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Month: October 2024

Weekly Round-up, October 26, 2024

2024-10-262024-10-26 John Winkelman

Dawn over Michigan Street

[ Just before sunrise, facing east down Michigan Street at the Union Avenue intersection. ]

This past week was one of the busiest and most hectic weeks of my year, so I didn’t accomplish much that wasn’t work or class or home maintenance.

Reading

Currently reading Norah Lange‘s Notes From Childhood, and it is gorgeous!

Writing

I have changed the name of the MC in my WIP to Thomas, because “Cacophonous Thomas” rolls off the tongue so nicely. Bob, as a protagonist name, is just a little too generic.

Weekly Writing Prompt

Subject: Empire, Politics
Setting: Labyrinth
Genre: Literary Fiction

Listening

This year I created a playlist for my novel, and the soundtrack to The Naked Lunch was the first addition.

Interesting Links

  • “Some People Just Want to Watch the Internet Burn.” (Peter Watts)
  • “The Whirlpool of the Artificial” (Kevin Munger, Crooked Timber)
  • “Speculative Whiteness by Jordan S. Carroll” (Camestros Felapton) – A good review of the book recently published by University of Minnesota Press. Just as interesting as Felapton’s review are the post comments by Kat Goodwin, which add some useful context to the review, and to the book.
  • “Sol Yurick on Trying to Find Any Trace of His Novel, The Warriors, on the Big Screen” (Sol Yurick, LitHub)
Posted in LifeTagged Camestros Felapton, Kat Goodwin, Norah Lange, Peter Watts, Sol Yurick comment on Weekly Round-up, October 26, 2024

Weekly Round-up, October 19, 2024

2024-10-192024-10-19 John Winkelman

Painted stones fond beside the Dragon Trail at Hardy Dam.

[Painted stones found beside the Dragon Trail at Hardy Dam.]

This past week was hectic. Far more hectic than I would have expected on a week off. But my week off coincided with the kickoff of a new project, which I am leading, so I had to pop in to a couple of meetings when I would much rather have been walking in the woods or otherwise not staring at a computer screen or listening to other people talk.

But I did manage to accomplish some of the things I set out to work on for the week. My house is slightly improved. Our cats are verified healthy. I am too, as of my first physical in over a decade.

Reading

I finished the Borges interviews, and for a change of pace picked up Runes of Engagement by Dave Klecha and Tobias S. Buckell. I know Klecha from the ConFusion science fiction convention, where we are both volunteers and occasional members of the ConCom, and he has been most helpful as I learn the ins and outs of helping to manage a science fiction convention. I met Buckell at ConFusion several years ago. He is a Righteous Dude.

Runes of Engagement was a fun read, and light, and I finished it in a couple of days. Next I read Jack Ridl’s new poetry collection All At Once, which was absolutely beautiful. Some of the poems moved me to tears, which almost never happens. Ridl is a treasure.

Now I am reading Norah Lange‘s Notes from Childhood, which I acquired several years ago from my subscription to And Other Stories. I might have missed this one, except that Lange is mentioned more than once in the Borges interview collection, and so was floating near the surface of my subconscious.

Writing

With my little extra free time I began organizing my notes for the upcoming Month of Writing. Since I am no longer participating in National Novel Writing Month, I am instead participating in “That November Thing”, an event coordinated by the West Michigan Author Alliance, that which used to be the Ottawa County/Grand Rapids region for NaNoWriMo.

Weekly Writing Prompt

Subject: Apocalypse, Precursors
Setting: Battlefield
Genre: Lovecraftian

Listening

Interesting Links

Posted in LifeTagged Dave Klecha, Jack Ridl, John Zorn, NaNoWriMo, Norah Lange, Tobias S. Buckell, West Michigan Author Alliance comment on Weekly Round-up, October 19, 2024

Weekly Round-up, October 12, 2024

2024-10-122024-10-12 John Winkelman

Poe and Pepper, living their best life.

[Lazy Cats]

Once again I was cruelly and unjustly snubbed for both a MacArthur Genius Grant and the Nobel Prize for Literature. The fact that I have done nothing noteworthy should not disqualify me from the selection process.

Reading

I just finished the collection of interviews with Jorge Luis Borges, and will likely soon start browsing my collections of his fiction, non-fiction, and poetry. So many brilliant ideas. So much brilliant writing.

I am now reading All At Once, Jack Ridl‘s new collection of poetry which was just published by CavanKerry Press.

Writing

I am ramping up my note-taking and world-building for the November Project. Since I am not officially participating in NaNoWriMo until they de-shittify the organization, I am instead working with

Weekly Writing Prompt

Subject: Robots, Death
Setting: Bar
Genre: Cyberpunk

Listening

A little something different here.

Interesting Links

  • The 2024 MacArthur Genius Grand Recipients
  • Korean author Han Kang has won the 2024 Nobel Prize in Literature
Posted in LifeTagged Jack Ridl, Jorge Luis Borges, MacArthur Foundation comment on Weekly Round-up, October 12, 2024

Weekly Round-up, October 5, 2024

2024-10-052024-10-07 John Winkelman

Poe, woozy from the drugs.

[Poe, woozy from the drugs.]

This past week was hectic. We had to take our cat Poe to the vet to have three of her teeth extracted. She is recuperating nicely, but caring for her as she recovers has thrown off the daily and weekly routine. Therefore I didn’t manage to accomplish as much as I had hoped.

Reading

I am still reading through the collected interviews of Jorge Luis Borges. He is currently at the top of my list of “If you could spend a day talking to one author, living or dead.” The interviews are all excellent, but there is a notable difference the interviews where the interviewer is almost as smart as Borges, and the ones where the interviewer is nowhere near as smart as Borges. Actually, “smart” isn’t the right phrasing. “Well read” and “erudite” work better.

Writing

I am still planning what I will tackle in November, since NaNoWriMo, having both become enshittified and having shit the bed, is off the table. Probably a re-write of my novel-in-progress Cacophonous.

Weekly Writing Prompt

Subject: Colonization, Economics
Setting: Boardroom
Genre: Mystery

Listening

Kris Kristofferson died a few days ago. I am posting this video because “Casey’s Last Ride” appeared in an intense scene in the first season of True Detective.

Interesting Links

  • “Are We Too Impatient to Be Intelligent?” (Rory Sutherland, Behavioral Scientist)
  • “How the US Lost the Solar Power Race to China” (David Fickling, Bloomberg)
  • “Metal music festival loses headliner, multiple bands after announcing Kyle Rittenhouse as guest” (PennLive) – Four of the bands, the headliner Evergreen Terrace, along with Southpaw, Let Me Bleed and American Hollow, dropped out of the Shell Shock festival when they found out Rittenhouse was a guest. I suppose inviting an incel whose mom drove him across state lines to hunt people for sport is a bad move for a festival whose stated purpose is to support people with PTSD.
Posted in LifeTagged Jorge Luis Borges, Kris Kristofferson, NaNoWriMo comment on Weekly Round-up, October 5, 2024

IWSG, October 2024: Scary Stories

2024-10-022024-10-30 John Winkelman

A young opossum on a white wooden porch rail, sniffing a green watering can.

Happy Fall, y’all! We finally have some seasonally-appropriate weather. And some seasonally-appropriate animals, like this young opossum which stopped by for a visit a few days ago.

The Insecure Writers’s Support Group question for October 2024 is: Ghost stories fit right in during this month. What’s your favorite classic ghostly tale? Tell us about it and why it sends chills up your spine.

Maybe it is because I have recently been reading a collection of interviews with Jorge Luis Borges, but the first story which came to mind when I read this month’s question was Ambrose Bierce‘s “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge.” While not a ghost story in the traditional sense, nor supernatural in character, it is the story which most disturbed me when I first read it as a teenager. I had read many more immediately frightening stories – Jaws, the Stephen King collections, and scores of others from books and magazines of the 1980s. Those stories bothered me for days or weeks (lookin’ at YOU, The Shining!) after reading them, and caused many a sleepless night. But they eventually faded into the background radiation of the larger horrors of my childhood. Eighth grade, for instance.

But it was Bierce’s story which threw me off-kilter in the long term. In fewer than 4,000 words, Occurrence cast into doubt the entirety of my lived experience. I had no way of knowing if I was not experiencing something of the kind at any given moment. Maybe I had been hit by a car and the past week was all a hallucination as I slowly slipped off this mortal coil. Or maybe I had been crushed in the barnyard as I tried to coax recalcitrant cows into the milking parlor. I couldn’t be certain if that which felt real was actually real, or if it was some combination of dream, memory, and imagination.

[At the time, I was unaware of Samuel Johnson’s “appeal to the stone” and likely would have broken my foot trying to prove that this was, in fact the really real world, even though the pain of a broken foot is experienced by the same mechanism that tells us we are in reality in the first place, and thus this would have been a pointless experiment. Reality may not be subjective but it is often contextual.]

Like all the other scary stories of my childhood, “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” slowly dissolved into the larger morass of my teenage years, leaving me with a continual sense of existential angst long before I had heard either of those words.

Then I read the story in college. And again after college. And as the 1990s became the 2000s and The Real suddenly found itself in competition with The Virtual, “An Occurrence” made its way back to the surface. People began asking interesting and uncomfortable questions about the nature of reality, consciousness, perception, and the mind. If we had a sufficiently lifelike Virtual Reality environment, could we fool someone into believing that it was the real world? And if something is indistinguishable from the real world, does it matter that it is not, in fact, real? Are we all just brains in jars hooked up to something like The Matrix? Is the entire universe really just a simulation running on a vast computer network? Barring obvious and unambiguous breaks in causality, such things are impossible to prove or disprove.

A few years ago I began reading essays by the late Mark Fisher, particularly those concerned with hauntology – the ghosts of lost futures which haunt the present. The protagonist of “An Occurrence,” Farquhar, is experiencing the ghost of his lost future in the time between when he is dropped and when the noose snaps his neck. Objectively the rest of his life lasts about a second. Subjectively it lasts several days. Which is the real future? In a sense, both and neither.  For an infinite moment he is neither alive nor dead. Schrödinger’s protagonist. Solipsism and nihilism fistfight in heaven.

And that’s not even getting into the many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics. Somewhere out there is a version of reality where Farquhar slipped the noose off of his neck and dove into the river, alongside another version where he never traveled to Owl Creek Bridge in the first place.

So to sum up, “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” did a serious number on my head, and continues to do so to this day. Reality may not be real. The most useful thing we can do is choose to believe and behave as if it is.

After all, what are ghosts, but restless spirits mourning their lost futures?

 

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Posted in Literary MattersTagged Ambrose Bierce, hauntology, IWSG, Mark Fisher 2 Comments on IWSG, October 2024: Scary Stories

September 2024 Books and Reading Notes

2024-10-012024-10-19 John Winkelman

In contrast with last month, September was an excellent month for short fiction. I have dozens of issues of various magazines and journals lying around my house unread, as well as probably close to 100 anthologies and short story collections awaiting my attention.  Any progress is better than no progress.

Acquisitions

Books acquired in September 2024

  1. Cassie Hart, Sloane Leong (editors), Death in the Mouth, vol. 2 [2024.09.12]
  2. Neil Kaufman, Darkness Is as Light To You [2024.09.21]
  3. Dorothy Roberts, Killing the Black Body [2024.09.26]
  4. Jack Ridl, All at Once (CavanKerry Press) [2024.09.28]

Reading List

Books read in September 2024

Books

  1. Fleur Jaeggy, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.05]
  2. Dreamforge #2 [2024.09.14]
  3. Dreamforge #3 [2024.09.16]
  4. Dreamforge #4 [2024.09.22]
  5. Neil Kaufman, Darkness Is as Light To You [2024.09.24]

Short Prose

  1. Fleur Jaeggy, “I Am the Brother of XX”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.01]
  2. Fleur Jaeggy, “Negde”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.02]
  3. Fleur Jaeggy, “The Last of the Line”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.02]
  4. Fleur Jaeggy, “The Gentleman and the Lizard”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.03]
  5. Fleur Jaeggy, “Agnes”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.03]
  6. Fleur Jaeggy, “The Aseptic Room”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.03]
  7. Fleur Jaeggy, “The Heir”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.03]
  8. Fleur Jaeggy, “Portrait of an Unknown Woman”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.03]
  9. Fleur Jaeggy, “The Black Lace Veil”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.04]
  10. Fleur Jaeggy, “An Encounter in the Bronx”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.04]
  11. Fleur Jaeggy, “The Aviary”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.04]
  12. Fleur Jaeggy, “The Visitor”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.04]
  13. Fleur Jaeggy, “Adelaide”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.05]
  14. Fleur Jaeggy, “Tropics”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.05]
  15. Fleur Jaeggy, “Cat”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.05]
  16. Fleur Jaeggy, “Osmosis”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.05]
  17. Fleur Jaeggy, “Names”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.05]
  18. Fleur Jaeggy, “The Hanging Angel”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.05]
  19. Fleur Jaeggy, “The Perfect Choice”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.05]
  20. Fleur Jaeggy, “FK”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.05]
  21. Fleur Jaeggy, “The Saltwater House”, I Am the Brother of XX [2024.09.05]
  22. Alyssa Eckles, “Home”, Dreamforge #2 [2024.09.06]
  23. Andrew Jensen, “Sid”, Dreamforge#2 [2024.09.08]
  24. Marie Vibbert, “Loitering with Mathematical Intent”, Dreamforge#2 [2024.09.09]
  25. Tyler Tork, “Tea with Gibbons”, Dreamforge#2 [2024.09.09]
  26. L.P. Melling, “Luna’s First Eclipse”, Dreamforge#2 [2024.09.09]
  27. Blake Jessop, “I See Punk Elephants”, Dreamforge#2 [2024.09.09]
  28. G.M. Periera, “Sudan”, Dreamforge#2 [2024.09.09]
  29. Gregory L. Norris, “Hysterical”, Dreamforge#2 [2024.09.09]
  30. Michael McCormick, “Snow, 2562”, Dreamforge#2 [2024.09.09]
  31. Adam Fout, “We Are Cherished”, Dreamforge#2 [2024.09.09]
  32. Mark Gallacher, “Pioneer”, Dreamforge#2 [2024.09.09]
  33. Lif Strand, “Being Me”, Dreamforge#2 [2024.09.09]
  34. Davide Mana, “Sapiens”, Dreamforge#2 [2024.09.10]
  35. Deborah L. Davitt, “Arcology”, Dreamforge#2 [2024.09.10]
  36. Lucy Stone, “Haunting the Present”, Dreamforge#2 [2024.09.11]
  37. Emily Mah, “Wrath of a Lightweight”, Dreamforge#2 [2024.09.13]
  38. L. Deni Colter, “The Weight of Mountains”, Dreamforge#2 [2024.09.14]
  39. David Weber, “A Certain Talent”, Dreamforge#2 [2024.09.14]
  40. Jane Linskold, “A Question of Truth”, Dreamforge #3 [2024.09.14]
  41. Gustavo Bondoni, “A Sip of Pombé”, Dreamforge #3 [2024.09.15]
  42. Isaac E. Payne, “Esclados the Red”, Dreamforge #3 [2024.09.15]
  43. Hal Y. Zhang, “The Specular Boy”, Dreamforge #3 [2024.09.15]
  44. Scott Paul Hallam, “Fire in the Sky”, Dreamforge #3 [2024.09.15]
  45. Mary Soon Lee, “Wrong Turn”, Dreamforge #3 [2024.09.15]
  46. Jennifer R. Donohue, “Fundamentals of Search and Rescue”, Dreamforge #3 [2024.09.15]
  47. Josh Rountree, “Revolutions Per Minute”, Dreamforge #3 [2024.09.16]
  48. George Nikolopoulos, “Our New Home in the Stars”, Dreamforge #3 [2024.09.16]
  49. Jim C. Hines, “On the Efficacy of Supervillain Battles in Eliciting Therapeutic Breakthroughs” (Patreon) [2024.09.16]
  50. John Jos. Miller, “The Ghost of a Smile”, Dreamforge #4 [2024.09.17]
  51. Marie Croke, “Cessation of Civilization”, Dreamforge #4 [2024.09.17]
  52. Kurt Pankau, “Autoimmune”, Dreamforge #4 [2024.09.18]
  53. Gary Kloster, “Hot Times in Shady Pines”, Dreamforge #4 [2024.09.18]
  54. Anna Madden, “The Last Petal”, Dreamforge #4 [2024.09.21]
  55. Sally Wiener Grotta, “Beyond Our Hidden Stars”, Dreamforge #4 [2024.09.22]
  56. Robert E. Harpold, “Extremophile”, Dreamforge #4 [2024.09.22]
  57. Donald S. Crankshaw, “Dreamforger”, Dreamforge #4 [2024.09.22]
Posted in Book ListTagged Dorothy Roberts, Dreamforge, Fleur Jaeggy, Jack Ridl, Neil Kaufman comment on September 2024 Books and Reading Notes

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