irevuo: the up-and-coming venue up-and-coming artists? Hopefully!

Hey, three things, each of which is immediately pertinent to the next:
First, my newest story, “In Finiti,” has recently been accepted for publication in the seventh issue (“Homeland”) of the UW’s spec-fiction literary journal AU! What with the editor team overhaul this year, I was worried my style might not strike a chord with the new management, but it seems those concerns were unfounded. A little editing, and it’ll be set to hit print within a month!
Also, since an expanded cut of “In Finiti” will be included in Love&Darkness as well, that means–yes, you guessed it (you did guess it, right? I know I didn’t give out very many hints)! The rough draft of L&D is finally… er, finalized, meaning that after some finishing-up on the foreward and “inspirations” section, I’ll be giving a compiled document of its full contents to trusted friends and relatives to run over for formatting, grammatical, and/or egregious plot-based discrepancies before the initial printing run. Meanwhile, it’s time to move on to something just as vital: promotion and marketing! I’ll be working on some new and improved posters, stickers, and pocket fliers to put up around Seattle soon, along with their respective high-res images on the site so you can do the same (if, y’know… you want to).
And on a final note, in the interest of raising marginal awareness for Distortions as well, I hereby announce what is in absolutely no way whatsoever an effort to boost confidence in the imaginative power of my own work by announcing the unofficial Notes and Sketches fan art contest! From now until December 1st, send in or link to a picture of something you drew, built, or otherwise personally manufactured based on something from Distortions, AU, this site, or anywhere else my stuff has shown up (I think I wrote a limerick on the back of a handicapped bathroom door at Disney World once, but it’s probably gone by now), and based on largely arbitrary standards, I’ll give whoever makes the coolest one a free copy of both Distortions and Love&Darkness! (when it comes out, I will send it to you. You won’t even have to pay for shipping!) The runner-up will just get a free L&D, but since you probably already have Distortions, that’s not a bad deal either!
Unfortunately, this news does not concern me going to South America or dating a 7′ tall woman, but I’ve got something just a few tics below in importance: my personalized Amazon.com author page is now online! I mean, it was before, but now there’s a much easier (and , given my track record with registering names, remarkably un-taken) URL to deal with: https://www.amazon.com/author/trevorwhite . So if you need something more “mainstream” to pass along to your friends as an introduction to my work, then there’s that. Also, I linked my Twitter account and this very blog to said page as well–apparently, all you have to do to get an RSS feed is input http://%5Bexample%5D.com/?feed=rss to your something-or-other, and bam! Of course, you’re most likely on top of both already without a feed, but it seemed sensible to get in on that mode of transmission as well.
In other news, this looks promising: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/09/13/print-on-demand-books-espresso_n_1882616.html?utm_hp_ref=tw
It’s been a long time since I’ve taken part in April Fools Day — not to be a killjoy or anything, but the short explanation is that I just gradually thought at some point that having a holiday devoted to lying wasn’t really my thing. However, if there’s two things I do enjoy, it’s putting massive amounts of preparation into working on something without actually doing it, and doing that as a way to procrastinate! Therefore, I started a “project” several months ago to set up a fairly entertaining dupe, but realized as the date neared that 1) I had no idea how to pull it off without minor — but nevertheless risky — repercussions, and 2) Okay, seriously, this was wasting too much time. As such, without further ado, witness now the… you know what, how about this? Just open that document down there, hit Ctrl+A, Ctrl+C, go to Wikipedia, choose any article you want or the Sandbox, Ctrl+V into the Edit box, and hit Preview.
Licorice and Hope – Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
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Credit goes to whoever(s) put together the page for “Nothing Personal” by All Time Low, because that’s what I plagarized most of it from.
First of all, minor hiccups caused by here-and-there edits notwithstanding, the page for Distortions on Amazon.com should be live! Having said that, unlike B&N’s site (which, for reasons not readily apparent, has been adding relatively inaccurate “people who bought this also bought…” recommendations, despite a current sales tally of zero copies), there’s no directly integrated author info page. However, that’s actually good, because what it turns out Amazon has is “Author Central”, a sub-site of social networking features and media designed to help authors share themselves and their work with more people, fellow writers and average readers alike! Some of the stuff on there might be a little redundant, seeing as I’ve already got a blog and I’m not planning on tweeting at least until the real push for Love & Darkness comes around, but it’s my belief that until someone starts listening, you can’t say you’ve said something too much on the internet. But I digress: Here’s a link to the page in question, which may or may not fluctuate to a certain degree in the coming weeks.
Additionally, I’d like to take this moment to express my sincere sadness at the official closure of the Borders chain. I’m not crying myself to sleep or anything, because I know it’s not going to turn into Farenheit 451 overnight from here, but it is distressing to see what eBooks have done to the prospects of brick ‘n’ mortar stores. Were there other factors? Of course–the economy’s all over the place, for one (and in my personal opinion, there’s just not that many good new books out anyway). In any case, I can’t harp on the whole thing too much–after all, I’m selling my book(s) digitally at this very moment. But I don’t think I need to tell you that there’s no replacement for the real deal, and it bodes ill for the industry as a whole to see a corporation of this magnitude go under. Also, I’ve been something of a iPod junkie as of late, so the “& Music” part of their business is an equally troubling loss. However, there’s this Barnes & Noble in Seattle with a second floor full of albums… so there’s always that, for now.
Hey, all! And by all, I mean the two or three people who follow this blog. But that’s okay, everybody’s got to start somewhere, right? Anyway, just wanted to let you know that I haven’t given up the ink and keyboard just yet. Since my last post, I’ve been working on wrapping up my last quarter of college with 20 credits worth of classes, and it hasn’t been a schedule that’s allowed for much unbridled work-time when the rest of my life’s demands are taken into account. Fortunately, I’m graduating tomorrow, and it looks like I’ll be making it out with a 4.0 in at least two classes, so that’s killer.
However, there’s one other thing that’s been holding me back as of late: A combination chest-cold and gastrointestinal condition. While the former is unpleasant yet manageable, the latter is a mysterious affliction that’s been going on for almost two months, leaving me with consistent nausea and abdominal pain that ranges from “it feels like I have literal heartburn” to “it feels like whatever’s in front of me right now needs to transform into a toilet, or we’re going to have to waste a perfectly good towel around here” (I haven’t gotten sick–yet–which should calm me, but I have no idea if it’s getting worse or not). But I won’t bore and/or gross you out with any of my tinfoil hat theories about what’s wrong with me; the point is, I’ve been seeing doctors and getting tests as consistently as I can, and the consensus so far is that it’s at least not anything deadly or parasitic. I’ll just tough it out through whatever happens!
Still, I have gotten some things done. I’m juggling two new short stories right now (in addition to a finished one!), and I’ve also completed a couple of new poems that I’m pretty proud of. Being a member of the college writing club certainly helped, if only because we decided to do writing prompts every week–however, I had to pass up on penning an elaborate metafictional espionage version of Cinderella that I thought up, because my English 102 paper was due the coming Tuesday and I was only halfway done.
But I digress. Here’s the news: The Timberland Regional Library has three (3) copies of Distortions in their catalog as we speak! I mean, as I speak. Type. Whatever. Anyway, at last count, there’s two checked out from Centralia and Chehalis, and one available in Lacey, though that’s sure to change quickly. So if you live within TRL’s range (some part of Washington State) and can’t afford a copy of your own, or can but don’t feel like promoting my career, then go to http://www.trl.org/Pages/default.aspx and search for “Distortions” by Trevor White!
That’s right! I’ve been working on getting Distortions available as a Barnes & Noble NookBook, and the day of e-publishing is finally upon us. Check it out. Copies are four bucks a pop, and though I can’t guarantee it’ll look as good as good as the print version, it’ll certainly get into your possession quicker. So buy it if you want, or buy it again if you already have it, but feel free to post a review either way!
By now, I doubt there’s a person in the industrialized world who hasn’t been following the crisis in Japan with growing concern. For the record, I’d like to take this moment to express my deepest sorrow over all the lives this past week’s tragedies have claimed, as well as my hopes that those surviving can stay strong and rebuild their lives. Of course, though the human cost is paramount, the ripples edging towards the rest of the planet cannot be denied, whether in terms of nuclear contamination or economic instability. I’m not qualified to comment on either of these potential effects, and so that’s not why I made this post–on my personal blog, at least. The reason I mention this is because of how this has personally affected me, and how I feel a little bit ashamed because of it.
First of all, I worry about how much of my distress over Japan is misplaced. I heard a valid point made recently that the amount of attention the crisis has been getting on the internet is partially attributable to the infatuation most geeks and gamers have with their cultural output. I’ve never been to Japan (even though I’ve so desperately wanted to, a dream that increasingly looks to be unfeasible), and my concept of what most of the country even looks like is based largely on fantasy RPGs and alternate-universe anime, so I’ll confess that such is no less the case with myself. Do I feel bad about Japan, or do I feel bad that my perfect little stereotypical image of the country has been tarnished, an image that was probably not even accurate in the first place? Do I worry about freezing temperatures and nuclear meltdowns, or do I worry that there might be a hiccup in my casual diet of quirky videogames and eyebrow-raising manga?
But let’s get to what primarily drove me to post this: My writing. See, I know I have more fingers on one hand than followers on this blog (any accidents this Fourth of July pending), but those of you keeping tabs on my work know that my novel-in-progress–and planned series of sequels–takes place chiefly in and around the Land of the Rising Sun, drawing heavily on Japanese culture along the way. So my question to myself, to you, to everybody, is… what do I do? Once again, I know it’s petty to worry about this problem in light of the events that preceded it, but I really had a feeling this thing was going to be my magnum opus–my Harry Potter, as it were. The questions have been flying through my mind, stressing me out to no end as they go: How have other authors in the past coped with massive disasters, pertinent to their work or otherwise? How many stories have been modified, or even completely scrapped, when current events mandated it? Should I make it a period piece, or maybe a “timeless” story, taking place in the modern day but altogether dodging such an issue? It’s a hard line to toe, between how Spider-Man addressed 9/11 and how Song of the South addressed… well, shoot, everything. Above all, though, if I don’t write this… then now what? I’ve got other ideas in the wings, sure, but I was counting on this one to buoy me for at least a few years.
Yet overall, the most frustration I feel is over the fact that despite my announcements about planning and pondering, I had been putting off writing this book to no end, despite telling myself how culturally relevant some of the material would have to be. Ironic… I basically sit down at my computer every evening, tell myself, “Oh, there’s time–it’s not like Japan isn’t going to be there tomorrow”, and play Minecraft or something instead (okay, I won’t be too hard on myself; I also had tons of college work to deal with). And what do you know? Of course the country will recover–the Japanese people as a whole are about the hardiest around, and they’ve collectively survived the only two nuclear attacks in history–but if an entire third of the place turns into a dead zone, I’m going to have to put some serious thought into how to write this book, particularly with the same tone I intended.
In the end, at least for me, I suppose it’s not all bad. I won’t be so philosophically controversial as to suggest that Japan’s tragedy has taught me some sort of “lesson”, but I do feel that a combination of the recent disasters and my college’s Creative Writing class have made me honestly evaluate myself as a writer for what may be the first time. I’m trying new styles of writing, improving old ones, and always jotting down ideas, and I’ve got over a dozen new poems (and a short play!) that I might upload at some point. I think it might be for the best, though, that I hold off on any tantalizing announcements until my next work–whatever it may be–reaches a more complete stage than five-and-a-half chapters and a couple hundred KB of “scraps”. As we’ve all (re)learned, things can change faster than you ever imagined.