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Taron Egerton photographed by Jarett Wieselman for Buzzfeed.
This is science.
Reenactor throws a spear at a drone
What a time to be alive.
āThe medieval warrior, realizing the consequences of his impulsive act, immediately approached the owner of the drone and offered to pay for the damage.
The owner of the drone was so impressed by the brilliant attack that he suggested organizing a competition for bringing down ādragonsā with short spears next year.
Drone owners have another year to develop a unique ādragon-likeā design for their flying machines.ā (x)
I am 100% cooler with this knowing that the spear-thrower realizedĀ āoops maybe I shouldnāt have done thatā and tried to make it right, andĀ that the guy who the drone belonged to was cool with it
just so everyone knows, this has already been memorialized in a runestone
Everything about this post blesses those involved with a +4 on their next Today is Good Day roll
Posted, Friday, June 4, 2016 by Michael Swanwick
Posted, Friday, June 4, 2016 by Michael SwanwickĀ
Last weekend, at Balticon, I got into a discussion with Connie WillisĀ about teaching new writers. She told of the time she addressed a group of such and said, āIām going to tell you everything thatās wrong with your stories.ā They all eagerly began pulling out typescripts. But Connie stopped them, saying, āNo, I donāt need to see them. Because you all make the same mistakes.ā And proceeded to run down the list of Universal Newbie Mistakes. Then Connie laughed and said, āBoy, I never did that again.ā We didnāt discuss what those mistakes were, because anybody with experience teaching already knows. But it occurred to me that it might benefit some gonnabe writers if I spelled out the mistakes youāre making that are so obvious that I donāt even have to look at your story to know youāre making them. 1. Starting before the beginning of the story. The first thing I do with a student story is to cross out all the scene-setting that new writers think is necessary before the story can begin. Somewhere on page 3 or page 8 or page 32, Iāll finally write: BEGIN HERE. 2. Overwriting. Even after that opening has been pruned, up to half the words in your story are unnecessary. Once you start describing something you keep on describing it and describing it and describing it until there are so many words in the way itās impossible to see. Poul Anderson observed that three evocations of the senses are sufficient to make any scene vivid. A man walking along the beach hears the crash of waves and cries of gulls. He smells the salt air. He feels the seaweed popping underfoot. Youāve nailed it. No need to go on describing the beach. Move on to whatās happening. Similarly, you only need two well-chosen details to bring a locale to life. InJohn Cheeverās notebooks, he described a Sunday morning when he was hung-over and in a friendās living room, while the friend chain-smoked and talked about his impending divorce and the attendant heartbreak. Cheever wondered how to capture the scene on paper. His glance kept going from the ashtray, overflowing with cigarette butts to the agonizingly blue sky outside the picture window. Blue sky, ashtray. Ashtray, blue sky. Nothing more is needed. 3. Not trusting the reader. Technically, number 2 belongs under this heading, but I thought that it needed spelling out. The new writer is prone to lecturing, hectoring, underlining, repetition, condescending, and above all repetition simply because he or she does not trust the reader to āget it.ā Your readers are on your side. They want your story to be good. And theyāre surprisingly perceptive ā chiefly because theyāve read a lot of fiction before yours. You can trust them. Those rare exceptions who are complete idiots? Forget āem. You canāt win them over anyway. 4. Being afraid of emotion. Yes, emotions ā particularly negative emotions ā can be scary. Embarrassing too. But theyāre a good part of the reason we read fiction. If the logic of your story insists that your protagonist would throw herself in front of a train, then itās a violence to the story not to let her do so. Flaubert understood this. So should you. 5. Having too few characters. Your characters live in human society. The reader cannot see that society without a representative sampling of its citizenry. And your protagonist needs to express a variety of emotions in order to feel well-rounded. Also ā and I speak from experience here ā while itās possible to write a story with three characters, which is usually considered the minimum, or even fewer, which usually involves the environment serving as an uncredited character ā pulling it off is hard work. Not many new writers have the craft to do that. 6. Letting the ending trail off. When the storyās over, itās over. Get off the stage. You donāt need to let everybody know what came next or how the characters felt about it. You donāt have to end with the storyās climax. But what comes after shouldnāt sap away all the energy of the climax. 7. Not having a good ending. Back when I was on the Nebula Jury, which is a long story and one I wonāt go into here, I read pretty close to all the genre short fiction published over several years. From this, I learned two things: First, that no story that starts out badly ever turns into a good story later. Second, that nine times out of ten, when a story that starts out well turns out badly, it happens in the final pages. This set of failings applies to pretty much all writers, whatever theyāre trying to accomplish. But thereās one thatās specific to writers of fantasy and science friction and thatās this:Ā 8. Your ideas are too small and derivative.
But thatās a big topic and one Iāll tackle some other day. Maybeā¦.
Indoor cats' lament. #catsofinstagram #cats #knives #gracie #creeper
This Village Without Roads Is Straight Out Of A Fairytale Book
The villageĀ Giethoorn known as theĀ āVenice of the Netherlandsā was founded in 1230 and resembles some of the most beautiful fairytale passages. The stunning oddity contains no roads or modern transportation. With the help of canals and 176 bridges, people are able to navigate through its wonders.
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Impulsive me wants to sell everything right now and move there.
This is crazy awesome.
My sister thinks I'm kinda alright. #owls #owlmug #sisters #justbecause
I don't WANT to stay in bed this late. You see how this isn't my fault, right? #Knives #cats #catsofinstagram #bedhostage
Rogue turkeys are slowly taking over my 'hood. #wildlife #birdswithballs #cheboygan #puremichigan
Spoils. #art #artwork #arttherapy #skull #flamingskull #raccoon
Gifts from my sister. #initials #books #notebooks #bookstagram #feelingthelove
An overnight with family then off to Vegas! #lockedandloaded #vegasbound #sincity #RT16
Packing: Level Expert. #stowaways #cathair #knowwhereyourtowelis #RT16
Dear Vacation...please come faster. #snow #lotsofsnow #springinnorthernmichigan #vegasbound #RT16
Cats: 1 Sneaks: 0 #cats #catsofinstagram #damncat #damnyousalazar #shakesfist