As a followup to my previous post

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There are few plot problems that can’t be solved by asking Who are these characters and what do they want?

MAN BITES BOOK

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After a productive week, I’ve hit another wall with the plot.  There are so many threads to tie up, and now that the book is 70K+ I should be wrapping all of them up.

But I need a long walk to think about the best way to tie up all the threads.

Of course, in the old, pre-contract days, I would have just put it aside for a month or two while I wrote short fiction.  That’s not a viable option now.

Aaron Allston and working for corporations

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I first heard of this on The Swivet, and I’d like to help spread the word:  Aaron Allston, a writer of fiction and paper-and-dice rpgs (including Champions, Car Wars and D&D, among others), had a heart attack a few months back.  He’s recovering now, but he had a quadruple bypass, and now he has major bills to pay.

How you can help.

But Christ, the fact that this man’s friends need to start a collection to help him pay his medical bills should be an outrage to all of us.  He didn’t have health insurance, and you know why?  Because he works for himself, and the individual health insurance market is a disaster.

What about people who don’t have fans?  What about a guy trying to start to start an auto-repair business?  Or a woman building a client list for a new sports massage startup?  Landscapers?  Documentary filmmakers?  Community activists?

I’ll tell you what about them:  They catch cancer and lose their houses.  They come down with Chrohn’s Disease and give up their own businesses to work for corporations.  They have heart attacks and go bankrupt, lose their kids’ college funds, lose their retirement nest eggs.

Health care reform in this country is not just about the uninsured–people like Allston, who seek care at emergency rooms, the most expensive kind of care there is, and when they do go to a health care provider, they pay far more (often double if not more) than insurance plans do for the same services because they can’t bargain for lower rates.  It’s not just about making those people healthy out of the kindness of our hearts.  Yeah, they’d be able to seek care earlier (and at less expense) in their illnesses because they’d have a doctor of their own, and we’d have a healthier society.

But we’d also have fewer medical bankruptcies (currently, we have hundreds of thousands every year).  We’d have fewer people stuck in jobs they hate because they’re afraid of losing their coverage.  We’d have less wage stagnation (wages have been flat for years, but companies are paying more and more for their workforce–all that extra money is going to health insurers).  And we’d have more people willing to strike out on their own to start their own businesses, to go freelance, to innovate.

Instead, we have a federal government that’s structurally biased toward inaction and gridlock.

For a country that claims to value entrepreneurship, we don’t seem to have the will to promote it.

Edited to add: Seen via James Nicoll: Comics writer John Ostrander can’t afford the medical treatments that would save his sight. Note that Ostrander has insurance, but it’s not enough.

Attention writers!

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You know what I think is due for a comeback?

Sword and planet stories.

Agree?  Disagree?  STAR WARS and Star Wars novels are still going strong, certainly, but where are the popular, original sword-fights-on-space-ships stories?

I have one Dreamwidth invite code

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First person to ask for it can have it.

(I know.  How very March ’09 of me.)

edited to add: It’s been claimed!

One for a Friday

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No time to post five links, (besides, the internet has not been amusing me as much as I’d like) so today you only get one:

Latest threat to national security:  books written by some guy name Barack Obama. 

New title!

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Isn’t that a fun, clever and original subject line?  I’m sure you’re all envious of my wit. 

Everyone Loves Blue Dog has a new name.  Not a new tag, because I don’t change tags.  I never change a project’s filename, either; that’s a lesson I learned the hard way. 

The new title is Game of Cages

I like it (I came up with it–ahem) and the sales department didn’t roll their eyes or bark out laughter when my editor presented it to them.  If you reacted that way, let me know.  Seriously.  But this means that Man Bites World is going to need a [Noun] of [Noun] title.  ::sigh::

In happy news, I’ve had a productive couple of days.  And I think I figured out the very end of the book.  Now I just have to work out how to get there.

My work hates me

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How do I know?  They have a giant cake and buckets of ice cream in the break room.

It’s like a slow motion hate crime against fat people.   :P

Good (but embarrassing) news

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I just received a two-month deadline extension for Man Bites World.  Frankly, I’m embarrassed that I need it and more than a little frustrated with my method of working.  For the last few weeks, I’ve had a powerful case of Other writers can do this, why can’t I? That’s still going on, but without the worry of missing a deadline.

Well, I did spend over two months of this year on revisions to the soon-to-be-retitled Everyone Loves Blue Dog.  My agent warned me to factor that in when calculating deadlines, but I had no idea I’d be stuck on it again for over two months!

At any rate, I head to SoCal in two weeks to Comic-Con and see friends–while there, I plan to steal extra time for book three.  Hopefully it will not only be finished, but good, too.  Hopefully part 2, I will never have to ask for this again.

Rather than

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Rather than struggle with Man Bites World for a moment, I’m going to post some links.

1) The 15 Creepiest Vintage Ads of all Time. Some of these have been circulating for a while, but there’s some all new, all disturbing images there.  Via eeknight.

2) Bamboo Bikes from Zambia.  Too cool.

3) Ten Ways to Take a Bad Author Photo.  Pretty funny.  I used my author photo on the front of my Facebook page.

4) The only part of the NY Times Book Review section I read religiously is the Crime Section, but there’s something about Marilyn Stasio’s style that annoys me to no end.