If only I could give you this moon.
Landscapes: Volume Two by Dustin Farrell. Images of Utah and Arizona, as you’ve never seen them before. Watch it fullscreen for the full effect. This is an amazing world that we live in.
Barbara Kingsolver, who worked for years as a technical writer. She considers the daily demand for copy (whether she wanted to write it or not) good practice for her work as a novelist. The whole interview is really good. (via ilovereadingandwriting)
(Source: advicetowriters.com, via libraryland)
Italics Mine: Things I need to research for my new book
This is very good advice. It’s so much easier to do research when you have a defined list of [fill in later]s. Otherwise it turns into some kind of amorphous goo. “I’ve got to include that!” “Oh that’s so interesting!” Etc.
Chuck Close (via sandyhong & @emilycarroll)
(via drawnblog)
Chuck Close
(via Austin Kleon)
John Green (Paper Towns) answering ideas and inspiration questions.
View high resolution
This makes me want to write stories about astronauts and spacewalks, rocket ships and aliens and cold black nothingness. I love it. (via itsfullofstars, via dvdp)
Jamie Ford, author of the NYT bestseller Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, starts with the release of his first novel and traces its development backwards in time for three years, arriving at last at the spark that got it going: calling in sick to write for a day.
Not that I’m really entertaining any ideas about that right now, but — I can at least admit — it’s inspiring. And tempting, too, honestly.