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Things, Lately

07.05.2015 by Nicola //

clovis

I’m currently in California, it’s the 4th of July, and I’ve been trying to break through a blogging block.

So here are some things I’ve been thinking about, lately…
 
 

Snapchat

Snapchat @robotnicola
Sometimes you need to be around something physically to get it. I’ve been on Snapchat for ages, and until recently it was all silly selfies from close friends, but we’d all tired of it.

Now that there are Stories there’s much more to see. Now that I’m in California, my in-laws using it has prompted me to give it a go. Follow me @robotnicola or do the snappy thing with the image above.
 
 

750words.com / Free-writing

750words
I totally thought this site had shut down like 5 years ago??? But apparently it didn’t. I used it for awhile, I’d wager around 2008/9 – though I can’t be certain. It’s a place for freewriting 750 words on a daily basis in a way that is, as the prompt says, Private, unfiltered, spontaneous, daily. This also brings me to…
 
 

James Greig’s Time Machine

james-greig
James spoke about writing at Small is Beautiful. It’s easy to romanticise writing – as the Emily St John Mandel piece (which I linked in Reading Week #61) attests. To write is to work. But sometimes you need a reminder and some cutesy quotes to fall back in love and back into good habits.

The idea I liked best from his talk was his opening hook about how writing is a great time-traveling device. It allows us access into the minds and thoughts of people in past times and places; and that’s what makes it special. I’m really enjoying personal writing lately, and thinking back on my own, so it’s a nice way to contextualise it all.
 
 

Stealing from Austin Kleon

Austin Kleon
This guy, author of Steal Like An Artist, also came up a couple of times in Reading Week #61, and on the Writer Files podcast recently. He does a similar wrap-up/annotated reading style of blog posts to Brain Pickings – one I’ve long wanted to crib but have felt too daunted to do so. I’d like to get on with that.
 
 

Yulin Kuang, Thinking Aloud

Meet the Artist | 2015 | Yulin Kuang | Kitten Rescue, Mary Kate Wiles
Emily Diana Ruth, whose weekly “this week, in my brain” blogs inspired this style, featured a filmmaker-YouTuber called Yulin Kuang. Emily had linked a video of Yulin’s from the point of view of a filmmaker cat in LA, and all the angst that comes along with that lifestyle. It’s adorable.

I then went to another video called Thinking Out Loud – a weekly feature and this one was about her second kiss (or kissee), in which she reconnected with the guy and read her diaries aloud to him to compare notes on their memories of the time. The time-machine idea came up here again: she said reading her diaries from when she was 17 was like one, though you can never really get back to that person.
 
 

So, yeah

This and much else I’ve cited have made me wish I’d been more of a consistent diarist over the years. I’m a start-stop diarist, and tend to write angry, so there’s not much worth savouring in my past diaries. Yet again, now, I’m starting over, trying to build the habit and avoid falling back into old tendencies like writing through rage and never in lighter moments.

What have you been into lately?

Categories // News Tags // diaries, snapchat, thoughts, writing

Reading Week #61

07.03.2015 by Nicola //

fresno-sunset

How’s it going? Any big news in your world?

I’m still living it up in California… if having a cricked neck and only being able to sit bolt upright or lay flat on your back is your idea of fun.

On the plus side, I’ve had a lot of Pocket and YouTube catching up to do – and what better way to spend the time indoors where it’s 70 degrees and not 100?

Here’s some good stuff I dug up.

 

–– ARTS & CULTURE ––

Image via BoingBoing
Image via BoingBoing

An oldie but a goodie: Emily St John Mandel on Working the Double Shift – something we need to hear more from writers.

Why Cory Doctorow is leaving London. All the reasons he cites are reasons not to move to London; and although I live in the rather more left-leaning Scotland, his comments on the UK versus the US are pretty compelling reasons to depart now, too.

I’m all about personal writing lately, so here’s Virginia Woolf on the Creative Benefits of Keeping a Diary via Brain Pickings.

In related: The Fiction of Self-Exposure from Molly Fischer.

Why artists should watch Groundhog Day, from Austin Kleon.

I loved this review of a recent take on The Driver’s Seat from my friend Cayley James: Take Back the Night – Female Autonomy and Muriel Spark.

Amy Winehouse, Kurt Cobain and the Gendering of Martyrdom. Noticing gender imbalance in the public discourse so you don’t have to.

PJ Vogt of the Reply All podcast wrote about Some Ways To Make Funny Work For You.
 
 

–– DIGITAL ––

Kharichkina / Getty Images via Buzzfeed
Kharichkina / Getty Images via Buzzfeed

Hugh McGuire asks, Why can’t we read anymore? A kind of obvious but terrifying prospect.

Megan Garber wrote about How to Say ‘Yes’ (by Not Saying ‘Yes’).

The Timbre interviewed Gimlet’s Matt Lieber about The Art of Podcasting.

How Bots Took Over Twitter – and not in the way you might think.

And, just for fun, Millennials Laughing Alone with Technology.
 
 

–– ON PAPER ––

The Argonauts by Maggie Nelson

Not Knowing – a fantastic essay by Katherine Bernard about identity based around Maggie Nelson’s The Argonauts.

Austin Kleon listed the same book as one of the best he’s read so far in 2015. Now I really want to read it.

And here’s a nice interview with Heidi Julavits about The Folded Clock: A Diary, which I read last month and really enjoyed.

Reading hasn’t been a huge priority so far this summer… but oh well.

I’ve been slowly picking my way through Life Among the Savages by Shirley Jackson, which I bought and mentioned last week.

On the Kindle, I’m also making some progress through Valley Fever by Katherine Taylor, which is set here in Fresno.

Which book is on your nightstand?
 
 

–– &c. ––

Image via New York Times
Image via New York Times

A father’s initiative (Or, Eli Saslow Will Stomp On Your Heart Every Damn Time).

Apparently Maiden Names are on the Rise Again after a lull in the 1990s. I didn’t change my name, and I don’t think anyone’s directly asked me why.

Los Angeles, As a Pedestrian sounds fun.
 

Read anything good this week? Hit reply or tweet me with a link.

Til next week!

 

Categories // Reading Week Tags // link list, reading week

Reading Week #60

06.26.2015 by Nicola //

sf-photos

Greetings from California!

I’ve just spent a couple of days in San Francisco and am back in the scorching central valley (104F and climbing!). I can recommend it up to 90-odd, but beyond that it’s kind of impossible to get around in.

What’s new with you?

 

–– ON ROBOTNIC.CO ––

Bookish Blether Episode 12 is up, and we’re discussing our favourite indie bookshops in honour of Independent Booksellers Week.

On my business blog? Lots more links.

 
 

–– ARTS & CULTURE ––

Edith Hall explains why we should all learn from the ancient Greeks. The reasons are many.

I like reading great writing about Buster Keaton almost as much as I like watching his movies, and this is no exception: The Deadpan Genius of Buster Keaton by Charles Simic.

NY Review of Books covered Digital Journalism: The Next Generation with minimal old man yells at cloud vibes.

A lovely piece on Lit Hub: The Day Virginia Woolf Brought Her Mom Back to Life.

 
 

–– DIGITAL ––

Podcast recommendation – last week’s Reply All is remarkable.

The Battle Over the Taco Emoji is hotting up. Features the line, “Bill Esparza, a leading expert in Mexican food in the United States and the voice behind the prominent blog Street Gourmet LA, understands the nuances of taco culture better than anyone…”

The latest Allusionist podcast is also about emoji, or more specifically, Mixed Emojions. Helen, the host, is not convinced.

Gmail Formally Adds ‘Undo Send’ Option. Prayer hands emoji.

 
 

–– ON PAPER ––

I’ve been in a big old reading slump of late, and am currently slowly slogging my way through Outline by Rachel Cusk, though I’m not sure if I’ll stick with it.

I also picked up a copy of Shirley Jackson’s memoir – Life Among the Savages – which I’d never heard of before. I’m into diaries lately.

What are you reading this weekend?
 
 

–– &c. ––

On Chicken Tenders – an ode to culinary simplicity.

The Tampon: A History – The cultural, political, and technological roots of a fraught piece of cotton.

A surprisingly good “what I’ve learned in my 30 years” blog here – The days are long but the decades are short.

Atul Gawande on America’s Epidemic of Unnecessary Care is a must-read.

 

Read anything good this week? Hit reply or tweet me with a link.

​Have a lovely weekend, friends!

 

Categories // Reading Week Tags // link list, reading week

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