At the end of November, I started at a new job. For the least 6 years, since I finished a postdoc, I’ve been working only peripherally to my degree. That’s been harder than I wanted to admit. It often felt like having my “nose pressed against the glass.” I love to write, but I...
For many years, I’ve worked as an editor and writer, with technical and management duties taking up only a portion of my days. On Monday, I’ll start a new job as a Data Engineer. In this role, I’ll be responsible for managing (and documenting) the flow of information within the company, for getting analysts...
Something I’ve discovered about myself over the years is that I rely on being busy to get me writing. It’s a lot easier to write for an hour when I have a busy, but predictable, day than when I have nothing else to do. For the last year or so, I’ve been quite busy,...
With our empty buckets, our ready shovels, we could choose to scoop the moist sand, construct a castle, hollow a moat, perhaps, given time, raise battlements. A retinue of crabs could stand guard, protect us from the angry surf, until they are swept away or bribed by promises of mild summer. Our policies, benevolent...
It’s easy to say “this is a writing job” when the title is “writer,” but many more jobs are primarily about writing. These days, many “journalists” are writers who rely on published accounts to rewrite stories (and hello, fellow bloggers!), and “social media manager” probably involves a lot of writing as well. It’s hard...
When I edit for individual authors, I typically get thanked in the acknowledgments section, and I can list it on my website. Not so for agency work. Most of my non-fiction work comes through specialized editing companies that handle the advertising, client communication, payment collection, and so on. This comes with two costs: (1)...
A poet I know, Nadia Gerassimenko, asked for early reviews of her new chapbook, at the water’s edge. The review is below, but the short version is, if you enjoy poetry in the least, buy it. One of the first things to notice about at the water’s edge is the orthography. No capital letters...
Sometimes, the words won’t come. Here’s my advice: accept it. But don’t accept it and just stop. Accept it as a symptom. Maybe you need more sleep. Maybe your plot is weak, and you need to figure out how to fix it. Maybe a problem at home or school or work is weighing on...
Although I often write about things as they “ought” to be in writing, I don’t believe that there ought to be an ought. Instead, I am discussing the ways that are most likely to lead to readers (or editors or agents, etc.) feeling “connected” to the writing or “understanding” the writing. I do my...
Dramatic irony is when the reader knows things the characters don’t. It abounds in literature and film, from horror (he’s right behind you!) to drama and romance. Dramatic irony can also destroy a good story when there’s poor justification for it. If two characters who are typically honest could clear up the major plot...