Busy, busy, busy
Mar. 10th, 2004 01:39 amI mentioned back on Leap Day that "I have another rush job for Unplugged, Inc, for a movie tie-in that I think I'm not supposed to talk about openly. I also have a couple of small freelance assignments for Tor."
That was a couple of understatements. Yesterday (Monday) was the first day I had to myself in over a week, and even that was pretty heavily committed.
The Full, Exhausting Itinerary
On Saturday, Feb 28, I received the screenplay to the movie for which Unplugged is doing a tie-in, so I had to read that and figure out how to make a game about it work.
On Feb 29, I drove to Atlantic City to adopt three darling baby rats from a friend of
nellorat's. As mentioned, they are almost impossibly cute. I still haven't had time to take photos; I hope to do so in the day or so (and definitely before Friday, when I deliver the female to her new adoptive family in Long Island). During the drive, I listened to Alan Moore's first recorded monologue, The Birth Caul. What I followed of it was brilliant. It's something that demands greater attention than one can give it during a drive on moderately crowded highways; I will listen to it again after I read the comics adaptation (by Eddie Campbell).
On Monday and Tuesday, I wrote the game spec, and revised it Tuesday and Wednesday in response to comments from my cow-orkers.
I also received notice that the maroney.org has finally been transferred to my control. (The process of getting the domain was one of those typical funny-and-annoying-at-the-same-time epics of bureaucracy, where I was receiving contradictory information from various customer service representatives.
Anyway, it all worked out eventually after much foot-dragging. So over the next few days I migrated a few of my web pages and all of the archive of Tim's site to the new server. Thanks again to
sarah_ovenall for letting us in on her webmaster package, and for all the technical support she has given. I promise to use this power wisely.
Wednesday evening was NYRSF Weekly Meeting, which tied me up much of the afternoon and evening. We got a lot done, and it was fun as always, so I don't mind, but the clock was ticking on my next freelance job, a reader report on an agented manuscript which had been submitted to Tor.
I spent all day Thursday and into Friday reading it--700+ pages of an inconclusive first novel in a several-volume Big Frickin' Fantasy series by a previously unpublished writer. It was better than bad, but less than good, and staggeringly unoriginal, and my brain was pounded when I reached the end.
But Friday night was the beginning of the NYRSF Work Weekend, a Friday-evening-through-Sunday-afternoon extravaganza of copyediting and layout. Fun, and we ended up with a very nice issue (and are positioned for a superb issue next month), but I was hungry for a day off.
I got that for a small part of Monday. I couldn't sleep in to my satisfaction, because I had to take two of the rats in to the vet, one (Missy) for her last antibiotic shot for a lingering lung infection which now seems to be gone, and one (her daughter Connie) for an examination preparatory to having a tumor removed--her second in three months. Sigh. I had a few hours home after that, and then went back in to the city, hauling about 50 pounds in paper to Tor.
I finished Monday with a mixed professional/social obligation: Gaming with the boardgame editors of Games Magazine. I try to visit John & Robin at least every other week, both because I greatly enjoy their company (and gaming with them), and because they not infrequently toss paid reviewing work my way. This week was of special interest because a reporter from NPR's The Next Big Thing was recording the session for an upcoming article.
Today, I spent another five or six hours working on the design spec and other Unplugged work. I tried to pick Connie up at the vet's, but she had chewed through her stitches and won't be home until tomorrow. I have another 700+ page manuscript to do before the end of the week, too.
For someone who doesn't have a job, I sure work a lot.
That was a couple of understatements. Yesterday (Monday) was the first day I had to myself in over a week, and even that was pretty heavily committed.
The Full, Exhausting Itinerary
On Saturday, Feb 28, I received the screenplay to the movie for which Unplugged is doing a tie-in, so I had to read that and figure out how to make a game about it work.
On Feb 29, I drove to Atlantic City to adopt three darling baby rats from a friend of
On Monday and Tuesday, I wrote the game spec, and revised it Tuesday and Wednesday in response to comments from my cow-orkers.
I also received notice that the maroney.org has finally been transferred to my control. (The process of getting the domain was one of those typical funny-and-annoying-at-the-same-time epics of bureaucracy, where I was receiving contradictory information from various customer service representatives.
Anyway, it all worked out eventually after much foot-dragging. So over the next few days I migrated a few of my web pages and all of the archive of Tim's site to the new server. Thanks again to
Wednesday evening was NYRSF Weekly Meeting, which tied me up much of the afternoon and evening. We got a lot done, and it was fun as always, so I don't mind, but the clock was ticking on my next freelance job, a reader report on an agented manuscript which had been submitted to Tor.
I spent all day Thursday and into Friday reading it--700+ pages of an inconclusive first novel in a several-volume Big Frickin' Fantasy series by a previously unpublished writer. It was better than bad, but less than good, and staggeringly unoriginal, and my brain was pounded when I reached the end.
But Friday night was the beginning of the NYRSF Work Weekend, a Friday-evening-through-Sunday-afternoon extravaganza of copyediting and layout. Fun, and we ended up with a very nice issue (and are positioned for a superb issue next month), but I was hungry for a day off.
I got that for a small part of Monday. I couldn't sleep in to my satisfaction, because I had to take two of the rats in to the vet, one (Missy) for her last antibiotic shot for a lingering lung infection which now seems to be gone, and one (her daughter Connie) for an examination preparatory to having a tumor removed--her second in three months. Sigh. I had a few hours home after that, and then went back in to the city, hauling about 50 pounds in paper to Tor.
I finished Monday with a mixed professional/social obligation: Gaming with the boardgame editors of Games Magazine. I try to visit John & Robin at least every other week, both because I greatly enjoy their company (and gaming with them), and because they not infrequently toss paid reviewing work my way. This week was of special interest because a reporter from NPR's The Next Big Thing was recording the session for an upcoming article.
Today, I spent another five or six hours working on the design spec and other Unplugged work. I tried to pick Connie up at the vet's, but she had chewed through her stitches and won't be home until tomorrow. I have another 700+ page manuscript to do before the end of the week, too.
For someone who doesn't have a job, I sure work a lot.
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Date: 2004-03-11 01:11 pm (UTC)Tim's site
Date: 2004-03-15 06:33 am (UTC)