Tag: other writers

  • Video Book Review of Um: Slips, Stumbles, and Verbal Blunders and What They Mean by Michael Erard (Video Blog ep 022)

    Video Book Review of Um: Slips, Stumbles, and Verbal Blunders and What They Mean by Michael Erard (Video Blog ep 022)

    Click the image to play the video review (opens in YouTube)

    I’ve realized during my few months of video-making, along with my previous couple of years making podcasts, that I tend to break apart my speech with ums, uhs, ers, ahhs, and every other sort of cerebral flatus out there. A desire to break away from so many speech errors is one of the reasons I picked up Michael Erard’s book Um: Slips, Stumbles, and Verbal Blunders and What They Mean. My thinking was that if I could understand why I flub my words, then I could eventually eradicate those flubs.

    I’m likely beyond help, but at least this book did teach me that speech blunders are perhaps less something that needs to be cleaned away, and more something that we all need to approach differently. Speech errors aren’t, by themselves, errors at all. Instead, what’s important is measuring speech disfluency from a baseline. Think of reading ums and uhs as similar to reading a lie-detector test; we’re all our own level of nervous even without being hooked up to a spooky machine. The trick is to measure how much more nervous we get when asked potentially compromising questions.

    Among the questions addressed in Um: Slips, Stumbles, and Verbal Blunders and What They Mean are

    1. Why is um-lessness thought of so highly?
    2. Why do we praise pristine speech?
    3. Has it always been this way?

    Many theories have been created to explain the meaning of a speech error including ones from Viennese professor Rudolph Meringer who supposed that language is like a living organism whose evolution is responsible for our collective blunders; Yale psychologist George Mahl who chalks speech errors up to anxiety; and the famous Sigmund Freud who felt that speech errors were windows into the speaker’s subconscious.

    Click here to watch the video review of Um: Slips, Stumbles, and Verbal Blunders and What They Mean (or click the image above). DON’T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE TO MY YOUTUBE CHANNEL!

  • Video book review of The Fifty Year Sword by Mark Z. Danielewski (Video Blog ep 021)

    Video book review of The Fifty Year Sword by Mark Z. Danielewski (Video Blog ep 021)

    Click the image above to watch the video on YouTube

    I anticipate some reactions to this video book review will be negative. Of those negative reviews, I anticipate 3 response types:

    1. Hatred from those that haven’t read the book, but simply want to defend Mark Z. Danielewski (I understand this feeling, believe me; and despite how I feel about The Fifty Year Sword, I will continue to defend Danielewski, even if only for his potential; House of Leaves remains one of my favorite novels of all time)
    2. Hatred from those who have read the book, and claim that I’m simply too dumb to “get it” (again, I understand this feeling and am willing to embrace this possibility)
    3. Hatred from those who have read it and claim to like it. It’s this last group that I’m most interested in.

    Those of you in this last group, please, please, please help me understand what I must have missed. I want to like this book. I really do. I want to believe that Danielewski’s verse writing is just an awkward trend (I didn’t like Only Revolutions, either, if you must know).

    The Fifty Year Sword will be re-issued in October 2012 should any of you decided to read this book.

  • Video review of Room by Emma Donoghue (Video Blog Ep 020)

    For some reason I tend to shy away from the BIG books, those being the books that rountinely make best of lists, fill the limited space in book review columns, and can generally be purchased at Wal-Mart (not that I have something against shopping at Wal-Mart…I went there just today, as a matter of fact…though, I only do so when hurting for money; see, I can’t agree with the business ethics of the company, and oh crap, I’m rambling). I don’t know if my aversion to widely-praised books can be simply diagnosed as hipsterism, or if there’s something more sinister at play. But none of that matters, as I recently read one such department store paperback, Room by Emma Donoghue, and I really, really liked it.

    Click the image below to watch the video review (links to YouTube).

    Click image to watch video

    What did I buy during my Wal-Mart trip today? The Bedwetter by Sarah Silverman. Will my success rate be two for two?

  • More Perverted Book Covers (Video Blog Ep 017)

    More Perverted Book Covers (Video Blog Ep 017)

    A few episodes back I presented some book covers that, through the twisted lens of perversion (is that redundant?), were made to appear more depraved than perhaps they were meant to be. Here, I present three more perverted covers that you won’t be able to unsee. Hey, I didn’t make these book covers to be easily perverted; don’t blame me.

    Here I manipulate the intentions of Gordon Highland’s Flashover, Rob Roberge’s Working Backwards from the Worst Moment of My Life, and Paul Bowels’ The Sheltering Sky.

  • The Versatile Blogger Award nominee

    The Versatile Blogger Award nominee

    A quick thanks to Jennifer over at Donnie Dark Girl for nominating this blog for the Versatile Blogger Award. It means  a lot when I learn that people actually read this blog.

  • Blog Tour Stop: Laura Szumowski, illustrator of New York Stories by Ben Tanzer. You’ll love her cartoonish style.

    Frequent readers will know that I’m a bit of a Ben Tanzer fan. He simply doesn’t disappoint. So when I was asked to make this World’s First Author Blog a stop on his recent blog tour for his New York Stories collection from CCLaP, I jumped at the chance. Equally, I’m jumping at the chance to host a stop for New York Stories illustrator Laura Szumowski.

    Laura has a style that pairs perfectly with the domestic, somewhat detached characters of Ben Tanzer’s work. Smooth lines, intense borders, unabashedly cartoonish, Laura’s work elicits a simple nostalgia, the type of times-remembered that Tanzer’s characters seem to always be chasing.

    New York Stories isn’t the first book illustrated by Szumowski. She’s the author/illustrator of a lot of cool looking books, my favorite of which is Cycling: A Guide to Menstruation. Though I haven’t read it, I can’t imagine it disappointing.

    Head over to Laura Szumowski’s site, take in her offerings, then be sure to swing by CCLaP to pick up a copy of the very limited, very handmade New York Stories.

  • Vertigo Unbalanced is now available to read FOR FREE in the new Nova Parade anthology from Solarcide Magazine

    Vertigo Unbalanced is now available to read FOR FREE in the new Nova Parade anthology from Solarcide Magazine

    The guys at Solarcide do wonderful work. One could argue that I say this only because they’ve been kind enough to interview me about, among other things, my penchant for domestic grotesque fiction. That One doing the arguing would be wrong, however, as Solarcide has been a refuge for great literary content for long before I tainted them with my talk of familial morbidity.

    Solarcide extends their great work into the world of anthologies with the publication of Nova Parade, a FREE .pdf download collection of stories from some fantastic writers, many of whom I shared space with in the Warmed and Bound anthology, in addition to Nova Parade (my story “Vertigo Unbalanced” appears in Nova Parade).

    Here’s a table of contents for you. Click over to Solarcide to download the free collection.

    • Richard Thomas – On A Bent Nail Head
    • Martin Garrity – Walking On Water
    • Bryan Howie – Tides
    • Bradley Sands – Giant Monster Attack!
    • Nathan Pettigrew – Today Our Future Is Born
    • Tony Rauch – That’s Where Your Real Parents Live
    • Rebecca Jones-Howe – Blue Hawaii
    • Andrez Bergen – An Octopus’ Grotto Is His Castle
    • Jessica Taylor – Just A Man
    • Paul D. Brazill – Catch As Catch Can
    • Chris Lewis Carter – Kill Screen
    • Amanda Gowin – Charlotte & Jolene: How To Make A Baby
    • Michael Paul Gonzalez – Ingénue
    • Jason Lairamore – Jack?
    • Jay Slayton-Joslin – Awkward Mornings Beat Long Lonely Nights
    • Chester Pane – Dreadlocks™
    • Joshua D. Moyes – A Stronger Family
    • Nikki Guerlain – King Neptune Sucks Off The World’s Largest Potato!
    • Caleb J. Ross – Vertigo Unbalanced
    • Phil Jourdan – Vomit As A Talent
    • Laurance Kitts – Poetry
    • Clint Rhodes – ATTN: Human Resources
    • Dakota Taylor – A Day In The Life
    • Jeremy Robert Johnson – The Brilliant Idea
    • W. P. Johnson – Cold Heart