“First they ignore you, then they ridicule you, then they fight you, then you win.”
penelopetrunk: In Tulsa. Blogging from airport to hotel. Driver: Do you write a lot? Me: Yes. I’m a journalist. Driver: Cool. I try to keep a journal, too.
penelopetrunk: In Tulsa. Blogging from airport to hotel. Driver: Do you write a lot? Me: Yes. I’m a journalist. Driver: Cool. I try to keep a journal, too.
START WITH YOUR CHARACTERS
Always figure out who your characters are before you figure out your plot. You can follow a good character through a bad plot, but you can’t make a good plot out of a bad character. Submitted by:…
The Drunkard’s Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives
Design by Keenan
It’s always fun to spot a book on the new books table that has a die-cut jacket; it’s especially fun to discover whimsy printed underneath on the book itself.
Ridiculously Useful Resource
Looking for Education Tools? Try the Centre for Learning and Performance Technology’s Directory of Learning Tools. The list contains links to over 2,300 tools, everything from Word Processors to…
Memorial Day
From the New York Times, June 7, 1868. This item is Memorial Day’s first appearance in the Times.
Memorial Day
Links 25-May-2008
- Penelope Trunk has an excellent post on how she got her current favorite mentor, to complement her other posts on the topic. As a forty-odder among twenty-somethings, I find that my mentors are not just the professors, but my peers who have longer experience of being a student, being at SILS, being connected to many other students who they think may be good for me to meet. I have a couple of trusted mentors — including, of course, The Illimitable Cassidy — both 20 years younger than me, who provide me with excellent advice and guidance. I hope to be of use to them one day, or to pay it forward in some way.
- I recall an author reading I went to years ago; she’d written a book about the Book of the Month club. Her opinion at that time was that literate book-culture was seeing its history growing smaller in a rearview mirror, hence the explosion of books about books, books about reading, books about bibliophiles. There’s a strong flavor of sadness and melancholy in these books. I thought of this when reading the UK Guardian review of Alberto Manguel’s “The Library at Night”:
The traditional library was a citadel sacred to the notion of omniscience; the web, by contrast, is ‘the emblem of our ambition of omnipresence’, like a supermarket that boundlessly proliferates in space and deluges the planet with its tacky wares. ‘The library that contained everything,’ Manguel laments, ‘has become the library that contains anything.’
- In junior high school, I got hooked on the Doc Savage novels with the James Bama covers. William Denton somehow located the author Lester Dent’s Master Fiction Plot Formula for any 6000-word story. While you’re there, check out William’s library science pages. And I’ll probably try his index card system for organizing my school work this fall. Update: I tried it for a while but it duplicated other systems for tracking work and reading that were more convenient, so I dropped it.
- Susie Bright is looking for odd book titles. (Susie’s site is fun, but its ads could be classified as NSFW.)
MOON WATCHING
To know whether the moon you see tonight will be bigger or smaller tomorrow night – In the Northern Hemisphere, the moon spells “DOC” each month – first it looks like a “D” (waxing moon), then an “O”…
Staircase Bookshelf Does Double Duty [Household]

A London-based couple wanted easy ways to maximize the use of space in their small flat, and a built-in staircase-shaped bookcase does the job. This isn’t a DIY project—an architect…
hotdogsladies: Listening to NPR hosts talk about sports is like watching cats try to play chess. Adorable.
hotdogsladies: Listening to NPR hosts talk about sports is like watching cats try to play chess. Adorable.

