Yeah, he's out of his mind. Apparently he wrote it because he was bored and it seemed like a fun thing to do while he was working on the next Vlad novel. From what I can tell it took him about a month or so. WHILE HE WAS WRITING ANOTHER NOVEL. Nutcase. Some people are too talented for their own good. Or my own good. Or something.
Anyway. Hope we get to see it sometime soon.
Huh. Sounds like he has a touch of debiculus grabienitis.
Yeah, it would be great if he can get the book published. Somehow, I doubt the book will make it through all the rights entanglements, but I so hope it does. I'd buy that book the moment I saw it.
bwah, ita. and wrod, too.
Cause when I'm bored, I get my hair cut. Or bother all my friends with lengthy e-mail...it's not usually creative.
Ah, well, if he can't talk a publisher into it, I'm sure there are ways to, you know... a la "Global Frequency". "Breven Stust? Never heard of him."
See also, Rachel Caine and Martha Wells and Naomi Novik ...
Hey all, topic for discussion. How do you write a non-fiction work full of opinions (contentious issues, conflicting viewpoints, cockamamie theories and all) without over-use of the following construction?
To [name], [fact] meant [opinion].
I know there is a way to do it, and I know Howard Bryant does not know that way. In fact, to Howard, the above construction means good journalism. I don't know how to tell him (except in, you know, ranty terms in my livejournal) that I wrote better than he does when I was in the sixth grade.
(The whole book --
Juicing the Game,
about recent baseball history and steroids -- is about opinions, including those of journalists. There is a whole chapter about beat-writers' relationships with players. There is no point in the book thus far where Howard Bryant has said outright that
he is a baseball journalist.
)
Ironically, just the other day I was pronouncing John McPhee's two-part essay on coal trains in the New Yorker kinda boring, because, I just don't care about coal trains. But the topic was boring, and, considering I was reading about coal trains, the writing was pretty good.
see, mr. flea was fascinated by the coal trains.
I want to like John McPhee, but I always get bored with him, even when he's writing about inherently dramatic things like trying to stop a volcano using seawater.
I love John McPhee, because he can make even the dullest things, like the orange industry, interesting. The Curve of Binding Energy? The Deltoid Pumpkin Seed? Edge of my seat.
The Curve of Binding Energy
is about the nuclear power industry, and the security and other dangers inherent in disposing of the waste.
The Deltoid Pumpkin Seed
is about a unique kind of aircraft, one that marries airplane technology with something like a zeppelin.