Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Losing is a kind of winning... right?

So this week I got my first "Your story sucks but thanks for participating" consolation email from the Writer's Digest Short Short Story Competition. The top 25 stories get printed in an annual and you get exposure and such. Suffice it to say my story "Grounded" about two unconventional superheroes is still, well, grounded. But this past week, after a night of staying up late, too much dark chocolate, and some divine inspiration I hit the ground running on expanding the story into a novel. This rejection is further fuel for me and I intend to burn it. Though inspiration is 1% of a novel, the other 99% involves Mondays at work where you feel absolutely useless, leg cramps and tension headaches from sitting for hours as you try to find the perfect adjective for your characters eyes, and a lonely pet rabbit that starts thumping loudly in his cage until you come pet him and appease him with carrots. But it's all worth it when you read something and say, wow, I wrote that? Then you read the line that follows, and you're like yikes, I wrote that too, no one's going to read this. It's like pride and humility are always in a fistfight. So, where or when do you get your inspiration???

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Sparkly Snow and a Christmas Carafe


We had a big beautiful snow this past weekend it was lovely and made me want to stay in all weekend. I didn't have to go far, my girlfriends came over for our now annual Christmas Craft and movie night! We eat food, chat about all things, and then ditch crafts in exchange for painting our nails. I can't believe this year is coming to a close already, so much happened this year and yet there's so much I which I could have squeezed in too. I'm looking forward to 2014 though, I'm taking my writing more seriously now and am going to pursue some outlets. I've entered a contest with Writer's Digest so I will keep you posted there, and I'm half way through editing the novel that I've been crafting for the last 5 years. Also the Olympics are coming, Jimmy Fallon is moving to 10:30, and Hollow City the sequel to Miss Peregrine is coming out!!! It's going to be a good year! What are you looking forward to?


My mom gifted this to me for my birthday, I'm excited to use it. Even though I don't really drink I'm sure I can fill it with a tantalizing mocktail. It's so swanky!!!

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Shades of Grey (not what you're thinking)


So last night I finally finished a book that I've been reading for a year, one of the most complicated and just plain weird books I've ever read. I "reviewed" the book for the Gray Matter issue of Numéro but never actually read the whole thing until now. It's set in a totalitarian, dystopian world 500 years in the future where society is ordered by your color perception, the higher perception, the higher position in society. And everyone's name tells you exactly what sector they are from. The Greys are those in society with basically no color perception and they are the workhorses, forced to serve. The interesting thing that I find about science fiction literature and films that I think the general populace fails to notice at times is that often it exists not just for expressions of imagination and whimsy but for social commentary. They are like parables, revealing more about the way we think and act, and bringing those uncomfortable topics to the forefront in the guise of the unbelievable.

Nichelle Nichols, who played Uhura on Star Trek all those years, after reading a few scripts she began to notice some common thread in the stories. She went to Gene Roddenberry, the director and creator of the series, and said to him, "I know what you're doing, these aren't just space stories, these are morality plays." Gene looked at her, put his finger to his lips and said, "Sshhh," with a smile.

So under the blanket of the colortocracy, killer swans, man-eating plants, smuggling of colors, and dangerous romance, Shades of Grey has a thing or two to say about social prejudice, hierarchy, government control, fear, and original thought. A very interesting read with more twists and turns than a yateveo tree.

Thursday, August 23, 2012

A welcome to wanderers of the web...

Lady Popeko is a place where I may take the illustrious liberties of expressing my artistic and design related tastes and endeavors as I try to navigate this glorious God-spun web which we all inhabit. I hope you enjoy! I will attempt to post often, I promise. For now enjoy this Miss Peregrine portrait that I constructed during my free time after work, when I was most likely supposed to be doing something else. If you have not read Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children, I highly suggest you read it before some Hollywood studio ruins it for the imagination.

With love and peace,
Nicole Blackburn
Graphic Designer + Illustrator
www.nicoleblackburn.wix.com/main
coleblk.etsy.com