Monday, July 27, 2015

Amazing Children

            Every now and then, usually while selling my wares at shows, I encounter children who amaze me with how smart and mature they are for their age. This weekend at ConBravo! I actually met two separate ones, each somewhere between the ages of seven and ten.

            The first came into my booth with one of her friends and they were admiring my various chainmaille products. The friend picked up a bracelet and exclaimed upon the price. This girl turned to her friend and admonished, “Don’t say that; they put a lot of hard work into what they make.” The friend then promptly assured me that she had only been expressing disappointment that she didn’t have enough money for the bracelet.

            This exchange astounded me, because I often get people (adults) who comment on how much various items cost – simply because they don’t understand the difference between something handmade and something mass produced in a factory. Yet, here was a child, obviously quite capable of making that distinction and aware enough to notice it.

            After this, it was incredible to have something similar happen a second time. Another girl, younger than the first, came to my booth, exclaiming on how beautiful everything was. The chainmaille shirt I had on display (it would be a full length dress on her) particularly caught her eye. She said it must have taken a lot of work and asked how much time it had taken and how many rings were in it. Then she started guessing at the price, saying “150, no, 200 dollars!” (obviously a large amount, especially to someone so young.) When I corrected her to $650, she, without hesitation, looked me in the eye and said, “It’s worth it.”

            To come across two children in the same show who are so aware of such things was something I thought impossible. It got me thinking, though, about how adults view children. We tend to assume that since they are smaller and younger than us, they still have a lot to learn. Following that thought, we often underestimate their knowledge and their ability to understand things.

            It makes me wonder how much our society holds children back from their potential. Not all of them, of course – everyone learns at different speeds – but it seems to me we group them into little boxes based on their ages and decide how much they are ready to know. It’s possible that, exposed to more information, they could learn far more. That’s what children are, after all – learning machines. The more information we give them, the more they absorb. Too often, I think, we decide they aren’t ready for things because they’re so young. Yet, there are eight-year-olds out there smarter and more mature than many people who have been deemed “adults”.


            I think it’s time to stop underestimating and talking down to children. If we allow them all the information they want and help them to learn at their own speed (rather than pushing them too hard in directions they aren’t interested or slowing them down because they “aren’t ready”), treating them as equals rather than inferiors, imagine what they could grow up to be.





Click here to find the charity anthology containing a couple of my short stories.






If there's any subject you'd like to see me ramble on about, feel free to leave a comment asking me to do so.

Monday, July 20, 2015

World Building is Fun

            I think one of the most important traits in an author is a love of knowledge. Why? Because we have to know the oddest things so we can make our books realistic. Some of the most obscure things come up.

            Recently I’ve been doing a lot of world building, getting a very detailed portion of my world developed for a series I’m planning. My research taught me all kinds of things, like you can raise 100 pigs on the same amount of land you need for one cow (free grazing – about 5 acres, in case you’re curious), that dinosaurs only lived about 30 years, and that there are vast stretches of underground, water-filled caves that are the only sources of fresh water in some parts of the world.

            I saw a quote once (and can’t find who said it) that an author must be an expert on everything. When Terry Pratchett wrote The Amazing Morris and his Educated Rodents, he said that by the time he was done, he knew more about rats than anyone would ever want to know.

You might wonder why what seem like minor details matter so much, especially in fiction. Couldn’t we just make it up? Well, yes, we could. But then, along comes an expert in horses to tell us that horses treated the way they are in the book would die from being ridden too hard. This is a bad thing on two fronts – first, it conveys inaccurate information to people and it’s amazing how easily people believe what they read. The second is that it ruins the realism of the book for anyone with that knowledge of horses – which is terrible. Fiction is meant for people to enjoy, after all.

            So, an important part of the writing process becomes research into the oddest things. I can only imagine how often mystery writers worry what people would think if they could see all their Google searches related to how to kill people. It takes less than a pound of pressure to cut skin.

            With all the bitty details needed, enjoying learning becomes mandatory. Otherwise, writing becomes tedious work – and, really, why bother writing if you don’t enjoy it? I’m lucky in that I’ve always loved learning. On the flip side, my research skills are lacking, so it takes me a while to find what I’m looking for, but I tend to pick up a few extra tidbits along the way. I gain lots of new information, then add it to my arsenal for developing believable worlds, stories and characters.


            World building is fun!




Click here to find the charity anthology containing a couple of my short stories.






If there's any subject you'd like to see me ramble on about, feel free to leave a comment asking me to do so.

Monday, July 13, 2015

Mimicked Messages

Of Dice and Glen is a story being written following D&D 5th Edition rules and using Minecraft as the battle mat (and to set the scene). Each of the two writers control their own characters and share the job of Dungeon Master (controlling the environment, story, monsters and background characters). As a result, neither of us has any clue of what's going on or where this is going. So, let's have fun!

This story is split between episodes being posted on the second Monday of every month. You can find the first episode here and the previous episode here.


Of Dice and Glen Episode 3: Mimicked Messages



On closer inspection, there were obvious shadows behind the two trees from which the mocking voices had come.

Following his gaze, her black eyes caught the ominous shadows and mimicked him in arming herself. Dagger in one hand, scimitar in the other she gave a quick sniff of the air.

“What are they?” she hissed, tail lashing nervously around her feet. An obvious threat, such as a great ettin stamping through her forest was one thing. She could and would deal with that. Mysterious and formless shadows with the power to mimic humanoid voices perfectly gave her qualms she could not shake.

“I couldn’t tell you without seeing them,” Shaddar said to her, then called in the direction of the trees. “Come out where we can see you!”

The memory came to Luna of creatures she’d seen before, around the woods. They looked like people-sized birds, only they had no wings. Instead, they had arms and wore ragged clothes. They didn’t really speak, but they communicated through mimicking sounds they heard around them. Kenku, she thought they were called.

“A moment...” she said, slowly. “Tall as us, sound just like us... I know! Kenku!”

As she said it, the two birdlike creatures stepped out from behind their trees.

One of them, holding a short sword, bobbed its head saying, in Luna’s voice, “Kenku! Kenku!”
The other, holding a shortbow, then started making an odd clinking sound, as if coins were bumping together in a pouch.

“Kenku…?” Shaddar said, frowning. “I’m not familiar with them. What’s that odd sound it’s making?”

“You’re about to be as familiar with them as you ever want to be,” she replied, not once taking her eyes from the foe, now exposed to greater scrutiny. “They’re greedy things. We could throw all the gold we have at them and they’d still attack, looking for more. They’re fast, pretty clever for birdbrains, but we can take them.”

Now both of the Kenkus were making the clinking sounds, becoming more insistent the moment Luna mentioned gold.

“So, they’re asking for our money right now?” Shaddar asked.

“Oops,” she muttered. “Yes. Though even giving it to them wouldn’t stop them. They’re evil. Let’s just rid the forest of their ugly filth and move on.”

“Hold on,” Shaddar said, then turned his attention to the Kenkus. “We don’t have anything of value.”

Two sets of beady eyes watched the dragonborn lie. The first creature, entirely taken in by the bluff, turned its beak away in disgust.

“Anything of value,” it repeated, again imitating Shaddar to perfection.

The bow-bearing kenku stared longer at the ranger, before also glancing at its companion, regretfully.

“We don’t have anything,” it too, mimicked.

Watching the exchange, Luna bounced impatiently from one foot to the other. Every instinct was telling her to rush in and take both the bird heads off, in one stroke. It wouldn’t be that simple, however, and this encounter could be over swiftly, them back on the trail for the real villains.

She gave a soft whining noise, as of a canine creature in mild distress.

Fine, she thought, you feather-brains escape this time...

“That’s right,” Shaddar said. “So you may as well be on your way.”

The kenku with the sword cocked its head to the side, looking at its companion, and made a sound like an arrow flying through the air, then imitated Luna’s whine.

The second one considered for a moment, sizing up the opposition. At last, it shook its head and turned away, saying, “Don’t have anything.”

Bobbing their heads, the two kenku headed off into the woods.

Shaddar sighed in relief. “That was close. It has slowed us down, though.”

He watched the sun sinking in the sky.

“We can go a bit further, but we’ll need to make camp soon. We can pick up our goblin’s trail in the morning.”

“Nay, noblest of dragony descent!” she proclaimed, standing tall, dagger-wielding hand planted proudly on a hip. “Fourth we shall tarry, through dusk, twilight and blackest eve! Rest is for heroes! Not sluggards, lazing about on soft moss-beds!”

Shaddar turned his head to the side. “Can you track something at night?”

Holding up a finger importantly and opening her mouth grandiosely, Luna entirely ran out of ideas.

“Very well,” she said, eventually. “But I only allow you this because I’m starved. What’s for supper?”

Grinning and not waiting for a reply, she stowed her scimitar and began a small hunt for their evening meal.

“Whatever we can find!” Shaddar laughed, watching the tiefling run off. She was unlike any person he’d ever met. He didn’t really like people, but she wasn’t half bad. Almost like an animal.

While Luna was away, Shaddar made camp, setting up a small fire and laying out his bedroll.






The unlikely druid returned in very short order carrying a half dozen squirrels by their scrawny necks. Her expression was grim, despite her imagined success however.

“Good catch!” he congratulated, seeing the squirrels. “We’ll probably even have some left for tomorrow.”

“Yeah,” was all she replied as she set about preparing the tiny bodies and roasting them.

Not a single word was spoken by the tiefling during this labour and her fawn-coloured features did not lift at all. Once the tiny woodland creatures were cooking, she sat back, watching the fire morosely and scratching idly in the grass and dirt with her dagger. She looked, for all the world, like a petulant devil child, put in the corner for a time-out.

“You don’t like killing to eat,” Shaddar observed. “I admit, I’ve felt the same at times. It is the natural order, though. I find that thanking their spirits for the sacrifice of their flesh makes me feel… better about it. It makes me feel at peace in a way that makes me think they understand and bear me no ill.”

The horned head rose slowly, an odd expression in the black eyes. Luna’s head tilted to one side as she considered him. Though she did not smile, the burden did seem lighter.

“You do that, too?” she almost whispered, shifting onto her hands to move ever-so-slightly nearer to him. “I... saw a cleric do it, once, in my forest. He was a human, but caring to all my friends. He had to eat, like we all do, but when he had taken down his prey, he bent on one knee and spoke a word I didn’t know. But I understood his meaning perfectly fine. He was thanking the beast for the gift of its life and its energy.”

Her gaze moved back to the fire and the small bodies above it.

“That ritual did make me feel better about... What I had to do. It’s simply that now, when my friends are being hurt and killed... I just hate adding to that toll. Whatever thanks I offer up to their spirits.”

“They understand even more now,” Shaddar assured her. “For you hunt those that harm them and their kind without remorse. By taking their lives to sustain yourself, you are helping to better the lives of all those in the forest.”

Luna listened to him intently, her black eyes wide. She drank in every word and even smiled slightly. Then she nodded and the spell seemed to break. Abruptly, she drew back from him, again, and sat, a little further away, staring into the fire.

“My thanks, dragonborn,” she murmured, despite the sudden change in her demeanor.

Shaddar nodded and smiled at her.

Once the rodents were roasted to perfection, she distributed the largest three to him and, clutching the remaining three in her mouth, held fast by her dangerously pointed incisors, she scrambled, with some difficulty, up and into a low-branched tree. There she stayed, first eating and carefully collecting the tiny bones. Then, holding the pile of food scraps in one hand, she spoke an incantation and flames erupted from her palm. The scraps were incinerated in a very short time. She brushed the ash off her limb and settled down in a convenient tree-elbow, to sleep.

Eating two of the squirrels now, Shaddar carefully removed and packed the flesh from the third. He then carefully dug a hole and buried all the inedible parts. Seeing that Luna was already settling down to sleep, the white dragonborn carefully doused the fire and spread the ashes in a circle around their camp to ward off predators. Then he lay down on his bedroll to go to sleep.


Discover what happens next in Episode 4: Approaching the Quarry





Click here to find the charity anthology containing a couple of my short stories.






If there's any subject you'd like to see me ramble on about, feel free to leave a comment asking me to do so.

Monday, July 06, 2015

Supply and Demand

            Today’s blog starts, as many of them do, with me thinking about things. In this case, supply and demand; how it’s supposed to work compared to how it has come to work.

            First, how it’s supposed to work. It’s all in the name: supply and demand. Supply is how much of something is available and demand is how many people want said something. Say, for example, a farmer in a market has ten apples to sell. If there are only five people who want apples, the farmer lowers the price to make the apples more desirable to purchase. On the other hand, if there are fifteen people who want apples, the farmer raises the price – this way, the people who don’t want the apples very much are dissuaded, the people who still want apples get them, and thee farmer makes more money for his work.

            It is a good system and makes a lot of sense. Sure, the farmer loses out a bit when lowering the price on the apples, but none of the apples go to waste and he’ll probably make a little more money by selling all the apples at a lower price than he would selling a few at a higher one. And while the people who found the higher price on the apples disappointing, it will still have been their choice not to buy one, whereas if the farmer had run out they would be likely to be more upset.

            Since the industrial age, though, this had been skewed. Just about anything can be mass-produced these days, and for a fraction of the cost. Theoretically, that means everything should be cheaper, yet the opposite is true.

            If something looks to be popular, it gets mass-produced. Far more of the item gets manufactured than could possibly be needed, just to make sure more than enough is available wherever it could be wanted. Then all the items are priced to cover the additional cost, along with a healthy profit margin, because if people want something enough, they will pay for it.

            The result is that there are many being sold for several times what they are really worth and there are still a lot left behind as waste.

            So, instead of market prices being controlled by supply and demand, they are now controlled by people seeing how much they can get and generating tons of waste.

            It seems to me that by doing better market research (and with less greed), a lot more could be provided to more people for lower costs, for everything from food to entertainment systems to vehicles.


            We have all the resources and skills to make the whole world run smoothly. Why haven’t we done it?




Click here to find the charity anthology containing a couple of my short stories.






If there's any subject you'd like to see me ramble on about, feel free to leave a comment asking me to do so.