Who doesn’t love charts?

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The chart of fantasy cover art.

eta: Also, craziness!

Two difficult, but necessary, links

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First, Jim C. Hines discusses the legal tactics of the Hotel Marriott lawyers in response to a lawsuit brought by a woman who was raped on their property: They are blaming the victim. (I’m linking to his LiveJournal because I can’t get his WordPress blog to open.) Jim has a warning at the top that his post is potentially-triggering discussion of rape and victim-blaming, and the comments are, too. FYI.

If you stay at Marriotts when you travel, you might want to write them a little letter.

Second, Hal Duncan has written an open letter to John C. Wright concerning Wright’s recent diatribe against Syfy, GLAAD and tolerance. I won’t like to Wright’s post itself, which is pretty gross, but Duncan’s response is excellent.

It’s also long, and the background makes it difficult to read. It’s worth the trouble, though.

If you value your sanity

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do not watch this

Part of me hopes it’s fake.

Five things for a Friday

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1) For those who missed it, I posted the first chapter of Child of Fire on my site yesterday. You can read it here. If you like it, tell your friends. If you hate it, tell your enemies.

2) Woman getting married to fairground ride. According to the article, she says she has “objectum sexuality, a condition that makes sufferers attracted to inanimate objects.” I avert my gaze as I hurry past the obvious joke there.

3) “Nurse of the Year” in Connecticut, who gave injections and dispensed medical advice, not actually a nurse. Remember, all failures of private industry are individual cases, but all failures within a government program reflect badly on every government program.

4) Drug buyers call the cops on their own dealers. Not because they were ripped off or because the drugs were bad. It was because the dealers were setting up squirrel traps in the park where they operated, and taking the fresh meat home at the end of the day. The drug buyers didn’t like that and dropped the dime on them. Fun note: When I first moved to Seattle, I lived very, very close to that park. It’s a beautiful place. via matt-ruff

5) I’ve always had trouble remembering faces and recognizing people, but man, I have nothing on Ryan O’Neal.

Busy busy busy

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Things are still crazy here in me-ville. I have so much crap to take care of, and no time to do it all.

Still, there’s always time for health care reform links: Just because we have really successful government-run programs doesn’t mean the government is able to run a program successfully.

More interesting commentary to come.

Books I have read. Books I will read.

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First things first: I’m not usually a fan of Megan McArdle’s political blogging, because it often seems like a triumph of preconceptions over evidence.

However! This interview with Paul Campos, author of The Obesity Myth, is pretty interesting stuff. I wish I’d seen it before I hit the bookstore today.

What’s that, you say? Bookstore? That’s right. I was about 12 pages from the end of The Patriot Witch by C.C. Finlay and it was so freaking good that I had to rush out and buy the next two, just in case they vanished from the bookstores or something. Now that I own them, I can read them at leisure (which means: right away).

I also bought Breakthrough Rapid Reading and The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Speed Reading (because I’m a complete idiot). I’d tried to read the former once before, but I borrowed it from the library and I had to–no joke–return it before I was done. No, really, I’m not kidding.

I think, in an effort to embarrass myself into learning to read faster, I will blog about my attempt to learn speed reading. Nothing like a little humiliation to goad the lazy.

I return

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My plane got in last night, and far from the cool summer of the Pac NW I was expecting, we had temps in the 90s. Today we’re supposed to be in the triple digits, which is rare stuff for this part of the world. Sitting around the table with my family last night at 10 pm, sweat was running down my face.

Luckily I’m currently at work, where we have “air conditioning.”

And! To commemorate my return, I give you a pair of links: Maker Time and Manager Time and the Freakonomics blog entry on the article. Personally, I think you can train yourself to enter maker time in short bursts. It’s not easy and it’s not optimal, but it works (and has worked for me).

I’ll never catch up with my whole friend’s list, but I’m reviewing it. If there’s something you think I should know about, let me know.

Finally, my weirdest moment at Comic-Con: I was signing books at the Del Rey booth, and a father brought his son to the table for a signed copy of my book. I’m terrible at guessing ages, but I’d say he was 8-10 years old–imo, way to young for the book I wrote.

His father had a copy of his own, though. Would he read it himself first? It’s not really my place to make that decision for them. I just signed the book and handed it over. Still, it felt wee erd.

7/19/09

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Buzz Aldrin, rapper.

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.

Hooray for Wing-it!

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Recently, the Seattle Chamber of Commerce held a contest to award $35K for an office makeover (Sorry, and “extreme” office makeover!) and my friends at Wing-It Productions were one of the finalists.

And the won! Check out the hot linked image!

Can I get that size checks with duplicates?

Recognize that guy on the left? Huh? Huh?

Child of Fire Cover

Anyway, they put together a great video which you can watch at the Chamber web site. I’ve known Mike and Andrew for many years and I couldn’t be happier for them.

Congratulations, guys!