Political Backstabbing and Handsome Men in ‘Everlove’

I recently reviewed Everlove, Silicon Sisters’ new romance / adventure game for Hardcore Droid. This game contains great dialogue, with both intrigue and snark. And the handsome, single men all over the kingdom really highlighted how often mainstream, for-everyone games assume that players are straight men. Plus, did I mention how many handsome single guys there are in Everlove?

 

gpoy

When finally forced to choose just one gentleman from the four options, I immediately choose dark, brooding and powerful, of course. Turns out, though, that all my choices had actual consequences, and Lord Dark and Brooding was attracted to Will and Responsibility, and at odds with my Kindness and Wisdom. (Typical me.)

I replayed, this time pursuing Thorodan, the handsome and talented young healer. He was a better match, since he was more interested in Rose’s steadily-increasing Kindness stat, but as he told me how many nights he’d stayed up frantically working on his magical curse-breaking formula, he reminded me of my buddies from the tech startup scene. A total mood killer when Rose and Thorodan finally got some romantic time. (Also typical me.)

via Everlove Review | Hardcore Droid.

Posted in Chapel Hill, Game Reviews, Seattle | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

What My Completely Honest CV Would Say

I did some stuff for games, some of them shipped. I wrote some stuff for magazines, some are still in business.

Posted in Chapel Hill, Gaming Culture | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

The Tragedy of Internet Marketing

Having a blog often brings me strange emails. Usually from well-meaning marketers, who’ve found me on some list of female bloggers and would therefore like to offer me the exciting opportunity to review their sippycups or diaper bags or something else completely useless to me.  Sometimes I get offers for guest posts, offering free access to an archive of clearly spun content with sponsored backlinks. Sometimes these emails are addressed to Ms. Paradox, which is going to be my superheroine name whenever I get powers. Internet marketing is a weird place, is my point.

The other day, I got the oddest one yet.

My name is ********, I’m webmaster of website livedatesearch.com.

I would like to kindly ask you to remove links to our website from your website.

They have been placed by mistake and are currently making negative impact on our website according to data from our Google Webmaster panel.

Therefore I would like to ask you to remove links to our website http://www.livedatesearch.com/ from the following page: https://simpsonsparadox.com/2006/09/not-quite-a-mud-mask.html

I kindly ask you to do this as soon as possible.

I’ve never heard of LiveDateSearch, so I was pretty confused. When I looked at the post in question, I discovered the link was in the form of a signature in commentspam. Usually Akismet is very good at catching and weeding out the comments left by a bot with the sole purpose of creating a backlink, but somehow this one had slipped through comment moderation.

Looks like the spam left on my blog is hurting the spammer’s search rankings. I’m terribly sorry about any inconvenience that spamming my blog has caused, and I’ll immediately fix it for you!

Right after I test out these sippycups.

Posted in New York City | Tagged | 4 Comments

Jesse Petersen’s “Monsters In Your Neighborhood”

Monsters In Your Neighborhood is Jesse Petersen’s sequel to Club Monstrosity. In Club Monstrosity, we met a collection of Manhattan monsters. Swamp Thing, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, the Blob, the Invisible Man, a mummy, a vampire, and Alec, the obligatory handsome werewolf. The surviving crew from the first novel is back, with the addition of Patrick, a sewer-dwelling chthulu lord, and the conspicuous absence of Mr Hyde, who’s disappeared to pursue his base impulses without Dr. Jekyll’s restraining hand.

Protagonist Natalie Grey is a modern Prometheus, a creature constructed from disparate “donor” body parts. (She’s quick to remind others that Frankenstein is the scientist’s name, not the monster’s, admitting an annoyance than many classic horror fans share.) Natalie’s a sweet girl with Hot Werewolf boyfriend and a fulltime job at the morgue, and Petersen stays true in her second novel, never letting Natalie become a sexy Halloween-costume version of the horror creature.

This sequel includes some of the same occasionally clunky plot exposition of the first novel. Information the reader needs is awkwardly inserted into a character’s mouth. “Once I sorted through his hoarding and you broke the encryption he used, Blob kept pretty good records,” Natalie tells Alec at one point. Amateurish exposition unpleasantly reminds readers that this is a novel, and not a magical peek into an awesome world of monster-inhabited Manhattan.

  Monsters In Your Neighborhood opens with the Van Helsing family declaring war on the monsters, just as promised at the end of Club Monstrosity. The Van Helsing’s hatred of the monsters has turned from the pitchforks and torches of medieval Europe into a social media smear campaign in modern-day New York. It’s a surprising choice — after much of the first book is spent describing the monsters’ difficulties in blending and hiding, it seems underwhelming that the monsters’ deadliest enemy hatches a dastardly plot designed to force the monsters to stay hidden. But ignore that bit of awkwardness for more of Petersen’s horror-humor blend and more interactions with the zany yet believable characters from the first book.

 Kai and Rehu’s off-again, on-again eternal mummy romance gets more attention, and the soap opera intensifies with another eternity curse and a few more near-death dangers. Linda falls prey to a manipulative boyfriend, a plotline that plays on Manhattan dating cliches and cleverly adds ghoulish overtones. Natalie discovers that she’s not the only creature Dr. Frankenstein created — with various degrees of success — and let loose on the world. The monsters are not exactly comfortable in the world of social media and internet stardom, but they’re going to have to be.

 This quick read sets humorous horror in Manhattan, blending centuries of blood feud with Twitter trends. Well worth reading for engaging characters in a world of horror and humor.

This review is based on an eARC from the publisher, although that never stops me from snarking about bad books. This review originally appeared in the Halloween issue of Monsters After Midnight.

Posted in Books, Chapel Hill, My Other Writing, New York City | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

#marriedintocomics (and horror)

county goats

This is me, having a lovely evening at the county fair with Harold, completely unaware that while I was thinking about funnel cakes, Harold was plotting a horror story set at the fair.

county fair

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But I Kept Reading

After I wrote about some of the amazing books I’ve read, a friend asked me if I’m done getting awful books and from now on, I’m just reading and reviewing awesome novels. I’m quite pleased with my recent ARCs, but I’m also getting plenty of misses.

These misses are no longer comically bad, sometimes self-pubbed, rarely proofread books often described as ‘genre-breaking’ and ‘indescribable’. I’ll skip mocking those, unless you start me off by handing me a beer and telling me how great it must be to review books and games…

But I’ve gotten plenty of mainstream misses. These are more like also-rans than horrible books. In every case, I actually finished the book, and thought, well, if I were on a plane and had nothing else to read, this wouldn’t be so bad, and then immediately realized what an awful standard that is.

While I’m predisposed to love expat memoir, Karma Gone Bad chronicles just how hard is it to be a rich expat housewife in India.

I recognize some of the expat juxtapositions described here, particularly imagining I’d come home filled with Eastern peace and wisdom, that I’d be fluent in Chinese (not just to be able to navigate China smoothly and independently, but filled with concepts so deep I could only express them in the original Mandarin) but then actually finding myself daydreaming about grilled cheese and Cosmo. I empathize so much with Jenny, buying Ragu and all sorts of other import delicacies in a crazed expat grocery store, until she returns to her husband with her bounty, asking, like a caricature of a sitcom wife, if the 3500 rupees she’s spent is a lot of money. (Ladies! Sure love shopping! Aren’t so good with math!)

A protagonist in an exotic land with endless money and no responsibilities isn’t necessarily a bad premise, but it does make it fairly difficult to empathize with her complaints about the treacherous journey when her chauffeur takes her to the nearest coffeeshop. There’s also a depressing undercurrent of sexism in this book. Even after Jenny and her husband Jay reconcile and are passionately in love, his additions to her India Bucket List of awesome things she wants to do before returning home are about finally learning to iron his shirts and cook his breakfast properly.

I admit to coming to the novel with great love for expat memoir, so I should admit to also coming in with Olympic-level eye-rolling at heroines who describe encountering a laundry list of pregnancy symptoms and then are so totally surprised to be pregnant. This is a narrative cop-out best kept in soap operas. (I’d like to give Karma Gone Bad a pass since it’s a memoir, and being surprised that morning sickness = pregnancy is more understandable in messy real life.  But then I would have to take seriously the scenes in which the rich girl encounters adorably grateful orphans and learns the True Meaning Of Life.)

I kept reading because I wanted to hear more about Indian expat life, but I can’t think of anything to say I liked, besides, maybe, recognizing the hints of the special kind of solitude that comes from being in a crowded foreign land, struggling with the exotic language. Even if those struggles were arguing with the houseboy.

Posted in Books, Chapel Hill | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Professional Discourse

Meg: I love that! And the students would love it too! But I’m afraid to link to Tumblr because Tumblr’s always two clicks away from porn.

Coworker: Isn’t that the entire internet?

Meg: You win.

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Geek Girl Con

ggc

The Geek Girl Con event schedule is up and neither of my talks is scheduled for first thing in the morning or last thing at night! I’m on a panel about women working in games at 11 on Saturday morning, and my talk on Press Kit Hacks for Indie Devs will be on Saturday at 2:30, in room 101, which is coincidentally the room in 1984‘s Ministry of Love that holds your deepest, darkest fears. I’m just saying. (But if you’re going to be Seattle, you should come in and smile at me.)

 

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Action Figures

My friend Tricia Lupien, who writes and draws the webcomic Swiftriver, has just done the cover for a new book, Action Figures: Issue 1 – Secret Origins (Volume 1) by Michael Bailey. Really proud of you, Tricia!

(I just bought the book, and so Amazon helpfully reminded me that I’ve had the trade of Screamland: Death of the Party saved for later, since around the time I helped Harold moved boxes and boxes of his books, and I realized I probably didn’t need another copy. Amazon also pointed out that my last anthology is out of print with no anticipated restock. All the info in the world, Big Data, and you use it to call me a hack?)

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Disease

Colleague: I’m glad your project is going viral.

Meg: That’s a very kind exaggeration. (But I am happy that someone outside our office has seen it.)

Colleague: It’s a cold now, but we’re on the way to Ebola.

Posted in Chapel Hill, North Carolina | Tagged , | 2 Comments