Indie Games Blog Carnival

indie games wordleBack in ancient times, cavepeople would make gather around the campfire and share blog carnivals (it was around the end of the Geocities age, just before cave painting really took off as an art form). That makes it retro cool, right?

I think this blog carnival format would work well for finding and sharing indie games and game reviewers, so I’m starting an indie games blog carnival. This is going to be a collection of links and little blurbs, I plan to include most (or all) of the submissions I get, but curated lightly to avoid repetition.

I would just love it if you’d submit indie game pieces and encourage friends to submit! This includes reviews written for magazines, communities or personal blogs, as well as essays on indie games, thoughtful dev blog pieces, and related creative writing. You can also submit indie games, too. This begs the question of what makes an indie, of course, but any game made for a game jam, developed with friends, or created as a solo project counts as an indie. You’re welcome to submit either your own projects or projects you enjoy.

Here is a form to make it easy for you to send cool things my way:

If for some reason the BC form isn’t working for you, then you can email submissions to me at my first name at my blog domain.

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‘The Boleyn Bride’ by Brandy Purdy

The Boleyn bride of the title is Elizabeth Howard Boleyn, mother of George, Mary, and Anne Boleyn. My entire previous knowledge of her life is basically me noting that the Boleyn siblings got their family prestige and connections through their mother, and their wealth through their father. Also that Anne Boleyn (Wife #2, Beheaded) and Catherine Howard (Wife #5, beheaded) were cousins through the Howards, so I was interested in learning more.

The book didn’t need any plothooks for me, because Tudor, but the story is narrated by a regretful Elizabeth in an extended flashback after Anne and George’s deaths. We see a young, spoiled aristocrat married off to the son of wealthy shopkeepers. Elizabeth’s in-laws may be styling themselves Boleyns now, but they’ll always be the new-money Bullens to her.

Elizabeth is a bizarrely likeable character, throughout all her hardships. We see her loyalty to Queen Catherine, even as her Boleyn family enjoy the benefits of Henry’s affairs with her daughters.  She carries on plenty of affairs herself, one long-running romance and loads of other encounters, and basically shrugs and says that there’s no question of the paternity of her children and that she’s not publicly embarrassing her husband, bring on the young men! She’s also vain, but in an oddly sensible way, showing awareness that her value is her face and figure.

    I’m already familiar with George, Mary, and Anne from all the other Tudor fiction I’ve read, but I enjoyed Purdy’s versions of these characters. Mary Boleyn is usually characterized as a dull-witted pawn for the power hungry Boleyns, or an immoral hedonist. But here, Mary is shown as a golden little girl who mimics her parents’ affairs, but finally finds love in a lowborn match and a removal from court.

The Anne / George incest theme always gives me the creeps in Tudor novels, and I felt like Elizabeth shared my squick, jumping to insist that nothing happened! Not any of those times they spent the night together alone, nope, totally not, because that would be gross.

The story of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn is a familiar one to me, but Purdy’s unique and oddly sympathetic Elizabeth Boleyn is a new character and a new twist.

The Boleyn Bride will be released by Kensington Books  on February 25, 2014. This review is based on an eARC from the publisher. (Thank you!) Opinions are my own and  free copies have never stopped me from snarking about a bad book before.

Related:

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Adding Awesome with ‘If This Then That’

New post on Yahoo about using IFTTT to save time and add awesome:

ifttt

If This Then That is a repository of recipes to take advantage of services and sites you’re already using, by integrating actions on one service with a result on another. At it’s most simple, it’s the one add on to rule them all, replacing all the WordPress plugins that send posts to Twitter, Facebook, and Tumblr.

I found plenty of recipes to automate and facilitate things I was doing anyway, and then I discovered recipes to do things that hadn’t ever occurred to me, like connect my location and the local sunrise time with the Phillips Hue app, to wake up to a simulated sunrise , even in the smallest, windowless urban apartment. (IFTTT user Benright, you are a genius!)

via Automate Everything with ‘If This Then That’ – Yahoo Voices – voices.yahoo.com.

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Imposter Syndrome, Part 273

Meg: I’m working on your bio for our hipster startup profile, how many years have you been teaching?

Colleague-who-will-not-be-named: Oh, man, I have no experience and no training. It’s a wonder anyone lets me teach their kids anything.

Meg: What are you talking about? You have loads of experience, your classes are awesome and all the kids love you! Why would you say — WAIT A MINUTE. You’re trying to make some kind of a point here, aren’t you?

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Stories From Space Camp

I have a new story, Star-Crossed, out in Stories From Space CampStories From Space Camp is a scifi zine with an issue theme of assimilation / liberation.

Star-Crossed is about aliens and alienation. Although I’ve been writing science fiction since I was a teenager, most of it has never seen the light of day. For good reason, that is. Either I like the world but nothing interesting happens, or there’s no particularly reason to set the action in the Delta Quadrant. I’m happy with Star-Crossed, though. There’s a different world, characters perform actions, there’s not too much exposition, and the story resolves.

After The Subway Bride, though, I felt a bit awkward talking about it. Hey Meg, didn’t you just finish a story that’s basically about being transplanted in a slightly-twisted South? Yes, yes I did.

I wrote Star-Crossed in the spring, before I began teaching at Youth Digital, and sent it off to Stories From Space Camp, and didn’t really think about it until it arrived. When I reread my story, I found this whole secondary (tertiary?) theme about finding satisfaction in challenging work and good colleagues, even if the job isn’t quite what you’d expected.

(Also, I’m incapable of rereading anything I wrote without wanting to go back and make changes. )

Speaking of surprises from my subconscious,  I recently came across an old paperback of E Pluribus Unicorn (from high school, you know, when I thought I would be a science fiction writer), and reread it. Apparently the story The World Well Lost made a larger impression on me than I’d thought, because of the arcs in Star-Crossed is not so much inspired-by, more stolen-from.

Anyway, new story, I don’t hate it, it’s on dead trees and it’s part of a really lovely collection. Plus it was mailed with a candy bar, which is how all zines should arrive.

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The Future of Games Journalism

…is turning out 1000 ~ 2000 not-quite-original words, in 6 hours, for $1.

Looking someone to rewrite 100 to 200 word game news. Each 100 to 200 word game news is priced at $0.10

Please include these words in your application: I understand that “Each 100 to 200 word game news is priced at $0.10”

Please do not apply if you cannot rewrite 10 game news in 6 hours, or you’re not serious. This is a long-termed job.

From an actual job posting for a Game News Writer on oDesk.

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Surfer, Muppet, Gun, What?

My App Design 3 students are doing a math-heavy assignment, and as I explained what they were doing, I threw out a couple of Chinese  number handsigns, meant to emphasize that there were 6 sides on a die so 7 would roll an error. Ok, fine, so this math-heavy lesson was helping the kids make a cheat in a dice-rolling app. One of my students asked me what I doing with my hands.

Oh yeah, I said, it’s just a handsign I used for bargaining in Beijing, sorry kids, let’s get back to the app. The kids had a million questions, so I told them about my years in China, and taught them 6 through 10. (That’s Surfer, Muppet, Gun, Fingerpuppet, Fist, if you’re wondering.)  Sometimes I don’t feel like I’ve done very much in in my life, but I just sidetracked my games programming class with expat adventure stories, so, there’s that.

Later that night, I told Harold how funny it was, that I have so internalized the Chinese number handsigns that I used then in class for emphasis and clarity, forgetting that not everyone knows them.

He looked at me weird, and then asked me what number handsigns I was talking about.

Apparently I have been just throwing random hand signs around for years and no one has ever questioned it.

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Winter flowers. #blog

Winter flowers. #blog | January 28, 2014 at 11:29AM
Winter flowers. #blog

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Pioneer Girls

I started rereading the Little House books after Jennette and I got talking about them the other day.  (I’m not entirely sure how we made the segue from brunch mimosas to The Long Winter. We are talented!) I’d totally recommend rereading them as an adult and rediscovering so many familiar scenes, but if you’re going to reread them, definitely take a break between These Happy Golden Years and The First Four Years. I reread them in succession, finishing each one and then immediately beginning the next, and at The First Four Years, I felt like I’d been punched in the gut.

Each chapter of These Happy Golden Years reads like a blog post, a narrative essay ending on a high note. I read on my iPad, and without the thickness of a book in my hands, I kept thinking each chapter end was really the book’s end. They have all the Ingalls tells, like song lyrics and poetic prairie descriptions.

And then in The First Four Years, Almanzo is suddenly 10 years older than Laura. Apparently the part where she is a 16 year old schoolteacher and he is a 19 year old homesteader was fictional… so they are not a well matched precocious pair of young adults, but a slightly creepy 15 and 25 when they begin sleigh dating. Also he took on massive debt to fund their new house! And their crops keep failing! And Almanzo keeps borrowing against the next year’s crop!

I thought I might have been taking the story of a young (ish. I mean, Almanzo is my age.) couple’s setbacks too much to heart, but after three years of crop failure, and a bout of diphtheria, their house burns down. I was really surprised to read about their stillborn son, I didn’t remember it from childhood reading because the oblique references to pregnancy and childbirth went right over my little girl head. Ma Ingalls would have approved.

So yeah, take a little break first, and think about how great Those Happy Golden Years is.

pioneer girl I was happy to get the eARC for Bich Minh Nguyen’s Pioneer Girl, because it was described as a novel about a Vietnamese-American grad student researching Laura Ingalls Wilder and her daughter, Rose Wilder Lane. The key to the mystery is a golden brooch, that resembles the description of a gift Almanzo gives Laura in These Happy Golden Years. An American journalist called Rose left it in a Saigon cafe in the 60s, and now the granddaughter of that cafe owner wonders if that journalist might really have been Rose Wilder Lane.

The Lien family and the Ingalls-Wilder family share more than just possibly the gold cabin pin. As Lee Lien investigates Rose’s papers, she also starts to uncover more about her family and the topics they don’t discuss. We also see parallels between the Ingalls family’s travels, always in search of a better place, and the Lien family, immigrating from Vietnam and then moving throughout the Midwest.

Lee is hanging out at home after grad school, helping out a bit in the family’s cafe, and hoping for a job offer. Spending time at home as an adult leads to levels of discovery, as she ruminates on her brother’s favored status, on job prospects for a lit grad (I hear you, Lee!), their father’s death, the family’s travels around the Midwest, working at Chinese buffet restaurants, and focuses on her grandfather’s meeting with Rose Wilder, throwing herself into research and uncovering secrets in both families.

Sections of the book rang so true, like reading Edith Wharton for what the author calls the “wealth porn”, while other sections, like stumbling across secret documents at Rose Wilder historical site, were almost magical fiction. (I had some feelings about Rose’s secret child, but I Had Feelings over the improper archival methods.)

As Little House is a memoir that reads like fiction, Pioneer Girl is fiction that reads like a memoir. The story is a collection of loosely related arcs, and between the rambling and the slow reveals, it just felt more like an account of real events than a novel.

It’s not a memoir. I kept telling myself, because I would cringe at the unflattering descriptions of characters. (I’m over 30 years old, and I worry about fictional characters feeling badly about themselves) It’s not real people. I should have tried this for The First Four Years.

    Pioneer Girl is ultimately about wanderlust, that brought Pa Ingalls out to Indian Territory, and the wanderlust of all the homesteaders and immigrants, and the wanderlust in Lee’s family, as they move from one Chinese buffet restaurant to the next in the Midwest, and Lee’s own wanderlust, taking a job that seems promising but still might fail, leaving her just like Pa and Almanzo.

I received an eARC of this novel from the publisher to review. As always, all opinions are my own, and review copies have never stopped me from snarking about a bad book.

Edit: Julie reviewed Pioneer Girl too! PS Julie and I are friends because she also got very upset over a book character pocketing a historical document. 

 

 

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Instagramming

Hey, you guys, am I using Instagram right? #sunset #flowers #nature #lotsoffilters

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