Vintage Links 003: Phish, Insane Clown Posse, Design, Clouds, and Habits

Back in March, before my dad passed away, I’d started the Vintage Links project in order to put some structure around clearing my overstocked “To Read” folder. At time of writing, there are about 600 of them remaining, and I’m going full Marie Kondo on those fuckers: everything is checked, thanks, and either deleted or filed away so I don’t have to deal with it again.

I got through two instalments before life went all kinds of chaotic, and I think it’s time to resume now that the year is settling down. This week I’m clearing a grab bag of useful links for writers and one particularly pretty short film that’s well worth giving ten minutes of your time (and if you want to see more, you can see the prior instalments using the Vintage Links tag).

9 Lessons from Phish and The Insane Clown Posse For Deep Fan Engagement (Fast Company, 2013)

Read the post over at Fast Company

Back in 2013, journalist and pop culture commentator Nathan Rabin wrote an entire book about deep fan communities that had built up around acts like Phish and The Insane Clown Posse. This post is a fantastic distillation of what these sorts of acts do to engage such fervent adoration from their fans, and in particular how they’ve built a loyal following that follows them from project to project (I mean, seriously, the Insane Clown Posse built their own wrestling federation from their fanbase, it’s…well, insane).

It’s an incredible list of ideas if you’re working in a niche (which, frankly, many emerging writers are), and I’m vaguely disappointed that the book is still only available in print.

The Ten Basic Elements of Design (Creative Market, 2017)

Check it out over at the Creative Market website (and there’s an infographic to go with it)

I got interested in design about fifteen years ago, when I first started looking at RPG book covers and trying to figure out what made them work beyond the great cover art (which, as an emerging RPG publisher, was well beyond my price range). By the time I started working for the writers centre eight year slater, we were starting to have those conversations with writers who were venturing into the world of indie publishing as the kindle took off.

I’d tagged this one because it was an incredibly useful primer for people starting to look at cover design and start thinking about the elements that made something work.

Four Common Myths About Habits, Debunked (Lifehacker, 2015)

Read the post over at LifeHacker

There’s a lot of bad advice out there with regards to building habits, and the worst of them (also the first debunked in this article) is the idea that it takes 21 days to bed a new habit in.

Teaching people habits (and hacking habits) is frequently a huge part of teaching people to write, so posts like this are always a handy reference point. The real useful thing to do is probably reading Charles Duhig’s book on habits and their formation, which I recommend to writers and other artists at every available opportunity, but stuff like this is always a useful reminder.

The OceanMaker (Vimeo, 2015)

Watch it over on Vimeo (or click the embedded video below)

A short, ten-minute animated film about a post-apocalyptic world where pilots compete to harvest water from the last remaining source of moisture–the clouds. It’s incredible what the film gets out of a simple concept and some really nice design–particularly when you consider it’s the result of a seven-week project done on a laptop.

The OceanMaker from Mighty Coconut on Vimeo.

Vintage Links 002: Warren Ellis; Short Crime Fiction; Washing Pillows; Unproductive Days

One of my projects for 2019 is clearing the archive of unread links tucked away in the “To Read” folder of my bookmarks bar. At time of writing, there are about 600 of them remaining, and I’m going full Marie Kondo on those fuckers: everything is checked, thanks, and cleared away so I don’t have to deal with it again. The stuff that brings me joy gets posted here, to be shared with others. 

You can see the first round of things I shared in last Monday’s post. When read alongside this week’s recommendation, it should be remembered that I have a very broad definition of joy.

I’m Warren Ellis, and This Is How I Work (Lifehacker, 2015)

Read the post on Lifehacker

I spend the first hour or two of the day at a table in my back garden, under a sloping roof, either just with the phone or with the Dell, the Pixel or a notebook, depending on what kind of day it is. (Am awaiting a Textblade, which might make some things simpler, particularly when away from home.) The rest of the day is in a small room at the back of the house that I claimed as my office twenty years ago. I’m at the same old, heavy wooden desk I bought from a junk store twenty years ago. I’m not sending a picture because it is currently a bloody mess that makes me look like a hoarder because a bunch more junk got dumped in here a couple of months ago and it hasn’t been processed out yet.

I’m a fan of Warren Ellis. Have been ever since he started writing Transmetropolitan, which was one of the first comic series I loved hard enough to pick up all the trades in a single swoop. I’ve loved the work he’s done since then, regardless of whether it’s in comics, television, or fiction. I’ve been subscribed to his newsletter for a few years now, and it’s one of the examples I look to whenever I feel like author newsletters are a bad and crassly commercial idea.

I admire the way the man thinks at the cutting edge of technological implications, yet has so many decidedly analogue methods to his process. 

And, of course, I love the little glimpses into other writers processes, so this entire post is catnip to me.  It’s one of the few links in the ‘to read; archive that is not going to be deleted, but rather transferred to the file in my archive marked “Writer Processes.” 

5 Crime Short Story Writers You Should Be Reading right Now (LitReactor, 2015)

Read the full post at LitReactor

Back when I was writing for Spinetingler Magazine on a regular basis, we ran this cool feature called “Conversations With The Bookless.” (The concept was borrowed from Jeff VanderMeer by Spinetingler head honcho, Brian Lindenmuth.) It was a very cool feature which highlighted short story writers who had yet to publish a book. It included writers such as Frank Bill, Todd Robinson, Chris Holm, Patti Abbott, Kieran Shea, and a couple of dozen others (myself included).

I’ve thought about revisiting the concept a time or two while writing for LitReactor, but the only problem is that with self and macro publishing being such a huge part of the landscape now, pretty much anyone with 5-to-10 short stories to rub together can put out a book. So there really aren’t that many bookless folks out in the world anymore. But there are still plenty of damn talented short fiction writers who’ve put out collections, novellas, or have written a novel or two, that still excel at writing short stories.

I still need to read the five writers on this list, but I flagged it when it first showed up on RSS because a) I don’t often think about the short fiction in the crime genre, and b) I’m fascinated by the idea that very few people are bookless these days, even though I’m aware of how easy it is to get a book out there. 

How to Recover from an Unproductive Day Like It Never Happened (Lifehacker, 2015)

Read the full post at Lifehacker

We all have unproductive days. Maybe an unexpected event throws your schedule for a loop. Maybe you’re not feeling well. Whatever the reason, it can be tough to get back on track. Here’s how to get past the dip in productivity and back into gear.

I’m generally pretty good at managing my time when everything is going well, but have a bad tendency to let every productive process in my toolbox fall by the wayside the moment that anxiety kicks in and I have a bad day. This post contains a lot of the things I use to help manage those expectations, but also throws in a handful of options I hadn’t considered. 

How (And How Often) You Should Wash Your Pillows (Apartment Therapy, 2015)

Read the full post on Apartment Therapy

Dry your pillows according to the care label. If you are able to put them in the dryer, place a few tennis balls in with the pillows to speed up dry time and to keep the fibers from clumping

This was saved alongside a whole bunch of posts about exercise, calorie counting, cleaning, and getting your shit together with regards to your health. This post was flagged because I drooled in my sleep, and have white pillowcases. The effects of my drooling is quite noticable.

They still are,  even though I spend the majority of my nights trapped behind a CPAP mask to combat the sleep apnea I wasn’t yet aware of at the time. 

That said, I still don’t take care of my pillows like a should, despite having this on my to-read list for nearly five years now. 

Vintage Links from the To-Read Folder: Word Counts, YA Editors; My Little Pony; Book Tours

Readers love to talk about the piles of unread books they’ve been accumulating over the years, breaking out plans to put a dent in the pile if only so they can justify purchasing new books to fill the gap. We can take a certain pleasure in what that unread book signifies, in both the look at all the pleasures that await me when I have time sense and the behold my default state of busy sense.

We tend to be a bit quieter about the unread piles of links and bookmarks we accumulate, unless someone looks over our shoulders and spots a massive pile of unread tabs. Or, in my case, taps the “To Read” folder in my bookmarks bar and gets assaulted by the 300+ blog posts I’ve stored there to engage with later.

Lots of these were put there during my days with the writers centre, flagging resources I might want to come back to later or could be useful when answering a particular call. Others were just me flagging stuff I wanted to read outside of work hours, which I never got around to because I didn’t prioritise such things.

Today, I’m diving into the archive of unread links and picking four to share with you, post about, and then delete from my list forever. Join me as I put a dent into the pile. 

Her Stinging Critiques Propel Young Adult Bestsellers (New York Times, 2015) 

Read the full article at the New York Times (if you’ve got enough free articles left this month)

In the cosseted world of children’s book publishing, getting an editorial letter from Ms. Strauss-Gabel, the publisher of Dutton Children’s Books, is the literary equivalent of winning a golden ticket to Willy Wonka’s chocolate factory. It virtually guarantees critical or commercial success, and often brings both.

A few years back the New York Times did a profile on  Julie Strauss-Gabel, one of the top editors in the YA genre who has been associated with a number of hit novels. It’s the kind of thing that would get shared around our offices at the time—the staff was full of YA fans and we were all talking to people about writing, editing, and publishing on a daily basis. I remember flagging it because it was about the kind of editorial relationships lots of writers hope for in the traditional scene—an ongoing, developmental partnerships—and it talks about exactly how rare those relationship are in modern publishing. 

How To Plan Your Own Book Tour (Bill Ferris @ Writer Unboxed, 2015)

Read the full article at Writer Unboxed.

They say book tours don’t sell books. In fact, they can actually cost authors a lot of money. So why bother? Well, you’re making connections with readers and building your brand and a bunch of other slick-sounding, unquantifiable marketing-speak. If you want to be a big-shot author, you need to act the part, and that means taking your show on the road. Think of a book tour as a tax-write-off-able vacation where people tell you how awesome you are every night.

Book tours are one of those legacy promotional vehicles from the days before the internet, a method of connecting readers with their favourite authors in a world where you couldn’t just tweet Neil Gaiman about how much you loved one of his books. Like book launches, they hold a particular place in aspiring author’s hearts—people would ask about organising tours and book launches on a weekly basis, usually hoping for some magic thing that would transform their book-that-is-doing-okay into a book-that-is-wildly-successful.

Like many things in writing, the dream is predicated on an American vision of bookselling, where you’ve got a population pretty evently distrubited around the country and biggish cities throughout. Australia is big and empty, which means a local tour involves travelling long distances for a handful of stops.

Within this understanding, I remember thinking that Ferris’ post was remarkably clear-sighted and useful, so I flagged it as a resource to direct people towards when they were insistent that their tour would be different and they’d recoup the expenditure through sales.

Welcome to the Heard: A Feminist Watches My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic (Global Comment, 2011)

Read the full editorial at Global Comment

There’s a lot going on with MLP:FiM, including a sizable adult male viewership (of which, more later), but the most important thing to me about the show is this: it presents a world in which the normative position is female.

I found myself watching the first seasons of My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic with my flatmate back in 2012. Initially, it caught me with a joke about Buzzards that Really Buzz, then followed it up with Fluttershy singing like Barry White, but the thing that kept me watching was decentreing of the male point of view and the focus on friendship. Like another favourite show in recent years—Supergirl—it focused on conflicts and resolutions that were meaningful and decidedly fresh, coupled with some particularly smart writing.

That said, I kinda wish this post were longer and went into its points in more depth, particularly revisiting it many years after it was first written. 

The Daily Word Count of 39 Famous Writers (Writers Write, 2015) 

Read the full post at Writers Write.

Two nice things this post does: first, it appends a quote about writing to the word counts for each of the authors they’re focusing on; second, it’s listing all these numbers with a point:

Creating a habit of writing – even if what you are writing is not good – is vital.

The word count, going by the varied targets of the wildly successful authors on their list, is not. Although I am surprised at the number of people who aim for 1,000 words, rather than the highly touted (and occasionally problematic) 2,000 that people start aiming for after they read On Writing