Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Funny Foto #24


by Michael Seese

Last Saturday, my family and I went to the dentist. Across the street from his office was a gas station, where I saw this:

























I remember when air was free. Then, it was a quarter. Soon, the price was $0.50.

But needing a credit card? That's ridiculous!

Share your thoughts. Spread the absurdity!

Friday, June 22, 2012

The Full, Short Arc

By Michael Seese

Super agent Janet Reid served up another of her 100-word contests yesterday. The keywords:

star
magazine
crunch
cog
spree

This one came easily to me. Please enjoy my entry, "The Full, Short Arc."

The warm sunshine on the plaza made Sarah feel like more than a cog in a corporate machine, but a rising star, as she engaged in her daily mid-afternoon ritual: reading Vogue magazine while noshing on a Nestle Crunch and Sprees.

She had the full arc of her life planned: senior administrative assistant, paralegal, lawyer, perhaps pause to get married, junior partner, and finally senior partner. Yes, some day, her name would adorn the letterhead. Life would be perfect.

Her pager buzzed.

Back to the grind, she thought, unaware that she was five minutes from dropping into a diabetic coma. 

I'd like to point out that I got all five words in the first sentence. And if I may make a bold, brash prediction, I believe this one will win. I speak not from vanity. I just think this is the best story I have created for this space.

Feel free to share your thoughts.

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Like I Was Saying...

by Michael Seese

I actually started this entry in February. In the middle of that month, I wrote a post which gushed with optimism. Good things were just around the corner. I knew it, because my gut told me. As it turned out, I did get a few small "wins," and one pretty good bit of news: my short story, "Worm Herding" was going to be published in the collection BUGS! by Pill Hill Press. If you watch this space, you know that the book is now available on Amazon. It's also a Goodreads giveaway until July 1.

Though I didn't get everything I said I "wanted" in that previous post -- in fact, I had more rejections than acceptances -- I remained optimistic. In fact, I said, quote:

I kept hoping that I would get more good news which I could share.

and

And, like before, I feel good about this coming week. More good stuff is on the way. I know it.

Well, wouldn't you know it...

On Friday of that week, I got home from work, checked my email and learned that my poem "The Daily Caffeine Stream" had been accepted by Medusa's Laugh Press. This actually seems like a cool project. They're publishing a collection of poetry called the Overplay/Underdone poetry anthology. In a nutshell, they're printing a book of multi-layered poems which become 3-D works of art. It's kind of hard to describe. Here is a link to their site, showing pictures. They expect it to be out in December.

But more good things were just around the corner, which is why I sat on this entry.

And I sat.

And sat.

And sat.

I'm still waiting for the "home run." But, tomorrow I plan to send out three queries with the new and improved Nightmares. So keep your fingers crossed.

And I've gotten a few rejections. For example, the folks at Pill Hill said "no" to my short story "Tinkerhell." Of course, I'm still shopping it.

But in addition to the Medusa victory, I feel it's time to report:

- My short story "Never Mind The Nonsense, Here’s The Sex Truncheons" has been accepted by May December Publications for their A Clockwork Orchard: Rivets & Rain compilation, and
- My short story "Night Of The Laughing Dead" has been accepted by The Apocryphile Press for their upcoming short horror fiction collection.

The point is, keep believing. Keep trying. Always keep trying. Good things are just around the corner.

Friday, June 15, 2012

Funny Foto #23

This frequently is the scene in my office refrigerator.

























I'm envisioning a conversation with the owner of one of these lunchboxes.

"So, does that have magical, one-way insulation?"
What do you mean?
"It is insulated, right?"
Yes.
"It keeps the hot air out?"
Yes.
"So how does it know to let the cold air in?"
What do you mean?
"It stops the hot air from getting to your lunch, right?"
Yes.
"So, how does it let the cold air of the refrigerator get to it?"
It probably doesn't.
"Then having it in the refrigerator probably doesn't help, does it?"
Uh...

"Here's your sign."

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Courage

By Michael Seese

Being an author takes courage. OK, perhaps not as much as a police officer or fire fighter. But nonetheless, writing is not for the timid.

- It takes courage to bare your soul in your written words. There may be authors who can "leave themselves out of it." I'm not one of them. I've found that a little bit of me and my life finds its way into my fiction.
- It takes courage to send your "babies" out into the world, only to be told they're not cute enough. (Non-metaphorical translation: rejection sucks.)
- And it takes courage to know when something isn't working, and needs to be put away, or perhaps just overhauled.

It is the latter I want to talk about today. 

I have read blog entries, etc. where a successful writer recounts how he had a story that he loved--that he thought was great--but that opinion was not shared by anyone in the publishing industry. So he had to let go, and write something else.

That hasn't happened to me...yet. Of course, I'm more stubborn than a lot of people.

But overhauling...

If you've been following this blog for a while, you may recall that I'm trying to get an agent interested in my YA thriller Nightmares.

Now, if you don't know, when you query an agent, all will want...well...a query. That is, a 100- or 200-word elevator speech to entice them to want to read it. Most will want a sample as well. Some want five pages; others want the first chapter. 

To date, I've sent it out to ten agents. And all ten have said "no." (I just counted; to be honest, I thought it was more.) After the first six or so rejections, I decided to tighten up and improve the query. But that hasn't helped.

So I was forced to admit that perhaps the story itself was the problem.

I believe Nightmares is a good, thrilling book. But one thing I came to realize is that the "action" really starts on page 20. And that's 20 pages of a document; I can't say how that would translate to book pages. 

Here is how Nightmares used to start:

The sun was in my eyes. But it didn't matter. I could still see her in the distance, just as I had remembered her. She was wearing the same floral print dress. She cradled a dozen red roses in her arms. I had sent them. Somehow. The wind was strong, and whipped her hair savagely across her face, obscuring her porcelain features. Everything, except for her mouth.
      I wanted to distrust my eyes. This just couldn't be real. It was as though nothing had changed. It was like...it was like time had simply stopped and stood idly by, in deference to her. It had been...I can't remember how long it had been since I had last seen her. She was so beautiful. All I wanted was to hold her. But the rolling and waving meadow separating us seemed endless. Miles of heather, clover, and goldenrod. And I have hay fever.
      We were frozen on opposite sides of an immense gulf. But I was determined to let nothing keep us apart this time. She eyed me lovingly, longingly. I felt a few beads of perspiration gather on my forehead. My palms were sweaty. She licked her lips.
      And then we started running towards each other. In slow-motion, just like in the movies. Our arms out stretched, we raced across the field, trying to eliminate the distance. It was taking forever. The sun remained big and bright, and birds were chirping.
      Soon I was close, almost close enough to smell her. We ceased running and then walked a few deliberate paces. We stopped, and just stood, staring, not twenty feet apart. The wind now was blowing directly at her face, forcing her to squint slightly, but drawing her hair back in a magnificent amber flow. The wind also playfully lifted that beautiful sun dress, occasionally treating me to a glimpse of her silk thigh. Then it was quiet.    
     Silent. Dead, eerie calm.

It's actually a dream sequence. 

So I decided to take the plunge and put the action right at the beginning. Here is how it now starts.

Drop.
Count.
Ping.

Drop.
Count.
Ping.

      When you think about, dogs really aren't that stupid. They sleep all day, get their tummies scratched just for rolling over, and don't have to worry about religion, taxes, or bad breath. They're such simple folks, driven only by the simplest of needs and the most basic of pleasures. Take, for example, chasing cars. We, of the intellectual bipedal sort, consider it folly when we see a dog, yelping like an idiot, tongue flapping in the breeze, as he chases a car down the street. We chuckle and repeat the cliché, "What's he going to do when he catches it? Ha ha."
      But the dog doesn't care. Most likely, he hasn't thought that far ahead in the process. Knowing only that he wants to do it, not why he wants to do it, is all that matters to him. That's a simplicity that even Thoreau could be proud of. Not a bad life. Not a bad life at all.
     We, on the other hand, are on a treadmill. Running like idiots, tongues flapping in the breeze, as we chase after some ideal, or goal, or bank account balance, without getting anywhere. Society today is fast-paced, fast food, instant oatmeal, instant cash. Dog-eat-dog, if you will.
      Dogs seem to be an anomaly in that world. They're a throwback to the, quote, good old days, unquote. We describe dogs as loyal and obedient, playful and child-like, protective and selfless. It seems to me like those are words that at one time were used to describe our own species. I think we could all learn something from dogs.
     But back to the chasing cars thing for a moment. When you think about it, catching a car isn't all that difficult. Staying attached to it—now there's a trick worthy of a cookie. A big one.
     Sometimes I think of the strangest things.
     Like now. I was wondering how much happier I could be were I a dog.
     And sometimes I do the strangest things.
     Like now. For at this moment I was standing on the Euclid Avenue overpass, conducting last-minute physics experiments in preparation for my rapidly approaching idiotic mission.

At first, I thought it would be fairly easy to make the change. About five pages in, there is a lull in the action where my character has a few minutes for contemplation. I thought I could just move pages 1 - 19 to that place. And I pretty much did. The only problem--if this makes sense--is that originally, the 20 pages leading up to the action represented both story line moving to that point, as well as "flashbacks." Now it all has to be a flashback. And that's proving a little harder--primarily from a grammatical standpoint--than I had expected.

But I think the results will be worth it. I hope to have it done and ready to send out in a week or so. I'm sure you'll be hearing about whether it helped.


Friday, June 8, 2012

Funny Foto #22

I see this on the way to work every morning.

































 





I'm sure glad they told me. Otherwise, I might have been confused.

What? What is happening? How do I get out of here? Where do we go from here?  Life is so strange. It's a conundrum worthy of Sartre. Or Missing Persons.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Goodreads

I don't know if you've ever heard of Goodreads. To use a simple analogy, it's kind of like Facebook for authors and readers. (Though, to my knowledge Goodreads doesn't have a rapidly declining market capitalization.) 

I believe my friend Donna turned me on to the site about six months ago. So I created a profile. This is me, if you want to "friend" me here. But I didn't really know what to do with it.

And then super-agent Janet Reid, the source of so much of my knowledge about the publishing biz (truly, I so owe this woman a bottle of wine and a box of chocolates) mentioned it in her blog yesterday, and talked about "giveaways."

So I did a little research. As it turns out, authors can sign up to give away a number of copies of their books. Interested readers put their name "in the hat." And when the "contest" ends, the folks at Goodreads pick the winner(s). Then it's up to the author to mail it.

The hope (though not a requirement) is that those who enter will put the book on their "to-read" list, and the winners will post a review.

I am offering two copies of Scrappy Information Security and two copies of BUGS, up until July 1. So far -- after less than 24 hours -- I have 61 and 26 interested parties, respectively.



Goodreads Book Giveaway


Scrappy Information Security by Michael Seese

Scrappy Information Security

by Michael Seese


Giveaway ends July 01, 2012.

See the giveaway details
at Goodreads.

Enter to win





Goodreads Book Giveaway


BUGS by Michael Seese

BUGS

by Michael Seese


Giveaway ends July 01, 2012.

See the giveaway details
at Goodreads.

Enter to win



I'm sure an update will follow. If you're interested, please click on one or both links, and sign up.

Friday, June 1, 2012

Funny Foto #21 + Some Good Advice

This one isn't laugh-out-loud funny, as are (I hope) my other fotos. But I got a chuckle out of it.

I receive a daily email newsletter from SC Magazine, for infosec professionals. Here is an image of one I received earlier this week.


























I thought, That picture looks familiar. Where have I seen it?

Hmmm.

Hmmm.

Oh yeah. I remember: my book.

























The nerve of those guys! I'm going to sue! I'll have their hides! I'll...oh wait...it's a purchased image.

But seriously, the article is pretty interesting, even if you're not a propeller-head.  Especially fascinating / scary is the part about the malware being capable of "turning on the machine's microphone to record conversations."   

Based on its sophistication, the toolkit's targets aren't people, but rather nations and corporations. Still, that doesn't mean you should let down your guard. Just remain vigilant, and observe the standard best practices. 
  • Maintain an up-to-date anti-virus program. (Personally speaking, I use Microsoft Security Essentials, and have it set to auto-update.) 
  • Don't click on links in emails unless you are certain you know that the sender is who he claims to be. (And to be on the safe side, always hover over the link and read where it actually will go.) 
  • NEVER click on a link from a email that purports to be your financial institution. 
  • And for goodness sake, don't pick up a thumb drive you find on a sidewalk and say, "Wow! My lucky day! I wonder what's on it?" 
Since I am rather evangelical about infosec -- after all, good security is good for all -- if you ever want some advice, please don't hesitate to drop me a line.