"A display of the collection will be on site in the main pavilion"
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"The collection will be on display in the main pavilion."
Thursday, December 15, 2011
Saturday, December 10, 2011
How to Tell If You're a 'Real Writer'
These days, everyone’s a writer. Advances in technology have allowed anyone with a keyboard and a traumatic childhood to claim the title of “published writer.” Of course, this has frustrated “real writers” who believe they shouldn’t be clumped in with the high school sophomore who made $11.50 in Amazon Associates income by blogging “gott my period 2day LOL.” But what, exactly, separates the “real writers” from heartsick middle-schoolers, illiterate manifesto writers, and Dean Koontz?
Prominent scienticians have recently isolated some unique characteristics of true wordsmiths. Based on their findings, here’s how to tell – once and for all –if you’re a “real writer.”
1. Your mother keeps mailing you study guides for the Civil Service exam.
2. You’re no longer slave to the arbitrary social constructs that separate pajama pants from real pants.
3. Your friends all know you mean it when you say, “Don’t get me started on Dan Brown.”
4. You’re out of cat litter (nonfiction writers).
5. You’re out of vermouth (literary fiction writers).
6. You’re out of Nicorette (crime fiction writers).
7. You’re never out of Paxil (romance writers).
8. Your creativity informs every aspect of your life, especially your tax returns.
9. You qualify as “extremely liberal” on free speech, deadlines, and food expiration dates.
10. You qualify as “extremely conservative” on speech in the form of Amazon user reviews.
11. You use the phrase “lost sense of community” a lot, but you’re usually talking to your dog.
12. Your pristine copy of The Collected Works of Shakespeare is prominently displayed on your bookshelf.
13. Your decaying, bathtub-splashed Stieg Larsson paperbacks are stashed under your futon.
14. You haven’t read a book since 1998 (screenwriters).
15. You have attempted to calculate J.K. Rowling’s royalty income.
16. Your math skills rendered this task impossible.
17. You’re trying to copyright your recipe for ranch dressing on stale saltines.
18. You have worked the word “factotum” into a conversation (literary writers).
19. You have worked the word “gams” into a conversation (noir writers).
20. You have worked the words “my place” into a conversation (romance writers).
21. You have worked the word “loan” into a conversation (all writers).
22. You laughed when a friend gave you scratch tickets for Christmas, then hastily disappeared into the bathroom with a quarter (a borrowed quarter).
23. You love the Kindle, you fear the Kindle.
24. You consider a shower to be foreplay.
25. You consider a wet washcloth to be a shower.
26. When you say “my doctor,” you mean Dr. Oz.
27. You feel closer to your protagonist than even to the girl across the street with the really sheer drapes.
28. You spend six hours a day tweeting about how you should spend more time blogging.
Prominent scienticians have recently isolated some unique characteristics of true wordsmiths. Based on their findings, here’s how to tell – once and for all –if you’re a “real writer.”
1. Your mother keeps mailing you study guides for the Civil Service exam.
2. You’re no longer slave to the arbitrary social constructs that separate pajama pants from real pants.
3. Your friends all know you mean it when you say, “Don’t get me started on Dan Brown.”
4. You’re out of cat litter (nonfiction writers).
5. You’re out of vermouth (literary fiction writers).
6. You’re out of Nicorette (crime fiction writers).
7. You’re never out of Paxil (romance writers).
8. Your creativity informs every aspect of your life, especially your tax returns.
9. You qualify as “extremely liberal” on free speech, deadlines, and food expiration dates.
10. You qualify as “extremely conservative” on speech in the form of Amazon user reviews.
11. You use the phrase “lost sense of community” a lot, but you’re usually talking to your dog.
12. Your pristine copy of The Collected Works of Shakespeare is prominently displayed on your bookshelf.
13. Your decaying, bathtub-splashed Stieg Larsson paperbacks are stashed under your futon.
14. You haven’t read a book since 1998 (screenwriters).
15. You have attempted to calculate J.K. Rowling’s royalty income.
16. Your math skills rendered this task impossible.
17. You’re trying to copyright your recipe for ranch dressing on stale saltines.
18. You have worked the word “factotum” into a conversation (literary writers).
19. You have worked the word “gams” into a conversation (noir writers).
20. You have worked the words “my place” into a conversation (romance writers).
21. You have worked the word “loan” into a conversation (all writers).
22. You laughed when a friend gave you scratch tickets for Christmas, then hastily disappeared into the bathroom with a quarter (a borrowed quarter).
23. You love the Kindle, you fear the Kindle.
24. You consider a shower to be foreplay.
25. You consider a wet washcloth to be a shower.
26. When you say “my doctor,” you mean Dr. Oz.
27. You feel closer to your protagonist than even to the girl across the street with the really sheer drapes.
28. You spend six hours a day tweeting about how you should spend more time blogging.
Labels:
ebooks,
publishing,
self-publishing,
writers,
Writing
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