Towse: views from the hill

December 10, 2006

[WR] (old) Interview with New Yorker’s fiction editor, Deborah Treisman

Filed under: writing — Towse @ 10:13 pm

People Are Nearly Getting Hit by Beer Bottles Every Day
An Interview with the New Yorker’s Deborah Treisman

BY CHRISTOPHER FRIZZELLE
Nov. 2005

I’m sure you get asked this every time you do an interview, but how does it work? How do you choose the stories you choose?

There are six people in the fiction department. Most of us do nonfiction as well, so we don’t have as much time as it sounds. But basically stories come in, whether they come in through slush or to one of the editors or to me, and they get read and whatever we’re taking seriously gets circulated to all of the editors and we have a meeting once a week where we sit around and argue. Everyone writes a short opinion of the story and those get attached to the manuscript as it makes its way around. And sometimes it happens that all six of us think a story is great—that’s maybe one in 10 of the stories that get to this level. What most often happens is three people like something and three people don’t, or four people versus two. It’s a funny mix and there’s lots of argument—you know, arguments that can be very frustrating because you’re never going to convince the other person, but that is probably what the response is among the readership as well. You just hope that, in general, the majority is going to be affected by what you publish.

$1.65 billion … B … billion!??!?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Towse @ 1:43 am

Dinner last night with friends celebrating a friend. Old friends. Geeky friends.

One friend, Ann, does not want to even talk about the purchase of YouTube by Google.

“$1.65 billion … B … billion?” she sputters.

… for what? There’s nothing there!

Sure, there is, Ann.

Stuff like this.

Ann, though, was talking about what’s behind the content on YouTube, the inner workings, the database, the uploading, the hosting. What exactly was Google buying and why did they think it was worth that much? What sort of IP was there? What sort of patent applications are pending? What is there that’s worth $1.65 billion (B) billion?

Those folks at Google are pretty sharp folks. I’m sure they have plans and will have more plans about what to do with the concept.

Here’s an article from money.CNN about Google and its non-existent (or at least not headline-worthy yet) copyright woes. Check out Google’s deal with CBS and the effect on Letterman during sweeps.

HIV/AIDS, Malaria and Tuberculosis co-infection

Filed under: Uncategorized — Towse @ 12:10 am

More research and information (Economist) now available re HIV/AIDS co-infection with malaria. Co-infection with tuberculosis and the implications and impact (especially in some prison systems and in sub-Saharan Africa) has been known and documented for a longer time.

Sub-saharan Africa triple whammy.

EurekAlert

Science magazine abstract

Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (HQ: Geneva)

December 9, 2006

[WR] Late breaking Miss Snark (and Jane Yolen!) news!

Filed under: Uncategorized — Towse @ 10:10 pm

Jane Yolen reads Miss Snark!

(As evidence by a comment in the comments tail of this post. Read her comment for some background trivia about James Thurber …)

Things I’ve memorized and still remember for which there is no real use

Filed under: Uncategorized — Towse @ 9:22 pm

Laura Lippman had a recent post about memorization. She asked for memories of memorization.

Instead of memories, I provided a list of things I’ve memorized and still remember for which there is no real use:

(1) pi to twenty-two places which seven-years-older brother Skip taught me when I was in fourth grade — age eight — not because there was any purpose to it but because he was fifteen and thought it’d be fun to see how far my memory could stretch. I’ve never added on to that limit because what need is there for that sort of stuff except to win bar bets?

(2) “If” by Rudyard Kipling, extra credit in fifth grade.

(3) kingdom-phylum-order-class-family-genus-species // Bio 1 test prep c. 1969.

(4) chlordane, lindane, pentachlorophenol — three top legal organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) used as termiticides // Ent101 test prep c. 1971. Dr. J. Gordon Edwards (Janey Edwards’ dad) was the sort of professor who ate DDT in class just to show you that it wasn’t all that poisonous. And he didn’t think much of Rachel Carson either.

(5) The three vowels immediately after the “h” in “Weyerhaeuser” are in alpha order. // software control project to set saws for the sawmill in Raymond WA using lasers to scan the logs and some sophisticated algorithms. c1981

(6) The worst memory waste, though, is “Brent and Joanne, Vic and Pam, Jerry, Michelle and Sharon” — the names of the folks who shared a house down near San Jose State where I was allegedly going to hang out after class — instead of heading home to the family manse — and stay until after dinner when, actually, I was going somewhere I shouldn’t’ve been. Knowing their names was supposed to add verisimilitude to the story. c1971

I can remember their names but not where I shouldn’t’ve been going.

Do you have any memory tricks? Bar bet worthy? “There are strange things done in the midnight sun” Robert Service poems? “Four score and seven…” ” By the old Moulmein Pagoda, lookin’ lazy at the sea” (by Sinatra, of course. …) or “We the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.”

… and things of that sort?

[WR] Advice from Laura Lippman – Self-help: selling your first novel

Filed under: writing — Towse @ 8:46 pm

Laura Lippman’s updated her self-help essay filled with advice to the writer on selling that first novel.

Step #1?

Finish the damn book.

The essay is short and to the point. Here’s hoping that those who need to read it (hands raised!) will.

[Snitched Repurposed from Miss Snark]

[WR] David Louis Edelman on book promotion

Filed under: book promotion,writing — Towse @ 1:22 am

David Louis Edelman posts on book promotion: what worked, what didn’t, what is worth doing, what not.

File this one away for later use, if you can’t use it today.

[Snatched from Bella Stander’s blog. Thank ye, ma’am.]

December 8, 2006

Water on Mars

Filed under: Uncategorized — Towse @ 3:24 am

Water (or some other flowing liquid) on Mars.

Recently!

How cool is that?

December 7, 2006

RIP James Kim

Filed under: Uncategorized — Towse @ 7:41 am

Maybe it’s the season. Maybe that’s why I’m teary.

Maybe it’s the pictures the newspapers and news sites ran and the waiting and the hopes that everyone who knew the story had and that he was a local guy and we had that local connection and a bump in hope when mom and daughters were rescued while the search went on for the husband/dad who had trekked off for help.

He was found today and something about it all tears my heart to shreds.

Maybe because Dad’s bday was yesterday and this is the first bday we’ve had without him. Maybe because Skip’s bday is in a few days and I’ve never got through a December without tears since he died. Maybe because it’s December and dammit this shouldn’t happen.

But it does.

My heart goes out to the Kim family, his dad, his wife, his kids, his family, everyone who loved him.

This is not what any of us wanted to happen. We were all hoping against hope for days that the story would have a happy ending. A team of searchers spent all their energies in the end for naught except that they found his body and … closure.

The daughters will learn some day that their dad died looking for help for them and their mom and slogged on bravely with more courage than I think I would have had, through hunger and cold and pain and impossible conditions, bravely.

I am just so very sorry that he won’t be with them.

December 6, 2006

[URL] GourmetSleuth.com

Filed under: food,URL — Towse @ 8:29 pm

GourmetSleuth.com‘s title head says it all:

Masala Dabba – As Seen In December Food and Wine Magazine | Comfort Food – Raclette | Cheese! – Cheese Making Kit | Ingredient du jour: Burrata cheese | New! – Cooking Conversions Calculator | Cooking Dictionary – Ingredient Substitutions, Equivalents | New Ingredient – Verjus | For Wasabi Lovers! – Real Wasabi!| Recipes – Mexican Recipes | Just For Guys – A Guy’s Gotta Eat | Pets – Dog Treat Recipes

I found this site because his nibs was setting us up for dinner at Colibri after we leave the Commonwealth Club holiday schmoozefest tonight. He’s reading the menu [PDF] to me. All yums. But what’s Quesadillas de Rajas? What’s Rajas?

/rajas/ in the bar at the top of Firefox pulls up the GourmetSleuth.com page on “rajas,” which tells me

Rajas
The word “rajas” just means “strips” but in Mexican cooking it refers to strips of chiles. The chiles are roasted, peeled, and cut into strips. After that the recipe can vary but normally they are sautéed with onions, herbs and seasonings. The cooked mixture is used as a condiment with meats or as a vegetable side dish.

and goes on to give me recipes, how-to, variations and uses, &c.

What else does GourmetSleuth have? Lots. Seems a useful site.

[cleared out the sustenance tag and changed it to food to keep my tags copacetic]

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