Tag: Geek Stuff

  • Why I Finally Admitted I’m a Writer

    Why I Finally Admitted I’m a Writer

    articleFor the past seven years I’ve been writing a graphic novel.  I only admitted this to a non-family member for the first time two years ago.  I admitted it to close colleagues eight months ago, and then only because I had to give some reason for quitting my job.  I was forced to tell my boss the embarrassing truth; I wanted to focus on becoming a writer.  Specifically, I’m trying to sell a graphic novel.

    Admitting this at work was awkward because none of my 40+ year-old colleagues here in Brazil had any idea what that was.  “You’re quitting because you want to write comic books?  Like Superman?”

    “No, a graphic novel is a medium that can tell any story.  They’re actually becoming more mainstream.  A graphic memoir by a lesbian cartoonist about growing up with her closeted father who ran a funeral home was nominated for a National Book Critics award.”  This explanation didn’t clarify anything for them.

    As I suspected, once you tell people you are a writer and take the time to explain what it is you’re writing, they are going to ask about it.  Every time they see you.  This is why I never wanted to say anything.  This is why I hoped to keep it secret until I could direct all inquisitors to their local bookstore where they would find my already published and acclaimed debut on the shelf.

    I never called myself a writer because in my mind, a writer who has never published is a failed writer.  I have a deeply rooted fear of failure, and so far all I have to show for my writing is 57 rejections.

    I have only myself to blame.  I chose to write a graphic novel, which is a growing but hardly massive market in the U.S.  If I had written a romance or Young Adult, I’d be able to query a new agent a day for years.  I set my story in Brazil with a poor, Afro-Brazilian protagonist.  When I started writing, I had never read a graphic novel and had to google “format for a comic manuscript”.  I’ve also never had a creative writing class in my life.  And I can’t draw.  At all.  Not even a straight line with a ruler.

    Thinking about it, 57 rejections aren’t so much surprising as inevitable.

    When my husband and I conceived the story over dinner seven years ago, I was recently arrived in Brazil, with no job, and a lot of time on my hands.  I outlined the story in detail, taught myself how to write a comic, and wrote the first 25 pages.  I knew a story set in Rio de Janeiro should be illustrated.  The visual contrast of the luxury and poverty of the city needed a visual element, but 25 pages into the story, my research was revealing extreme odds against ever getting published.  Not being an illustrator, having no experience in comics or any area of publishing, and living in Brazil unable to attend conferences or network led me to save the project on a hard drive and forget it.

    That was in 2008.  I came back to it in 2013.  I quietly finished a first draft and sent out a ton of bad queries for an unpolished manuscript and got back 55 polite “No, thank yous.”  Naturally, I then decided to quit my job and pursue writing full-time.

    Why? What made me finish the manuscript?  What made me finally decide to not only pursue writing full-time but also publicly admit it?  I became a mom.

    My parenting philosophy is to model the behavior I want from my daughter.  I want her to drink water at meals, so I drink water.  I don’t want her to resort to physical violence, so I never use it on her.  I want her to consider fruit a dessert, so I wait until she goes to bed to eat my ice cream.

    More than anything I want my daughter to find her dream and follow it, so I damn well better follow mine.

    I can’t tell her success takes hard work and dedication if I gave up after only 25 pages.  I can’t tell her that failure is ok and a learning opportunity, if I abandon writing after 55 rejections on a first attempt at a first novel.  I can’t tell her passion is a wonderful thing, if I’m too embarrassed to openly admit my own.

    Today I have a polished and edited graphic novel manuscript, a critiqued query letter, 2 fresh rejections, and a strategy to pursue publication.  I have a picture book manuscript recently sent off for critique.  I have a detailed outline and the first 10,000 words of a young adult trilogy.  I have this blog.

    And when I do finally publish my first book, it will be dedicated to my daughter.  Because if it weren’t for being a mom, I would never have become a writer.

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  • Hell: Adding a Social Media Button to My Blog

    Hell: Adding a Social Media Button to My Blog

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    Help! I don’t speak IT! Is this even what IT people do? See…I don’t know anything!

    Today, I had a terrible afternoon.  By the end of it, I was pacing around, shoulders hunched and knotted, snarling and snapping at any person who came within arms length.  I was adding a Pinterest button to my blog.

    It’s easy.  Our platform allows for a smooth and intuitive interface.  It’s drag and drop.  You can have your site optimized in fifteen minutes.  You never need to see any code.  A blind, semi-literate centenarian could optimize her own site with our system.  Lies.

    Pinterest is a form of social media, so in order to add a button enabling readers to “pin” a post to their digital board, I must change my “social media buttons”.  In order to change the social media buttons, I need to update my plugins with a new widget…or do I update my widgets with a new plugin?  I can activate plugins in the settings heading. Or is it tools or appearance headings?  But activating the plugin might not work if you don’t change your security settings to allow the code to embed on the blog…or do you want the code to embed on the blog and single post pages? Obviously your blog and posts are two different things.  What about archives and categories?

    And which plugin for social media buttons do you want?  Choose one from the 1,127 listed.  This one here allows short code for embedding.  That one allows for following and sharing.  Some make your static content more dynamic and others make your dynamic content more static.  One popular choice allows your website to show both thumbnails and blocks. (No, not the things your preschooler still chews on. Is that what you think “thumbnails” means? Are you 150 years old?)  Perhaps you’re really looking for a slider plugin that specifically works with social media SEO.  What is SEO?  Just step away from the internet.  Immediately.

    Now that you have selected and activated your widgetized plugin for optimizing all your acronyms, you must decide where on each page the buttons will be displayed.  Do you want them in the header, footer, primary sidebar, secondary sidebar, tertiary sidebar, content area, more footer left, more footer right, more footer middle? What position? First, second, third, or fifty-third widget down, caddy-corner to the far-left-more-footer? How many pixels between the icons?  Of course you know the length of a pixel because a pixel is now a standardized form of measurement.

    Alright, now that you have assigned a position to your button…you’re done!  Click visit site and there’s your beautiful Pinterest button! In four different places on the homepage, no places on the individual post pages, and all the post excerpts have disappeared from the homepage.  Aaaaaaaaaaaaaagh!

    I was at this stage of the button adding process when my husband came into the office.  He approached me slowly and spoke in a low, calm voice.  He stopped a few feet away and didn’t make any sudden movements as he assessed my situation.

    “Have you cleared your cache?” he asked slowly.

    “What the hell is a cache?” I snarled, a few drops of spittle landing on my screen.

    I still don’t know what a cache, but I do know that clearing it is an important troubleshooting technique that should come before slamming your fist on the return key fifty times in a row.

    An entire afternoon of my life was given to putting a white square less than a centimeter across on my blog so that strangers will share my writing with other strangers by pinning it to virtual tack boards.  There are life-saving surgeries that take less time.

    But I’ve got a damn Pinterest button now. At least, I think I do. I’m sure I speak for everyone in my home when I say if you’re reading this and don’t see a Pinterest button, please DON’T tell me.

  • I enjoy comics, therefore I am a geek.  I think.

    I enjoy comics, therefore I am a geek. I think.

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    I admit it. I had X-men comics as a kid.

    A couple weeks ago as I was skimming the Internet, I  saw the latest Avengers: Age of Ultron trailer.  I saw it five times in a row.  When I discovered in the comment stream that the movie opens on April 23 here in Brazil, a full week earlier than in the US, I squealed for joy.

    Last Friday, I was browsing books on Amazon and it recommended the fourth compilation of the Saga series.  I hadn’t even realized it was out!  I gave thanks to the omniscient Amazon gods and ordered it immediately.

    This week I’m putting the final touches on the second draft of my 216 page graphic novel.

    I can no longer hide from the truth.  I am a geek.

    I suppose I’ve always known on some level, although I’ve repressed it for decades.  My brother is a gamer and has actually attended a Dragoncon, so I think it might be genetic.  I definitely don’t think it was anything my parents or society did.  I grew up in an upper-middle class suburb outside of Atlanta in a congressional district that doesn’t even have a Democratic party office.  There were club sports, sleepovers, and more churches than gas stations.  I had everything necessary to be totally mainstream.  Yet, my absolute favorite cartoons growing up were X-men and Batman.  I watched reruns of Batman every day after school long after I knew I couldn’t admit it at my lunch table.

    I was very confused.  I liked X-men comics, but I also made top grades, was elected to student council, and played varsity sports.  I didn’t have trouble making friends or shopping at the Gap.  It was made clear, by people on both sides of the line, that people who liked comics and superheroes didn’t do those kinds of things.  Also, I have a vagina, so I couldn’t possibly be a comics fan.  I was assigned a side, which I’ve stuck with until now.

    And there are most definitely sides.  I’ve done my research, and the internet divides people into two distinct camps: geeks and non-geeks.

    Geeks like comic.  They also enjoy animé, very elaborate games that require an entirely new language of acronyms like MUDs, ADnD, and MMORPGs, dressing as characters from their favorite comic/movie/tv show/video game, and toys.  Lots of toys.  When not cosplaying, geeks also enjoy wearing cotton tshirts with witty quotes or logos proudly promoting their geekhood.

    Non-geeks enjoy the outdoors, Starbucks, Top Gear, and yogurt.  They frequently wear cotton tshirts with logos promoting their favorite sports team and/or player.  They believe books with pictures are for children and adults only read celebrity cookbooks, Literature (with a capitol L), or war memoirs.  When not wearing their team colors, they are wearing Old Navy or J. Crew depending on income.

    Since high school, I have been living my life as a non-geek.  I love Starbucks and my reading time has been devoted to Capitol-L authors such as Jhumpa Lahiri, Barbara Kingsolver, Margaret Atwood, and Toni Morrison.  Then some time in my mid-20s, I came across a list of the “100 greates books of the 20th century.” I don’t remember who created the list. I think it was Times or maybe a freshman English major at Berkley.  Either way, I know the list included Watchmen by Alan Moore, illustrated by Dave Gibbons.  I was intrigued.  How did this comic, masquerading as a novel, end up on a list of “Greatest Books”?  The contradiction was there in the title, Greatest BooksThis list put a comic alongside Hemingway and Alice Walker.

    I was aware of the term graphic novel but didn’t understand it until I read Watchmen.  Then for Christmas my brother gave me Y: The Last Man and 100 Bullets.  Another year, a cousin gave me American Born Chinese.  I discovered Fun Home was named the best book of 2006 by Time.  Then one day I looked at my bookshelf and discovered a row of graphic novels, what my non-geek kind still refer to as comic books.  I had a shelf full of comic books!

    What can I say?  I’m sucker for a good story.  Combine memorable and complex characters with good writing and you’ve got me, even if the story is told in illustrated panels.  American Born Chinese is one of the most elegant pieces of story telling I’ve ever read, and it’s a graphic novel for young adults.

    I guess that makes me a geek, but I’m a little worried about what coming out as geek means. Geeks seem to make being a geek such a huge part of their identity; I’m afraid about half-assing the role. Can I love the Avengers movies without understanding the difference between The Avengers, The Mighty Avengers, and Avengers Assemble?  Because I’m really busy and just don’t have the time to figure that out.  Do I have to be willing to stand in line for two hours for an autograph from a Star Trek cast member?  Because frankly there’s nothing short of life saving necessities that I would stand in line for two hours to get.  Although I admire the passion. And the patience.  I could use more of both.

    Oh, and about the costumes…they look wondrous but also super impractical.  If I’m going to walk miles around a conference hall filled with 100,000 people, I’d prefer something breathable.  Is there a character I could portray in linen pants and a pair of Toms?  No?  Well, maybe I’ll write one.  As soon as this non-geek geek gets her first graphic novel sold.  But that’s a post for next week.