Wednesday, July 28, 2010

NW 23rd Ave Interview with Komo Bains

Check out my interview with NW 23rd local Komo Bains!  

Find out what Komo dreams about, why he wants to make hair grow faster, and of course what he loves about Portland and living on NW 23rd Ave.

For a direct link to the interview, click here.

And as always watch for more interviews with great folks at www.nw23rdav.wordpress.com

Friday, July 23, 2010

Unhappyhipsters:
The only activity that could combat the horror of the child’s clunky Ugg boots—organizing the upper shelves by color and size.

(Photo: Shawn Records; Dwell)

 I understand.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

NW 23rd Ave Interview with Cecily Stevens


Check out my new interview with Cecily Stevens on the NW 23rd Ave Blog!   Cecily is a super-friendly district manager with Goorin Brothers based out of the hat shop on NW 23rd and NW Johnson.  Originally from the Berkshires in Massachusetts, Cecily gave some great answers about who she is, why she moved to Portland and what she loves about NW 23rd Ave.  For a direct link to the interview, click here.  Thanks for reading!

 As always, watch for more interviews at www.nw23rdav.wordpress.com.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

William Safire's "Great Rules of Writing"

Some excellent advice from William Safire, author of New York Times Magazine column "On Language" from 1979 until his death in 2009:

Do not put statements in the negative form.

And don't start sentences with a conjunction.

If you reread your work, you will find on rereading that a great deal of repetition can be avoided by rereading and editing.

Never use a long word when a diminutive one will do.

Unqualified superlatives are the worst of all.

De-accession euphemisms.

If any word is improper at the end of a sentence, a linking verb is.

Avoid trendy locutions that sound flaky.

Last, but not least, avoid cliches like the plague.

Funny... but it's true.  Good writing is simple writing.  My rule of thumb: If there are words that can be removed from a sentence without changing the meaning, remove them.  

Example:  I originally wrote "My general rule of thumb:  If there are words that can be removed from a sentence without changing the meaning of the sentence, then you should remove them." 

You get the point.  I'll be adding these to my wish list:

The Right Word in the Right Place at the Right Time: Wit and Wisdom from the Popular Language Column in the New York Times MagazineHow Not to Write: The Essential Misrules of GrammarLend Me Your Ears: Great Speeches in History, Updated and Expanded Edition


Saturday, July 17, 2010

I Write Like David Foster Wallace

If you've ever tried to compare your writing style to your favorite authors (or if you're just curious), this one's for you.  On I Write Like, users can insert a sample of text into the analyzer and find out what famous writer their word choice and writing style compares with.  Who knows how this really works, but it has gotten some pretty solid recognition (check out the I Write Like blog) and it is great fun.  There are also a few other handy tools for writers on the site, including a blog of writing-related quotes, resources and recommendations.  I subscribed to the site's newsletter and was immediately emailed a link for a complimentary download of Short Story Writing: A Practical Treatise on the Art of the Short Story by Charles Raymond Barrett, Ph B.  So I'd say overall, I Write Like is worth a look.

I entered my last substantial blog post, Taking the Time to Write, into the analyzer, and here is my result:


I Write Like by Mémoires, Mac journal software. Analyze your writing!

Friday, July 16, 2010

NW 23rd Ave Interview with Josh Richardson

Check out my interview with the handsome Josh Richardson, OHSU PhD candidate and NW 23rd Ave resident.  Click here to learn more about Josh and why he loves living on NW 23rd Ave



As always, watch for more interviews at www.nw23rdav.wordpress.com.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

The Importance of Editing

I've been feeling a bit observant lately and have been noticing a lot of typos in web articles, blog posts, and even one of the books that I've been reading (I won't name names).  I usually try not to be too critical and I'm sure anyone could sift through this blog and find a good handful of typos, so I have been resisting the lecturing "get an editor people!" post that has been mounting inside of me.  When I came across this tidbit today, I thought that sharing it would suffice.  Enjoy!
The 7 Most Disastrous Typos of All Time

*Note: this article is not intended for young or easily offended audiences.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Taking the Time to Write

Yesterday my mom asked me about Joyce Carol Oates' writing style.  While I happen to be quite inexperienced with her writing, I was explaining to my mom what I know about her writing habits and the habits and writing styles of other prolific writers.  This got me thinking about the amount of dedication and time that writing, whether as a career or hobby, requires. 

In The Midnight Disease, Alice Flaherty describes writers who suffer from hypergraphia, an uncontrollable compulsion to write usually caused by high temporal lobe activity such as temporal lobe epilepsy and bipolar disorder.  People with hypergraphia write constantly and extensively.  For example, Lewis Carroll, who is believed to have had temporal lobe epilepsy, wrote 98,721 letters from his late twenties to his death at sixty-five.  Flaherty also talks about "normal" but prolific writers, such as Joyce Carol Oates, who do not have abnormal temporal lobe activity, but who write almost as extensively as writers who do.

It's not easy to put that amount of time into writing.  For me, the difficulty is putting aside all the other things that need to be done, or could be done.  There are always dishes to do, mail to sort, stuff to look at online or out the window.  A long day working at the job that actually pays is always a good excuse.  In Bird By Bird, Anne Lamott describes writing constantly, every day, even when she was working full time.  This is what is really hard, the commitment to just do it, just keep going.  Lamott follows the advice of her father, who was also a writer:
"Do it every day for a while," my father kept saying.  "Do it as you would do scales on the piano.  Do it by prearrangement with yourself.  Do it as a debt of honor.  And a commitment to finishing things."
I have friends who write, too and I think we all have the same trouble with it.  One has been writing for years, has even been published.  She tells me, "I'm going to start writing again," and weeks later she's still telling me the same thing.  Another says to me, "let's go somewhere and just sit and write" so we go to the park and we sit and we talk and we people watch with our notebooks and pencils in the grass beside us.  I think that there is value in the desire to write and in the intention to write, but at some point you actually do need to just sit down and write.

See also:  The Inner Manic

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Peanut-Butter-Jelly Time

Check out my newest interview with the creators of PBJs Grilled Gourmet Peanut Butter Creations located on the corner of NW 23rd and NW Kearney.  Read about their vision for delicious grilled peanut butter sandwiches with everything from bananas to blue cheese to hot sauce to pickles.  It's brilliance on a piece of bread.

As always, find this and other interviews with NW 23rd Ave locals at: www.nw23rdav.wordpress.com.  Or click here for the direct link to the interview.

Go to www.pbjsgrilled.com for more information on PBJs.
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