Thank Yous -- with Update

News just in from Deepwater Horizon Response: "Unified Area Command announces it will not use hair boom in its Deepwater Horizon/BP response efforts." The upshot: Sorbent boom was deemed a better choice. Says the release, "We appreciate the overwhelming response from the American and Canadian people who want to help in the response to this spill. Please continue to send suggestions for alternate cleanup solutions." The release includes contact info for suggestions.

Thank yous go to the people I've met over the past couple of days, who have made a wonderful effort in collecting hair and fur:

Heather's Bark Avenue Pet Spa and Donated Fur
Large view

Heather Stetkar, owner of Heather's Bark Avenue Pet Spa, and staff. Donated fur for the Matter of Trust Hair for Oil Spills Program is in the bag at foreground. I've been picking up donations to send to the program, which turns hair and fur into hair booms for soaking up oil spills. More info and links to resources here.

After my stop at Heather's, I went on to the Quick Stop Barber Shop:

Angela at Quick Stop Barber Shop with Donated Hair
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Angela, who cut my hair on Monday (before and after photos here), stands beside a bag of hair donated to the program.

Even though Deepwater Horizon Response says it will not use hair booms, the Matter of Trust Hair for Oil Spills Program has been in operation since well before this catastrophe. "Last year over 2,600 oil spills occurred in the world," says its website. Thanks also go to Attitudes Family Hair Center, which has been involved with the program since before the BP spill.

headtotoe-attitudes-buscards

Top: Business card for From Head to Toe salon, where Dennis Monroe has been organizing local businesses in the Hair for Oil Spills effort.
Bottom: Business card from Attitudes Family Hair Center.

Earlier today I mailed two boxes of hair and fur to the program, with a third box now filled. I will wait to hear from Matter of Trust as to where I can send the box now sitting in my garage. Because even though Deepwater Horizon isn't using hair booms, the program still goes on.

Update, May 22: Matter of Trust continues to make hair booms. From their press release: "The boom will be there in case it is needed. There are many Boom B Qs planned for this weekend all along the Coast and the warehouses will soon be fully stocked. At this point, we are asking all new participants who sign up after May 22, 2010 to patiently wait for our emergency alerts before sending more hair to the gulf. We will need all the space we have for all the fiber already in the pipeline." Matter of Trust has tweeted that they are making and stockpiling boom in case haz mat teams need them.

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Right On, Citrus County (FL)!

Hair and Fur for the Gulf
(Above: Hair and fur to be shipped out, so they can become hair booms to absorb oil in the Gulf of Mexico.)

I spent part of today driving around Citrus County with a car full of hair and fur. Four bags of it -- two picked up from the From Head To Toe salon and two from Best Friends Grooming Salon, both in the county seat of Inverness.

A while back I'd seen this article ("Hair, pantyhose and other donations sought to sop up oil spill in gulf") in the St. Petersburg Times. That took me to the Make Mine Bluegreen site and to the Matter of Trust Hair for Oil Spills Program (their instructions for the program are here.)

Make Mine Bluegreen recently held a collection event at Weekie Wachee Springs -- their wish list (including towels, nylons, steel wool pads, and other cleaning supplies) is here (.pdf). Closer to where I live, the Homosassa Springs State Wildlife Refuge is also collecting Gulf spill clean-up items at its admin office.

I signed up for the Matter of Trust program. They coordinate temporary warehouses across the Gulf and across the country, where needed, to collect hair and fur for oil spill clean-up. The hair and fur are inserted into nylons and made into booms, which soak up the oil spills. The temporary warehouses are just that, given the volume of material that comes in. As they fill up, new locations sign on to help store the load.

After storing my four bags in the garage, I popped over to my local Winn-Dixie and filled my car again, this time with boxes. I now have two large boxes ready to go and a third that's partially filled, and plan to get my first shipment out tomorrow.

I don't always catch the local news and hadn't this time, but I learned today that Dennis Monroe at From Head to Toe salon has been covered in both the Citrus County Chronicle (see here) and local cable. He's been coordinating efforts across Citrus County for the Hair for Oil Spills Program. He and I are now coordinating. And Countryside Animal Clinic, whose vets were wonderful to our (Mary's and my) cats Daisy and Red when they were alive, are participating in the program as well. One of their clients picks up the fur and mails it off.


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Hair for the Gulf

Hair for the Gulf

A few days ago I signed up at the Excess Access/Matter of Trust Hair for Oil Spills Program. Their instructions for sending hair, fur, and nylons is here. Last night I got an address to which I can send boxed hair and fur. The Homosassa Springs State Wildlife Park takes nylons, so I can drop those and other needed items off locally.

The e-mail from Matter of Trust specifically says not to forward the storage address info, plus the info is good for only a few days. This is because places are volunteering storage space and don't want to be overwhelmed, and those locations change over time as different places step up to warehouse boxes of hair and fur. I have until May 20 to send what I can collect. After that date I need to wait to see if the deadline is extended or if a new address comes up.

Earlier today I paid a visit to the Quick Stop Barber Shop and told Angela I wanted a cut similar to what Annie Lennox sports here. My hair is thin, so it doesn't stand up on its own. But it combs back very nicely, since I've bunned it up in the back for years. This is the first time I've gotten a haircut since the 1970s.

I left a printout of the Matter of Trust instructions, along with my contact info. Quick Stop will collect clipped hair in a bag for me to pick up.

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Regular Sibling Rivarly Ain't Got Nothing On These Guys

So...long summer already isn't it? Canes-done. Rats-done. You know you're desperate when you start cheering for Philly just because Leights and Lavi are rocking the black and orange.

Well, clearly the guys over at Edwards Mill Road were a little bored too. They were probably sitting around (possibly playing ping pong in the players' lounge) going "hey you guys we need to do something...anything...". Then out of nowhere a little voice probably piped up "I know! I know! Ohh ohhh pick me!" You see when he wasn't texting or hiding under certain people's beds, Tripp had been working on a plan. "We need another Staal" he declared with authority.

Now I know what you're thinking and it does seem a little redundant to acquire a second member of the same family, but that ol' JR thought it was just crazy enough to work. So he went out and got himself another Staal. No not that Staal. Nope not that one either. Oh come on now people, that's just silly. There you go! That one.

Yup it's official, Jared Staal is a Carolina Hurricane. Well as long as they can sign him by June 1st (UPDATE: it seems they have agreed to terms with Jared) and provided, of course, that he makes the team at some point. But forget those small details, we are just inches away from having more Staals than any other team in the league! That means we're guaranteed to win Stanley Cups! It means the hockey gods will smile on us once again! I can see the promos now and they are Staal-tastic! :does a little jig full of sarcasm:

Honestly, no one knows whether this will turn into anything more than a PR stunt, but it did get me thinking about other brother combos in the NHL. We all know about the Sutters, the Richards, and the Staals. But what about lesser known names like the Millers, the Birons and the Cullens?

Some sibling fun facts first: since the NHL's inception in 1917, 47 brother pairs have played together on the same team with 10 of them winning the Stanley Cup together. Brothers have battled against each other 5 times in the Cup Finals (with the most recent incidence of sibling rivalry being in 2003 when the Niedermayer boys of the Ducks and Devils squared off).

The Miller boys are the first of two American born siblings that are making dinner conversations just a tad more tense. Ryan Miller is probably the better known of the two (Olympic hero, goaltender extraordinare), but baby bro Drew has one thing Ryan doesn't-a Stanley Cup ring (with the Ducks). Who do you think gets shotgun now?

The duo never played against (or with) each other until the two met in the NHL as opponents. The two couldn't be more different. Drew is the more "aggressive" of the two, even giving his brother a shot across the mask during their first NHL meeting. Ryan is more "serious, analytical and even-tempered" and once asked for Star Wars Imperial Guards to "guard his room and keep Drew out of it". But, despite their differences, the two are most definitely friends, even if Drew does give his teammates the inside scoop on Ryan's weaknesses.

The Cullen have definitely managed to fly under the radar as far as "NHL brothers" go. While Matt is very familiar to fans all over the National Hockey League, younger brothers Mark and Joe are definitely less well known. Mark played 32 NHL games for the Blackhawks and Flyers in 2005-2006 and plays for the Manitoba Moose of the AHL. After being drafted by Edmonton, Joe has spent his whole career in the minors and now is part of the Ottawa Senators organization.
The Biron brothers made some history back in November of 2003 when Matheiu (then a defenseman for the Panthers) became the first player in 23 years to score on his brother. Bonus points if you can tell me who the last pair of brothers were that held this record. As Martin Biron, owner of the laser eyes, said:
"The [last set of] brothers probably have been fighting for the last 23 years," Martin Biron joked. "We'll probably be fighting for the next 23 years, my brother and I."
The Canadian born brothers no longer play against each other now that Matheiu has taken his services to Europe and the Deutsche Eishockey Liga. Martin remains in the NHL as one of the many goaltenders in the Islanders' system.

Odds are everyone has heard of the Lundqvist twins, but I wouldn't be doing my job if I didn't jump at a chance to post this picture:
Umm...yeah let's move along. The identical Swedish twins (Henrik is 40 minutes older) became the third set of twins to play against each other in NHL history back in 2006. Growing up the brothers may have had their battles on the ice, but they always considered each other as a best friends first and rivals second. In fact, Henrik (and the Rangers for that matter) has Joel to thank for turning him into a goalie. When a coach asked the group who wanted to be in net, Joel volunteered his brother and the rest, as they say, is history.

Last, but certainly not least, are the Wesley brothers. Glen was, of course, a fixture on the Carolina blueline before hanging up the skates and moving to the front office. But many may not be as familiar with his older brother Blake (also a d-man) who played parts of 7 seasons with the Flyers, Whalers, Nordiques and Leafs before retiring in 1988.

So there you have it. Will the 4th Staal follow in the footsteps of the older three and earn his place in the NHL (and Hurricanes) history books or, like some of the "other brothers" here, will he forever be a footnote on a Wikipedia page? Only time will tell. For the Hurricanes' sake I sincerely hope it's the first one.

Shape-shifting manuscripts



This blog entry comes in conjunction with Coyote Con, a free, month-long digital conference on speculative literature. Kudos to the organizers at Drollerie Press et al. for a great event!

I've published in different genres and in different sizes. The latter includes poetry and micro-poetry, flash fiction and micro-fiction, short stories, novelettes, and novels. The first (not ready for prime time) "novel" I ever wrote could probably qualify as a novella as word counts go. For speculative fiction, the qualifying word counts for short stories up through novels may be found on the SFWA Nebula Rules page -- but check your market for individual specs.

So, given a story idea, how do I know what size it fits into?

Short answer: I often don't.

My novelette "Flotsam" (Asimov's, Oct./Nov. 2009) clocked in at around 2,000 words more than what I'd originally intended, though I hadn't set out to achieve a particular word count. Instead, I thought I knew where the story arc would end. Once I began writing that scene, I realized I needed to add more to achieve the kind of closure I wanted.

In contrast, my other published novelette, "Lazuli" (Asimov's, Nov. 1984), had to be trimmed by about 2,500 words. In that case, I had submitted the longer manuscript. Shawna McCarthy, then editor of Asimov's, suggested the trim, and I cut several scenes that, much as I liked them, were not crucial to the story.

Fortunately, I had kept my old draft -- because Shawna then wanted some of that material put back in. Keeping old drafts is a good idea!

Those examples show how sizes change within pretty much the same narrative format. But what if the format changes entirely?

Generating story ideas is not my problem. Getting those ideas to work is the challenge. Even after I come up with my concept of a beginning, middle, and end, I still get into trouble. It's akin to sketching an invention on paper and trying to build a prototype that then collapses. The unexpected happens during the creation process. A story arc I at first thought was straightforward becomes more complicated. Or I need to do more research than I originally thought and which raises more questions still. Or my tone -- the emotional structure of the story -- is off, like a joke that falls flat.

When my story collapses I have to return to the basics: namely, what am I trying to say? What is my theme? Why did this story idea grab me on a personal level, such that I wanted to tell it? What do I want to impart to my reader?

My poem "The Last Dragon Slayer" is forthcoming in Mythic Delirium, but it didn't start as a poem. It started as a humorous short story. I wrote the first few scenes before I realized I was way off. I felt like a budding comedian who knew she was well on her way to dying on stage. How did I know? I couldn't maintain the tone I wanted and my pacing got all wiggly.

Some weeks later -- after much note-scribbling and twiddling and tearing my hair out -- I gave up on the short story idea and wrote a 102-line story-poem instead. It has a beginning, a middle, and an end. It has a backstory. But in contrast to my aborted fiction, the poem is dark rather than light. It uses an economy of phrase and poetic rhythms that differentiate it from fiction. It works as a poem.

It sent the basic theme I wanted to convey in an entirely different direction. I still haven't given up on using that theme in fiction. I'm toying with another story idea that has a much different plot line than its predecessor and that uses science fiction rather than fantasy tropes.

Saying I get a story idea means I get a story premise. That's my "what if?" My job is to translate that premise into a story, or a poem, or whatever format can carry that idea. Just having a premise alone doesn't cut it.

In 1985 a single, overheard line after a lecture on factory automation got my mental cogwheels turning. I wanted to write a story, but I had no plot, not even a story idea. All I had was a concept I wanted to get across. I first wrote "Labor Intensive," a poem that was published in the Harvard Business Review (Jul./Aug. 1986) and later reprinted in Prof. John K. Shank's case "Jones Ironworks, Inc." The story, "Cog," didn't come to me until two years later, and appeared in Tales of The Unanticipated (Fall/Winter 1988). The two pieces are different in many ways, but claiming one's sense of personal dignity is the underlying theme that they share.

Sometimes I'm "in the zone," where my narrative infrastructure holds together and needs only to be properly dressed. I've drafted stories in a night. But sometimes I find I've put a facade on a house of cards. My ideas are still there, my premise is still there, but I've somehow lost the story and I need to go back and start again.

Sometimes the "story" isn't enough. My Deviations series began as short fiction that I drafted at the end of 1985. Feedback I received for that submission was that the writing was good, my premise was good, but I had to provide more information. That manuscript remained shelved for almost 20 years until I dug it out, kept and polished much of the first half, ditched the second half, and embarked on what I thought was the writing of a novel. Then I thought I'd written a trilogy. Now I know I've written a six-book series.

Writing in different formats uses different parts of my brain, at least figuratively. I spent April (National Poetry Month) writing a sonnet a day, based on science-themed news stories (link inclusive index here). It was good exercise for me in distilling articles down to their core components and fitting those into fourteen rhymed and metered lines in a way that made them both educational and entertaining. Those poems are creative cousins of the abstracts I've generated in my corporate writing. In that way, they differ from my other poems, even from my other sonnets. Some of what I learned from those science articles has also given me ideas to play with in other forms.

"Poetry" itself encompasses far more than a single format. At one end of the spectrum you have Basho's haiku. At the other end of the spectrum you have Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, and modern epic poems like Homero Aridjes's novel-poem Persephone or Ntozake Shange's choreopoem For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow is Enuf. Different ideas can fit into different poetic forms -- what works in a cinquain sequence might not work in a sestina.

One can dispense with words altogether. Preparations for writing "Arachne" (Aboriginal Science Fiction, Nov./Dec. 1988, reprinted in Riffing on Strings: Creative Writing Inspired by String Theory from Scriblerus Press, 2008) included sketching a very pregnant woman with butterfly wings and antennae. No such character appears in the story or even comes close, but the act of sketching itself allowed the story to come together in my brain. I also carved and played around with spider-shaped stamps and with weaving -- this entry gives a look into what became a thoroughly obsessive creative process. I only recently returned to the sketch I made more than 20 years ago (seen here) and used it to generate the poem "Butterfly Woman," which appears in Goblin Fruit.

For me, the bottom line -- and one of my personal mantras -- is that nothing is wasted. An idea that doesn't gel in one format might gel in another. Or maybe it needs more ingredients (or fewer ingredients) in order to work. (For a great comparison of the writing process to baking bread, see this article by Jennifer St. Clair.)

I write a lot of crap, but in the end it's helpful crap. It's what Natalie Goldberg calls "composting" in her book Writing Down the Bones. She says, "Often I will stab many times at something I want to say. For instance, you can look in my notebooks from August through December 1983 and see that I attempted several times a month to write about my father dying. I was exploring and composting the material. Then suddenly, and I can’t say how, in December I sat transfixed at the Croissant Express in Minneapolis and a long poem about that subject poured out of me. All the disparate things I had to say were suddenly fused with energy and unity -- a bright red tulip shot out of the compost. Katagiri Roshi said: 'Your little will can’t do anything. It takes Great Determination. Great Determination doesn’t mean just you making an effort. It means the whole universe is behind you and with you -- the birds, trees, sky, moon, and ten directions.' Suddenly, after much composting, you are in alignment with the stars or the moment or the dining-room chandelier above your head, and your body opens and speaks."

Play around with different formats. If something's not working, try re-casting it. That process in and of itself can loosen blockages and grow ideas into finished products.

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Chapbook and Moth

30 Science Sonnets Chapbook

I've put April's science sonnets (index here) into a chapbook. From the back cover blurb: "Thirty sonnets delve into science's breaking news during a month of discovery. From advances in cloaking devices to dogs helping war veterans through post-traumatic stress disorder. From an asteroid passing close to the Earth to one containing basic components for life. From bees whose genes dictate their diets to beavers recruited to help a state cope with climate change. And much more."

The cover features an African iris (original shot here) and a photo I took of the Moon, reddened from Georgia wildfires (original shot here). My intro describes a bit of the poem-generation process.

Earlier on Tuesday, I found this Eastern Tent Caterpillar Moth:

Eastern Tent Caterpillar Moth

Malacosoma americanum, Family Lasiocampidae (Tent Caterpillar and Lappet Moths). Thanks to Bob Patterson at Bugguide for the ID! Species info here.

I had no idea what I was looking at -- before now, I'd seen only the caterpillars and their tents. My initial guess (a Datana species) was waaaay off. I not only had the Family wrong on that one; I had the Superfamily wrong. (I usually see Datana moths with their wings curled up (here, for instance), but I've occasionally seen one with its wings unfurled).

This critter wasn't one of those. The only thing they have in common is that they're both moths.

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Seen on the Withlacoochie State Trail

100502-pinkflowerbunch3-altered
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The trailhead at Holder is just a few miles down the road from the house. I decided to be on the trail when it came time for me to take a photograph for A Moment in May, a project of the New York Times.

I have yet to identify all of the plant species, including the pink and purple flowers above. They carpeted the space off the trail, just to my right (east):

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Close-up:

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At least I know a prickly pear cactus when I see it:

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With an unopened flower...

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... and an opened one, farther down the trail, closer to the South Citrus Springs trailhead:

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Prickly flowers of another sort, also close to the South Citrus Springs trailhead:

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Common name: Tread Softly. Cnidoscolus stimulosus, Spurge Family. Also called Spurge Nettle or Bull Nettle. Says our National Audubon Society Field Guide to Florida, "Do not touch, covered with stinging hairs; can cause severe reactions." These bloom March-October, "probably year-round in s. FL."

You can barely see the yellow flowers for the foliage...

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But get a little closer...

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And closer still...

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The sign at the South Citrus Springs trailhead gives mileage to the northern and southern terminus of the trail.

100502-citrusspringstrailheadsign-cropped

The photo below is what I submitted as my "A Moment in May" shot, taken at 11:00 a.m. my time. The project solicited photos taken around the globe at 3 p.m. UTC (Coordinated Universal Time).

100502-withlacoochiestatetrail7-submit
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Bird boxes like the one shown here stand to the west of the trail, with forest to the east. The yellow flowers (above) bloomed to the west of the trail. All the other plant photos were taken on the eastern side.


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