Archive for January, 2011

Zenni

I think I’ve posted about this before, but I love zenni.com.

I just bought a pair of prescription glasses plus a pair of prescription sunglasses (not shades, but full glasses) for a total of $36 including shipping. The pair of glasses I already have from these guys are holding up better than any others I’ve ever had. By a lot. Also, they’re the only glasses I’ve ever liked. (The new pairs are for Drew.)

If you wear prescription glasses, you should seriously think about ordering from these guys next time. If you already have a pair of glasses, it’s not that hard to figure out which ones will fit your face. The price/quality ratio is truly ridiculous.

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What I’m Playing 2011

I rate video games 1-5 stars. A five means I was utterly delighted for every last moment of the game. Four means I loved it. Three means I liked it, despite deep flaws. Two means while it had some redeeming qualities, I was not impressed and may not even have finished. One means it made me hate all video games without prejudice.

Video Games I’m Currently Playing:
Skyrim

Video Games Played in 2011:
Bastion *****
Halo Anniversary Edition *****
I MAED A GAM3 W1TH Z0MBIES 1N IT!!!1 *****
Grandia 2 ***
Gears of War 3 ****
Lost Odyssey *****
Enchanted Arms *
Xenosaga **
Assassin’s Creed **
Portal 2 *****
Mass Effect 2 ***
Portal 2 co-op *****
Mass Effect ***
Rainbow 6 Vegas Co-op **
Final Fantasy X-2 **
Bioshock 2 *****
Borderlands: Mad Moxie’s Underdome *****
Oblivion *****
Borderlands: The Zombie Island of Dr. Ned *****

RPG campaigns for 2011:
Shadowrun-based Mass Effect game
IK Bard’s game
Pathfinder IK Giants conversion
Pathfinder Shadowscapes conversion

2010 video game list is here.

2008-2009 video game list is here.

What I’m Reading 2011

I don’t review books, but I do keep a list of what I’ve finished during the year. I’m a very picky reader, so it’s a good bet that if I finished a book, I recommend it.

Wintergirls by Laurie Halse Anderson
The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate by Jaquelyn Kelly
Hold Still by Nina LaCour
Nectar in a Sieve by Kamala Markandaya
Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
Solar Storms by Linda Hogan
The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins
Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins
If It Kills Me by Tara Creel
The Ostrich and the Rose by LeeAnn Setzer
The Andela by Lesley Hart Gunn
Heir of the Line by Eric James Stone
The Garden By Lesley Hart Gunn
Angel Streets by Ryan Alleman
A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini
V for Vendetta by Alan Moore
Exit by Nabiel Kanan
Watchmen by Alan Moore
Doppelganger by Marie Brennan
After by Amy Efaw
Story of a Girl by Sara Zarr
Twisted by Laurie Halse Anderson
Sweethearts by Sara Zarr
Once Was Lost by Sara Zarr
The Thimble of Doom (working title) by Lee Ann Setzer

2010 list is here.

2009 list is here.

2008 list is here.

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The Birds

We have this flock of birds living in our neighborhood. Flock feels like an insufficient word. It’s more like a horde. There are hundreds of them, and they descend upon our yard en mass, with great swoosh and fluttering. As soon as they sense movement, they’re off again, all of them whooshing up into the trees.

I’m not much of a bird watcher. Anyone know what these things are? My best guess is some kind of blackbird.

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Hummingbird

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Shocked to be posting this. It’s about time I started doing this photo-post thing again, don’t you think?

Initiation

I feel like I’m going through some rite of passage.

Last night, I discovered that our laundry room smelled like gas.  Our furnace is housed in there.  Not good, right?

So we called the gas company.  Yup.  Furnace is leaking.  Gas gets shut off.  Now we have no heat and no hot water.

Luckily, it didn’t freeze last night.  It’s still 60 degrees inside our house even 12 hours later.  I’m calling that a blessing.  (We left faucets dripping just in case.)

Called some heating contractors today.  (Yesterday I didn’t know that was a thing.)  They’ll be here in a few hours.  And we’ll spend money I intended to spend on other things on fixing our heater.  Yay.

It’s not exactly a financial hardship.  We’re doing just fine, as usual.  But I feel like the unexpected-broken-thing is a part of home ownership–one we had not yet encountered.

I just hope these things don’t really come in threes.

ETA: It’s fixed. Fairly painlessly. Turned out the part was even under warranty.

And now for something completely different

In December, I was between projects.  I had some revisions planned, but wasn’t quite ready to dive into them.  I had just finished a very intimidating rewrite, and felt only marginally good about the results.  Most of all, I was tired of taking myself so dang seriously.  I just wanted to write something fun.

So, on a day when I was not feeling particularly well and ready to excuse myself from writing, I had this itching to write the first chapter of a middle grade novel I’d had banging around in my brain for the last five years or so.  I’d been studiously not writing this novel, because how many different kinds of things do I think I can write, anyway?  I was being a good little girl and sticking to a couple steady brands.

But if I wasn’t going to write that day anyway, some writing was better than none, right?  What could it possibly hurt to just write the first chapter?

You see where I’m going with this.

I wrote that first chapter.  And then the second one.  And then the rest of the novel.  It’s not terribly long, but it’s a novel and it’s complete and I wrote it in under three weeks.

And what’s more, I had fun.  For once I did not have to care if what I was writing was good.  My main criterion for quality was whether or not it amused me.  I used Drew as a secondary audience.  I wrote character quirks and situations that cracked me up.  I told them to Drew, and he laughed, too.  It wasn’t all that dark, and it wasn’t all that serious.  (Though it does include lots of imminent death.)  And I liked the novel *as I wrote it.*  All the way through.  I still like it even now, in fact.  I don’t think that’s happened since I wrote my first novel, and that was over ten years ago.  (That novel is also impressively bad, though I hope there’s no correlation, there.)

And now I need to be a good little girl and get back to the things I’m supposed to be writing.  In fact, I already have.  I’ve started a new intimidating revision, and I’m not impressively thrilled with the results so far.  I’m not loving it.  It’s hard work and I am mildly miserable.  That three-week novel isn’t some revolution in my writing process.  I’m not going to feel that way about every book all the way through.  I don’t know if that book is marketable/good enough/going anywhere.  And the truth is, I don’t care.

It sure was a nice vacation.

Resolutions

I don’t make New Years resolutions.  This is not because I can’t keep them, but rather because I am an obsessive, goal-driven person who is always working toward too many goals at once.  I can’t just interrupt all that to make new goals just because the year happens to change on me.

But if I had a resolution for this year, it would be to put writing first.  Last year too many other things needed to come first.  These were real needs–Drew had some big things he was working toward, and I had to fill in all the gaps.  And then there was the moving and the buying the house, and the illness stuff.  I wrote, but I didn’t write like I want to be writing.  

It’s time to stop that.  Writing is my actual job now, not my pretend job, which is how it often felt when I was investing in my career for all those years.  It needs to get the priority an actual job would.  I’m still not going to write eight hours a day (because my brain just can’t handle that) but I need to be writing a decent chunk every day.  I’ve been working really hard, but not as steadily as I could be.  This year, that’s changing.  I’m anticipating some other big changes in our lives over the next few years, and if I don’t put writing front and center now, I’m setting myself up for some very big problems down the road.

Now, nothing is allowed to push my writing aside.  I am not allowed to schedule so many things in a day that I have no brain space to write.  If I have to do big things that will suck my brain out my ears, I have to write first, so it gets done.  

 In reality, this is only a small adjustment, as I already have decent writing habits.  I just want to move those to the right a little, until they reach excellent writing habits.  I started working on this goal a month or so ago, and it’s going very well.  I’ve got several projects to work on for the first part of the year, and then after that, who knows.

Welcome to the website of Janci Patterson. Janci's first novel, CHASING THE SKIP, will be published in October, 2012 by Henry Holt.

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