Eric

Thanks, Number 100...

Just wanted to thank the reader who supplied my "Another Guy at West Peak" story with kudos number 100 recently. It had been at 99 for at least several months, and since it was a riff on a Bru story that had long since faded from notoriety and most likely from memory, I wasn't really surprised that nothing further was happening.

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The Monster

THE MONSTER
by (AJ) Eric

Warning: This story scene is not violent or graphic in any way, but the person who tells it is a suicide bomber about to set off a weapon in a crowded hotel lobby. If that makes you want to skip this story, I certainly understand. If you’re willing to hear her out, read on.

Does the One True God delight in irony?

Corey's Last Concert

It’s 1981, and Corey Glynn has spent the past two years portraying junior high cheerleader Bonnie Bright, with great success: hit records, a movie series, national concert tours, and lots of Disney merchandise featuring the Bonnie character.

But Corey knows that there are changes occurring which mean that the end is coming soon.

Story Theme

I was trying to think yesterday whether I've ever read a story where the usual teen-age (give or take) male dweeb -- shy, introverted, socially clueless -- after finding it necessary or desirable to live as a girl or young woman for a time, discovers that having done so allows him to fit in more confidently as his male self, able to be more assertive, recognize social cues and better understand other people's reactions and behavior.

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Here Today...

In which a mystery of long standing is solved, mewling writers and chirping critics battle for the last laugh, and one storyteller discovers that there are worse fates for satire and its practitioners than closing on Saturday night...

Here Today...
by (AJ) Eric

Odd, Innit?

Curious: the spellcheck on this site turned up last night in Imperial English. It has objected to neighborhood, aluminum, color, vise (the clamping tool), endeavor and paralyze so far, so it's fairly simple to spot a trend here.

I can't find anything under 'my account' to toggle it, so I'm guessing it's that way throughout the site right now. Is there a way to change it back for U.S. users?

Eric

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Woman-speak: The Word "You"

My brother the music executive sent me some pop CDs that I asked him for, and sent along the Kelly Clarkson greatest hits album -- which brings me, in a roundabout way, to something I've idly thought about off and on for some time.

It's the pronunciation of the word "you" with a short-e sort of inserted: yeah-oo.

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Another SF Question

Another science fiction question, though this one at least has some TG content.

I own the Ace Double Novel from the 1950s containing Cosmic Checkmate, by Charles DeVet and Katherine McLean. That's Ace's title -- they were always changing titles, probably in hopes of tricking potential buyers who'd already read the stories -- for an expansion of a magazine story or novella called "The Second Game", written by DeVet.

The "complete novels" in Ace's Doubles were often relatively short works; this was one such, coming in around 120 pages. An expanded edition, Second Game (no "the"), was issued in paperback in 1981, which is why I'm writing. Has anyone here read the later version?

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Looking For a (Non-TG) SF Story

Since there are a lot of science fiction fans here, I'm hoping that one of them may be able to tell me the author and title of a short story I read years ago in an anthology. FWIW, it was the last story in that book, introduced by the editor's comment that the author enjoys playing around with story structure.

My guess is that it's from around 1970, from an American writer. (Jack Vance's name came to mind, but I couldn't find anything that looked like it among his story titles.)

It's in three sections. The first begins with the line "this is the end of the story".

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D'Eon (et al.) Bio at $1

The Dollar Tree chain of stores in the U.S. and Canada brings in remaindered books on occasion which they sell (like nearly everything they carry) for a dollar. One I found there a couple of weeks ago might be of interest to folks on the site.

Title is Unlikely Allies: How a Merchant, a Playwright and a Spy Saved the American Revolution, by Joel Richard Paul (2009, Riverside/Penguin).

It's what amounts to a triple biography of American Silas Deane, French author Caron de Beaumarchais (Barber of Seville, Marriage of Figaro -- the successful plays upon which Rossini and Mozart based the operas), and the Chevalier d'Eon de Beaumont, who had relatively little to do with the whole thing but was too good a subject to pass up.

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Video of CD Young Teen Goes Viral

Not sure whether it demonstrates anything other than right place-right time (and that production values are good and the kid, ID'd as Joey Flores in the video, makes a really cute girl), but what seems like fairly routine subject matter -- older sister makes up and dresses up kid brother -- has gotten more than 40,000 YouTube hits in the past week -- that's about one every 15 seconds, if I calculated that right -- and 1,200,000 total.

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Magazine Article: The Transgender Athlete

Thought it might be useful to mention that the current (5/28/12) issue of Sports Illustrated has a six-page article with the above title. (It doesn't seem to be available on their website to non-subscribers, but many public libraries subscribe and may also have computer access to it.)

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UK Dialogue

I've just come up with an attempt at a short (750 words, I think) humorous tale -- probably for Fictioneer, since it's non-TG and there's only been one story posted there by anyone in more than 10 weeks.

But it seems slightly more appropriate for me to set it in England than the U.S. Because of that, I'd appreciate a reader from that side of the pond letting me know if the dialogue is too American. (Now that I think about it, I don't even know if the payoff sentence is used there.)

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It's Only Words...

A couple of items that have come up at least twice recently, that I hope people will keep in mind.

DEFINITELY -- For some reason, spellcheckers frequently mistake misspellings of "definitely" for "defiantly" (challenging, or aggressively contrary). In most cases, "definitely" is, uh, definitely the word they're looking for.

PRONE/SUPINE -- Lately, a couple of stories have had a character topple "prone" onto their back. "Prone" is on one's stomach, face down. It's "supine" that's face up, on one's back. Mnemonic: "supine" has "up" in it.

Hope that helps.

Eric

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