Monday, February 22, 2010
Dilbert comic strip for 02/22/2010 from the official Dilbert comic strips archive.
Sunday, February 21, 2010
So very, very tired.
I just got done writing about all about the crazy Iron County sports scene and I'm tired. Sundays are tough because between church and the last minute interviews and writing I need to do to meet my deadlines; I can't sleep during the day. Then I have to work Sunday night. Every week I get a good 24 hours of wakefulness. It doesn't really suck anymore, after a while most things, like my vacuum, stop sucking.
I’m moving along in Twilight and laughing most of the way though.
Okay, if you like Twilight and are reading this please tell me: Why do they like each other?
This is what I gather: Bella likes (excuse me, loves beyond all comprehension) Edward because he is a vampire and is able to trance people into liking him. Edward likes (loves to death) Bella because he can’t read her mind.
What?!
Is there more I’m missing? They never really enjoy each other’s company. They go between being pissed at each other to being hopelessly and over dramatically attracted to each other. Sure, there is the whole two days where Edward questions Bella on every detail of her life, but that seemed more like Edwards bully nature than an honest interest.
Do either of them stop complaining? Bella talks endlessly about how she just wants to be with Edward, then throws a hissy because she has to hike for a few miles. Ugh.
Also, Man this book is sexual. I’ve never read such a sexual book where the two main characters don’t hardly touch each other.
I’m going to get a bit personal here.
I lived in Florida for a while and while there I had the unusual experience of being the object of several girls’ attention. Part of the reason was that I was one of three straight single guys working at Disney World, but another part of it was that I was a known virgin. Girls liked to know that they could lead me along for as far as they wanted and I’d always keep them safe. They would try and push me to the edge just to see if I’d turn away before it was too late (If mom is reading this I never went further than a gentleman should go, and I never went as far as they would have wanted me to go [if someone apart from my mother is reading this then it’s still true. I was raised thinking that going “all the way” meant a trip to Disneyland and “hooking up” meant meeting someone for burgers]).
The point being: I know that some women are attracted to the guy who, though capable of dangerous things (sex, and all guys are), they can feel safe with them.
Of course basing a relationship on that in the context of fiction is very superficial and 2 dimensional. I’m hoping for Edward to come out and say “You know what Bella, I’m tired of being such a jerky, overbearing brute. I like you because….” and then give a real reason.
Okay, not going to happen.
And there are HOW many books after this one?
Oh! I got to the part where he shows how he sparkles in the sun. It was just as embarrassing to read as I imagined.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Slogging Blogging
It's just so... bad.
I've had to slog my way though hundreds of books in college, but Twilight instills this deep sense of.... like when you are starving but the food you have to eat is not tasty or nutritious AND it takes a long time to prepare. Also, better food is all around you ready to eat. I'll do it, I feel a challenge to do it, but it may take longer. I can only do it if I let my mind have vacations with better things around.
Tonight I started watching the TV show "V" and I kind of like it. Overacted, yes, but anything that finds an obscure internet conspiracy and uses it as a premise for an entire series has my vote.
My own story is lingering in that strange place between character and plot. I have this vague sense that it is good, I just don’t know what it is. I have all these really compelling images and scenes in my head, as well as characters, but I don’t know what ties them all together yet.
Also, World of Warcraft is awesome and I like to play it. I’d say I play it too much, but I’ve written three frackin’ novels in the last few years. That’s most than most novelists, WHILE I was going to school. I think I’m okay as far as video game time goes.
Also, the word “frack” and any derivative thereof is from the TV show “Battlestar Galactica”. It is used as their futuristic swear word and highlights the absurdity that some words are considered bad and some are considered good. I don’t swear as a general rule, and I never use the name of God in vain, but I like frack. It sounds enough like a bad word to make people stop, and then dismiss immediately, which is stupid really. Someone said to me, “If you mean it, why don’t you just say it?” It’s all so relative as to render it absurd. And the way people swear is just funny. It’s suppose to be edgy, but is something really edgy when virtually everyone does it? The opposite of edge is, flat, as in the EDGE of this knife is no more. It is now FLAT. So if everyone uses the edgy words, they are no longer edgy, right? Why do people get away with this? Same thing with sex, but that’s another topic for another day.
I assured her that if I ever did mean it I would say it. It being the other swear word that starts with a letter F. The “Eff” word. The F-dash-dash-dash word. In the words of Ralphie, FFFFFUUUUUDDGGGEEEE.
Twilight is funny, it uses the word “crow” for Bella’s swear word, which is so farfetched and stupid as to render it adorable, like a differently-abled puppy trying to argue for libertarianism. Everyone knows that it won’t work, but the effort is just so scrappy you have to smile.
I’ve never heard any American person use the word crow as an exclamatory. I’ve heard it twice apart from that. First was from an old Australian man who said. “Stone the Crows, It’s hot.” And the second time was from British playwright Andrew Lloyd Webber’s show “Joseph and the Amazing… and so forth” where Pharaoh says “Stone the crows, this Joseph is a clever kid.”
The saying makes no sense, but that’s the way it is with sayings from Brittan.
So Stephanie uses it because she doesn’t want her characters to swear, which only dips this story deeper into the shellac of unreality.
“But it’s about vampires,” a fan my say. “It’s not supposed to be realistic.”
Yes it is. Every story is suppose to be realistic. Even if you clone dinosaurs, have zombies, and show Hitler winning the war, it has to be done in a way so that the dinosaur riding zombie Nazis can exist in a world that we believe in. This realism is created by the little things. The way people talk or the way scenery is described. The books characters read or the conversations they steer away from. The way light shines though a leaf or the swear words they use.
I love Stephen King’s books because they seem so realistic to me. Not that I believe a vampire could exist, but because his characters and locations are so methodically put forth that I believe what happens.
Another good example of this is the book “Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom” by Cory Doctorow (which you can read and download for free by clicking here, it’s not stealing, he allows people to do this). This book is a scifi book about a future where death is a minor inconvenience and you wear your reputation on your sleeve for everyone to see and rank. The story could never happen, but it is set in Walt Disney World and the culture and setting is perfect enough that you believe it. Then the fantastic stuff just happens.
So, the popularity of Twilight must mean that lots of people relate to the story or to Bella as a person. As I’ve said before, people don’t act like that EVER, so it has to be something else.
I think it’s sex, but as I said, that is another story for another time.
Friday, February 12, 2010
Blogging Twilight: Part 2
Chapters 5-9
I’m only a section through the first book and already I realize that much of the criticism leveled at this story could very well be unfounded. There ARE problems to be sure, but it may not be to the extent that some say. I’ll have to see how the stories play out to be sure though.
First, the bad. The writing in this book continues to suck. Like, CSI Miami suck. Check out this clip that will make you laugh.
Yeah, I picture this type of scene in the book all the time. Let me share a couple of the worst sections.
“I didn’t feel like mentioning that my stomach was already full—of butterflies.” (YEEAAAHHHH!)
“The decision was ridiculously easy to live with. Dangerously easy.” (YEEAAAHHHH!)
Plus there were a ton of coma splices, tense confusion, and other mistakes that can be forgiven in a common blog, like mine, but not in a published novel. All other things this book does right are hidden behind confusing language.
Okay. I won’t complain about the bad writing every time unless it’s particularly funny.
Here the reader is introduced to Jacob who, if the Burger King ads are to be believed, becomes a major character. Major enough to have a whole team named after him. I fear that he will end up the perpetual good guy who is actually, you know, nice to the girl who he likes which enables the girl to use him and string him along while giving all her love to the jerk. Jacob seemed likeable enough, at least compared to everyone else in the story. Too bad I’m fairly sure Bella is going to treat him like crap.
And here is a major criticism against the book I think may be wrong. I’ve heard over and over that Bella is a simple character who is good at everything but given that one fault to make her seem more accessible, in her case it’s her clumsiness. I don’t think that’s the case.
I’m giving Stephenie Meyer a huge benefit of the doubt by saying this, but it is possible Bella is more complex that I gave her credit for. I see Bella as a little scared girl who forces herself to act older and ‘above it all’ when in reality she isn’t. She always acts like the flighty little problems of high school are below her, but whenever Edward is in the picture; she not only reverts to high school, but to elementary. He says jump, she says how high… while jumping. He says bark, she barks.
He forcefully grabs her and, against her will, pulls her across the parking lot toward his car, refusing to let go even though she tells him to stop, and she’s okay with it.
Yeah, it’s nearly an abusive relationship, I’d be surprised if Edward doesn’t smack her sometime in the series, it fits his character so far, but it’s defiantly manipulative and unhealthy, which taps into the whole sick and stupid ‘bad boy attraction’ some girls seem to have. Daddy issues play a part. Mommy issues too. Bella says herself that she had to be the adult in the relationship with her mother, which could make her socially retarded. She never dated and she obviously doesn’t know how to handle herself on the beach or on the girl’s shopping day.
In a real way, this is like pornography in the fact that it presents an unhealthy and unrealistic expectation to girls about their relationship to guys which can never happen in real life, but the draw is too alluring to ignore, though the objectifying of men, though very much present and harmful, can’t compare to how much porn degrades women.
So let’s talk about Edward for a moment. He too could be more complex then I gave him credit for, though it’s hard to tell because he is written in a way meant for the reader to fall in love with him. As I am not in love with him all I see is the dangerous and dreamy man-animal (manamal) Bella wants him to be. And he is socially retarded in his own way: unable to handle conflict, quick to anger, demanding, demeaning. He’s a grade A jerk, but he sees he is a jerk, and he hates it, which is a little bit interesting.
Two social retards dating though… I don’t know…. it doesn’t seem to bode well, and this is where I have my hesitation.
I can’t see either character pulling the other one up in order to go through a dynamic change which could form real and honest characters. Both are wallowing in their own dysfunction and both completely self obsessed (If Bella really cared about Edward, she would have honored his wishes to stay away from him and if Edward really loved Bella, he wouldn’t treat her like a toy poodle).
Here’s the deal. I need to see some dynamic action with these characters or the story is bad. Not only does the action need to be dynamic, it needs to be honest. It can happen, I’m just wondering how. It’s very possible that this story will floor me with unexpected goodness I could never expect.
But I’m not going to hold my breath.
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Blogging Twilight: Part 1.5
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Blogging Twilight: Part 1
Pages 1 - 84
This afternoon when I woke up (I work graves remember) I saw the book sitting on the little computer chair in the middle of the living room. Apparently my wife found it in the garage and set it up for me.
So here I go.
Starting a book with an excerpt from the ending is kind of a gimmick, but I can see why it needs it. The first line, "I'd never given much thought to how I would die..." is pretty bad, but it sets the tone. I have to get over one thing pretty quickly: This is not a well written book. In fact, it’s pretty awful.
Which, I guess, is not the worst thing in the world. Lots of popular books are poorly written. I love me some Lovecraft, but the man was a hack.
This book bumps around as clumsily as Bella. It's full of unneeded…. Punctuation- breaks. Not only that, but it has a very passive voice. Mix that in with hardly any dialogue at all and it’s a tough thing to smooth your eyes over. The end result is like trying to read a cheese grater (that makes sense to me). The narrative runs haphazardly from one topic to the next with little to no, I don’t know, storytelling.
It’s also apparently one big voice over. Yes, it’s first person, but the very first rule of fiction is: Show, Don’t Tell. This is nothing but tell. In truth it reminds me of reading stories from a first year college writing class. I imagine if someone was a bit more honest with Stephenie in a workshop group, then it would be a lot easier to read.
But enough of that. Let’s move to the story.
Bella moves from a town she loves to a town she hates to live with a father she barely acknowledges to get away from a mother she loves so she can travel with a baseball boyfriend who is alright. While there she is frustrated and annoyed by the attention she receives from just about every boy in school.
Okay, wait a sec. She gets asked out to a dance (or asked if she would ask them out I guess) three times in one day and is annoyed by this because she can’t dance and because the hot rude boy is just so frustratingly handsome.
I’ve known girls who are described like Bella, (or at least as much of a description as she gives. I can see how she is a perfect vessel for any girl to pour themselves into), and they don’t act like that. No girl acts like that.
No they don’t.
No. They don’t.
I think this is how older women wished they would have acted and that could explain why the book is popular. Young girls can wish they were like that and older women can pretend it was.
Okay, so the members Cullen family are all beautiful beyond belief and aloof to the school. Edward takes an interest in Bella for reasons that are not apparently clear yet. First he acts like she is stinky then he pays attention, then he saves her life, then she gets all crazy.
Yes, she gets all crazy:
“It’s too bad you didn’t figure that out earlier,” I hissed through my teeth. “You could have saved yourself all this regret.”
“Regret?” The word, and my tone, obviously caught him off guard. “Regret for what?”
“For not just letting that stupid van squish me.”
(…) “You think I regret saving your life?”
“I know you do,” I snapped.
What?!? Where did this come from?
Okay, obviously she is really upset because she is so very much in love with this guy who looks pretty and acts like a jerk and she doesn’t think he is interested at all… how does that jump to “you wish I was dead”? If I was the guy, I would laugh, tell Bella to have a nice life, and go for a less angstish mortal.
And here is my problem. I don’t like the characters yet. Bella is a whiny fake person, Edward is a jerk who knows he can get away with it because he is so very attractive (and supernaturally hypnotic I think, which has its own creepy vibe), and everyone else doesn’t have a personality I can properly identify. If it wasn’t for Bella telling me who she was talking to I wouldn’t know them from anyone else. Gender seems to be the only thing her friends at school have unique about them.
I do like the father character though. It’s a pretty accurate portrayal of a bumbling father trying to do right with his daughter while neither one of them know what to do.
Though, in a way it is fun to read. Something I can’t figure out does call out to the shallow and selfish days of high school where everyone thinks they are the center of the world.
We’ll have to see how the trip to Seattle goes. Something tells me it will be equal parts hypnotic and angsty.
Saturday, February 6, 2010
Problems with High Speed Internet
The Epic of the Lost Twilight
Thursday, February 4, 2010
Blogging Twilight
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Lost
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
In a movie, something has to happen
And there they go. Now Locke shows everyone his knives.
Anyway, that's not what I wanted to talk about. I wanted to talk about this movie I watched today. It's called "Paranormal Activity" and it's stupid.