Fuel for My Jetpack, Mead for My Dragon

Doing the impossible is a lot harder than it sounds.

Being a science-fiction or fantasy writer is hard.  Wrestling with the hassle of plot, theme, character, setting, transition, voice, and deeply rooted psycho-sexual subtext is hard enough without having to deal with the added challenge of hanging the threads of your story from the rafters of disbelief in order to satisfy the demands of the genre.  As if these hurdles weren’t high enough, the problem of inspiration when it comes to thinking up a memorable and appropriately science-fictiony or fantastical-without-being-embarrassingly-flamboyant name for characters and exotic lands becomes even more frustrating when writer’s block insists on being a squatter in the house of ideas.

Fortunately, the Internet hosts a series of solutions to this problem in the form of name generators.  Name generators are applications that are programed to combine a number of different elements of vowel sounds, consonant constructions and a slew of other linguistic elements into new configurations that give you just the unearthly quality you need to sound authentic.

One of the first and best experiences I’ve had is with seventhsanctum.com, a website by Steven Savage featuring a particularly robust set of generators.  Not content to focus on names alone, the site enables the visitor to play with a number of different subjects, from character names to planet names, story ideas, character skills and even ideas for when good old cousin Writer’s Block stops in for a few days.

A quick click on Elf Names – described as “Names for both Tolkeinesque elves, Wild Elves, and general fantasy,” – opens up a page that requests the number of names desired (up to 25), a category field offering the choices of High Elves, Wild Elves or Full Names, and a generate button.  A selection of ten High Elf names renders thus:

Aderlusn Hammerfinder
Adsaar Smilefollower
Atagear Firewand
Atleid Lakemaker
Goglaal Prayerstealer
Ilburb Mercyblade
Ilolain Rainvoyager
Lorhaeg Dreamfletcher
Naratg Featherfollower
Otibnadr Hawkbrewer

Somewhere in there is my future pen name.  Or hotel-check-in alias.

           The names don’t always have to be exotic.  Utilizing information from the US Census, seventhsanctum.com’s Quick Name Generator can supply you with garden-variety appellations that can also be frustratingly difficult to come up with without sounding bland. Kristina Scott, Lily Cash, and Stefanie Hatfield would agree – were they real people.

           The site is a blessing for anyone looking for humor or inspiration in writing their story or bringing their role-playing game setting and characters to life.  It was put together with an obvious love for writing and creativity.  Not content to simply kitbash the English language and leave it at that, there are several links to other sites and features meant to aid the artist’s mind in advancing technique and even suggestions as to how to make forays into the world of getting paid to do what you love.

           So the next time you seethe with frustration when you find that somebody else preemptively stole your idea to name the dashing hero Han Solo or Aragorn, head on over to seventhsanctum.com to kick-start your creative slump, and find a doorway into a great community as well.

KMS

A Year in Books/Day 14: Literary Feasts

  • Title: Literary Feasts Inspired Eating from Classic Fiction
  • Author: Sean Brand
  • Year Published: 2006 (ATRIA Books)
  • Year Purchased: 2008
  • Source: Daedalus Books
  • About: A tantalizing cornucopia of literature’s finest culinary scenes, complete with all necessary ingredients to recreate them.
  • Motivation: Classic literature + food. Need there be anything more?
  • Times Read: 1
  • Random Excerpt/Page 35: “Of all the feasts in this book, Swann’s way is the most obsessively sensitive and gratuitously nostalgic. It is not about flavor, and certainly not about portion-size-it is only a small mouthful that sets Swann off on his multi-volume reverie. This tea reminds the serious gastronome of the exquisite pleasures of simple things simply done, and the extraordinarily range of memories that can be revived by simple tastes.”
  • Happiness Scale: 7 1/2
    Marcel Proust in 1900

    Image via Wikipedia

     

Poetic Grief, Revisited

My Great-Aunt Ginger died yesterday. It is my family’s time to mourn now, and so once more I turn to another writer’s words to express thoughts which refuse to be corralled by my own mind.

“It is a curious thing, the death of a loved one. We all know that our time in this world is limited, and that eventually all of us will end up underneath some sheet, never to wake up. And yet it is always a surprise when it happens to someone we know. It is like walking up the stairs to your bedroom in the dark, and thinking there is one more stair than there is. Your foot falls down, through the air, and there is a sickly moment of dark surprise as you try and readjust the way you thought of things.” -Lemony Snicket, ‘Horseradish:Bitter Truths You Can’t Avoid’.

Lost and Found

After months spent working at my husband’s desk, using his laptop, I am finally back in my own cozy, lovingly crafted studio space. Writing on my machine. Surrounded by my things. While I know that I can write anywhere, if pressed, tapping out these words on my computer feels so right. I crossed the room, sat down and am home again.

Joe Strummer reminding me that the future is, indeed, un-written.

A Year in Books/Day 13: The Hulton Getty Picture Collection 1920s

  • Title: The Hulton Getty Picture Collection 1920s
  • Author: Nick Yapp
  • Year Published: 1998 (Könemann)
  • Year Purchased: 2005
  • Source: Barnes & Noble clearance rack
  • About: A photographic stroll through the 1920s, with enlightening chapter introductions and detailed captions.
  • Motivation: I’m mad for history; I write extensively on Jazz Age subjects, including silent cinema, dead writers and flappers.
  • Times Read: 2
  • Random Excerpt/Page 206:”The ‘hands on knees crossover’ step from the most famous and enduring dance of the Twenties-the Charleston. The monkey was not obligatory.”
  • Happiness Scale: 10
    English: Violet Romer in flapper dress

    Image via Wikipedia

     

Shopping for the Bookworm: Author! Author! Art

Literary-based art adds a wonderful design element to any writing space or reading nook. I love these Jack Kerouac, Sylvia Plath and Kurt Vonnegut inspired prints from Etsy.

[News] School Libraries Petition

I could easily devote thousands of words to the subject of reading. It has played a significant role in my life. I don’t remember a time without books, as my earliest memories involve me toting around my little trove of golden-spined treasures, plopping down in the middle of the floor and trying so hard to unlock their mysteries. I was approximately 18-months old. I spent a lot of time at libraries. Going to the public library was a huge treat, better than dolls or Hot Wheel cars or ice cream sundaes. When I started kindergarten, I became doubly lucky: schools have libraries, too! I was, as it turns out, even luckier than I suspected: my family read to me whenever I asked, took me to check out books whenever I begged and, just as importantly, I went to a good school with a properly funded library of its own.

Personal circumstances aside, the latter is not a luxury; it’s a much-needed and highly important necessity that should be available to every child. Reading changes lives. It’s one of the most important paving stones on the road to success that begins, for most of us, at our local school library. As of this moment, 17,645 signatures are still needed. If you’d like to sign the petition, go here. A special thanks to Cassie at ‘Books and Bowel Movementsfor the FYI.

A Year in Books/Day 12: Bizarre Books

His Excellency Lord Aberdeen

Image via Wikipedia-Lord Aberdeen, quite the humorist.

  • Title: Bizarre Books A Compendium of Classic Oddities
  • Authors: Russell Ash & Brian Lake
  • Year Published: 2007 (Harper Perennial)
  • Year Purchased: 2010
  • Source: Barnes & Noble clearance rack
  • About: This books features the best of the worst titles that England has produced, in one handy, uproarious little volume. All of these works were written and published in all seriousness.
  • Motivation: ‘Jokes Cracked by Lord Aberdeen’, ‘An Irishman’s Difficulties with the Dutch Language’ and ‘How to Avoid Work’ are all reproduced on the front cover. I’m also obsessed with lists.
  • Times Read: 1
  • Random Excerpt/Page 132: “While Dick knelt down, ready to fire, Syl could not help but clutch his wonderfully-got bag of marbles.”
  • Happiness Scale: 9 1/2

     

A Year in Books/Day 11: Born for Liberty

  • Title: Born for Liberty A History of Women in America
  • Author: Sara M. Evans
  • Year Published: 1989 (The Free Press)
  • Year Purchased: 2001/2002
  • Source: Unknown
  • About: An intelligent, critical study of the changing nature of women’s place in American society.
  • Motivation: I’m a feminist who enjoys a good, solid read on the subject.
    Suffragists picketing the White House, January...

    Image via Wikipedia

     

  • Times Read: 2
  • Random Excerpt/Page 85: “By the 1830s the social worlds occupied by the genteel and by the working classes were distinct and rarely overlapped. A lack of familiarity with one another’s cultural patterns-and with the circumstances that explained them-quickly evolved into suspicion or contempt. Middle-class reformers often viewed the lower classes as a breed apart, and readily condemned their ideas of domestic comfort and standards of morals far below their own.”
  • Happiness Scale: 9