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Jun 172013
 
Ain't she sweet?


My blog list hasn't expanded much in a long time. I am mostly reading friends rather than looking for new ideas? What blogs do you read that might be unusual or thought-provoking.

My story "Kathy McDonald's Mother" is up on YELLOW MAMA.  Thanks to Cindy Rosmus.

My new Tumblr blog

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Jan 032013
 
I was cleaning up an old computer and deleting most of the pictures stored therein, but I got to pity all the cover scans and other stuff I've been saving, so I decided to up a new blog. It's also called Pulpetti, but it's at Tumblr, so I could use the same moniker. Here it is.
 Posted by at 6:41 pm
Jan 032013
 

By PD Martin

Like many people I often feel reflective around this time of year and I thought today I’d use that feeling to think about my year (2012) of blogging here at Murderati. My highlights! I’ve included craft blogs for the writers plus some more general posts. Hope you enjoy the highlights show…

I opened 2012 up with a look at the health hazards of being a writer — and I think these apply no matter what year we’re in! Things like RSI, carpal tunnel syndrome, alcoholism, insomnia, stress, etc.

And if you’ve ever wondered whether being an author was more about talent or skill, check out my April 10 blog.

In May Aussie Kathryn Fox was my guest, and she talked about chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE)…an eye-opening blog!

One of my July blogs was about the rollercoaster effect of being a writer — the creative rollercoaster, the agent rollercoaster, etc.

September was a very important and personal blog — And Baby Makes Four. This blog talked about us going to Korea to pick up our new son.

Finally, I closed 2012 with a blog on the gun laws in Australia. It was in response to some of the discussions I was part of on Murderati and Facebook about the tragedy in Connecticut.

So they are my blog (and sometimes life) highlights of 2012. Obviously there were a lot of blogs (and milestones) in between, but I wanted to mention some of my favourites.

What are some of your highlights of the year? Blog or otherwise :)

Nov 022012
 
My 1970s sci-fi nostalgia (or, as I prefer to call it: pop culture archeology) blog, Space: 1970, just celebrated its third anniversary. Three years of  writing about the science fiction films and television shows - and related memorabilia - of the 1970s and early 80s (closing rapidly on 700 entries now)... and people seem to like it. Stop by if you get a moment.
Sep 032012
 
In his blog I too rarely read Peter Rozovsky has started a new series of posts: he looks into the classic American hardboiled crime fiction. Here are his posts on Lionel White, Edward Anderson (Thieves Like Us), James M. Cain, Dan J. Marlowe and Robert Silverberg (admittedly a small one) and finally Dan J. Marlowe (again!), Paul Cain and Jim Thompson. He has also some other fascinating posts on different subjects, go read them all!
 Posted by at 8:10 pm
Jul 022012
 
One of my other (and more popular) blogs, Space: 1970, has received a positive, brief write-up in the latest issue of GEEK magazine, a very slick publication on newsstands now.

I find it interesting that they refer to the "retro-hipness" of the site, when the material I cover over there certainly wasn't considered very "hip" or cool when it was new. I got called lots of unpleasant names ("geek" being among the least offensive) back in the 1970s for liking that stuff. I also got beat up on occasion and had lots of comic books, Star Trek paperbacks and Starlog magazines stolen from me and torn up in my face. More than a few adult authority figures berated me for my interest in science-fiction and other escapist entertainment, calling me stupid for wasting my time with it.

It's nice that I've lived to see a day when there is such a thing as "geek culture," when Star Wars and Star Trek are undisputed mass-market, mainstream entertainments and big-budget super-hero films have become Hollywood's most anticipated blockbusters. And it's way cool that my own silly little ramblings online are considered a notable (or foot-notable) part of that pop cultural shift.

Still, it would be nicer if I hadn't had to get beaten up so much back then....
Jun 052012
 

My head is spinning and my feet and knees are aching after two days (so far) at BEA, Book Expo America, the annual show and party celebrating books and publishing. A brief interim report, to be fleshed out after this ends in another couple of days:

  • Lots of e-publishers on hand - in fact, there's a new "Digital Zone" for e-book publishing and companies that service electronic publishers. But the digital publishing, really, is spread throughout the display floor.
  • There are more than 1300 exhibitors on the floor this year - two dozen very long aisles (each a city block or two) jammed with every possible kind of book. The best mysteries, perhaps not surprisingly, are to be found at the table of the Mystery Writers of America, and a LOT of great writers are using that booth for autograph signings.
  • I don't know how many thousand people are roaming the floor, but there are times when you can barely move through the crowds.
  • Most interesting find so far: a small book by R. William Bennett called Jacob T. Marley. It contains the "backstory" of Marley - of Scrooge and Marley from Dickens's A Christmas Carol - and explains how and why Marley was able to come back to warn Ebenezer Scrooge to change his ways. As the blurb says, "Jacob T. Marley is to A Christmas Carol as the world-famous Wicked is to The Wizard of Oz. This should be fun to read - I'll try to do so pretty quickly and give you a report.

Much more, if I survive my return visit to the expo tomorrow. That's when I also get to go through the exhibitors set up for BlogWorld/NewMediaExpo, which is running concurrently with, and in cooperation with, BEA.

Jun 032012
 

Book Expo America kicks off at the Javits Center in New York City tomorrow morning, and I'll be there. It begins all day Monday with the BEA Bloggers Conference, aimed at book bloggers (this is a book blog - you noticed, right?). Then, Tuesday through Thursday, it's the enormous BEA conference itself, with much of the publishing world attending, lots of books and Advanced Reading Copies being given away, lots of authors around to autograph their books - in other words, great literary fun (and not a little literary business as well). My Wife the School Librarian will be there, chasing down publishers and authors who specialize in books (etc.) for kids.

Another side conference will be the BlogWorld and New Media expo, which runs concurrently with BEA Tuesday through Thursday. I plan on hitting that one, most likely on Wednesday - I expect a lot of blogging and podcasting friends will show up there.

Anyway, if you leave comments on any of my posts this week, I'll try to catch up and respond ASAP...but it may take a bit of time. Please be patient. And, yes, the weekly podcast and review will be posted Monday morning as usual. Enjoy!

Blogs

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Mar 182012
 

Since a lot of you are bloggers, I want to ask you a question or two.

Do you admit to your non-blogging friends that you have a blog? What is their attitude toward it? Do your real life friends read your blog? Do they roll their eyes if you mention it? Do they tell you they just don't have the time for things like that?

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