Wow, I didn't think it was possible to be more depressed about my job, but I guess I was wrong.
This is what I've been saying! Being an acquisitions editor sounds fun, and it is sometimes, but mostly it's depressing and tedious and ... depressing.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
Wow, I didn't think it was possible to be more depressed about my job, but I guess I was wrong.
This is what I've been saying! Being an acquisitions editor sounds fun, and it is sometimes, but mostly it's depressing and tedious and ... depressing.
Mostly I'm sad I sought out the actual PW survey article.
The frustrating thing about my job is that I actually really like what I do on a daily basis; however, I have a really really bad manager and comparing my salary to the median income here provides very little incentive to stick with it.
Especially since, lately, our job has involved way more marketing (which is fine by me since that's actually what my undergrad degree was in, and I'm good at) and the amount and kind of work this entails means I should be making a lot more.
Le sigh.
That series looks good, Tep.
I warn you, it is FUCKED UP. But in a good way.
An excellent review of the new book by Audrey Niffenegger, the author of The Time Traveler's Wife, Her Fearful Symmetry:
It is an inventive take on the ghost story, a neo-Victorian narrative combining the extraordinary with the everyday, kept fresh with just a few unexpected plot twists. It is a coming-of-age story, illustrating two girls staring into the chasm of adulthood. It is a cache of fantastically drawn characters ... It is an ode and a declaration of love to authors and books of the past - while Elspeth's flat is filled with beautifully aged and rare reads, a result of her profession as a bookseller, Niffenegger is clearly tipping her hat to the likes of Jane Austen, H.G. Wells, Lewis Carroll and other such authors that came before her (her use of the verb "galumph," in particular, tickles me). It is a meditation on love and loss, life and death, and the unknown that waits for us beyond. It is wholly absorbing and it is a pleasure to read.
The Three Sisters: Fantasy, Horror, and Marchen:
Bit by bit, we've been rediscovering those old paths, and realizing that fairy tales really were urban fantasy, as we currently define it. "Fantasy set in what is essentially the real world, mingling with real people, in real situations." Well, once upon a time, "the real world" wasn't a city, it was a big, scary wood where there might be wolves, or robbers, or any one of a thousand other things. "Real people" weren't businessmen and police, they were woodcutters and tinkers and little old women whose granddaughters brought them baskets full of goodies. The world changed, the stories moved on...but the roots remained.
The Magicians was quite fun. It's like a more adult realist mash-up of Narnia and Harry Potter, with a Brooklyn writer vibe. There's a problem (for me) with pacing toward the end, but I'm sure plenty of people here would like it.
Fritz Leiber fans may be interested in these.
The "official" Dracula sequel as compiled from Stoker's own notes, by the Stoker estate.
The "official" Dracula sequel as compiled from Stoker's own notes, by the Stoker estate.
I still don't know how I feel about that. I mean, I know I'll end up reading the damn thing, but I still don't know if I approve of the idea.
Mina and Jonathan Harker's son backstage at a production of Dracula directed by Stoker? It sounds bad.