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May. 20th, 2013 @ 06:40 am New Voice: Polly Holyoke on The Neptune Project
for Cynsations

Polly Holyoke is the first-time author of The Neptune Project (Hyperion, 2013). From the promotional copy:

With her weak eyes and useless lungs that often leave her gasping for air, Nere feels more at home swimming with the dolphins her mother studies than she does hanging out with her classmates.

Nere has never understood why she is so much more comfortable and confident in the water than on land until the day she learns the shocking truth—she is one of a group of kids who have been genetically altered to survive in the ocean. These products of the "Neptune Project" are supposed to build a better future under the waves, safe from the terrible famines and wars and that rock the surface world.

But there some big challenges ahead of her: noone ever asked Nere if she wanted to be part of a science experiment; the other Neptune kids aren't exactly the friendliest bunch, and in order to reach the safe haven of the new Neptune colony, Nere and her fellow mutates must swim across hundreds of miles of dangerous ocean, relying on their wits, their loyal dolphins and one another to evade terrifying undersea creatures and a government that will stop at nothing to capture the Neptune kids ... dead or alive.

Fierce battle and daring escapes abound as Nere and her friend race to safety in this action-packed marine adventure.

When and where do you write? Why does that time and space work for you?

I've been writing professionally for over twenty years now, and I do like to write in my little office (usually supervised by two lazy cats), but I can make myself write anywhere.

Ellie and Luna
I'm also a big believer in the "bio-rhythms" of writing. Different people definitely have different times of day when they are most productive. Between 8 and 11 o'clock in the morning is my magic time when the words and phrases flow easily. Noon to two or so is a barren, frustrating desert, and then my creativity starts flowing again around three in the afternoon, just when I have to pick up my kids from school.

I knew a successful romance writer whose most productive time was literally from midnight to four or five in the morning. She lived a completely nocturnal lifestyle when she was on deadline, but luckily she was single and could cater to the whims of her personal bio-rhythms!

Most of us have jobs and family obligations which keep us from writing at our most productive time. But if you want to be a professional writer, you have to protect that time as best you can.

Sometimes you get stuck having to produce at a time of day when those creative juices don't flow as easily, but if you're a pro, you still put yourself in front of your computer at home, in the car, at the office cafeteria, or at your kid's school gym between games and make the words come or, at the very least, get some useful revising done.

As a science fiction writer, how did you go about building your world?

The Neptune Project takes place almost entirely in the sea, and one of my favorite compliments from a teen reader was, "I had no idea all that cool stuff was down there."

There is lots of "cool stuff" in the ocean, and I went to great lengths to build an undersea world so vivid that my readers could see it, hear it, feel it, and taste it.

Fortunately, I've been a scuba diver for many years, and I was able to describe from personal experience the light and the visibility and the currents one often encounters beneath the waves. I went to the websites of dive companies which operate in waters I didn't know, like the Vancouver Island area, and I studied their photos and read comments from their guests to collect more visceral details to convey what it's like swimming around in such cold, dark waters.

Even though the entire premise of humans breathing water may seem preposterous to some, I wanted to make it seem as believable as possible. I had to do a ton of research and found out that what we can already do in terms of genetic engineering is both amazing and frightening.

We truly are on the brink of being able to create custom-designed children and genetically-enhanced super soldiers. Creating humans who can breathe in the sea isn't preposterous at all.

Finally, I tried to tap into my own teen years and imagine what it would be like if I were fourteen and suddenly was forced to live in the ocean. What would I notice, what would astound me, and what would I miss from my life on land?

Effective world-building often comes back to the simplest details.

In one of my favorite scenes, my characters float in a circle eating their lunch of raw fish and kelp while they talk about the food from home that they miss, like ice cream and freshly-baked bread. I hope in that moment, my teen readers do realize how hard it is for my characters to have to live in this strange new undersea world for the rest of their lives.
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cynleitichsmith
May. 20th, 2013 @ 06:34 am Event Report: Lindsey Scheibe & Riptide
Lindsey signs Riptide
By Cynthia Leitich Smith
for Cynsations

Debut YA author Lindsey Scheibe launched Riptide (Flux, 2013) yesterday at BookPeople in Austin. From the promotional copy:

For Grace Parker, surfing is all about the ride and the moment. Everything else disappears. She can forget that her best friend, Ford Watson, has a crush on her that she can’t reciprocate. She can forget how badly she wants to get a surf scholarship to UC San Diego. She can forget the pressure of her parents’ impossibly high expectations.

When Ford enters Grace into a surf competition— the only way she can impress the UCSD surfing scouts—she has one summer to train and prepare. Will she gain everything she’s ever wanted or lose the only things that ever mattered?

Read a Cynsations New Voice interview with Lindsey.

Lindsey with Austin SCBWI founder Meredith Davis & Bee Cave librarian Michelle Benavides
Austin authors Jo Whittemore, Nikki Loftin, Jennifer Ziegler, Greg Leitich Smith, Bethany Hegedus, Salima Alikhan & Cory Putnam Oakes catch a wave.
Cory and writer-photographer Sam Bond
Debut YA author Lindsey Scheibe
Here I am, getting into the surfer spirit!
Author-illustrator Mark G. Mitchell & author Julie Lake
Lindsey tells stories of her own surfing adventures.
Lindsey Scheibe signs for fellow Austin author (& fellow Lindsey), Lindsey Lane.
Here I am, sandwiched between Austin SCBWI ARA Samantha Clark & Salima
Erin Edwards & Jo mug for the camera; Austin SCBWI RA Shelley Ann Jackson waits behind them.
Samantha, Shelli Cornelison & Meredith at Lucy's Retired Surfer Bar in Austin
Salima, Bethany & Samantha at Lucy's
Greg, Salima, Erin, Nikki, Lindsey, her husband, Meredith, Bethany, Samantha & Shelli at Lucy's
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cynleitichsmith
May. 20th, 2013 @ 12:01 am Halo and Rainbow Panorama

http://epod.usra.edu/blog/2013/05/halo-and-rainbow-panorama.html

Halo_RainbowAA1_100413_01

Photographer: Michael Grossmann; Michael's Web site
Summary Author: Michael Grossmann

It's rare that you can see a rainbow and halo simultaneously. However, on this early spring day in Kaempfelbach, Germany, such a feat was possible. During the late afternoon, as a brief rain shower developed in the eastern sky, a rainbow could be detected at the antisolar point -- near the eastern horizon (left). At the same time, sunlight refracting through randomly oriented ice crystals, composing a layer of cirrus clouds in the vicinity of the Sun (in the western sky, at right), triggered a bright 22 degree halo. Note that the camera is facing south. Photo taken on April 10, 2013.

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epod_feed
May. 20th, 2013 @ 06:29 am Today’s Air Force Heroes

http://asuen.com/blog/todays-air-force-heroes/

http://asuen.com/blog/?p=1366

Today’s Air Force Heroes
by Miriam Aronin (Author)

Booktalk: Meet real-life airmen and women who have displayed incredible courage in the face of danger as they served their country in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Snippet: At sunrise on a bitterly cold day in March 2002, a helicopter carried Airman Cunningham and a team of Army Rangers toward a tall mountain in Patkia province, Afghanistan. There were on a mission to rescue a Navy SEAL who had fallen out of a helicopter when it was hit by rockets and gunfire from Al Qaeda forces.

Nonfiction Monday

This week’s Nonfiction Monday Round-up host is Perogies & Gyoza.

Copyright © 2013 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.

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anastasiasuen
May. 20th, 2013 @ 08:23 am Earths Richat Structure

http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap130519.html

What on Earth is that?  What on Earth is that?


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apod
May. 19th, 2013 @ 08:27 pm Writing for the long haul: a blog series

I’ve been thinking for a while now about what it means to write for the long haul.

I’ve been writing professionally for more than two decades now, rebooting and restarting and rethinking my career–as well as the reasons I’m writing in the first place–many times. I’ve watched other writers do the same, and I’ve wondered at all the varied shapes our careers have taken.

I’ve also watched writers stop writing, and I’ve wondered at that too, because there doesn’t seem to be any one formula for when writers continue writing and when they move on to other things. It’s not as simple as the most successful writers lasting the longest, or the rest of us stopping after we hit some set number of challenges or bumps in the road. Whatever it takes to keep writing, it’s something more complicated than that.

What does it take to keep writing for the long haul? Much of the discussion of writing online is about how break in, or else about how to manage a career for the first few books or the first few years. Those perspectives are valuable, but I’m also interested in seeing an ongoing discussion of how writers survive beyond that–not just from a business point of view, but also from an emotional and life balance point of view.

So I started asking novelists who’ve been in this field for at least a decade (often far longer) why they’re still here and how they keep writing.

Starting tomorrow, I’ll post their responses as part of a new weekly blog series. I’m already enjoying the range of takes that I’m reading, and I’m looking forward to sharing them.

I’m hopeful that, wherever we are in our individual careers, we all can learn from each other.

Mirrored from Desert Dispatches: Wordpress Edition.

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janni
May. 19th, 2013 @ 10:15 pm Trek: Some Spoilers
Tags:
Well, that was nearly 2/3 of a good Trek movie....

I wanted to love it. I really did. But... no. Even by Trek science-out-the-window and understanding-of-bureaucratic-logistics standards, the plot fell apart if you looked twice, there was overuse of fanservice in the wrong places (IMO), and oh god the logic-fails a decent copyeditor would have flagged in a heartbeat.

I would have loved to have seen it set a few years later, when we had a reason to believe in the bonds between the crew, getting rid of the entire opening set-up which had Logic Fail all over the place and open with the actual story, and maybe please possibly some acknowledgement that one person can't run that much of a conspiracy all by themselves, especially in a peacetime bureaucracy.... I know. I ask too much.

The cast gave it their best shot, tho. They were all solidly believable in their roles, and hey, I was there to see My Man Bones, anyway.

(and Cumberbatch utterly steals every scene he strides into. If nothing else I have renewed respect for Martin Freeman and Rupert Graves, who don't let him do that on a regular basis in Sherlock.)
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suricattus
May. 19th, 2013 @ 05:00 pm Why writers need retreats

Back from a lovely, energizing, soul-filling week at Kindling Words West, in the company of a writing community I’ve not seen for far too long, not setting goals for once but simply (yet not-so-simply) filling the well.

And I wrote today, not because I’m supposed to or because I’ve established useful routines and habits and know how to stick with them, but simply because it’s what I woke up wanting to do more than anything else in the world.

It’s good to be back.

Mirrored from Desert Dispatches: Wordpress Edition.

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janni
May. 19th, 2013 @ 01:00 pm Hamster is Perplexed by Tube

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ICanHasCheezburger/~3/E35vNRHhipc/7466406144

http://cheezburger.com/7466406144

Hamster is Perplexed by Tube

Submitted by: Unknown

Tagged: gifs , critters , cute , hamsters , tubes , funny
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icanhaschzbrgr
May. 19th, 2013 @ 12:00 pm Sith Kitty

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ICanHasCheezburger/~3/RluavPGw8GA/7466538496

http://cheezburger.com/7466538496

Sith Kitty

Lol by: Unknown

Tagged: star wars , darkside , sith , funny
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icanhaschzbrgr