Wherein the adventures of two cousins is told to a very unlikely group of pernicious and/or prefabricated
readers, involving encounters with robbers, pirates, geese, horses, and other such livestock, to end
in a very old fashioned happily ever after. Also featuring poetry by the great talents of none other than
Lackscroft and Roe-- Poets Extraordinarie.
Showing posts with label China Mieville. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China Mieville. Show all posts
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Ten Winners - the goofy, gleeful and goosey
Last year, I started out with this idea of presenting various books, movies, characters, songs, TV shows, anything or anyone that had a wonderful element of goof. Only the silliest, funniest and ridiculous could be chosen for a Gooseyness award.
Last Years winners were predominately from books. No surprise there, I read more books than I watch movies. We had Victorian space epics, princesses with gravity problems, or hair problems, a group of friends with weird hobbies - the jellyfish obsessed kind - and a girl named September.
I'm starting to better understand what qualifies for a gooseyness award. I made a shelf of books that include some of the winners from last year, and as I was adding books I found other ones that I want to share with you.
Monday, September 27, 2010
Where do the ideas come from?
"I think most people have more ideas in their heads than they think they do. Its just that those of us in the fantastic fields - either we don't listen to our own filters, or we have a much high ridiculousness threshold."
Interview with China Mieville, NY Times July 23rd, 2010
I've finally posted the 3rd letter from Ange. Yay! Go Ange!
It's not the most exciting action packed letter, but it does some important set-up stuff for later. I realized I went into this story assuming whoever reads it would know the fairy tale. That said, I've found the fairy tales on-line:
It's fascinating to read the different versions. So, I've got two for you:
From Andrew Lang's The Blue Book: The Goose Girl and from Andrew Lang's The Red Book: The Golden Goose
Another source is available at SurLaLune Fairy Tales. Here's the main website: http://www.surlalunefairytales.com/. SurLaLune has an extensive site all about fairy tales. They have annotated versions of the stories, as well as all the hundreds of retellings available from children books, novels and live action movies and cartoons. I remember reading the Goose Girl on SurLaLune when I was first beginning to write Goosey, to help get some ideas about how to proceed.
Mostly I think my ideas come from the same part of my brain that forms dreams.
So, here's Letter #3 for your critques, comments, questions, etc.
Happy dreaming. I mean reading.
Interview with China Mieville, NY Times July 23rd, 2010
I've finally posted the 3rd letter from Ange. Yay! Go Ange!
It's not the most exciting action packed letter, but it does some important set-up stuff for later. I realized I went into this story assuming whoever reads it would know the fairy tale. That said, I've found the fairy tales on-line:
It's fascinating to read the different versions. So, I've got two for you:
From Andrew Lang's The Blue Book: The Goose Girl and from Andrew Lang's The Red Book: The Golden Goose
Another source is available at SurLaLune Fairy Tales. Here's the main website: http://www.surlalunefairytales.com/. SurLaLune has an extensive site all about fairy tales. They have annotated versions of the stories, as well as all the hundreds of retellings available from children books, novels and live action movies and cartoons. I remember reading the Goose Girl on SurLaLune when I was first beginning to write Goosey, to help get some ideas about how to proceed.
Mostly I think my ideas come from the same part of my brain that forms dreams.
So, here's Letter #3 for your critques, comments, questions, etc.
Happy dreaming. I mean reading.
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