Thursday, December 18, 2008
I heart books!
Monday, December 15, 2008
Friday, December 12, 2008
Pride and Prejudice--Facebook Style
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
My girl crush. :)
Sunday, December 07, 2008
You know you're a pastor's kid when...
Thursday, December 04, 2008
Book recommendations
Why do I live here again?
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Sarah Connor Chronicles: Strange Things Happen at the One-Two Point
:
Friday, November 21, 2008
Such a girly thing...but I can't wait.
Thursday, November 20, 2008
National Buy A Book Day (Credit to Barbara Vey)
Friday, November 07, 2008
From my rescue organization...but what's funny is I thought the same thing!
Tuesday, November 04, 2008
Watching the results, Sarah Connor Chronicles, random stuff...
Sunday, November 02, 2008
Have to share a dog picture...
Monday, October 27, 2008
NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month)
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
Oh, look! Shiny. :)
I. Must. Resist.
The hardest part about writing is staying focused. And when you're faced with something you don't know how to get around--how to get started, how to write a particular scene, how to handle a character's issues--other stories start singing the siren's song.
It's not that I don't love the current story, the one I'm supposed to be working on. It's just...the other one is still in this vague, perfect-because-it-hasn't-been-proven-not-to-be-yet stage. When you're up close with an idea, dealing with its flaws, and you're elbows deep in the structure, all the other ideas waiting in the wings seem...easier. Better.
But alas, it is an illusion. For all stories need work, love and care. Some come easier than others, true. Some make you bleed for every word. But whether it's easy or difficult in the writing of it doesn't seem to affect the quality of the story in the end. What will affect the quality is whether I'm willing to put the requisite work in.
I am. After I'm done whining. *sigh*
: ) Stacey
Saturday, October 18, 2008
Experimenting with settings...
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Feels Like Home To Me...
I still feel like I'm coming home when I get to campus. It's changed a lot since I was in school there. There are at least three new buildings and fewer old buildings (Goodbye, Baldwin Hall with your narrow stairways and musty air--I could easily imagine girls in poodle skirts and short neck scarves in those classrooms. Something about the design, shape and smell spoke to it being from a different era.)
In contrast, visiting my sister's dorm room was like stumbling into a miniature Best Buy. Televisions, DVD players, iPods, and THREE laptops. Not sound all old-school, but when I was at Valpo, laptops were near unheard of. You were lucky if you had a computer at all, and most of us spent our days camped out in the computer labs, praying that our 3.5" floppy disks wouldn't fail on us when we needed them most. (I once lost an entire paper because my boyfriend, now my husband, borrowed my disk and left it in the frigid car overnight). We printed out on dot matrix printers and then wasted another five minutes or so peeling the perforated strips off the side!
Me, with flat hair and no make-up, at my favorite computer in the computer lab, scrambling to get yet another paper done. (Yeah, I know it's sideways--you know I have issues with this. :) )
Our dorm room, circa sophomore year, 1994.
This is what I miss--everyone hanging out together! (I'm guessing Deb took this photo, which is why she's not in it. I owe most of the photographic evidence of college to her diligence and skill with a camera.)
My baby sister with me on graduation day, 1997. She's now a sophomore at Valpo, and we walked in this same area this weekend to pick up the birthday cake my mom sent through the Guild.
Wednesday, October 08, 2008
Google--first in the fight to stop drunk emailing...
Tuesday, October 07, 2008
Catching up, Allison from Palmdale and more...
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Designer babies
Monday, September 29, 2008
Chicago Area Writers--Plot class at College of Lake County
PLOT IS A FOUR-LETTER WORD
It's a great story. You've developed it in
your mind from beginning to end. But
when your fingers hit the computer keys,
the plot just doesn't flow. It's difficult to get
the characters from one scene to another.
The dialogue seems stilted and the action appears
contrived. Never fear! Join author Stacey Klemstein as she demystifies
the concept of plot and breaks it down into more easily manageable
pieces. Writers will leave with tips, tricks and tools to help
create more interesting characters and a stronger storyline.
Cost: $59.00
4308 CWRT 18-001 0900A-0300 S GLC E124 10/18 10/18 KLEMSTEIN
My weekend project and other random musings...
Friday, September 26, 2008
Recognizing the supreme awesomeness of this exact moment in time...
Thursday, September 25, 2008
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Random thought for the day
ETA: I'm an idiot for posting without actually reading what I wrote. Sorry for the typos. Most of them have been captured safely and returned to the wild.
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
A post about something other than television...
Sarah Connor Chronicles: Mousetrap
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Sarah Connor Chronicles: Automatic for the People
Tuesday, September 09, 2008
Sarah Connor Chronicles: Samson and Delilah :) Loooooong post…sorry.
Okay, so don't read on if you haven't watched yet…
So far, one episode into the second season, and it is BETTER than last year. As you know, I'm watching this not just to make sure the world stays safe from the machines, but also to find out what Derek Reese's secret(s) is/are, whether Sarah is going to fall for him in any way shape or manner (or is that too weird?), and what are they going to do with John and Cameron?
As a devotee of the forbidden love genre, I'm DYING for them to get to the "I have feelings but I can't do anything about it because it's wrong and possibly weird" stage.
I've been rewatching the first two Buffy seasons and figured out that was my favorite part, the back and forth with Angel and Buffy.
Of course, my beef with that show is they did not figure out a way to give them a happily ever after without destroying the show. Hence, no happily ever after, or HEA, as they say in the romance writing business. It is for that reason that I only own the first two seasons of the show. I loved the whole show (except for the last season), but the first two seasons just rock.
I'm trying to think of other shows that did this back and forth thing and managed to have a decent show and an HEA. Usually the show--and the network's desire to keep raking in the cash--outlives the romance. Only shows like BSG and Roswell--where they know they're in the final season--have that kind of closure, I think. Farscape, too, gave that kind of closure through the TV movie, if I remember correctly. Any other ones? Suggestions? I feel like I'm missing an obvious one…)
Anyway, back to SCC and last night's episode, it nearly killed me when Cameron turned on them, damaged chip and all. I was worried we were going to spend the entire season with "bad" Cameron and that would have annoyed the crap out of me.
But I like the damaged chip aspect in that it now adds even more unpredictability to her behavior. IMO, she was always unpredictable because you don't know what she knows and what her exact objective is, other than keeping John alive.
The scene in which they've trapped Cameron between the two trucks and she's pleading with John not to take her chip out, that she loves him and he loves her…oh, boy, this is what I've been waiting for. *claps hands together gleefully*
Sarah tells him that it was all fake, that they're machines. They can't *feel* anything. It was manipulation, plain and simple. And it works because John gives her a second chance.
Interesting, because I don't recall any other terminator using emotions to lie this way.
Yes, they imitate other human beings through voice or physical appearance, but never as themselves. They did not seem sophisticated enough to carry off that kind of task, or else why wouldn't they (meaning SkyNet) send one with the intention of befriending John and Sarah only to turn when he/she is finally trusted? (Maybe they have! Derek, what exactly happened to you in that weird abandoned house last season? Hmmm...)
It brings up all kinds of delightful questions about how advanced Cameron really is she told him in the beginning that she is a more advanced model), why John in the Future (JitF!) chose to send her specifically back, and whether a machine is capable of expressing some form of humanity.
Her interest in ballet, for example. They made a big point of showing her practice this even after the mission for which that knowledge was required was over. And yes, I know, Summer Glau is a ballerina and they're making use of her skill set for the role, but I also feel like they may be exploring the boundaries of humanity and how we define it.
It also brings up this great point about love…last year in preparation for a book that I'm still thinking about writing, I bought this book called Love and Sex with Robots. It's non-fiction and the author's premise is that with the advances in technology now, it would be possible to create companions who would fill the role of spouse and partner. Programming is sophisticated enough, or will be, to simulate a human. And where do you draw the line?
We feel a certain way because our brain has been programmed to respond to certain stimuli, not all that different than a CPU.
Also, the author included some research about love that indicates we fall in love because of how we feel when we're around the other person. Your feelings for someone have more to do with how he/she makes you feel about yourself or in general than anything in particular about them. Isn't that interesting?
Therefore, I would posit that it is very possible to fall in love with a machine that protects you, helps you, looks after you and strongly resembles an attractive female in your age bracket. The question is, can the machine love you back? And how can you tell, what's "real" and what's "programmed"? Does it matter?
There's also the self-sacrifice issue too. When Cameron tells Sarah,"If that ever happens again, don't let him save me." That would indicate that her programming regarding John (the mission to protect him) are more of a priority than her own survival. She recognizes that she could be a danger to him and puts that before anything else. Another definition of love, perhaps…
LOVE this kind of stuff. LOVE IT.
Also, it was way cool to see the TX1000 or whatever the melty metal robot models are called. : )
Updated to add: Fixed the screwy paragraph spacing. Sorry about that. Also, I'm reading online that some are putting forth the theory that Cameron herself is the one who overrode the termination order rather than any preset programming, which would indicate some form of self-awareness and independence. Intriguing!
Monday, September 08, 2008
Fall has kicked me to ground and trod upon my head
I love fall. We're heading in to my favorite time of year. Crisp leaves, cool air, bright sunshine in an impossibly blue sky. Unfortunately, I seem to forget that, every few years, the season change kicks my a**.
Allergies and sinus issues run rampant in my family (A dentist, after reviewing my x-rays, said I had the largest sinuses she'd ever seen--gee, thanks?) and the second the weather changes and the barometric pressure shifts one way or another, I'm down and out for the count.
It's not every year, so it probably has something to do with the mold count or how fast the changes happen or something.
I've spent the last week with a splitting headache on the right side of my face, above and below my eye. Ugh. I laid around all weekend with tissues and over the counter medicine, hoping to knock this thing out. And I woke up this morning to find the pain gone…
Unfortunately, it had only relocated to the left side of my face.
*sigh*
I do not have time for this!
I'm teaching my first class at the College of Lake County this week on Thursday, and I'm still prepping my materials. I'm trying to make some forward progress on my very stubborn sequel to G&G. And I'm planning to spend the weekend at my friend and mentor, Linnea Sinclair's, house.
I cannot be on sinus medicine while I'm visiting Linnea--I will miss out on the Cosmos and that is simply not acceptable. : )
So come on, head, hurry up and STOP hurting already.
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
College Admissions? Research help!
Monday, August 18, 2008
Austenland by Shannon Hale
Friday, August 15, 2008
Writing about your exes
Thursday, August 14, 2008
An author by any other name...
Wednesday, August 06, 2008
Movie and Books
Monday, August 04, 2008
So...what did you all think?
Friday, August 01, 2008
Breaking Dawn tonight
Maybe I'm a cynic, but...
Thursday, July 31, 2008
New York, Day Three (part two) and Day Four
After our long journey back from Central Park, we took a quick nap and then got cleaned up for the wedding. I must confess I actually used one of the hotel provided shower caps for the first time in my life as I knew my hair would still be sopping wet if I shampooed again. It was funny and weird. I felt like Lucille Ball or something.
There was a shuttle to the wedding location in Queens, which was fortunate because I did not feel brave enough to face the subway again, especially in heels. The wedding was held in The Foundry, which is exactly what it sounds like, an old industrial-type building revitalized into this very cool open concept building. Seeing the heavy beams, old brick and odd little alcoves where the equipment must have been was neat. The back patio on the building held nursery plants, so it was beautiful and green.
The ceremony was lovely, just perfect. I really enjoyed the two poetry readings in the ceremony, which I believe were written specifically for the bride and groom. I actually teared up during the wedding, and I don't remember the last wedding that made me cry. : )
After the ceremony, we had drinking and dancing and dinner. The photo above is at dinner. We clean up pretty well, no? : )
Once dinner was finished, we had celebrated with more champagne (don't know what it was, but it was fabulous) and more dancing. I really had fun this time. It helped, knowing so many of people there.
At one point, Greg and I were demonstrating various 90's cheesy dancing techniques, like "churning the butter" and "mowing the lawn" just to be silly. The champagne definitely helped with that. My favorite part was seeing my in-laws "raising the roof" during "Jump Around" by House of Pain. They were awesome!
The bride and groom also provided these really cute Chinese-type slippers for those of us who wanted to kick off our heels and dance, which heck yeah, I did.
After cake and more dancing, an ice cream truck pulled up outside. Mr. Softee for everyone who wanted it! How cool is that?
I declined the ice cream but had a very enjoyable discussion with several of the other wedding guests about ice cream sandwiches and the proper cookie to ice cream ratio that must exist. : )
One final spin around the dance floor and then it was time to go. The shuttle had arrived to take us back to the hotel.
One funny/scary moment, our bus actually stopped dead on the bridge between Queens and Manhattan. Of course, some of us were, um, still feeling just how much we'd celebrated and found this more amusing than scary. But the bus driver got us up and moving again very shortly and all was well.
Day Four
…is not very exciting, I'm afraid. We slept in. Brian and Susan were up and about and adventurous, but we were too tired. We did make it down to breakfast to talk to family a little more and say good-bye. But then it was all about getting packed and getting to the airport.
I was sad to leave. We don't get to see this part of the family very often. I only get to see my New York friends about once or twice a year. And I just had so much fun! : ) It was such an adventure, very different from chilling on the beach at Maui, but an altogether awesome experience. Thanks to everyone who offered advice and encouragement. You were right!
New York, Day Three (part one)
Day three, late nights and early mornings, we were starting to get a little tired. But we rolled out of bed to head for Rockefeller Center (photo at the top) to see if we could catch The Today Show and then line up for our NBC Studio Tour. (Thanks to sister-in-law Susan who did much of the organizing and planning for this trip--you rock!)
We missed The Today Show as they stopped filming early because it was a Saturday, but that was okay. We had plenty of time then to shop at the NBC store, where you can buy things like a talking bobble-head of Michael Scott from The Office, a t-shirt for Psych that reads, "Psychics do it in the future" and a BSG mug that quite simply states, "FRAK."
I would have loved to buy all of the above but instead settled for a small keychain for my sister who collects such things. Not much suitcase room, even less money!
The studio tour was really neat. We saw where they film the nightly news with Brian Williams. And it was a working studio. Behind the glass a few feet away, a reporter/anchor named Alex something (somebody want to help me out with her last name?) was giving a report on MSNBC.
We also saw the Saturday Night Live set, which actually didn't look like much. They had equipment and boxes all over the places for the Olympics. The show, obviously, is on hiatus until fall.
My favorite was the Conan O'Brien set. It was SO tiny. I know television uses all kinds of illusions and tricks, but this was ridiculously small compared to the cavernous space you feel like you see on screen every night. For those who watch the show, let me say this…the distance between Conan and Max, the drummer, is like five feet, maybe even less. Like I would be worried that Conan, during an enthusiastic arm wave, might knock into the drum set. That's how close they are.
But because they use individual reaction shots, Conan by himself and then Max or vice versa, it makes them seem very far apart. Same thing with the distance from the point where Conan does his monologue to the desk. Maybe ten feet apart. Twenty might be pushing it. And yet if you watch the show, you know it seems to take him a long time to get over there. Just another illusion, folks.
The set furniture is also really small, to match the scale of the set. Our tour guides, the adorably named Margo and Carly, said standard living room furniture would look huge. So, beware of anyone who looks tall on the show! They're probably not. I also wonder if this is part of what's behind the running joke about Conan being freakishly tall, as he frequently mentions on the show. I'm sure he is tall. I'm even more sure he looks gigantic because of the set.
Also, the set itself is curved, no hard angles. That's so you won't have any depth perception and be able to tell exactly how small the studio is. Interesting, right?
After the tour, we headed to the Carnegie Deli, only to find a huge line and a menu that included too many mentions of "tongue" for us to be comfortable eating there. So, instead we went to Lindy's. It was horribly expensive, but I must admit that I liked my sandwich and Greg's soup was really good. For the money, though, Junior's was better. (Trump Tower, we would discover later, offered a three course meal--appetizer, main course and dessert--for $22. Donald, I have new respect for you, offering decently priced food in New York City.)
We decided then to brave the walk to Central Park (photo at the top). It was so cool. It make sense that you would have to have something like this for all the dogs, kids and frisbee players that must live in the area. Still, it was a bit odd to see so many people staking out little patches of ground with their blankets and accoutrements. It sort of looks like what you'd see before a fireworks display on the 4th, only no fireworks.
That was, I think, my favorite part, walking all the way to the park. Of course, then we had to walk alllllll the way back. Even in my comfy chucks, my feet were hurting aplenty by the time we made it, but it was worth it. After this, we had the wedding, but I'm going to save that for my next, and probably last NY trip-related post. :)
New York, Day Two
Okay, so here's where things got a little nerve-wracking. On Friday, I went my own direction while everyone else went theirs.
Greg, his parents, and Brian and Susan all went on the Grayline Tour to see some of New York's most famous sites.
I left to meet my editor from Hyperion for the first time. I was SO nervous. I left the hotel at 9:07 for a 10:00 a.m. meeting based on the front desk's warning that there might be heavy traffic. I arrived at our meeting place at 9:22. Good grief. Fortunately, I noticed there was a Barnes and Noble on the corner, so I went in to shop and kill some time.
It was an interesting experience. The store reminded me of our college bookstore, all crowded shelves and things in odd places. It wasn't the sleek, stand-alone structure I'm used to seeing in the Chicago area. It was like a rabbit warren with all these little rooms kind of stuck on to each other and alcoves full of books. It was cool.
I headed back then to the City Bakery and read for a few minutes. My editor arrived, and we had a great time talking about everything from books to our favorite television shows. He is awesome and I can't wait to work with him! : )
After that, feeling quite confident in myself, I hailed a cab on my own and gave directions to the hotel (Madison and 21st, please). Of course, I immediately failed the next test when the cabbie asked me if I wanted him to take twenty-third all the way. I had no idea and was forced to confess so. But it was all good. I made it back eventually, probably in a more roundabout way than if I were a native, but oh, well.
After dropping off stuff at the hotel, I walked the block to Grand Central to meet my friend Stacey Agdern for lunch. She's a bookseller in Grand Central as well as a writer, so we just grabbed a quick bite to eat while she was on lunch break. We chatted about writing and books and about the possibility of RT next year.
When Stacey went back to work, I headed back to the hotel. I should have taken a nap, but I was way too keyed up. So I headed up to the rooftop garden bar on the hotel (picture at the top). It was beautiful and warm up there. I wrote for a bit. Then I went for a walk around the block and checked in with my folks on my cell phone.
At four, I went back over to Grand Central and met Stacey again. I was about to take my inaugural subway ride to see a mutual friend and she, thank goodness, agreed to come with me. The subway system, to me as an outsider, seems very confusing. Trains are identified by both letters and numbers, and I can't quite get a fix on how everything comes together. Chicago's color coded system seems much easier.
So, we found our way to Queens and our friend Isabo Kelly, to see her and her new baby, Jack. Both are doing well, and Jack is SO adorable. Lots of hair, and he's holding his head up like a champ after only two weeks.
We met up with another friend and author, Leanna Renee Hieber, at Isabo's house, and after a short visit with the new mom and baby, I had to head back to Manhattan for the rehearsal/welcome dinner. Thankfully both Stacey and Leanna agreed to chaperone me all the way back to Grand Central, even though it was out of their way. Thanks, you guys!
I raced the block back to the hotel, and I do mean raced. The family was supposed to meet at 7:30 in the lobby for a shuttle (or so I thought) and it was 7:22 by the time I walked out the door of Grand Central.
I got to the hotel, out of breath and sweaty (ew!), but no one was down in the lobby. I made it up to our room and found Greg just getting dressed. Apparently, I'd gotten my days mixed up for the shuttle, which was actually going to be Saturday, and they'd all just gotten finished with the wine and cheese hour.
Whew. So, I freshened up and then we took a cab over to the dinner location. In the cab, we had our first what I would call stereotypical NY experience. A woman started to walk in front of the moving cab. Our cabbie honked at her. She gave him the finger. He gave it back. She kicked the cab as we pulled away. Yeah. : )
Dinner was fabulous and so much fun! Even though most of us were staying the same hotel, we hadn't all seen each other yet. So it was great to be able to catch up, laugh and share stories. Greg's uncle, father of the groom, had put together this great presentation about the family, traditions, history, fun stuff. It was cool to see the old pictures and nice to be included in some of the more recent ones as well!
After dinner, we relocated back to the hotel and headed up to the rooftop bar again. It was really beautiful at night. Full of scammers, too. : ) Older business-type gentlemen hitting on girls young enough to be their daughters. Yeah, we had fun watching that. The girls kept pumping them for drinks and then…went home for the evening. Ha.
Feeling full from good food and drink and fabulous company, we finally dragged ourselves off to bed at about 12:30.