitting. Send your unedited manuscript if you want flags for every stray punctuation mark that's hard to see on the screen, every single numeral that should traditionally be spelled out as a word, every time you forgot whether you were spelling a character's name Jeanie, Jeannie, or Jeanne. That's my niche. I failed rather dramatically to do it for Hunter Chadwick last summer, when the computer with all the edits on it crashed somewhere around page 450 of 500, but I've done it to the satisfaction of many people whose printed books succeeded, and that included a 500-page reference book that went into reprints.

(What can we do to avoid the horrible possibility of the computer crashing when I'm editing page 450 of your 500-page manuscript? What some of the hack writing and editing sites encourage, and I'd like to encourage writers to do it in real life, is DAILY UPDATES. If every single day's edits are sent to you as a separate e-mail, that may be half a dozen e-mails to deal with where one would suit you better, but it does mean that only one day's edits can be lost, and there's probably time for me to do those over.)

Monday, January 13, 2025

Book Review: The Ghost Convention

Title: The Ghost Convention

Author: B.A. Rose

Date: 2019

Quote: "When she isn't running into people, or being late, she's a wonderful event planner."

Traditional publishers, according to self-published B.A. Rose, live in a strange and wonderful world. They fall in love and have sex with superhuman intensity. When they crawl out of bed, they talk to ghosts, solve long-past murders, and eat sugary junkfood to replenish their psychic energy. Then they go out to dinner and eat full-fat traditional food treats from deep-fried Chinese meat dumplings through Italian pasta pig-outs through good ol' American pancakes with butter, syrup, and bacon, while telling each other how good they look since they burn off all the calories through all that sex. Oh, and sometimes, in between times, they snatch a moment to do trendy vacation things like swimming or riding horses--not that they have to bother with keeping horses; they just flit off to places where horses are kept. Once in a while they even remember the way to the office long enough to squeeze in a few minutes of work.

I don't think I even want to read about the decadence of being a traditional publisher. I felt my character softening just reading this ridiculous romance, in which everyone constantly urges everyone else to relax, let go, and indulge even more than they're already doing. 

No one could possibly approve of this novel so the author went ahead and left in every detail of which body parts were caressed in which order, I think every single time Daisy and Lucas flopped into bed. I may have missed something. I wasn't using the novel as a marital aid so I skimmed a lot. It is amazing how boring detailed sex scenes are when you're not trying to get into the mood to stage your own. For those who do want to get into the mood, if this novel won't get you there...either you're not really trying, or your body might respond better to bare-naked lettuce and exercise. In real life, bacon and syrup do have built-in limitations.

Do not store this book in a place where school-aged children are likely to be. Someone might die of embarrassment. But it's a hoot!

Web Log for 1.12.25

More rants than links but, hey, at least I found the time to read some of the e-mail....

Aging 

Reddit thought I'd want to weigh in on the question of whether a fifty-something woman should apply for a job as waitress in a strip club. Bleep would I know? I've not seen her. I've not seen the club. I may have seen the sort of customers the woman would have to work with, but I was trying to move quickly along.

But, ironically...A fifty-something woman who could still enjoy restocking store shelves isn't going to get the courtesy of serious consideration if she applies for that kind of job, although some of us think that would be a hoot, or kicky, or something. A fifty-something woman might get an interview at a strip club because people can believe that she thinks that would be a hoot, and she just might have the look the job demands. 

I'd like to see more respect for middle-aged people who want a little part-time gig, so they apply for jobs as store stockers, or library pages, or receptionists, or nightwatchmen, or maybe busboys. The McDonald's where I spent some time today badly needs a good busboy. There is no reason why I, or someone my age, couldn't be it. I don't know any fifty-somethings who have any kind of problem wiping sausage grease and pancake syrup off tables.


Meanwhile the question arises whether Karen Pence, shown looking miserable at Jimmy Carter's funeral, "snubbed" Melania Trump. I know this face. Allowing for some differences of bone structure and color, this is my face on the days when instead of being mistaken for a cousin who's twenty years younger I get mistaken for one who's thirty years older. Observe the temporary wrinkles, especially along the jawline. Observe the dress that suddenly looks painfully tight ("But it hung like a sack the last time I put it on"). That's a fine-looking woman who is feeling sick and wants to go home. If she had had the star quality to rise above what she was feeling and make politely funereal conversation with Her Radiance, that would've been news.

(But the thing is, we've seen video of The Radiance That Is Melania on days when we were told Melania Trump was feeling below par. She does have star quality. And she's met the Big Five-O by now, too. Talk about your red-hot Mamas doing menopause with style...that's what we tend to expect the First Lady of the United States to do, but The Melania is a world champion.)

Disasters 

It is not a bleeping competition. People in North Carolina (and Georgia and Tennessee) still need shelter because it's cold where they are, and construction work goes slowly in cold weather. People in California need shelter because they had their fire late this year, and it's not cold where they are, but humans are built to seek shelter at night. We all paid taxes. We all gave FEMA money to take care of people in North Carolina, in California, in Florida if they still need help, and people are tweeting some things about Hawaii. So take care of those people already, FEMA. Anybody in North Carolina who has spent the winter in a hotel is going to need to stay there through March. Don't even talk about trying to move them until they find somewhere to go. I'm sure they're looking as hard as they can!

Gentle Readers, if you can see a way to help some of these people, please do. As it might be when students who came home for Christmas went back to school, talking about plans to spend spring break somewhere else, and there is this room just sitting there until June. 

Meanwhile, the Arizona Cardinals offer Los Angeles football fans relief...


Californians think their late fire season has been deeply weird. This web site won't attempt to sort out the accusations and conspiracy theories. This web site will just say that some people clearly were making deliberate attempts to aggravate the fire, and those people are likely to find themselves in a place that is hotter than a California wildfire, soon. And this web site will remind the incoming presidential administration that its mandate is to restore property rights to individuals and families, with heavy penalties on any interference with disaster recovery that could potentially be part of a land grab, as in offices shut down, bureaucrats ruled unfit for decision-making positions for life...We need a positive movement to restore land to private ownership, preferably entailed to families as in the Bible to check real estate speculation, perhaps allowing some land to be retained as public parks or historic shrines but requiring it to be owned by private persons.

Robert Reich shared a fire-fighting fantasy, for which I thank him; it was nice. He mentioned that California requires prison inmates to work, and one of the jobs they can "choose" is fighting fires, for five or ten dollars a day. They're not "professionally trained," may be sent into more dangerous situations, and are more often injured than other fire fighters. How, he asked, would Donald Trump be likely to do? My guess is that Donald Trump, or Robert Reich, or I would not do brilliantly as fire fighters...but any of us would do a lot better than might be expected, given our ages and sizes. All hillbillies used to have to be fire fighters and one of the more inspiring sights I've seen in my lifetime was watching a smaller, older man who was supposed to be staying off an injured leg lead a younger, stronger crew. Because fires are for fighting, and our fighting instinct is for fires, and fighting a fire is fun. Most people are both braver and stronger than they think.

Senator Fauxcahontas Warren wanted to make the California fire a political fundraiser...Call her out, Gentle Readers. I want to see her working with newly homeless people. Sharing some of her houses. She wants people to thank Democrats for doing something in disasters, let her give them something to thank a D--her--for

Some correspondents think "Trump hates California." I have, of course, no earthly idea. But a lot of people have memories of California that don't really arouse love. I should know. I was born in some part of the mess of urban sprawl that is Los Angeles. They were having a fire that week too, an especially ugly fire because the color wars were involved, and my little White mother was afraid to go to the hospital where she wanted me to pop out into the world because she would have had to drive through a Black neighborhood and people were literally killing each other for being the wrong color. The'rents had spent their twenties in California and made friends and contacts there, and we kept going back and living in different parts of the State, and I remember some beautiful views and even some nice people, but...I saw a cartoon once. The cartoonist claimed that New Yorkers turn the stress of being crowded outward and spew unprintable curses when they mean "have a nice day," while Angelenos say "Have a nice day" when they mean unprintable curses. There is some truth in that. There is a moral and emotional callosity...San Francisco was where someone actually had a heart attack, collapsed on the street, and was promptly trampled to death by neighbors who didn't even want to bother to step around him. 

And, in a disaster, who cares? Some victims of large-scale disasters may lack human feelings. We don't. My memories of Michigan aren't the fondest, either, but I still think even Wolverines ought to have safe drinking water. Trump may have real reasons to hate California. I certainly have reasons not to have ever even given a serious thought to going back there. I still feel something for people watching walls of flames blow closer to their homes, and the air is so dry out there that people don't even try to water their grass but just call it "gold," and at the last minute they throw their valuables into their cars and drive away, knowing their homes are going to be ashes if and when they ever go back. 

Inauguration 

In with the "disaster" e-mails come the "inauguration" ones. Inaugurations just get crazier. I remember when they were dignified grown-up events. Not lately. There's a new tradition of "counter-inauguration" demonstrations of disrespect. There are the so-called "inaugural" events staged by and for people who may belong to the new President's party but have no connection with his inaugural event schedule--in the Clinton era it was reported that Hillary and Bill Clinton managed to dash into and out of eight of over a hundred "inaugural balls," and dance one short dance at each one. Trump-hating takes the weirdness to a new level. Someone claiming to be President Trump, and the whole spam campaign is so ridiculous I could almost believe the person is working for today's Republican Party, wants to bring YOU to D.C. for the last rally and some of the inaugural festivities! Donate to the Rs and you'll be entered into a raffle in which somebody will get a plane ticket to the capital city and...

There is one thing about this spam campaign I like. They're not encouraging people to bring their own cars to D.C. 

However: I can believe e-mail may actually be coming from Tracy Jones, R campaign worker. I could even believe that e-mail used to come from Team Obama, because cyberspace used to be a small, rather selective place where whole e-mail services were "by invitation" and--yes, we were a global elite, albeit a young, low-income, messy, geeky one. I do not believe e-mail from the President of the United States, today. 

And if I did...I saw the last Trump rally in Washington on Twitter. I am too little, too old, and too much a lady for that kind of shenanigans. If I'm going to be trampled and deafened and choked on weird gases, I'd rather be fighting a fire. 

Introversion 

Some people still seem to think that affirming and celebrating introversion means rejecting company or friendship. No such. It means celebrating our own natural approach to friendship, which develops slowly, usually lasts a lifetime, and has a kind of passionate intensity that can be better than sex--at least it lasts longer. Introverts are sort of notorious for making what might be seen as extravagant gestures of friendship and not even wanting to talk about them, because, as C.S. Lewis wrote, "We are sorry that any gifts or night-watching should have been necessary" and, once the friend is out of debt, or out of the hospital or whatever, we want to get back to what we do with the friend that is fun. We're also famous for having odd collections of incompatible friends, because we do different things with different people. Some introvert friendships seem suitable or predictable to other people, and some quite the contrary, and that's none of those other people's business, thanks all the same. We have to avoid the trap of trying to make just anybody, especially the pushy extroverts who want to claim us as friends, into a friend but income, education, race, or belonging to an enemy tribe have nothing to do with it. We do things like marrying people nobody in their right mind would ever have suggested we'd want to date, and staying "in love" for ten or twenty or fifty years.

Thomas Jefferson died poor because he gave money to a friend.

Warren Brown lived to write more of the world's best car reviews, some of them in poetic forms, after doctors thought he was dying, because a writer friend gave him a kidney. Twice.

C.S. Lewis wrote about personal feelings and experiences he would not normally talk about, because fans sent him things that were hard to get in England during the War, and he could share them with his friends. Everyone should read Lewis's book, so confusingly printed as both The Four Loves and The Five Loves

Productivity 

An e-friend with a leg injury notes a funny thing about leg injuries. I remember this from mine (which wasn't as bad as hers). You think you're going to tear through your crafts-to-do list, right? No distractions like going out and doing things, just knit, knit, knit...No such. You don't feel right sitting and knitting, or sewing or whatever. The leg distracts. You don't get knitting done

You don't enjoy things. You know that there are things in your life that are enjoyable, that will never come again, but the leg is not letting you enjoy these things. You have, let us say, a four-year-old relative who is adorable. You know that that child will never be four years old again. This is the one and only summer when he will recite Hop on Pop and bat balloons across the coffee table with you. Next summer he'll be a different, older, larger child, interested in different things. You cannot properly enjoy that child's being four years old, anyway. You have this stupid leg constantly itching at your consciousness, making things not...feel...right.  

So you're not happily productive, either. Your crafts aren't fun the way they normally are. You do not get into that mental groove of sitting in your favorite spot with your favorite crafts. Friends wanting to cheer you up buy you supplies and pay in advance for things you can make. Making things doesn't feel like making things. Ideas don't come to mind. You sit down to knit, feel all out of sorts, go and lie on the couch. Watch TV. Fifty-seven channels and nothing good on. Phone a friend...well, people did that back when I had my leg injury anyway. Pick a fight. Quarrelling with friends is the kind of thing the leg suggests to your mind, because everything feels all wrong anyway. "Doomscroll," go to web sites you don't even like, read a lot of drivel that you don't enjoy reading and that's very likely not even true. I had a stack of short articles to publish on Associated Content, which at the time would probably have paid for all of them, and I needed the money, and I did not feel like sitting up and typing short articles into a webform. The leg just seems to want you to spend time doing things you don't even enjoy doing, because nothing feels right anyway.

If you are a person with a leg injury, or a friend of one, please know that THIS TOO SHALL PASS. 

Butterfly of the Week: Black Swordtail

Graphium colonna is found in southern Africa. Its English name is Black Swordtail, because it belongs to the group of butterflies called Swordtails and because its predominant color is black. People thinking of a different kind of African wildlife nicknamed it the Mamba Swordtail. "Black Mamba" means a venomous snake but some people think it's a "cool" name for a harmless butterfly.


Photo by Alkilpin, taken in December in South Africa.

The Swallowtails were traditionally named after characters in literature, so who was Colonna? Colonna is the Italian word for "column." As such it was the name of an ancient city and still is the name of an influential family who can trace their pedigree back nine hundred years. Google does not identify it as the name of a fictional character, but does note that many people have liked to think that Michelangelo was in love with Vittoria Colonna. Fiction had probably been written about them in 1873, when this species was named.

The Black Swordtail's wingspan is between 2.1 and 2.6 inches. Males and females look similar; males spend more time in open country and are much more often seen by humans. The colors are produced by iridescent scales, and change as the light shining on them changes. Females are slightly larger than males, and may have wider black or sable stripes; as they spend more time among trees, where they are well camouflaged, they are not often seen by humans at all. Most of the Black Swordtails people see are male.


Photo by Richard_Johnstone, also in December in South Africa. This photo also shows that, although Swordtails use the tails at the ends of their hind wings in flight, the tails also give predators something to grab. A butterfly who has sacrificed its tails to a bird or lizard can still fly. 

After an introduction explaining how the genus names of the Swordtails have changed over the years and how lepidopterists describe the color patterns on butterflies' wings and the shapes of their tail ends, Richard Vane-Wright describes the distinguishing features of Graphium colonna beginning at the bottom of page 47...


Countries where the species is found include Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, South Africa, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia. It may have established breeding populations in other countries besides those. In some places it is rare. It is not known to be endangered. In the United States it and its food plants survive only in enclosed greenhouse conditions, but it has done well in the University of Florida's "Butterfly Rainforest" screened outdoor conservatory. If you visit the area you can see photos, videos, and quite possibly living specimens of this popular species.

A subspecies name was proposed, but most experts seem to think that all colonna belong to a single species with similar DNA and lots of individual variation.

Their genome has been mapped.


In South Africa they are a summer species, a few individuals flying as early as November or as late as April. Nearer the equator they have multiple generations and may be found at any time of year. 

They can live in symbiosis with any of half a dozen shrubs or small trees in the genera Annona, Artabotrys, and Uvaria. Artabotrys monteiroae, the Red Hookberry, is an interesting plant. Like poison ivy, it can adapt to conditions and be found as a vine, a bush, or a tree. Five species of Graphium eat its leaves.


They are found in and near forests at low altitudes. Males are often found at puddles; females, like other female Swallowtails, spend more time near their host trees but come out, in the morning and early afternoon, to sip flower nectar. 

This species can fly high or low, fast or slow. When they are not being chased, their flight has been described as lazy, but they can speed up above the treetops if alarmed. 


Photo by Richard Johnstone, taken in February in South Africa. 


Photo by Magdastlucia, taken in South Africa in February. Magdastlucia also donated a photo essay of eight action shots of one couple's courtship flight to Inaturalist. Though one of the pair had wings so tattered that humans might not have expected it to be able to fly at all, it flew persistently around the larger and darker butterfly, whose wings were fresh. Both butterflies flew through long grass; colonna is more likely to fly through denser vegetation than the other species it resembles.


Photo by Donchelu, taken in Tanzania in January. The mother butterfly places an egg on a young, fresh leaf. Google found no image or description of the eggs.

Within the range of Swallowtail caterpillars, most of which try to look like the droppings of a sick animal as much as possible, local lepidopterists find colonna caterpillars distinctive. Their humped backs and upturned tails reminded him of the Notodontidae or Prominent moths, which also like to turn up their tail ends. The color scheme is olive. Younger caterpillars are more yellow and brown; older ones are green and brown. Younger caterpillars have eight little blunt horns, three along either side of the thoracic section and two at the back end, and many little stiff hairs. Older caterpillars don't have the stiff hairs but have textured patches of skin, and their horns grow branches of bristles.  They are not venomous, though they are mildly poisonous if swallowed, but they benefit from being as unpleasant for predators to swallow as they can be. Descriptions of these little animals range from "creatively ugly" to "magnificent." However, Google found no photos of the caterpillars.


Photo from the Reiman Gardens. The pupa does a fair job of looking like a slowly dying leaf. It is attached to a stem by a band of silk. Since this species produces scant qualities of a weak grade of silk, pupae are often found when the silk breaks and the pupae dangle loosely from the stem.

Although the adult butterfly looks very much like G. antheus or G. policenes, the larva and pupa look different. Writers usually place G. colonna in the group with G. antheus, but off at the end, due to these structural differences.

Sunday, January 12, 2025

Web Log for 1.10-11.24

Not a lot of links found. The Internet connection was very patchy. I didn't do much surfing.

Glyphosate Awareness 

Right. Trump, here's your mandate. Fix this. 


Knitting 

Is this crochet, or a fancy knitted stitch? No matter. It can be knitted. It'll cost $250 plus shipping.