
A Song of Vanilla Ice and Fire
No spoilers, word to your mother.
Richard Parry: writer, liar, superhero
No spoilers, word to your mother.
ICYMI, the 40th Anniversary of the Alien movie is coming up (25 May 1979, according to IMDB, was when we learned true terror). I dig these movies, a lot. I have this framed in my writing study: Some whacko had the idea of doing a bunch of short movies to celebrate: In celebration of the upcoming 40th anniversary, @20thcenturyfox is inviting fans through the @tongal community to create their own #ALIEN short films. Learn more at https://t.co/ETyR8EcKSG pic.twitter.com/6xutfB6Q2z — Alien (@AlienAnthology) June 27, 2018 Unnamed hero, I salute you. I terrified myself with the shorts this morning, because that’s what you do on Easter Sunday, amirite? Catch yourself up:
Here’s one of my world-famous emails, originally send Friday, 12 April 2019. You can get on the list here. Building New Worlds. I’ve talked a bit about Boundless, and now it’s time to talk more about it. This week, we’ve got: The writing process – Part One! An excerpt. Let’s swing that blade. The Writing Process Part One: Outlining vs. Discovery Writing There’s a holy war in the writing community, excluding a bunch of people like me who DNGAF. It’s the outliners (sometimes called the death-by-boredom style) vs. discovery writers (unflatteringly referred to as pantsers). Outline writing is what people like James Patterson prefer; you structure your story down to the last minutae, then write it out. Discovery writing is where you start with almost nothing but a bright idea, and start hitting keys until magic falls out the other Read More …
…and this time, back with JJ Abrams. I’ll be over here, sleeping in my cryo tube, until December.
I’ve been doing a chunk o’ worldbuilding and plotting for the revised Boundless. While my World Anvil is pretty sparse (spoilers, people), my internal notes are growing. Yesterday, I dug up this super-old relationship wireframe: Dug up this super-old relationships concept (this is like 0.1 ALPHA, and there's 600 others, with far more detail) for Boundless. It's funny how some of these stick with me and others are dead and buried. #WritingCommunity #indieauthors #amwriting #amworldbuilding pic.twitter.com/Ifa3XhLGu7 — Richard Parry ๐พ (@ParryForte) April 10, 2019 I figured you might get a kick out of seeing what the current story scaffold looks like. I’m a mix of outlining and discovery writing; I like to have an end state in mind, but freestyle the rest of it. The approach gives a structured tale while letting the characters tell their own part of it Read More …
A recent oped hit the NYT on why the cool kids are playing D&D. D&D isnโt only about inventing a more badass version of myself, writes @annaleen. I was also drawn to the idea of building a social group whose baseline assumption was that weโd see each other regularly. https://t.co/VmIZ5Of0nH — NYT Opinion (@nytopinion) April 7, 2019 (The author is Annalee Newitz). As a kid I was into RPGs. I played D&D Basic, AD&D, and so on through the ranks to 3e, 4e, and … I haven’t hit 5e yet, because all my friends are dead*. It wasn’t just D&D, but Cyberpunk (2012, then 2020), Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay, Runescape… you get the drift. The games were a fantastic glue for social interaction, and we’d game at lunchtimes at school, or in the weekends, and so on. There’s a sad, historic Read More …
We had a blast this weekend at 24/7 Electrical’s piglet races. They host a gig for the company + customers (of which we are one: shout-out to them for being like the only company who could fix our DSL problems). Owners Jamie and Elise have a farm where they raise (amongst other things) kunekune pigs. They host an annual racing event for the litter. Kids get very excited, can pet the piglets, and eat a lot of cake. Hyperactivity is high. I hope you dig these photos. Piglets are super cute, and this is why I don’t eat pork.
This is one of my world-famous emails, originally sent Friday 5 April, 2019. Get on the list here. It’s almost done By ‘it,’ I mean Tyche’s Fallen, the latest Ezeroc Wars trilogy. Tiffany’s given me back edits for the first book, and should be done with the second two by, uh… soon. Until we get that hot sauce onto your burger (…is that a good metaphor?), there’s more to talk about. A note on focus, and how mine sucks; An interview with Amy DuBoff; and A social experiment I’m running, where you’re the subject. Let’s rattle on. F 0 C u ssss… There was a time when I mentioned how the return to honest work was going pretty well. While I’ve been keeping up with my workday wording habit, I’m in the throes of editing Tyche’s Crusade (third in the Read More …
I see this one a lot. Is writing everyday really necessary? from writing The short version is no, and the longer verison is that it might be harmful to your creativity, depending on how your brain works. Let’s get into this. The prevailing advice from the world is, “Yo, you should write every day. Every! Day! And twice on Sundays.” I’m not 100% sure where this craziness comes from, but it could be misguided thinking around the power of habituated behaviours. Habits can be good! Humans love habits. Making and breaking them takes effort, and while a crack cocaine habit is most likely bad, a fitness habit is probably good. You’ll have heard how habits take 21 days to form, and while it’s a little more complicated than that, doing something often, perhaps on a schedule, can be good for Read More …
One of my world-famous emails, originally sent Saturday, 30 March 2019. You can get on the list here. It was bound to happen eventually. Kathy sent me an email recently, which is the genises of this PSA. This week: My brain! The Empire’s Rogues. Let’s start with the thoughts-and-prayers segment. I know the emoji in the subject is an explosion… …not an implosion. Turns out, there’s not a decent emoji for that, and I prefer the idea of imploding, so here we are: me vs. the Unicode Consortium. Let’s move on, and talk about Kathy’s email. In it, she said (note to others: this is how you tell authors they’re stupid, all while doing it politely): “Grace’s timeline no longer makes sense to me.” I’ll admit to a small feeling of dread on reading this. As I noted in a Read More …