Gulp…

I went to my Secretary of State’s website and filed as an LLC.

I did it. I finally jumped in and did it.

I’m so very nervous and excited.

I followed up by actually doing some more work after that, to reinforce to myself that I am taking this seriously and it’s not a game.

Scary but good.

I have some projects that I’m working on I remembered to take pictures of this time (nothing like being all done and then remembering I need before pictures!)

I’ll write more soon, and have a post with actual pics and a tut. 🙂 In the meantime, I’m going to sleep, and think about business-y stuff.

Just had to share!

Brief Book Review of Apocalypse Z: The Beginning of the End

What:

Apocalypse Z: The Beginning of the End

Who:

Manel Loureiro (I know, the site isn’t active, but the message is hilarious!)

Hell-ooo, nurse!

Oh wait, Manel Loureiro is a practicing attorney and international best-selling author, not a nurse. I suppose that may have something to do with my heart did some pitter-pattering when I finished the best zombie book I’ve read in a dog’s age and saw his bio. Good looking and obviously brilliant? Yes, please!

Enough about my new crush, though…

The nitty gritty:

So far as I can tell, Beginning of the End is the only one of the Apocalypse Z series currently available in English, though if you happen to read Italian, the second installment (Dark Days) is available to you. Or, if you’re fluent enough in Spanish to read well, I believe the third has been published as well (The Wrath of the Righteous). If only I’d kept up with my Spanish…

This is a very good book, folks. Doubtless, some of the credit has to go to translator Pamela Carmell — it can’t be easy to translate a 300+ page book successfully. Think of all those idioms that make no sense from one culture to another.

It’s written in the journal-entry style, likely due to its having been written as blog entries originally. Day by Day Armageddon by J. L. Bourne came about similarly and is also written as journal entries.  How cool is it that we get to witness a new genre emerging as a consequence of the techno-world we’re living in? (Total side note: The third in the series, Shattered Hourglass, was delivered to my door this morning. So excited to read it! I plan to write a review on the series once I’ve read #3.)

There’s not much else to say without any spoilers. This is a very well written book. There are moments that may seem familiar if you read a lot of zombie books — not in a plagiaristic sense, but in a questions that need answering for zombie books sense. As a writer and as a fan of the genre, I find it very interesting to watch it develop. How do authors deal with fast vs. slow? Journal-entry style or a more traditional 3rd person POV, limited or omniscient?

I’m off to tidy the house   pretend to do something productive then succumb to the next zombie book.

What High School Art Class Taught Me about Blogging

An Owl in the Sun

My first day in high school Drawing class, our teacher put an image of an art piece on the projector and invited us to write down everything we knew about it. I made a really long list on my paper. Then we came back together as a class and shared our knowledge.

I was baffled and frustrated when someone else received the teacher’s praise for calling out that the artist had used cross-hatch shading. I hadn’t bothered listing it because my 6th grade art teacher had taught that technique, leading me to believe that everybody knew about it.  Turns out they didn’t.

Lesson 1: Don’t assume the obvious is actually obvious.

I had always wanted to be good at art. I wanted to learn what it was that would take the figures in my drawings from looking stiff and frozen to looking like the totally awesome fantasy characters I envisioned in my head. I wanted to know what all those different brush types were and why and when to use them. I wanted to be a master (or mistress!) of oil paints and know how to use gesso and stretch my own canvases.

Although Drawing did entail specific lessons about perspective and shading, Painting was, to me, pretty frustrating. My teacher was fabulous and encouraging, but I didn’t understand why she didn’t TEACH us stuff about art. It was as if we had to figure out how to do things by actually working at them. (please hear dry tone of voice.)

Lesson 2: There is no substitute for practice. It’s the only way to get better.

 

I was thinking about how those ideas tie into the world of blogging and social media… That what for me and so many others who’ve grown up with computers is so obvious is not obvious in the slightest to a whole lot of other people.  And that my pics and my posts aren’t going to get better by not posting. (:

With my semester and my internship both wrapping up – and speaking of wrapping up, a whole bunch of Christmas gifts and decorating projects to pull together in the next few weeks – I’ll have more time to focus on creative endeavors. I went to the thrift store yesterday and stocked up on some crazy cheap goodness to get my kiddos and I well down the road to a merry term break. My blogging plans usually fall apart when I don’t take any pics of my projects, so I’ll try to be sure to take plenty.

Here’s to practicing more!

And because a blog post without enough pics just isn’t as fun: