Saturday, January 31, 2009

Winter's lock is shuddering

I heard children playing outside today. I was struck by how unusual that seems these days.

Winter is reading time. (Well, it's always reading time. But especially in winter.)

Now in progress:

Scar Night by Alan Campbell. My tolerance for dystopian SF/F isn't what it used to be. When I was younger, I liked things dark, and so edgy you could cut yourself. Now, no - when I go off into a fictional landscape, I find the noir starts to get monochromatic and monotonous when laid on with a trowel. I like this book so far, though - it reads like the baby generated by a back-alley bang between China Mieville and Neil Gaiman (perhaps surprisingly, Neil tops) and the baby is then circumcised in a bris straight out of the ritual books of Gormenghast. Pirates vs ninjas? Played out. How about angels vs. assassins?

London: The Biography by Peter Ackroyd. Years ago, I read Mike Wallace and Edwin G. Burrows's Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898, and loved it madly--in part because it was comparable in size to a Manhattan phone book, and so utterly thorough. I also loved it because I know New York's streets well as they are now, and I love being able to visualize the ones no longer there. London's a much older city to fit in a big book, and the reading experience is different because I've never been there. But the prevailing sense of love and interaction is similar, because the authors understand the way cities are beings in their own right, and for a person to try to comprehend their vast lives is a lot like one of my red blood cells trying to understand me.

Friday, January 30, 2009

...this thing on?...

Hi all, I'm Monica, recently cut loose from the Chicago Reader (where I spent nearly 14 years), and now rambling as a free agent. Now, here's an icky issue we laid-off writers contend with: when it first happened, although it came as no shock, I was so frakking angry. Not at the Reader editors, no, they had to make the best of a shitty situation. The only employment-hell-related thing I can think of that's worse than being laid off from a job you loved is having to be the one who lays off longtime collaborators and friends, because the incompetent hacks who bought your company aren't willing to do the decent thing and come do their dirty work in person where we can throw shoes at them.

I am bummed about my industry dying because, in part, there are an infinite number of monkeys on the Internet willing to do an infinite amount of typing for free. (Or stealing other people's typing - no, I won't forget, Huffpo). So what do I do now? Contribute to the problem? Be a scab?

Problem is, I'm a writer. It's what I do. When I'm not blocked, I'm typing and I can't shut up.