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Honolulu

May 08, 2008

I AM INWINCIBLE!

GAH.

I go for my usual half-hour walk around 5:30 p.m. It is my first time this week without any head covering, so of course I get hit by a raincloud about eight minutes in. I run most of the way back home. The rain stops. Frustrated but determined to do something with my now pumped-up heart energy, I yank our shovel out of the ground, where it has been propping up a new sapling purchased at last week's Plant It Hawaii sale; the young potted tree is prone to falling over until I can get it in the ground.

I start digging into the lava cinder soil in the corner of our front lawn, a hole I have been digging for the last several days. Eight inches down, I have hit solid rock, as with everywhere here, so I decide to go for width rather than depth. Something tells me that if I persist within this particular spot, I will be rewarded.

In frustration, I start banging the metal shovel head against the rock floor, chipping away at an angle. The floor starts to give, breaking up a bit to yield several chunks small enough to fit within my palm. I excavate the chunks, along with the copious lava cinder generated by my widening. Then I sense a larger, looser chunk of rock at the base of this hole -- the true mother lode here. By digging on all sides, and widening out the hole even further, I determine that this boulder is nearly a foot across and quite deep. If only I could get Madam Pele to give it up.

So I get a small trowel to prop this giant, loosening chunk on one side while I attempt to pry it out with the shovel. It is growing dark, and so far I have a few small rocks, several shovelfuls' worth of cinder, and one mosquito bite to show for my efforts. Yet I persist; this is no longer about a hole in the ground; it is about my frustration with the Hawaiian elements, and my fierce determination to move on with my life. I am tired of digging holes. I want this bounteous Hawaiian earth to sustain us, and I especially want to enjoy someday a tall glass of lemonade taken from the tree that I am resolved to plant within this niche.

Five minutes more, and I feel a small blister forming beneath these garden gloves. I dig into the earth with my fingers and yank at the boulder. It yields. The hole is now a good six inches deeper, enough at last to plant this lemon tree. It is dark now. Tomorrow I will return to put this tree into the hole and nurture it within Pele's stubborn yet fecund earth.

--BB ... Angry White Male?




Wishing you a beautiful day,

Bill Brent


[this page last updated: 2008.05.08, 8:30 p.m. Hawaii time]


LitBoy.com is a professional blog. If you enjoy this blog, please use the Tip Jar at the top of this page. Your two-dollar minimum donation helps keep this banner-free site alive. It's quick and easy!

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This meter displays this year's contributions to date in U.S. dollars and my annual goal of $200. Make a donation, watch the meter rise! Usually I post your contribution on my next blog post.

All original materials here on LitBoy.com (writing, photos, drawings, graphics, etc.) belong to Bill Brent. If you want to re-use something here, please ask. Higher resolution images are available.

April 17, 2008

Link to Engineer's Guide to Cats

While we're still on this week's ever-popular themes of satire and cute cats, here's another video for you to enjoy -- roughly seven minutes on Man's Best Casual Acquaintance.

Aside from the overall execution of the core concept (outstanding), I love the 1960s Farfisa combo organ outro music over the closing credits. Nothing sounds quite like that. Well, unless it's a REALLY good simulation. (And now you know what kind of nerd *I* am. Well, one of several kinds, at least.)

And thus I pose to you a musical challenge: Can you name the heroic music that the producers of this video use to establish the mood, starting at 3:14 and ending at 3:40?

The first reader to post the correct answer (composer and title) to "Comments" below has the option of buying any item via the new link in the left sidebar, titled:

Please Shop At My Amazon Store.

...and receiving a $5 rebate from me on any purchase. I'll keep the contest open through April 20 and post the answer on April 21 if need be.

[FOLLOW-UP, May 17: Well, no one ever answered this one (shock!), so here's the answer: It is Verdi's Requiem. You can hear some clips of it HERE.]




Wishing you a beautiful day,

Bill Brent


[this page last updated: 2008.05.17, 1:00 p.m. Hawaii time]


LitBoy.com is a professional blog. If you enjoy this blog, please use the Tip Jar at the top of this page. Your two-dollar minimum donation helps keep this banner-free site alive. It's quick and easy!

Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
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This meter displays this year's contributions to date in U.S. dollars (after the funds processor takes its cut). Make a donation, watch the meter rise! Usually I post your contribution on my next blog post.

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April 16, 2008

But why bother with the coins...

...when they could just build the pawn shops right into the gas stations?

It's so much more efficient.



To view this video, you must: CLICK HERE.




Wishing you a beautiful day,

Bill Brent


[this page last updated: 2008.04.16, 8:50 p.m. Hawaii time]


LitBoy.com is a professional blog. Keeping it online costs me $200 per year. That's before paying me for my writing, photography, or anything else I do here. If you enjoy this blog, please use the Tip Jar at the top of this page. Your two-dollar minimum donation helps keep this banner-free site alive. It's quick and easy!

Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
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This meter displays this year's contributions to date in U.S. dollars (after the funds processor takes its cut). Make a donation, watch the meter rise! Usually I post your contribution on my next blog post.

All original materials here on LitBoy.com (writing, photos, drawings, graphics, etc.) belong to Bill Brent. If you want to re-use something here, please ask. Higher resolution images are available.

March 20, 2008

Ever get the feeling you're being screwed?

We really can't stop ourselves<--CLICK FOR DETAILS





Wishing you a beautiful day,

Bill Brent


[this page last updated: 2008.03.20, 7:40 a.m. Hawaii time]


LitBoy.com is a professional blog. Keeping it online costs me $200 per year. That's before paying me for my writing, photography, or anything else I do here. If you enjoy this blog, please use the Tip Jar at the top of this page. Your two-dollar minimum donation helps keep this banner-free site alive. It's quick and easy!

Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
20.00 / $199.90
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This meter displays this year's contributions to date in U.S. dollars (after the funds processor takes its cut). Make a donation, watch the meter rise! Usually I post your contribution on my next blog post.

All original materials here on LitBoy.com (writing, photos, drawings, graphics, etc.) belong to Bill Brent. If you want to re-use something here, please ask. Higher resolution images are available.

March 02, 2008

Be SPECIFIC when you wish for change.

Here is a NEGATIVE example of change:


The last time I saw Richard was Detroit in '68

And he told me all romantics meet the same fate someday

Cynical and drunk and boring someone in some dark cafe

You laugh he said you think you're immune

Go look at your eyes they're full of moon

You like roses and kisses and pretty men to tell you

All those pretty lies pretty lies

When you gonna realise they're only pretty lies

Only pretty lies just pretty lies


He put a quarter in the Wurlitzer and he pushed

Three buttons and the thing began to whirr

And a bar maid came by in fishnet stockings and a bow tie

And she said "Drink up now it's gettin' on time to close"

"Richard, you haven't really changed" I said

It's just that now you're romanticizing some pain that's in your head

You got tombs in your eyes but the songs you punched are dreaming

Listen, they sing of love so sweet, love so sweet

When you gonna get yourself back on your feet?

Oh and love can be so sweet Love so sweet


Richard got married to a figure skater

And he bought her a dishwasher and a coffee percolator

And he drinks at home now most nights with the TV on

And all the house lights left up bright

I'm gonna blow this damn candle out

I don't want nobody comin' over to my table

I got nothing to talk to anybody about

All good dreamers pass this way some day

Hidin' behind bottles in dark cafes dark cafes

Only a dark cocoon before I get my gorgeous wings and fly away

Only a phase these dark cafe days


Copyright © 1970; Joni Mitchell


I've heard this damned song over a hundred times, and it still makes me cry.

Perhaps you find a lot of Ms. Mitchell's material just too depressive, especially if you've never been an alcoholic or an addict. Where this piece really gets me lies in that last verse. Both of her characters are stuck in the same prison, using alcohol to tack their boats against the winds of change; their circumstances only look different on the outside.

And, of course, the dissipation continues all the while; it's only a slower and more insidious form of change.

That's the plight of eternal dreamers, in a nutshell.

Nutshell = nut's hell.

And American Dreamers are eternal dreamers. Y'all know the word for it by now, so say it with me: DENIAL.

Think of it this way: W is a fundamentalist dry-drunk dreamer whose administration has leveraged his privilege to create more negative change, arguably, than any other in American history. Now, the four oldest Justices are liberal thinkers. God help us if we put another Republican into the Oval Office. Do you want to see a real nut's hell? Just wait until the Supreme Court is stacked with conservative thinkers for the next several decades. You can kiss goodbye whatever remains of your already-reamed civil liberties.

So, yes, I'm suggesting that you choose the lesser of two evils. Obama is certainly a pretty man to tell you pretty lies (after all, he is a lawyer), but he is still our best shot at undoing the current administration's heinous damages to our civil liberties. (The war in Iraq will probably continue regardless of who gets the gavel.)

Now, no one who is reading this is likely to suffer more under one or two terms of Democratic rule than she is under a Republican heir to the current nut's hell. In the bargain, we might get a couple of new Justices on the Supreme Court who will sometimes rule in the best interest of the individual, rather than the corporation. That's the real reason to vote for a President.

"Only a phase these dark cafe days" is an expression of hope and futility. Optimism or wishful thinking? We sell off the present in the belief of a better future. In a nut's hell, this is the concluding message of THE GREAT GATSBY by F. Scott Fitzgerald. He would know; he was an alcoholic. And I think that's exactly where this nation is at this orgastic moment in history. "Orgastic" is the word Fitzgerald coined to describe an orgy of spending. But whether it's balling or malling, it all leads to exhaustion at some point. And thus we are enmeshed in the big-box paradox we've built: Pandora is vast. And microcosmic.

Are you out shopping for a home in the current foreclosure-glutted market? Take it from one realtor who spoke off the record: "Home" is a high-gloss box that rusts in the rain. You can't take it with you. Remember the moral of a different song, a much simpler one: "The cheese stands alone." And the bank is where they keep the cheese. What's a bank, then? Just a big, cold box.

So more about high-gloss boxes: It really doesn't matter whether we're talking about buying a new house or a new large-screen TV. Did any of you just get reamed yet again by technology "upgrades"? I'm talking about big-box Wal-Mart's switch from HD DVD to Blu-Ray.

That's the kind of bait and switch, negative change you can expect more of as long as you'll put up with it.

Society is an addict. We've been bred for it. How long will you wait to bottom out?

Here are a few ideas to get you off the gloss and on the road to recovery:


Blog Action Day Post: Consumption


Uncomplicate My Life, part one


Uncomplicate My Life, part two



Wishing you a beautiful day,

Bill Brent


[this page last updated: 2008.03.02, 8:25 p.m. Hawaii time]


LitBoy.com is a professional blog. Keeping it online costs me $200 per year. That's before paying me for my writing, photography, or anything else I do here. If you enjoy this blog, please use the Tip Jar at the top of this page. Your two-dollar minimum donation helps keep this banner-free site alive. It's quick and easy!

Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
20.00 / $199.90
(10.0%)

This meter displays this year's contributions to date in U.S. dollars (after the funds processor takes its cut). Make a donation, watch the meter rise! Usually I post your contribution on my next blog post.

All original materials here on LitBoy.com (writing, photos, drawings, graphics, etc.) belong to Bill Brent. If you want to re-use something here, please ask. Higher resolution images are available.

December 31, 2007

My Favorite Resolution

Wishing you a beautiful day,

Bill Brent


[this page last updated: 2007.12.31, 4:15 p.m. Hawaii time]


LitBoy.com is a professional blog. Keeping it online costs me $200 per year. That's before paying me for my writing, photography, or anything else I do here. If you enjoy this blog, please use the Tip Jar at the top of this page. Your two-dollar minimum donation helps keep this banner-free site alive. It's quick and easy!

Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
80.99 / $199.90
(40.5%)

This meter displays this year's contributions to date in U.S. dollars (after the funds processor takes its cut). Make a donation, watch the meter rise! Usually I post your contribution on my next blog post.

All original materials here on LitBoy.com (writing, photos, drawings, graphics, etc.) belong to Bill Brent. If you want to re-use something here, please ask. Higher resolution images are available.

September 24, 2007

Thoughts on Creative Process

I just realized something about the creative process. Mine, at least.

I tend to get inspired from experiencing the art or vision of other creative types. It doesn't have to be in the same field of discipline as mine. And it truly doesn't have to be art per se. Sometimes it can be as simple as my own analysis of what I like or dislike about their particular vision, or my observation of how that vision plays out in the larger world.

Let me see if I can explain this.

It's as if the other creative type and I are sheets of paper or cloth, and if the other is "on fire," and brushes up against me, that tends to set me on fire as well. Then we've got two creative types on fire, each with his own "print" or tapestry to expose to the world. My tapestry is not a copy of theirs, but I need to catch a glimpse of theirs in order to set mine free — to unravel it, if you will. Or to "see" my own design and make a print of the image that is forming in my brain.

Hunh.




Thanks to M.P., M.M., and D.S. for their recent contributions
in support of this blog.




Wishing you a beautiful day,

Bill Brent


[this page last updated: 2007.09.24, 12:12 p.m. Hawaii time]


LitBoy.com is a professional blog. Keeping it online costs me $200 per year. That's before paying me for my writing, photography, or anything else I do here. If you enjoy this blog, please use the Tip Jar at the top of this page. Your two-dollar minimum donation helps keep this banner-free site alive. It's quick and easy!

Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
80.99 / $199.90
(40.5%)

This meter displays this year's contributions to date in U.S. dollars (after the funds processor takes its cut). Make a donation, watch the meter rise! Usually I post your contribution on my next blog post.

All original materials here on LitBoy.com (writing, photos, drawings, graphics, etc.) belong to Bill Brent. If you want to re-use something here, please ask. Higher resolution images are available.

August 11, 2007

JIM GOAD, interviewed by Bill Brent

Greetings, reader. This is an essay I wrote during Jim Goad's visit to Hawaii in April 2007 and expanded as I found time over the next four months. This accompanies the interview I did with Jim that day, which I present here in four segments of roughly twelve minutes each, every Saturday for four weeks. Click on the audio player below to hear segment number one of four. —Bill Brent

070405jimgoadhilocowboyApril 5, 2007, 7:57 a.m.

Eccentricity is not, as dull people would have us believe, a form of madness. It is often a kind of innocent pride, and the man of genius and the aristocrat are frequently regarded as eccentrics because genius and aristocrat are entirely unafraid of and uninfluenced by the opinions and vagaries of the crowd. —Dame Edith Sitwell, poet, 1887-1964

Jim Goad has been visiting us for the past couple of days, and tonight he leaves for Honolulu to stay in a Waikiki hotel room that has been paid for by a reader he has never met, and probably never will. They corresponded over the Internet, and she was going to show him Oahu, but apparently she balked and rented him a room instead. She has not been returning his calls.

Jim leads a charmed or a cursed life, depending on how you look at it. Although he would probably deny it, I think he may be that rare example of a pure artist, one who survives on his wits and creative skills alone. Perhaps "pioneer" is a word that Jim would more readily identify with; more on that later. He claims he is not good at business — negotiating contracts and such — although he is arguably one of the smartest people I know. I guess this confirms one hypothesis I have, which is that the brilliant often don't concern themselves with the "petty details" of life, although it is often in such details that we establish or deny our security.

Yet Jim has a strong sense of self-preservation, as do I. Perhaps that's the main reason I like him. He carries himself with a physical sureness that I find appealing, although I am sure it intimidates others. No wonder he runs into men who pick fights with him; they must find his confidence a threat to their fragile masculine egos. No doubt, this is also what many women find attractive about him. This, too, threatens some men. There's a bit of the High Plains Drifter about Jim, that mysterious Stranger destined for mayhem.

So often we try to describe someone by reducing him to analogies. Yet perhaps this one will serve:

We've been having a bit of a misadventure trying to track down poi. With this visit to Hawaii, Jim has now visited all fifty states. Jim makes a point of experiencing the indigenous cuisine, wherever he goes, so naturally he would choose the one Hawaiian dish that nearly everyone associates with the Hawaiian Islands. Moreover, poi is simple — it's mashed taro root — and therefore it would seem readily available. Yet by my count we checked at six grocery stores yesterday, and not one of them had poi in stock. Restaurants specializing in authentic Hawaiian cuisine are scarce — the Yellow Pages list one place in Kona, and one in Hilo — and the Hilo place (really just a lunch counter with takeout and maybe a table or two) was closed when we visited the other evening around 7 p.m., although its Yellow Pages ad states, "open for lunch and dinner."

Other local specialties – musubi (SPAM sushi) and the loco moco — are widely available, yet each was invented by some cook in a kitchen within the past century, and thus are about as "authentic" as the Chinese fortune cookie, which was similarly invented by an enterprising California baker in the early 20th century.

Well, we finally cornered the elusive poi at an overpriced tourist trap called The Coconut Grill, where the food was mediocre at best, and the service so abysmal that Jim left the tip beneath the water glass — a dollar bill folded down to the size of a bitter pill.

Jim's focus on the quintessential strikes me as a trait shared by the best scientists and artists, along with the most spiritually evolved among us. Those who persist in the name of discovery can settle for nothing less. Those who cut away ruthlessly at discouragement and distraction are rare souls, probably because most of us don't really want to hear, in the words of Boyd McDonald, the shameless fucking truth. My friend Romy describes this as "bare-bricks reality." It is in pursuing truth that we have the best shot at achieving real freedom — yet "man is born free and everywhere he is in chains," Jim told me yesterday, quoting Rousseau.

Rousseau's novels inspired the leaders of the French revolution. Often it has been the writer-philosophers who are most keenly attuned to the winds of change, and thus can offer a set of guiding principles during troubled times. Jim would scoff at the notion that he had any such guidance to offer, but I can see that some of the principles he embodies include:

– the courage to change;

– the courage to move through life without the security of the pack;

– the curiosity to try new things and even seek them out with passion.

Of course, such foresight is a blessing and a curse. It's tough to see through the obfuscation of powerful social codes that benefit a few and keep the rest of us fighting with each other. The few gifted have-nots such as Jim who point out these codes are usually shunned as heretics. It's a case of killing the messenger, though, when the point is to heed the message. Were we to do that, and live up to its demands, we would have to stop fighting each other (as did the ancient Hawaiians when they sat down to poi) and seek ways to improve or even abolish the corrupt aspects of our culture, even when this called for revolt. Instead, while the have-nots bicker over whether, for instance, racial or class inequality is the greater social bane — one shining example of distraction — those already consolidated in power remain undistracted by such vagaries, and thus they prevail and prosper.

Freedom implies change. The courage to change is one of the fundamental traits of strong character. Men of strong character are often condemned by those who lack it. All positive change brings about destruction of old, non-functional behaviors and outmoded ways of thinking. If we are not proactive, then, we are doomed to being re-active, which is rarely if ever a position of strength.

The quintessentialists learn this lesson early in life.

I think [artists] create because they have to. Because they were people who just happened to see things a little bit differently than the rest of the world, and because of that they're ridiculed and persecuted as kids. And some of us turned those feelings and that hurt inside and used it to try and create something that we can show to people and say, "Here. You think I'm weird? This is how you look to me. This is my view of the world." And it's not something you can choose whether or not to do; it's something you're driven to do. —Billy Zoom, musician, interviewed by Mark Prindle, 2004

Someone I once pointed at Jim's NetJerk Lounge remarked that there was a lot of "hostility" on display there. Strangely, this hadn't occurred to me. We live in hostile times. So why would the writer-philosopher's focus on the quintessential exclude projections of hostility? How could one even begin to tell the truth of our time without it? Jim once wrote that "the only pioneers are those who give voice to the ugliest corridors of their unconscious without fear of censure from any quarter." I propose a corollary premise: that such a pioneer sheds light upon our culture's ugliest corridors without self-censure or fear.

Sometimes, though, Jim strikes me as his own worst … publicist. His willingness to present himself and his views in a less than flattering light may be honest, but it is sure to alienate many listeners. On the other hand, this lack of sugar-coating is yet another example of quintessentialism. All humans are flawed, and those of us willing to present our flaws (including our flawed yet evolving views) without apology or self-censure will have it rough at times. Perhaps Jim's saving grace in that regard is his sense of humor, in particular his willingness to laugh at himself. He and I share this trait, as well as some fairly brutal early life experiences. Perhaps it is all one, and humor is the intellect's natural defense against early wrongs. In any case, I know that it is not virtue that redeems a wounded soul, it is laughter.

As a life-artist, Jim Goad is a work in progress, one who poses us with the challenge to evolve … or perish. To my mind, his message, more through his example than through his words, is this: you can lead your life, or let it lead you.



RELATED LINKS:

Link to Amazon com Buy JIM GOAD'S GIGANTIC BOOK OF SEX and LitBoy.com gets a commission.

Check out Jim Goad's website.
- Buy his fine products direct [click on the "4sale" link] and support Jim's creative vision.
- Read the NetJerk Lounge [click on the "lounge" link].
- Read essays by Jim [click on the "words" link], and more.

Check out Jim's MySpace page, listen to song selections, and read news of Jim's musical pursuits, including any scheduled appearances.

Meet Karlsson/Stephenson, and listen to selections from their album, dog. Brief clips of the album are used as intro and outro music for the various interview segments. Special thanks to Rob Stephenson for mastering the interview audio files.

Check out the MySpace page for composers Mikael Karlsson and Rob Stephenson.




Wishing you a beautiful day,

Bill Brent


[this page last updated: 2007.08.15, 6:45 p.m. Hawaii time]


LitBoy.com is a professional blog. Keeping it online costs me $200 per year. That's before paying me for my writing, photography, or anything else I do here. If you enjoy this blog, please use the Tip Jar at the top of this page. Your two-dollar minimum donation helps keep this banner-free site alive. It's quick and easy!

Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
53.06 / $199.90
(26.5%)

This meter displays this year's contributions to date in U.S. dollars (after the funds processor takes its cut). Make a donation, watch the meter rise! Usually I post your contribution on my next blog post.

All original materials here on LitBoy.com (writing, photos, drawings, graphics, etc.) belong to Bill Brent. If you want to re-use something here, please ask. Higher resolution images are available.

July 15, 2007

NOVEL-WRITING LOG: 2 days and counting

Pinonewaywigglyswv WIGGLY.

Today's written product came out wiggly. It came about in a wiggly way, too. Many years ago, I interviewed a friend about his days (nights, mostly) of running nightclubs and performance venues in San Francisco and Manhattan. This interview helped me write a detective story I finished at the end of 1996, which was set in a nightclub, and featured arson as the crime. Fortunately, I held onto the interview cassette. There was a section on the tape about local corruption that didn't make it into the original project, but it sure came in handy today, as I was working on the right-brain novel.

I have thrown away, given away, and sold countless tons of stuff over the years, yet I have held onto nearly everything I have ever written, sketched, or recorded, whether the material seems raw or polished. Sometimes I have to wait years for these creative trinkets to pay out, yet every so often they do. So I encourage anyone who considers herself a creative worker to think twice about tossing out anything that might make good creative fuel down the line, even if it's unrealized now. You can always toss it later, but you can never get it back.

My writing was wiggly because it was part of an unexpected plot twist and because it involved some wiggly words. Actually, I think it is some of the loveliest language in the book. A fair amount of the novel's text is in a highly poetic, allusive, multilayered style, but I have to be in a certain frame of mind to write a lot of the heavier stuff. Today was the right day; I was a bit wiggly from the combination of the morning coffee and the long-term emotional fatigue of this project. It's just part of the deal, the fatigue. I'm glad I have lived long enough to write about some heavy topics in longer work. I wasn't ready for this in 1996.

In the right-brain novel, the characters and situations are hewn more from whole cloth than dirty laundry. Either can make the better fabric for a story, of course, and I have done both. In the case of the latter, I've long since learned to change first names. I screwed up on that once and it's not a mistake I'd care to repeat. And in the instant case, the characters are so fabricated out of my imagination, or are such fragmented bits and pieces of the past's amalgam, that the amalgam would not be recognizable to anyone else ... and someday, perhaps, not even to me. Such is the nature of invented reality. Yet is well-rendered fiction substantially different than real life, which is also invented as we live and then relive it? Of course not. It's all wiggly, see?

Snoopyhasfunmeetinggoals

We had intermittent rain throughout the day, which made my regular walk (often a source of creative inspiration) a wiggly proposition, so instead I sat on the bed in hubby's room and chatted with him as we watched the sun go down. Snoopy slept at the foot of the bed and dreamed his wiggly, twitchy-cat-paw dreams.


Bill's Left-Brain Novel,
as of July 15, 2007:

Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
69,885 / 90,000
(77.7%)
[unchanged]


Bill's Right-Brain Novel,
as of July 15, 2007:

Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
37,283 / 50,000
(74.6%)


Today's net gain: 1,474 words.



Wishing you a beautiful day,

Bill Brent


[this page last updated: 2007.07.15, 9:55 p.m. Hawaii time]


LitBoy.com is a professional blog. Keeping it online costs me $200 per year. That's before paying me for my writing, photography, or anything else I do here. If you enjoy this blog, please use the Tip Jar at the top of this page. Your two-dollar minimum donation helps keep this banner-free site alive. It's quick and easy!

Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
43.55 / $199.90
(21.8%)

This meter displays this year's contributions to date in U.S. dollars (after the funds processor takes its cut). Make a donation, watch the meter rise! Usually I post your contribution on my next blog post.

All original materials here on LitBoy.com (writing, photos, drawings, graphics, etc.) belong to Bill Brent. If you want to re-use something here, please ask. Higher resolution images are available.

June 10, 2007

NOVEL WRITING LOG: 37 days and counting

Welcome to the ongoing saga of my private NaNoWriMo, at the end of which I will have a first draft of a novel completed by my birthday on July 17.

GirlycigarettesToday, the total word count on the Right-Brain Novel moved from 11,608 to 14,232. Things got very interesting after I spent two hours "luking" (web-surfing) on the phrase "girly cigarettes." That's all I'm sayin'.

PinonewaywigglylwvI seem to shift readily between left-brain and right-brain modalities. I don't know how common this is, but according to the quiz results I've posted below, I'm evenly split. Today is the third time in two months I've taken the quiz and I've been 45/55 and 55/45 the other two times.

You Are 50% Left Brained, 50% Right Brained
The left side of your brain controls verbal ability, attention to detail, and reasoning.
Left brained people are good at communication and persuading others.
If you're left brained, you are likely good at math and logic.
Your left brain prefers dogs, reading, and quiet.

The right side of your brain is all about creativity and flexibility.
Daring and intuitive, right brained people see the world in their unique way.
If you're right brained, you likely have a talent for creative writing and art.
Your right brain prefers day dreaming, philosophy, and sports.


Again, the big novel is very left-brain, whereas the second novel is all about the right. It'll be fun to see which one gets finished first. Left-brain has a big head start, but right-brain is gaining fast.

Bill's Left-Brain Novel,
as of June 10, 2007:

Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
62,541 / 90,000
(69.5%)


Bill's Right-Brain Novel,
as of June 10, 2007:

Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
14,232 / 50,000
(28.5%)

I've been reading a helpful book, Link to Amazon com How to Become a Famous Writer Before You're Dead: Your Words in Print and Your Name in Lights , by Ariel Gore.

If you buy a copy of Ms. Gore's book through this page, I am supposed to get a 10% commission from Amazon.com's Associates program. If you're feeling particularly generous, and want to support my goal more directly, you can make a donation via the Tip Jar at the top of this page.

So that's the scoop from Day Two of my novel writing challenge.




Wishing you a beautiful day,

Bill Brent


[this page last updated: 2007.06.10, 5:15 p.m. Hawaii time]


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Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
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