Wednesday, December 10, 2014

The Guest of Honor: A (Scary) Christmas Story

Well its been a while since I last posted. I blame that on turkey and stuffing....not laziness or anything like that....

But today I'd like to share that a story of mine is being featured over at Dark Chapter Press! It's called 'The Guest of Honor' and it was a story I was asked to submit for their DreAdvent - a 24 day writing competition leading up to Christmas. If you like scary Christmas stories then you may want to check it by clicking right here, or at the link at the bottom of this post.

I hope you enjoy it! I don't know why but lately I've really enjoyed writing horror. It's not my forte but I'm really getting a kick out of it. I haven't abandoned my science fiction (or my novel) but it is fun to dive into something different every now and then. I promise to update more often now that life is settling down again. I haven't even had a chance to write up something about the new Star Wars trailer, which is pressing business...obviously.:)

The Guest of Honor

Monday, November 3, 2014

A New Story: The Fortune

I am very excited to announce that I was a finalist in the Dark Chapter Press September Flash Fiction competition! The story I submitted, The Fortune, is featured on their blog this week and drew inspiration from a creepy picture of an old, wooden pier. Please visit the Dark Chapter Press website and you can read my story!

Dark Chapter Press is a new horror publisher and I'm very honored to have placed as a finalist in their first two competitions. Unfortunately, I didn't have time to write a new story for their October competition. But if you love horror (and especially scary clowns) please browse their website because they will be featuring additional horror stories in the coming weeks and months!

On an unrelated note, it is also National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo). I'm using this as excuse to finish up the first (and very rough) draft of a novel I have been working on for over a year now. If you'd be interested in being a guinea pig and reading my draft once it has been fixed and changed and edited, please let me know. I would really love some input from people to make it a better story. This would probably be sometime in the late spring. Please email me or drop me a message on Facebook.

Another link to The Fortune. I hope you enjoy it! Any and all feedback is appreciated.

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Top 100 Scientific Articles

Quick post today because the work week has been crazy.

The scientific journal Nature just released several articles about the Science Citation Index (SCI). The SCI is a measurement of the number of citations (by other articles and research reports) a particular research paper or study receives. This purportedly reflects how important a particular research article is in related scientific fields. Both Thomas Reuters (which owns the SCI) and Google Scholar reported back to Nature on the top 100 most-cited scientific papers of all time. It's quite surprising how many methods and computational papers make the list. A second article discusses how researchers view their own work.

I'm still digesting the articles and what they mean to science and publishing in general, but I wanted to share this with anyone interested. I do find it surprising that the journal Nature only has two papers in the top 50....and the journal Science only gets as high as #63! Take that for what it's worth.

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

What's in a Name?


Have you ever called someone an Einstein? Or a Scrooge?

You may have even uttered the words ‘Call me Ishmael…’ at some point in your life. 

So what’s in a name? 

It is seemingly a simple question. A question that has been on my mind for some time. Frustratingly so, in fact, considering the powers that be in my research field cannot seem to settle on the nomenclature for the genes I am studying. It’s a mess, but that’s a story for another day…

The question may not be as simple as I once thought.

Names can be powerful, inspiring, and potentially fear-inducing. Sometimes a person or an idea can have multiple names. Some names transcend time – Cleopatra, Caligula, Hammurabi, Jesus, Budha. Whether or not you know it, the names of things can affect you every day. Take for instance the recent events in Syria and Iraq. Many governments and news outlets can’t even decide what to call the Islamic State. Is it ISIL? ISIS? ISIQ? Just the Islamic State? There have even been recent attempts to switch the acronym to QSIS (Al-Qaeda Separatists in Iraq and Syria) to differentiate the terrorist group from anything that remotely resembles Islam – because it most certainly does not.

I’m curious if individuals within the Islamic State have a similar problem when it comes to their own identity.  I doubt it, but if so, what would that mean? How can an enemy be understood if no one can even agree on what to call him/her/it/them? I don’t claim to have any answers on that but I think it is important to figure out.

I’m also not the only one who has thought about names. Click on this link if you are interested in a podcast about names and society. It's by the guys over at Freakonomics and it certainly dives into the topic at length.  

However, I’ve again treaded from my originally-intended topic: the literary motif of names and naming in fantasy stories. 

Even the most casual of fantasy readers are familiar with this. A great example is Lord Voldemort in the Harry Potter series. For most of the other characters in Harry Potter, ‘You-Know-Who’ or ‘He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named’ are what Voldemort is known by. The mere speaking of his proper name is horrifying to most wizards and witches. There is a stigma associated with his name that induces emotional and sometimes physical reaction. In fact, J.K. Rowling builds a form of magic around the use of the name ‘Lord Voldemort’. Wizards using his proper name aloud can be tracked because of a taboo curse put on the actual spoken words. Not only does this add to both the stigma and mystique of Lord Voldemort but that’s just great story-telling! 

This does reflect the world in which we live though. When Hitler comes up in conversation there’s almost an immediate association with hurt and suffering. We also associate nicknames to people. Some are well-intended and others…..not so much.  And it’s the most frustrating thing to run into someone and temporarily have forgotten their name. (Something I need to work on.) I feel lost from the moment the conversation begins. 

The power behind names is a central theme in Patrick Rothfuss’ The Kingkiller Chronicles. The Dresden Files by Jim Butcher plays with the idea of full names and power, and there are elements concerning the names of people and places throughout The Lord of the Rings by Tolkien and The Sandman series by Neil Gaiman. Even in classics like Rumpelstiltskin - the queen must give up her child unless she can guess Rumpelstiltskin’s true name. 

I like the fact that theories of names and the power they derive are a staple in a lot of fantasy literature. It’s odd, but I find it comforting that buried in the depths of the Mines of Moria and obscured in the land of Faerie are hidden the true names of things. 

Are there such places in the real world where the true or first names of things are hidden? What did our primitive ancestors first call love, or the stars? Maybe that is why I’m drawn to the fantasy genre so much. The original name of a particular person or place or thing can draw a lot of power in those stories. I think the same is true for our own world. 

Monday, September 22, 2014

A Short Story: Where the Toys Go

Last month I submitted a 500-word story to an up-and-coming horror magazine and publisher called Dark Chapter Press. Dark Chapter runs a monthly horror flash fiction contest with inspiration for stories derived from photographs featured on their website. The August competition featured a photograph of creepy doll parts and it can be found here. I'm very excited to say that the story I submitted - Where the Toys Go - was selected as one of the runner-ups in the competition! They are featuring my story this week on their blog. Please click on the link below to read my story and the submissions of the other winners! There are also other horror stories featured on their website if you enjoy being scared. Horror writing is a new genre for me but I have to admit I am having a lot of fun with it. Enjoy!

Story: Where the Toys Go

Thursday, September 18, 2014

What is Flash Fiction?

I discovered flash fiction in the back page of the scientific journal Nature. Nature: Futures runs a new, flash sci-fi story every week and the call for submissions asks for provocative stories that are <950 total words in length. Many, many other online magazines and publications are now publishing stories that are <1,000 words. Daily Science Fiction will even email you (for free!...so sign up...do it now) a new flash fiction story every morning. The editors at the magazine encourage readers to take three or four minutes to enjoy a new story with breakfast, or during lunch, or in bed, or whenever and wherever else you decide to read and enjoy such things in life.

In essence, flash fiction is story-telling on a microscopic scale. It poses several different types of challenges both to the reader and the writer and I have come to really enjoy it as a form of literature and entertainment. I would say that most flash fiction stories are <1,000 words in length, on average. But I have read stories that are even shorter, as small as 500 or even 100 total words. There is no universal set length for a flash fiction story...but it should be short. The advantage truly is being able to escape to another world in the time it takes to have a cup of tea or coffee in the morning...or even on the bus on the way to work.

For the reader this can be challenging on several levels. I enjoy reading detailed descriptions of setting and mood and I like to slowly sink into the story and get to know the characters. Flash fiction stories will usually set the tone and atmosphere almost immediately - some even begin in the middle of conversations and the reader is delightfully tossed right into a predicament. The reader often needs to play catch-up and sometimes will just have to accept that some aspects of the story's world will go unexplained. This forces the reader to get out of their comfort zone and engage with the plot immediately due to the story's brevity. It's refreshing in way. Of course, for those of us with short attention spans, it is not surprising flash fiction is taking off as a popular form of story-telling. In today's day and age most people don't even read a full newspaper article any more, let alone a short story or novel.

For a writer there are challenges as well. How do you tell a gripping or entertaining story in such a short span? One thousand words sounds like a lot but it is nothing more than two pages, double-spaced. That is not a lot of room to develop the relationship between the protagonist and the problem, or between two characters, or to describe the ending of the world. I think it is good practice for writers to attempt this format at least once, however, because it forces one to really examine what is essential to a story and how it can be pruned to hone in on the message.

If you are interested in science fiction like I am, make your way over to Nature: Futures or Daily Science Fiction or just Google 'flash science fiction' and see what you find! Most magazines keep an archive of previous stories free for you to peruse at your own leisure.


Wednesday, September 10, 2014

My First Story - One Day in the Future

The first short story I wrote and officially published was called One Day in the Future. It's a fun story (I think) and it can be found here. I submitted it to a 'flash' science fiction competition called Quantum Shorts. The submissions were judged for their quality, etc. and the stories had to involve something related to, or derived from, quantum mechanics. It was an open-voting competition so everyone's stories were published online for all to see. I didn't win but I considered resubmitting the story elsewhere for publication because I like it.

This was when I decided to actually read the rules in fine print for the Quantum Shorts competition.and stumbled upon this:

" and (e) by providing a Submission, entrant consents to give Organizer a non-exclusive license to use, reproduce, modify, publish, create derivative works from, and display such Submission under a Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"  Source.

My story is now shared under a broad licensing agreement, which the host's of the competition own. Unfortunately, this means submitting the story elsewhere to be published has strings attached to it and is hardly likely to be purchased. Thus, my story is now published in my opinion...at least in spirit. So I hope you enjoy it! And as a side note, I've now come to learn from reading the fine print of many other competitions and magazines that most won't take a submission that is already freely found on the web, or that is currently under consideration with another publisher. So in retrospect I wouldn't have been able to publish this story anyway (assuming the story had been accepted elsewhere).
 
I consider that a penny saved, if not necessarily earned. 

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

A Fresh Page

It's been a long time since I've attempted to blog. Most of my efforts the past year and a half have been focused on finishing up graduate school, finding a job, and working on various projects here and there. But I feel it is time to start blogging again.

There are several reasons for this, including the shameless self-promotion of anything that I will hopefully publish. But I also want to write about the journey as I develop as a writer and hopefully this platform will interest me and....who knows, maybe somebody else.

A little bit about me: during the day I am a postdoctoral researcher at the National Institutes of Health. I research genetic causes of essential hypertension and the genetic changes that occur within our bodies as we age.

But at night I am an adventurer, a space captain, and the lone survivor of a forgotten war! Not really. But I like to write about those things and I hope they will entertain others someday. This blog will archive my success and failure at honing my craft and serve as a nice little soapbox to brag every now and then. I live mainly in the realms of science fiction and fantasy but I've tried some other fiction and we'll see how it goes.

I would also appreciate and love any input you may have. Tell me if you liked my stories, or hated them, or share something interesting you have read lately! Feel free to comment here or email me at any time, theripplesintime@gmail.com.