I’ve always been a good proofreader, but I never realized how good.  This is because I can’t accurately proofread anything that I have already read.  In fact, I’m not so much better at proofreading, as I’m probably much, much faster.  Anyone can have good spelling and grammar knowledge, but only an Aspie has a brain hard-wired to spot when something is out of place (indeed, pictures hung on the wall crooked drive me crazy).  However, the superpower doesn’t help if I’ve read something before, because the errors look like they are correct.

I was wondering how much freelance proofreaders charged.  I thought I could just check on Craigslist, but I don’t see any listings for freelance proofreaders.  I couldn’t find much in Google, though I might have to look harder.  However, I know one person who does that sort of work, and I looked up her rates.  If her rates are typical, proofreaders make $30/hour.  However, my friend reads about 3-4 pages per hour.  I haven’t checked, but I’m reasonably sure that I could do more than ten.  When I feel up to it, I will hang out my shingle at $30/hr for the first few jobs until I have references.

If you know anything about freelance proofreading, I’d like to hear from you.

Sometimes I spend years trying to communicate an idea to other people.  Other times I get lucky and someone hands me the words.

I got lucky this time.

And, of course, I’ll leave aside the strong tendency for the mimesis of so-called “m/m” stories…to replicate traditional heterosexist tropes. …”m/m” as a term is sufficiently co-morbid with perhaps I have a special anusism that I saw this controversy as ultimately a commercial one, not one primarily between the forces of repression and liberation. ANYWAY.

What he said, and more of it.

On a social networking site I frequent, someone posted how excited they were about their short story available in ebook format.  For $1.69, readers were invited to purchase a twenty-page story of the sort that other members in the group were likely to enjoy.  The writer specifically said that she was eager for positive feedback. Continue reading »

As some of you may be familiar, a year ago Torquere Press published my m/m fantasy s/m novel with extra marketing categories:  Wishbone.  You may not know that I’m working on a sequel.  I would like to post an excerpt or two from the new book for your enjoyment.  Also, I haven’t positively settled on a name for it, so I’m looking for suggestions.

Why look.

Here’s an excerpt, right here!

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I found Cecilia Tan’s guest blog on one way that multiple partners can mix with romance here

Sometimes I have an interesting thought about writing, and I think, I should write an article about that.

I’ve gotten paid for articles before.  And, like many authors, I’m happy to tell other writers what I think about writing.  After all, who else can understand these ideas.  Not my spouse who–however loving–has not a literary bone in his body.

I write slowly, though, and at the peak of SAD season I don’t have enough neurotransmitters to write even a blog post, usually.  But then I got this idea from conversations with a helpful beta reader.

Romance readers have a different ideas about monogamy than readers in other erotica genres.  Cecilia Tan wrote a really good article on the subject, but I can’t find it right now.  The point was that romance readers aren’t happy with fiction where the main character sleeps around on the person who is clearly their mate.  Cecilia wanted to write a romance series where the main character was not monogamous, and she made it work by having all of the main characters’ lovers be fully realized, sympathetic characters, which made her books end up longer than she expected.

The insight of my beta readers is that monogamy isn’t the key issue.  In fact, back before we could write about actual sex anywhere, let alone romances, sex wasn’t the barrier.  In fact, the difference between sex that is “allowed” can be almost anything, as long as you tell the reader what it is and stick to it.  One device I’ve seen before but detest is that the main character is allowed to have sex with people other than the true love, but only if he/she doesn’t enjoy it.  In gay romance, the character is often quick to offer oral sex, but saves his anal cherry for his true love.  BTW, I’m fairly certain that most actual gay men don’t fret over fidelity as much as female writers seem to think they do.  Feel free to let me know if you’re a counter-example.

This is a very liberating realization, because it gives me the opportunity to put all sorts of interesting things in the plot.  Of course, I can’t do much with the realization yet, but SAD season doesn’t last all that long these years.

If you like to read kinky fiction, you’ve met the error and punishment plot.

Actually, there are very few plots to choose them.  If you want your characters tied up and spanked, how do you get them there?

There’s the capture plot.  I’ve never read the Gor books, but I understand that people who enjoy them do so for the contest of wills between captor and captive (along with the whips and other obvious stuff).

Once the slave is “broken in” (and doesn’t that phrase send shivers through the kinky reader?), how do you keep the kink in the story?  Error and punishment is the next plot.

You’ll notice that we’ve covered the titles of the first two “Beauty” books:  The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty and Beauty’s Punishment.  So what plot is Beauty’s Release? It’s the “how kinky people can live happily ever after in a vanilla world” plot.

There’s nothing wrong with these plots.  I enjoy reading them.  But I’ve gotten bored of writing them.  Plots that involve consent are harder.  And, for the moment, more fun to write.

The daylight saving’s time switch gives me a week or two of depression every year.  Then I tend to cheer up.  The next two months are spent hiding from holiday cheer, but by early January depression is the water I swim in, just as it seems to be for many others in parts of the world where it gets dark and cold.

One of the best treatments for this sort of depression is cookies.

We’ve made a couple of batches of cookies.  All cookies tasted fantastic.  However, these cookies had a special bonus for me as a chronic pain sufferer.  People who take lots of pain medications may have extra special needs for fiber.  If you can’t figure out why, I’m not going to tell you.  However, I will tell you that these cookies were delicious antidepressants and had a regularizing attribute that cheered me up even more.  As it were.

This recipe is a modification of the King Arthur Flour Baker’s Companion “Chewy Oatmeal Raisin Cookies.”

2 1/4 c (9 1/2 ounces) unbleaked all-purpose flour

1 teaspoon baking soda

3/4 teaspoon salt

2 teaspoons cinnamon (preferably Vietnamese or something else with bite)

1/2 teaspoon nutmeg

1/4 teaspoon allspice

5 1/4 ounces butter

2 tablespoons vegetable poil

2 1/4 cups (18 ounces brown sugar)

2 large eggs

1/2 c (4 oz) plain yogurt.

2 teaspoons vanilla extract

3 cupts (10 1/2 ounces rolled oats)

3/4 cup (4.5 oz) chocolate chips

3/4 cup (4.5 oz) dried cherries

Preheat oven to 350.

Sift together dry ingredients and spices (not including oatmeal), set aside.

Cream butter, oil, and brown sugar.

Add the eggs.

Beat in yogurt and vanilla.

Stir in oats, chocolate, and cherries, then add the flour mixture in 3 additions, beating well.

Drop cookies from a tablespoon onto baking sheets.  Bake for 14 mins.  Don’t let them brown or they will be crisp rather than chewy.  Put on rack, or eat right out of the oven.  Keeps well in an air-tight container, if there are any left.

Hot Tomato!

I went to the farmer’s market today to pick up fresh tomatoes.  I have a picture of one, which is definitely NSFW.  I put in a nice break for you.

Continue reading »

I just read this article passed along by someone else; maybe you’ve read it before.

I was struck by how much of the car buying process I did right the last time I bought the little Honda beast.  But as I read this article, especially about those poor neurotypical salesmen perfecting their handshakes, I came up with an entire set of new ways to mess with car salesmen in the future.

The weakest link may be the handshake.

When the salesperson puts a little pressure on your hand, don’t push back. Fall down. Get upset and threaten to sue.

Look at his hand. Say “When did you last wash your hands?” If he can’t answer, don’t shake.

Or say, “I’m sorry, it’s flu season.” Or “I just sneezed into my hand. Do you have a tissue?” or “It’s against my religion to shake hands.” Offer to shake feet instead.

Then, when they get to the four square sheet, you let them start writing and say “I can’t buy that.” When he asks why, tell him that the color ink he used is unlucky. Make him do it over. Complain that he changed the numbers (which he might have done anyway).

Who knows.  If I get a break in the workflow, maybe I’ll go mess with some car salesmen just for practice.

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