Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts

Monday, May 20, 2013

It's not you, blogger, it's...ya, it's probably you.

After giving this a lot of thought, I've decided to make the complete switch from Blogger to Tumblr. For a while I've been posting onto both blogs, but that just seems like a lot of work. So, if you'd like to still keep up with what I'm (rarely, hopefully more frequently now) writing, then please follow me on my tumblr.
Peace out! See you on the other side.

Friday, July 6, 2012

Shameless Self-promotion

It's been a great few months, if I do say so myself. I've settled in to my office at home and I'm working on settling into a routine. I have to admit, I think I may have suffered a brief bout of post-masters depression and found myself in a little crisis of identity for a bit. Who am I now that I'm not an enrolled student? What am I supposed to do with all this time? The result was a frenzy of volunteer sign-up and a handful of small jobs and projects. Yet, I'm now doing a lot of really great things that I wouldn't otherwise have taken on.

I participated in a Habitat for Humanity house build in the nearby town of Three Hills. The town is about to celebrate its centennial and, in partnership with the Elks, sponsored a 100 hour build to commemorate the occasion. I spent two days at the site, first helping with the refreshments and meals, and then painting and clean-up. There were so many people helping over the 100 hours that by the time I arrived there wasn't much to do. My only real complaint, however, was I had to wear borrowed Habitat steel-toed boots. My feet have been itchy ever since!

I've also been volunteering as an English tutor and helping out with a summer reading camp at the Three Hills Library. I enjoy giving over some time to causes that make me feel useful. It's nice to put all that book learnin' to good use, by which I mean for the good of others. I'm up to about seven hours a week volunteering now, so I promised myself I had to stop taking things on.

Among all the volunteering I've started to become work busy! I'm happy to report I've found some freelance work writing for an academic press (not sure if I can name it right now) doing introductions and annotations for upcoming anthologies. I've also been helping out at the local paper, the Three Hills Capital.

On top of that, my first official publication is now released! Back in March, I was invited to contribute a chapter to a book titled Alternative Futures for Publishing sponsored by the Book Publishers Association of Alberta. It is available for free download, although be patient because it's a big file. Other contributors include my friends and colleagues Mark Leslie and Todd Anderson. I'm delighted to have worked with these and the other authors, and am indebted to Jerome Martin of Spotted Cow Press for his support. Mine is chapter four, "Look Who's Talking, Really: The Dialectic Relationship Between Author, Reader, and Publisher."
photo taken from Mark Leslie's Blog

Finally, I am beyond excited to say that I have been accepted to The Banff Centre Writing With Style residency program! I will be spending a week at the gorgeous campus in Banff where I'll be revising my thesis and turning it into the novel I know it should be. I'm so excited to be part of this inspirational and invaluable workshop, and I can't wait to tell you all about it.

Well, I guess I'd better get back to work. Those introductions won't write themselves. Thanks for reading, and don't forget dreams really do come true, if I can do it you can do it, keep your fork, a bird in the hand, and never put your hat on the bed.

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Do I still get to call myself a student?

I expected when I started this blog that I would talk about life as a graduate student. Yet here I am two years later and I think I hardly spoke about it even in passing. Now it's all over. I can breathe a sigh of relief; I somehow managed to fool everyone.

Eventually I plan to do a post about tips for surviving graduate school, but first I have to think about what those tips might be. At the moment I feel like the overlooked average kid. The one that doesn't stand out, doesn't need extra help, just goes where they know they're supposed to and makes it through to summer vacation hardly scathed. I also know this is sarcastic humility, and I am very sure there are some things I did exceedingly well, and some things I would go back and do differently. But that's not what I'm going to talk about here.

I'm going to talk about my newfound freedom in working! I guess I need to start by saying that I have too many lucky stars to count. I'm barely two weeks outside of my degree and I'm already working in publishing, a field I've always wanted to be a part of. I am rediculously lucky to join Todd Anderson at Henday Publishing as the managing editor. Together, we intend on creating community development, social economics, and education material with an interdisciplinary approach, a keen interest in technology, and an open mind for new material and methods. I am not so bold as to say we are the new face of academic publishing, but I am bold enough to say that we are pretty darned determined to carve out a space for ourselves in this strange uncertain and ever-changing market. Stay tuned and keep your eyes out for Henday Publishing.

In addition to my work as an editor, I am also thrilled to start a long-overdue artistic partnership with my dear friend Dusty Hagerud. Dusty is ony of my oldest friends, and he has been a designer/illustrator for as long as I have known him. I am a huge fan of his work and his sense of humor, and we have a number of plans in the works. Stay tuned for loads of hilarious, irreverant tales of myth, mischief, and marionettes.

Finally, after all the time I have spent working on courses, school deadlines, and that big old monster I called a thesis, I can't wait to get going on my portfolio. The first thing I'm going to do is put that thesis in a drawer for a few months and not think about it. Next I'm going to free-write to my heart's content and enjoy every indulgent moment of it. Then I'm going to do what any recently graduated, aspiring writer would do—pimp myself to anyone who will listen and brag like crazy when someone puts my work into print.

So, this is unfortunately one of those self-satisfying diary-esque blogs that doesn't serve much other than to promise awesome things to come. Hopefully I've done enough already that you are intrigued enough to believe me. Exciting things are certainly to come.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

New Toy = New Post

Christmas came early for me when I ordered myself an iPad. I quit smoking in October and decided to do it properly. I don't mean that I followed some sort of 12 step cessation program. I mean I took the money I would have spent on cigarettes and put it in a pickle jar so that I could see the fruits of my sacrifice for health. I came away with two things; first, a bunch of twenties that smelled like pickles, and two, enough money to go halvsies with my awesome parents for this fancy new toy.

So what have I been doing lately? I'm sure you can guess I've been downloading as many free apps as this 32 gig sleek piece of techno-marvel can handle. I've got Angry Birds and the like, sure, but I've also got newspapers, social networking tools, organizational tools, and a great word processor. And the most exciting bit is I've got my thesis on here, and I've since added to it. My latest writing funk (and if you know me you know they come often and intensely) was a particularly bad one, like seek psychological help bad, and this novel new space for writing this novel has definitely sparked my enthusiasm.

Which got me thinking about how much writers and scholars love new pens and notebooks. Have you ever had a notebook that you couldn't write in anymore because it lost its mojo? We need that feeling of untarnished, innocent space where we can make our impressions. I think I may have just compared writers to dogs marking their territory, but there you have it. Sometimes I think inspiration doesn't come from your ideas but the spaces where you put them. I hope the novelty of this nifty tablet doesn't wear off for a very long time and the word count just keeps going up and up and up.

Merry Christmas, happy Hanukkah, joyous holiday season, and here's hoping you all get new pens, notebooks, or any kind of agent of authorship and we all have a creative, wordy New Year.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

I'll write the title later

My alarm goes off at 7am every weekday. I get out of bed around 8:30. There's a Second Cup that opened a block away from my house and it has become my new "office space" for writing my thesis. I plan on heading there around 10:00 every morning and putting in a solid 6 hours. I get there around 2 and work until about 6. Intended 6 hours always translates to realistic 4 hours, doesn't it? Right? Or is it just me? I have been distracting myself lately by reading more blogs and it's prompted me to revisit mine. I haven't touched this dusty whatever-this-is in over a year. I admit it; I have a procrastination problem.

So in true Jessica form, I figured I'd click on that scary "new post" button and fire off an inspirational rambling that will put the Nike slogan to shame! Then I realized that the simple act of interacting with this blog has essentially brought my procrastination to a pause. Maybe not a screeching halt, but at least a slight hesitation.

I don't know why I'm terrified of writing. I seem to work very hard at finding other things to do that don't involve the one thing I claim to want to do more than anything else in the world. Why don't I write more? Who knows. Perfectionism? Fear of failure? Finger cramps? I'm confident that at least one of my problems is fear of bad sentences--and I write a lot of them! But writing an encyclopedia of bad sentences in September leaves room for chiseling out the bad in February.

Let me take a moment to redeem myself slightly. I did accomplish a lot last year. I attended a conference in Spain in April, I spent the summer in Quebec City étudier le français. I joined some committees, did some fundraising, met lots of people in academia, and got all my coursework done. All things considered, I can network and cross off to-do lists with the best of them. I just can't bring myself to write.

So here's a bit of advice for me. Stop being so hard on myself, write bad sentences, write them often, and have a long talk with that alarm clock.