5 Links For A More Balanced Writer's Life

This week I found myself having nightmares about conspiracies and daydreaming about a long vacation at some remote beach. That’s when I realized my life was once again out of balance.

Who among us hasn’t felt like they were running uphill at full speed for days on end? It’s a common experience, especially if you’re trying to balance more than just a small family and your writing career. For most of us we’re balancing a day job, family (and all those household things that go with it), volunteer activities and a host of other responsibilities as well as launching (or maintaining) a writing career.

Yet even in the midst of all those responsibilities, and maybe even because we have them, it is important to find a balance between them and our peace of mind. The following 5 links can help you achieve a better balance.

1. Downshifting: The First Day of the Rest of My Life, by J.D. Roth: J.D. shares his personal journey from being a regular 9-to-5 Joe with huge debt and lots of wasted time to being a problogger with finances in great shape and no time to finding a balance between his new self-employed status and having time to do nothing.

2. 10 Tips on Leading a Balanced Life, by Allen Galbraith: Although this post is written for the 9-to-5 crowd and those self-employed in businesses other than writing, there are some helpful tips nonetheless.

3. 5 Tips for Better Work-Life Balance, by Jen Uscher and Miranda Hitti: These tips are more generalized (and also more focussed on 9-to5ers) but, again, some of them are helpful, especially when it comes to family and household responsibilities.

4. WE ARE NOT ALONE: The Writer’s Guide to Social Media, by Kristen Lamb: This book is specifically for writers and is a great tool for learning how to manage marketing via social media so that it doesn’t become a time suck.

5. Sensitive (Mental) Health: HSPs and Burnout by Elaine Aron: This very short article is specifically for highly sensitive people, though I think some of it applies to non-hsps as well.

Balance is attainable, even if for a brief period. What are some tips you’ve discovered on maintaining a balance between your writing career and the rest of your life?

 

This is a reprint from Virginia Ripple‘s The Road To Writing.

Why Do I Procrastinate?

I ran across an online discussion today addressing why we procrastinate as writers. My comment went on so long a realized that this was something I should address on my blog. So here goes.

I spent 20 years procrastinating in regards to my writing. Hell, I spent nearly 50 years procrastinating if you start counting from when I determined that I wanted to write historical fiction until the time I successfully published my first novel, Maids of Misfortune: A Victorian San Francisco Mystery.

What I find interesting is that in general I am not a procrastinator. I learned in 4th grade (best grade school teacher ever) that the students who buckled down and did their work first thing ended up with plenty of guilt free time to goof off, and I have pretty much applied that concept through the rest my life as a student, a college professor, a mother, wife, and friend. Not as a writer.

The only area of my life where I procrastinate regularly is as a fiction writer. I think that this is because writing fiction is absolutely personal-it is just for me. In all those other areas of life I have been motivated in large part by my sense of responsibility to others (to make my parents proud, to be the best professor I could be for my students, to take care of my family, and be there for my friends.).

When I do a good job (ie don’t procrastinate) my reward, in my mind, has always been to give myself permission to read fiction (ie goof off.) But even there I was careful not to start a good book unless I knew I could finish it before the next task in my “real life” came due. I was always worried that my pleasure in reading would distract me from my  responsibilities!

Only twice in my life as an adult did I let what I wanted come first for an extended period. The first time was when I was 23, and I quit my first boring job and for a solid year just read (the new feminist body of work was just coming out at this time and I devoured it). This led me to the decision to get a doctorate in history, with an emphasis women’s history.

The second time came when I was 38 and had left my tenured track job in Texas (oh those good old boys were too much for this feminist to take) and I faced the possible future of being a part-time adjunct teacher for the rest of my life. I decided if this was to be my fate, then I was justified in taking the time to fulfill my life-long dream of writing fiction. Oh the bliss! Six months of writing my mystery, my husband at work, my daughter in day-care. But then I got a full-time job at the local community college, and I no longer put myself and my writing first. That book never got published, and I stopped writing anything new.

So now, retired, my daughter grown with children of her own, my husband happily working on his own writing, I have finally put myself first. I rewrote the first mystery, published it, and I now spend day after day writing the sequel. I can spend the hours it takes to let my mind run free (and perhaps even not hear when my husband says something to me-cause I am off in that world of my own.) I can decide to go back to writing after dinner, rather than use that time to make call backs to friends. I can be selfish (listen to the pejorative term I am still using!)

However, I think in writing this I have just had a revelation. When I “procrastinate” by checking my email, or commenting on someone else’s post, or writing for my own blog, it is not because I enjoy these activities more than I do working on my book. It is because these activities are more other directed. I feel more comfortable doing these things because they help other indie writers, or because they will help sell my book (and produce the income needed to keep the family budget healthy).

I don’t think that this is necessarily a totally gendered response. Goodness knows male writers have put paid employment, in order to support their families, above their desire to write for centuries. However, until recently, most women didn’t even see there was a choice. Other responsibilities, financial or not, always came first. And I think that I often procrastinate as a writer because I haven’t yet entirely thrown off the belief that if I do something, just for myself, I am not being a good person.

So, how about you? Why do you procrastinate?

And while you think about it, I am going to go write a couple more paragraphs on my next novel, selfish person that I am!
 

This is a reprint from M. Louisa Locke‘s The Front Parlor.

10 Steps to Solving Standard Tech Problems

This article, by Meryl K. Evans, originally appeared on her meryl.net Content Maven blog on 4/26/11 and is reprinted here in its entirety with her permission.

Being your own tech support person speeds up fixing the problem. While you’re not the expert in whatever fails to work the way you expect it, many companies have set up self-help systems anyway or they’ll ask if you did this ‘n that. So trying to solve the problem — or narrow it — can save you time as you’ll have the answers to standard tech support questions.

Tech support often follows a script. You contact them to report a problem. “Is it plugged in?” “Is it turned on?” They’ll continue down the list from the simple to the complex depending on your answers. Think of it like a flow chart: if yes, go this way. If no, go that way.

These steps are not in a specific order as different problems call for different approaches. The 10 steps will solve the most common problems. 

  • Reboot or shut down/turn back on. This works for almost every computer, accessory, mobile device and other electronics. When my digital video recorder (DVR) freezes or acts weird, I shut it down and turn it back on. This solves the DVR’s problem 99.99 percent of the time. We had to call the service provider once or twice in all these years. With laptops and PCs, try to shut down the computer before rebooting. Sometimes it can take a long time to shut down. Go do something else for a while and if the computer looks frozen, then turn it off. Wait a few minutes before turning it back on. I had a monitor acting weird (the other was fine) and asked my husband about it. He told me to turn it off and back on. (I can’t believe I didn’t even think of this.) It worked. I had never encountered this problem and sometimes we overlook the obvious.
  • Run and update your anti-virus (daily) and anti-spyware software (weekly). I know plenty of successful professionals who don’t have their anti-virus applications automatically checking for updates on a regular schedule (more than once a day). Sometimes a situation requires turning off the anti-virus app and people forget to turn it back on. They forgot they turned off the software and never turned it back on. Most standard anti-virus apps run a full-system scan at least once a week.  Make sure yours does.
  • Check cables and switches. The cable on my printer sometimes falls out. (The cable is barely long enough.) So first thing I do when printer doesn’t turn on — check that cable. My son has a laptop that only works if plugged in because the battery is dead and not worth replacing. He said the laptop wasn’t working. It was the surge protector where he had it plugged that was turned off.
  • Go to manufacturer and developer websites. Manufacturer and developer websites often have forums, Q&As, support pages, knowledgebases and documentation with common problems and their solutions.
  • Search the problem. Some of us forget that people experience the same problems and post them somewhere outside of the developer or manufacturer website. Look at this post I did in 2008 that solves the problem of the mouse not working in Microsoft Word. Notice the latest comment is a couple of months old. This is a three-year-old post. It’s tempting to ask a blogger, writer or expert for help. They won’t all respond or take the time to help because they get many requests like yours. They’re not trying to be rude, but they have jobs to do plus they are thinking “Let me Google that for you.” Be specific as possible in your search by entering error messages (if you get one) and the name of the application. Copy the error message or take a screen shot.
  • Know how to save, export and import files in different formats. Many people emailed me when Office 2007 came out because they couldn’t open the .docx, .xlsx and .pptx files. Two solutions: Have the sender save these files as .doc, xls and ppt, and download the free Office file converter from Microsoft. Make “File > Save as” your friend. Thankfully, we’re seeing more standard formats like CSV files and ical, which you can import into Outlook, Gmail, Apple Address Book and more. Also find a resource (search for them — many free ones out there) that lets you save files into Adobe Acrobat (.pdf) format because the reader is free and everyone can open and view them.
  • Narrow down the causes. A new tablet kept posting a notification that the new microSD card may be corrupted. I looked for a microSD card reader so I could test it out to rule out the possibility it was a bad card. Two of my readers were broken! Luckily, I found one and it confirmed the microSD card worked. I also verified there were no files on it. If it had files, I would transfer them somewhere else for safekeeping before reformatting the card. Problem solved. No more notifications.
  • Uninstall and reinstall. After trying everything, remove and reinstall the app unless it’s something big like an operating system. First, back up your data files to a safe place.
  • Test it on another computer or app. A client’s website looked weird in Firefox. Rather than panicking thinking the client’s website had a serious problem, I checked the website in other browsers and it showed up fine. The problem was a small one (it would’ve been a biggie had it happened on all browsers).
  • Backup and sync all data. I have a stand-alone external drive that holds a backup of all my computer data AND I also backup to a cloud service. The cost of various backup solutions have gotten cheaper so there’s no excuse for not having a backup. Remember to backup your devices, too.

 Solving the problem on your own saves time, avoids sugary sweet scripts thanking you for being a valued customers and how they want to help you or waiting for someone to respond to your call or email. Even if you can’t find the answer, you have a list of steps you’ve taken and can get through the script faster.

What tech support tricks do you have?

 

Take Stock And Think Ahead When You Get Extra Time To Write

This article, by Iain Broome, originally appeared on his Write For Your Life on 4/25/11.

For most of us, it’s the Easter holidays. If like me, you live in the UK, there’s also another bank holiday next week, for the Royal Wedding. If like me again, you’ve taken the days inbetween off work too, you’re looking at a nice chunk of time away from reality.

What are you going to do with that time?

I’m doing two things. First, I’m going to spend approximately 80-90 per cent of my holiday preparing for my impending wedding, including building a path, raking grass and causing myself untold backache. The rest of the time, I plan to write.

Quick correction. I plan to plan to write.

Take your time

When you have an extended period of free time, it’s tempting to dive straight in and write frantically. I know it is for me.

Because I have a full-time job, I have to work my fiction (and blogging) around my free time. When a big chunk of it comes along, I sometimes get excited and rush to the keyboard.

And yet, I know that this isn’t always the best use of my time. Rarely am I able to simply sit down and write for long periods without an element of planning up front.

When the opportunity arises, it’s natural for us writers to worry less about preparation and want to get cracking – to actually produce some work.

But actually, it’s far more important for us to make sure that we use that time effectively. To make sure that we squeeze every ounce of usefulness out of having more writing time available than usual.

Take stock and prosper

Planning isn’t always about planning, not in the typical sense of the word. For me, planning is as much about what’s gone before as it is about what’s to come. It’s about checking in and taking stock.

Read the rest of the post on Write For Your Life. 

The Ten Commandments Of The Successful Author

This post, by Roni Loren, originally appeared on her Fiction Groupie blog on 3/30/11.

So as I go through this whole writing journey, I spend a lot of time observing other authors–be it in person or, more likely, on the internet. I want to know what makes one so successful and the other not as much. What makes one likable and another unapproachable. In other words, what separates the good from the great. And so, based on my very unscientific observations, I’ve come up with my own Ten Commandments. These are the things I’ve seen successful authors do and the things I strive to emulate.  So here we go…

 

The Ten Commandments of a Successful Author
 

1. I will always strive to make the next book better than the last.
 

This is one that keeps me awake at night sometimes. The desire to make this next book better than the first one, to improve on every new project. We put so much effort into THAT book, you know the one to get the agent and the book deal. It’s the best we have to give on a page. Then the dream happens and you’re faced with book two and oh, you have a time limit this time, and oh if this one tanks, there may not be another book deal. *breathes into paper bag* The best authors out there manage to do this, even on tight deadlines, even when the check is already in the bank. They keep topping their own work.

2. I will not fear risk.
 

It’s tempting to be safe, to stick to what you know and what you know works. But the best authors don’t just put out book after book that follow the same formula. They take risks, they push boundaries, hell, some of them even test out different genre waters. With no risk, there’s no challenge. Write the stories you want to write. If some don’t work out, that’s okay.

3. I will never believe "I’m the sh*t." Well, at least not for an extended period of time.
 

We’ve all seen it. The author that hits whatever level and now seems to wear the "I’m the sh*t" tiara. Don’t do it. No matter if you top every bestseller list. It’s okay when you get a good review or hit a list or write a passage that rocks to think to yourself–yep, I’m the shizz nizz, baby. But keep it to yourself–please–and don’t let it go to your head. No one’s that awesome. 

4. I shall not wallow in a pool of self-pity and doubt when someone doesn’t like me or my writing.
 

Someone, probably many someones, will absolutely hate your writing. It’s inevitable. You can’t please everyone. If you let negative feedback get in your head, it will eat away at your confidence like cancer. This goes for rejections too. Feel the sting, eat a piece of chocolate or take a shot of whiskey–whatever you’re preference–and move on. 

 

Read the rest of the post on Roni Loren‘s Fiction Groupie.

Announcement From The Editor

Due to technical difficulties, no new content will be posted to the Publetariat site by staff this evening. New content posting will resume as per usual tomorrow evening at 6pm PST. Publetariat members can still use the Forum and post to their own blogs, and commenting on existing content is still possible at this time as well. Thanks for your patience and support.

Invitation To The Madhouse ~ Report On Self-Publishing

This post, by Alexander M. Zoltai, originally appeared on his Notes From An Alien blog on 2/24/11.

{This post is almost a rant and purposefully written in a voice I rarely use…}

A madhouse is where insane persons are confined or a place exhibiting stereotypical characteristics of such a place.

This, to me, right now, is what self-publishing is.

Let me define my terms a bit more precisely:

“Sanity” has roots indicating “healthy condition” or “soundness of mind”. If I temporarily constrict my argument to the term “publishing”, most people who are trying to keep up with the frenetic pace of change in this arena of human experience would, I feel, tend to agree that publishing is not in a healthy condition or showing soundness of mind.

Many of those same people would go further and claim that self-publishing is the medicine needed for the sick field of publishing.

Well…

I’ve been involved in self-publishing for about six years now and the last year has seen me working overtime to come to terms with how to best take advantage of the opportunities that self-publishing seems to offer.

I don’t have space in this post to detail the ills of the traditional publishing route but anyone interested can easily find much to ponder.
 

Read the rest of the post on Alexander M. Zoltai‘s Notes From An Alien blog. 

Please Don't Reply

Good morning everyone. First, I would just like to say how thankful I am that Publetariat.com exists for those of us navigating the self-publishing world. I love the tag line: People who publish. Somewhere it seems like the people part of publishing got lost. No personalized rejection letters. Formulas instituted on genres based on sales, not the quality of the story. Obviously, these policies haven’t helped strengthen the community, but temporarily propped up the bottom line.

I have high hopes for the self-publishing/indie author movement. Last night, my husband and I sat at our kitchen table after the kids were in bed, both enjoying a beer. I explained what was going on in the publishing world. The traditional tasks performed by a publishing house–cover design, marketing, editing, typesetting–are being chopped up and provided by freelancers everywhere allowing authors to remain in control of their content and distribute freely to readers. He shrugged, popped open the top to another Dogfish Head and said "Sounds like open source to me." 

I now have the full support of my husband in my self-publishing goals. We’re big supporters of open source technology, and he sees self-publishing as a way to improve information dissemination, even if we’re talking about fiction novels. I think it’s a great metaphor.

My goals are:

  • Finish my first novel this summer, and publish a professional product this fall.
  • Promote Imperfect Timing and begin working this winter on my second novel about a nurse with too much personal debt that inhibits her ability to find romance (no, not in a cute Confessions of a Shopaholic way). 
  • Publish second novel in spring. Begin work on third novel, possibly a sequel to Imperfect Timing.

Having a publication date, even one self-determined, reinforces my desire to be a professional author. My writing experience mainly comes from four years of writing non-fiction copy for websites, online newsletters, and internet publications. Literature has always been something I’ve devoured, studied, or critqued. I used my minor coursework electives in college to take English Literature classes.

I never thought I would be a writer, much less an aspiring novelist. Then again, I didn’t plan on moving every two-five years to support a husband in the military and needing a career that allowed me to stay home with my two children. Writing can literally pack up and follow me from Norfolk, Va to San Diego, CA, then back to the east coast in Charelston, SC. Despite living in three different places in four years, and about to move again in less than six month, I am very happy where I’ve landed. I have a family full of love and an escape from the kid’s table to the grown-up conversations in the next room. 

Thank you for reading all the way to the end, and I’m very thankful to be joining the Publetariat.com community. And whatever you do, don’t reply. 🙂

Allowable Home Office Tax Deductions

Publetariat Contributor Julian Block shares this helpful tax information for writers and other freelancers:

The National Association of Realtors has a Web site for the general public, houselogic.com. At the site, [you will find a slideshow entitled] "Home Office Tax Deductions: Tips to Get It Right". The slides pair attention-getting images with brief explanations of what expenses are allowable for freelance writers and others who operate businesses from their homes. The explanations alert [viewers] to opportunities to save taxes this year and get a head start for next year. Here is a direct link to the slide show.

 

Goshen College Amish & Mennonite Author List

Why am I interested? I write Amish fiction, and I’m on the list. After I self published I’ve always been on the lookout for free websites to promote my books. It was my worry that I’d write a book that doesn’t sell after I hired a firm to promote for me. What works for me might not be the way most authors publish and sell their book. I’ve put my books in different author sites and blog posts, thinking that might take longer than paid advertising, but I wouldn’t lose money. Besides, I can always work on another book at the same time.

 

At the same time, I’m always looking for other sites I can submit to. That’s why I put my name or book titles in google search often to see what has turned up on the Internet. Some of the links are where my books are sold and many of the google searches came from my promoting and blog posts. I like it when I find what I’ve done so far leads to a submission on google that I didn’t submit. This information I found recently. The website is Center for Mennonite Writing

Ervin Beck, Professor Emeritus of English at Goshen College is editor of Journal of the Center and maintains the website. He wanted to write an article about serial fiction by and about Mennonites and Amish. He intended to make a list of authors and knew of eleven. So he sent his list to Joe Springer, Curator of Goshen College. The list of authors Professor Beck got back was about three times longer.

Professor Beck complied an informal bibliography containing a complete listing of authors, brief biographies, name of series, publishers, individual books and dates of publication which is listed on his website.

Guess what? The first two books in my Nurse Hal Among The Amish series had made Joe Sprinter’s list. He’s always on the look out for new authors and their Amish or Mennonite books so he keeps an up to date list. Information is in the Mennonite Historical Library list at Goshen College.

What didn’t make the list was the stand alone titles such as Jodi Picoult’s best selling Plain Truth. Since this is the first list he’s posted some fiction series probably have been unintentionally omitted. Professor Beck says corrections and additions are welcome.

Later I checked again and found another list of Amish books on a Bethel College, Kansas site Mennonite Library & Archives complied by Barbara A. Thiesen. Joe Springer had helped her with the list and for 2007 – 2008 he had added my Amish book Christmas Traditions which isn’t in the series and happens to be in the library. Actually, the main character in that book is in my Nurse Hal series but adding her to the series came as an after thought.

As the writer of Amish fiction, the lists were interesting to read. Of course, I was thrilled to find my name made both lists. It’s an honor to be included. I was surprised since I’m new as an author and an Independent one. When I wrote the first Nurse Hal book I didn’t think about starting a series. That idea came from the readers of the first book A Promise Is A Promise. They wanted me to keep writing about Nurse Hal. It’s amazing how everything seems to fall into place for a reason. The powerful reach of the Internet doesn’t hurt, either. That helps me pick up new readers interested in my books.

 

This is a reprint from Fay Risner’s BooksByFay blog.

Dress For Success: Just Don't Expect The IRS To Help You Foot The Bill

Your latest book is going gangbusters; the reviews are to die for; and sales are off the charts. Oprah wants to schmooze, and you’re green-lighted for Dr. Phil, Regis and Ellen. On the other hand, you’ve been chained to your keyboard for a year, and your wardrobe shows it!

As a media favorite, it’s crucial that you are suitably dressed for chats with television’s glitterati. My advice for men: Wear a jacket, tie and pants. Whether this is a three-piece suit or a blazer and slacks is your call. But unless you seek to establish that you’re sartorially disadvantaged, try to look as serious as if you were applying for a loan.
 
My advice to women, gleaned from observing those who regularly show up on TV: Wear a jacket with long sleeves—not a dress or a short-sleeved jacket. You’ll look more serious. Strong, bright colors are best; avoid black or white. Overdo your makeup by about 10 percent, but tone down the jewelry and accessories. What interests viewers are your opinions, not your unusual necklace.
 
The right outfits don’t come cheap. So how about easing the pain to your wallet by writing off what you wear to interviews that result from the fruits of your labor? Don’t even think about it. Generally, clothing costs are not deductible as business expenses. They are considered nondeductible personal expenses.
 
The Internal Revenue Service and the courts agree that no write-offs are allowed for clothing that’s adaptable to general wear off the job. It’s no excuse that you need to be fashionably or expensively dressed for TV interviews. Your outfits are obviously appropriate away from work.
 
For example, the United States Tax Court threw out deductions for suits bought by Edward J. Kosmal, a Los Angeles deputy district attorney who planned to leave government service. Ed decided that the right way to impress his future employers and colleagues was to upgrade his wardrobe to the sartorial standards of a “big-time Beverly Hills P.I. [personal injury] attorney.” The court denied the deductions because, unquestionably, the clothes were fitting for ordinary wear.
 
HAIRSTYLING AND MAKEUP. The IRS and the courts sometimes differ on deducting hairdressing costs. The IRS classifies such payments as nondeductible personal expenses, even for a big-name, New York fashion designer like Mary McFadden, who’s in the public eye and “noted professionally for her distinctive hair style.”
 
However, an IRS defeat occurred in 1978, when the Tax Court sided with Margot Sider. Margot wrote off the cost of 45 extra beauty-parlor visits that were made, she argued, only because her hairstyle was an integral part of her job demonstrating and selling “a high-priced line” of cosmetics in a department store to a “sophisticated clientele.” As soon as she stopped selling, she went back to a simpler style.
 
At her trial, Margot cited a 1963 Supreme Court decision written by Justice John Marshall Harlan: “For income-tax purposes Congress has seen fit to regard an individual as having two personalities: One is a seeker after profit who can deduct the expenses incurred in that search; the other is a creature satisfying his needs as a human and those of his family but who cannot deduct such consumption and related expenditures.”
 
Margot maintained she’d spent the amount in issue as a “seeker after profit,” not as “a creature satisfying her own needs.” That satisfied the judge, who ruled she was entitled to fully deduct expenditures beyond “the ordinary expenses of general personal grooming.”
 
The IRS had no trouble convincing the Tax Court that Vivian Thomas shouldn’t be allowed to deduct grooming expenses. Vivian worked as a private secretary for an attorney who required her to be perfectly coiffed at all times while in the office. So she deducted the cost of twice-weekly trips to the beauty parlor. Sorry, said the court, but a secretary’s coiffure maintenance costs are not allowable— even in her case.
 
Back in 1979, actress September Thorp offered an unassailable not-adaptable-for-general-wear defense—and won—when the IRS challenged her deduction for makeup: “I’m in Oh! Calcutta! and I have to appear nude onstage every night,” argued September, “so I cover myself with body makeup. I go through a tube every two weeks, and it’s very expensive.”
 
—————————————————————————————————————————-
Julian Block is an attorney and author based in Larchmont, N.Y. He has been cited as “a leading tax professional” (New York Times), "an accomplished writer on taxes" (Wall Street Journal) and "an authority on tax planning" (Financial Planning Magazine). This article is excerpted from "Julian Block’s Easy Tax Guide for Writers, Photographers, and Other Freelancers".

15 Famous Authors Who Were Published Late In Life

This article, from Online Colleges and Universities, is reprinted here in its entirety with that site’s permission.

For as much as cultures around the world obsess over youth and its follies and promises, those young whippersnappers don’t always know how to keep up with the experience, wisdom and practice of their elders. Whether a university, life itself or some combination thereof provided them with a valuable education, plenty of celebrated writers never hit their stride until they approached middle age — or even later than that! They defy stereotypes of the temporally advanced as slow and unproductive, offering some excellent, enduring works to the literary canon.

Many of the authors featured here were actually publishing short stories, essays and articles earlier in life. This list zeroes on their dominant mediums; the ones for which they’re almost exclusively known — typically, novels, memoirs and other long-form works.

  1. Charles Bukowski: Much of Charles Bukowski’s adult life was spent puttering around at the post office and in and out of different odd jobs. He published a couple of short stories as a young man, but quickly cut it short when he embarked on a 10-year bender. It wasn’t until age 49 when his most notable works began hitting shelves. Largely semi-autobiographical, novels such as Post Office, Women and Factotum channeled many of the experiences and anxieties of his "lost years." Most of Bukowski’s straightforward, grim prose reflects American society’s teeming, oft-marginalized fringes.

  2. Laura Ingalls Wilder: Inspired by her adult daughter’s writing career, Laura Ingalls Wilder decided to embark on one of her very own in her 40s. She eventually landed a regular column and an editorial position, but it wasn’t until she reached her 60s when her fame really fell into place. Wilder drew from her own pioneer childhood when penning the Little House series (the most famous of which remains Little House on the Prairie). Today, these young adult reads continue to enjoy staggering popularity, even spawning a well-received television adaptation.

  3. William S. Burroughs: As one of the foremost writers from the Beat generation, a movement many typically associate with youth, William S. Burroughs never published his first novel until he was 39. The accidental shooting of his wife during a game of William Tell gone horrifically askance spurned him to start writing. Junky and Queer delved deeply into his gruesome battle with heroin addiction and alcoholism as well as his homosexuality. He had done a small amount of journalistic work while attending Harvard, but never seriously pursued publication, fiction or poetry until much later in life.

  4. Raymond Chandler: Snarky, ironic private detective Philip Marlowe revolutionized the noir genre. The creation of former civil engineer, journalist and other odd job holder Raymond Chandler came about after he started dissecting pulp fiction and writing to make ends meet. His first short stories ended up in various magazines when he was 45, but they’ve remained largely overshadowed by later books. The Big Sleep, Chandler’s first novel and the maiden voyage of iconic Marlowe, ended up published at age 51.

  5. Kenneth Grahame: Most of Kenneth Grahame’s career clicked away at the Bank of England, where he eventually came to work as its secretary. During that stint, he published a couple of short stories here and there as a hobby, but never got serious until after retirement. At 49, Grahame finally achieved literary acclaim. The Wind in the Willows still draws in young and old audiences alike, who delight in the adventures of the memorable Mr. Toad, Mr. Badger, Mole, Ratty and other fantastic characters inhabiting the Wild Wood.

  6. Richard Adams: Watership Down, the terrifying and much-beloved children’s classic packed with warring rabbits, ended up published in the author’s 50s. Richard Adams studied history rather than literature, taking a break to serve in World War II before returning. After completing his degree at Worcester College, the future author went on to join the British Civil Service and worked his way up to the Assistant Secretary position. He pursued writing as a hobby, but never took it too seriously until his daughters persuaded him to share the Lapine epic.

  7. Joseph Conrad: Interestingly enough, many scholars hold Joseph Conrad up as one of the English language’s greatest authors, though he never spoke it fluently until reaching his 20s. He led a life straight out of an adventure romance, with gunrunning, plenty of ships and trips to Africa and other locales. After retiring at 36, he turned his attentions towards writing and published his first novel – Almayer’s Folly – a year later. Some of Conrad’s most celebrated works, especially Heart of Darkness and Lord Jim, pulled directly from his exceptionally exciting, dangerous international exploits.

  8. Anthony Burgess: As both an expatriate teacher and a well-regarded critic, Anthony Burgess entered the literary canon already well-versed in common tropes and archetypes. He never pursued writing seriously until age 39, understandably dismissing it as a less-than-stable income, when published the first installment of The Long Day Wanes: A Malayan Trilogy (1956’s Time for a Tiger). Like many pursuing long-form fiction for the first time, these tales pulled from his experiences in Britain’s Asian colonies. However, A Clockwork Orange still remains Burgess’ most controversial, dissected novel. Pity, really. He actually quite disliked it!

  9. Henry Miller: Henry Miller worked as both a proofreader and a painter prior to metamorphosing into a serious author. His positions allowed him a network of exceptionally creative individuals, who eventually inspired the surreal, highly sexual works launching him into infamy. Prior to Miller’s publication of his inflammatory first novel, Tropic of Cancer, he only saw a couple of his articles printed under a contemporary’s name before turning 44. He wrote two other manuscripts prior to its release, but those landed on shelves either much later in life or posthumously.

  10. Flora Thompson: As with many of the other authors listed here, Flora Thompson dabbled in writing and published short pieces until finally springing for longer works. Most of her rich oeuvre consisted of literary criticism, nature essays, observations and short stories. At 63, she published the first volume of her semi-autobiographical Lark Rise to Candleford trilogy. These followed her girlhood, maturation and eventual postmistress position in several British offices.

  11. Marquis de Sade: Considering the Marquis’…ummm…"activities," it probably comes as little to no surprise to anyone that he didn’t come around to publishing much of anything until his later years. He was 51 when Justine unleashed a shockwave of scandal throughout France and beyond. These days, fans of erotic literature and political satire consider it an historical, essential read.

  12. Nirad C. Chaudhuri: During his career with the Indian Army, Nirad C. Chaudhuri served briefly as an accounting clerk and printed up many different articles on the side. After a time, he decided to move on and practice journalism full-time. In spite of this arc, Chaudhuri’s best-known works never hit the literary scene until his 50s. The first of his three major autobiographical and , The Autobiography of an Unknown Indian, was published when the author was 54; Thy Hand, Great Anarch! followed at 90; Three Horsemen of the New Apocalypse completed the trilogy at 100. Critics adore these reads for the excellent insight it provides into Indian politics and culture during and after British imperialist rule.

  13. Mary Wesley: Starting in her 50s, Mary Wesley published three modestly successful children’s books before deciding she wanted to reach more mature audiences. After turning 71, her first novel for adults, Jumping the Queue, hit the shelves and launched her second personal creative renaissance Following the auspicious debut, Wesley went on to write even more and saw them all go to print before her death.

  14. Wallace Stevens: One of the most celebrated American modernist poets started out working as a lawyer and executive of an insurance company. He occasionally dabbled in journalism and poetry while attending Harvard, but began composing in earnest around age 38. However, the vast majority of Wallace Stevens’ lauded output came about once he hit his 50s. The Collected Poems earned him a Pulitzer Prize in 1955.

  15. Mary Alice Fontenot: Mary Alice Fontenot wrote almost 30 books in her lifetime, and her writing career launched at 51. Most of her output revolved around children’s books, particularly the Clovis Crawfish series, and volumes of thoroughly-researched Louisiana history. This spitfire started out as a journalist, radio host and educator before moving on to the mediums that earned her an Acadiana Arts Council Lifetime Achievement Award. She continued to write pretty much up until her death.

 

I Am Offering A Writing Critique: Genre For Japan

This post, by Chuck Wendig, originally appeared on his terribleminds blog on 3/29/11 and is being reprinted here in its entirety as a public service message.

GENRE FOR JAPAN.

Heard of it?

It’s a sci-fi, fantasy and horror-based auction in service to the Red Cross to aid the victims of the Japanese earthquake and tsunami. It is filled with a ton of awesome stuff from your favorite authors past, present and future. Hello, Neil Gaiman? Mike Shevdon? Adam Christopher? Rowena Cory Daniels? Hell, the list goes on and on and the index of lots is right here.

Anyway, they asked me to contribute a little something-something, which is like asking a bait-minnow to hang out with a flock of majestic blue whales — hell, blue space whales, glorious and translucent as they float through the nebulae — but hey, I’m totally excited to have been asked and doubly excited that maybe someone will bid on my lot and send some money to the relief effort.

What do I have on the auction block?

First, an e-book of Irregular Creatures.

Second, a critique of your writing. Up to 5,000 words, which might be a short story or a piece of a novel. Is my critique worth anything? Well, hell, I dunno. I like to think so. Outside of my dubious writing advice that I offer here on this site, I have developed a number of books for White Wolf Game Studios, and that involved me helping writers hammer their first drafts into final drafts. You can ask them if I’m qualified, I guess.

Anyway, what I’m saying is, the bidding is now open.

Get on over there and pitch your coins into the hat if you care to. If not for my lot, then for another lot from another great publisher, editor, or author. Time to help out if you can, peeps.

Thanks, in advance. I’d also appreciate you spreading the word on this.

My Lot (Item 21) can be found here.
 

Public blogging platform WordPress hit by Distributed Denial of Service strike

A huge denial of service attack hit WordPress.com last week. The guess of the WordPress team is that the strike was motivated by political beliefs. Though WordPress.com was affected by the attack, the thousands of websites running a WordPress.org platform were not impacted.

WordPress.com gets Distributed Denial of Service attack to occur

Thursday, WordPress.com got hit by a denial of service attack. It was a huge one. WordPress.com, owned by the WordPress Foundation, is hosted by three large server farms. Part of the DDoS attack had gigabits of data sent. The WordPress servers received this data. The WordPress Distributed Denial of Service attack was larger than expected, although well-known web sites have DDoS attacks often. During the attack, websites hosted on WordPress.com were intermittently down.

The big web sites didn’t get impacted

The DDoS attack didn’t impact online websites such as CNN.com, Wired and Flickr even though they all run on WordPress. WordPress.org is the host for these online websites though. WordPress.com was attacked. The program from WordPress is used on sites such as Wired and CNN. They use WordPress as a content manager. However, using the WordPress program is not the very same as owning a WordPress.com site. WordPress Foundation hosts WordPress.com blogs. WordPress.org blogs and sites, on the other hand, are hosted on the company’s own servers. That means a DDoS attack on WordPress.com would not impact any website hosting their own installation of WordPress.

Paying for network security

It is really important to have network security in order to protect from DDoS and hacker attacks. Using WordPress.com as a larger service is where small businesses and individuals will outsource that security. Network security protection is offered by several of these hosting services. It is quite easy to send gigabits of information to a site. Keeping a site accessible for a larger business with its own website is more difficult to do because of this.

Citations

 

PC World

pcworld.com/article/221357/wordpress_recovers_from_huge_ddos_attack.html

 

Podcasts Are Coming Of Age

Podcasting has been around for a long time now, by internet standards. Anything that lasts more than a few months is long-lived by internet standards, but you know what I mean. Some things have their blaze of glory and disappear, though they leave a kind of legacy, like MySpace. Some things fire into the stratosphere incredibly briefly, incredibly brightly, and then are forgotten forever, like Chocolate Rain or the Star Wars Kid. They live on in infamy, in memory, but that’s about it. So it’s hard for anything, be it a person or an idea, to stick around for any length of time. Of course, podcasting isn’t really like a specific website or internet meme, but it is something that was either going to fly or sink.

With video-casting on YouTube and a website or three in every home, I did wonder back in the day (about 2008) if podcasting would really generate that desired state of normalcy, or if it would be something a geeky few would love briefly, before moving on. Here we are in 2011 and podcasting is unbiquitous. I co-host one myself, all about thrillers and other genre fiction. I listen to loads of them, especially fiction podcasts like Escape Pod and Podcastle. I’m still dancing with joy because my favourite podcast of all, Pseudopod, bought one of my stories recently. I can’t wait for that to come through.

But you know that podcasting is becoming truly accepted when it starts to win awards. Not podcasting awards, obviously, but other awards that have been around for ages and have now started recognising podcasts. I noticed this when I was going through the recently released Ditmar Awards ballot. Here’s the Best Fan Publication in Any Medium nominations list:

* Australian Speculative Fiction in Focus, edited by Alisa Krasnostein et al.
* Bad Film Diaries podcast, Grant Watson
* Galactic Suburbia podcast, Alisa Krasnostein, Tansy Rayner Roberts, and Alex Pierce
* Terra Incognita podcast, Keith Stevenson
* The Coode Street podcast, Gary K. Wolfe and Jonathan Strahan
* The Writer and the Critic podcast, Kirstyn McDermott and Ian Mond

Out of six listed nominations, five are podcasts. Among them are podcasts that I listen to regularly and one of them got my vote. The sixth one is a review website.

Here’s the same category last year:

Best Fan Publication

* Interstellar Ramjet Scoop, edited by Bill Wright

* A Writer Goes on a Journey (awritergoesonajourney.com), edited by Nyssa Pascoe et al

* ASif! (asif.dreamhosters.com), edited by Alisa Krasnostein, Gene Melzack et al

* Australian Science Fiction Bullsheet (bullsheet.sf.org.au), edited by Edwina Harvey and Ted Scribner

* Steam Engine Time, edited by Bruce Gillespie and Janine Stinson

No podcasts.

In the 2010 Hugo Awards, the Best Fanzine award went to StarShipSofa edited by Tony C. Smith. A podcast. It won a Hugo! It is brilliant, but even so it’s a great step in the acceptance of podcasting.

And this is just the genre podcasts that I’m familiar with. I’m sure there are thousands more out there covering all kinds of subjects. It seems that the audio magazine has really come of age. Even radio stations now are offering their shows as podcasts to appeal to people that might not be able to listen at a certain time, or may have missed a show. More power to the podcast, I say, and not just because I’m involved with one. Podcasting is a great example of utilising the power of the internet for good, producing quality, interesting content. Long may it continue.

 

This is a reprint from Alan Baxter‘s The Word.