hey hey, it’s just an ordinary day

Last night we had a rather impromptu girls’ night at our house, with a couple friends back from college and others that I just haven’t seen in awhile. It was really, really nice. Having worked the night before, I fueled myself with three large coffees and two slices of pizza, and then slept all the way through 9am this morning. Fifteen minutes before I should have left, had I hoped to go to Liturgy today.

I can’t even go to my staff meeting because Mom needs my car (though, to be honest, I’m not so torn up over that one). So, all signs point to it just being a lazy kind of day.

Hannah and I did school together, and I finished off The Daily Coyote. Fantastic book, I couldn’t possibly summarize it, but I highly recommend it. Now I’m trying to decide whether I should pick up another book, take a long walk, or take a shower. Honestly, the decisions I have to deal with everyday ;-)

well, crap

from Stephanie Meyer’s website:

This has been a very upsetting experience for me, but I hope it will at least leave my fans with a better understanding of copyright and the importance of artistic control.

So where does this leave Midnight Sun? My first feeling was that there was no way to continue. Writing isn’t like math; in math, two plus two always equals four no matter what your mood is like. With writing, the way you feel changes everything. If I tried to write Midnight Sun now, in my current frame of mind, James would probably win and all the Cullens would die, which wouldn’t dovetail too well with the original story. In any case, I feel too sad about what has happened to continue working on Midnight Sun, and so it is on hold indefinitely.

I’d rather my fans not read this version of Midnight Sun. It was only an incomplete draft; the writing is messy and flawed and full of mistakes. But how do I comment on this violation without driving more people to look for the illegal posting? It has taken me a while to decide how and if I could respond. But to end the confusion, I’ve decided to make the draft available here (at the end of this post). This way, my readers don’t have to feel they have to make a sacrifice to stay honest. I hope this fragment gives you further insight into Edward’s head and adds a new dimension to the Twilight story. That’s what inspired me to write it in the first place.

You can read her full statement and the draft here: http://www.stepheniemeyer.com/midnightsun.html

blogger black-out

I haven’t written much lately because this was my second 40-hour week of working third shift, and I try not to write when I’m chronically sleep-deprived. I find that I tend to come off as very whiny and rather depressed. And now I know I’m close to PMS-ing because I’ve started picking fights with people. In my head. And most of the time I don’t even win the argument that I’m having in my head, which really is depressing.

So to counter that, here’s a list of things that make me happy right now:

- Crummy Church Signs
- Squishy faced-kitties…in t-shirts!
- Rusty the Narcoleptic dog
- watching Stargate: Continuum
- Mymsie’s Bun of the Day
- Cake Wrecks
- this spoof of The Dark Knight

And Breaking Dawn is here, so you know, I probably won’t be catching up on sleep anytime soon…

diehard twi-hard

I’ve been happily geeking out lately, reading comic books and singing along with Dr. Horrible (two weeks later? still in my head. no lie.) I think that Monty Python meets Star Trek is just about the best thing ever, and how the frak have I not seen this before? My last two Facebook status updates were: “Emily wants to believe” and “Emily is on Team Edward” (current status: “Emily embraces her geek side”)

The object of my most recent obsession: Twilight.

Hannah got me hooked (like any good sister, I pawn most of the blame off on my siblings). A couple weeks ago, I was having coffee with Dad and bemoaning the fact that my book pile was continuously growing without so much as a dent being made in it. While I really wanted to spend more time reading this summer, I had no motivation to sit down and read anything. Just a dry spell, I figured. And I needed something to snap me out of it.

A few days later I bought the first book in the Twilight series for Hannah. I had never read the books myself, but they came highly recommended, and I knew she would love something new to do during the long summer days. She finished the 500+ page Twilight in less than a week, a personal record for her I think. Then she was on to New Moon, and she said I had to read Twilight, I just had to.

Well…why not?

(fyi: in literary terms, that first paragraph would be considered ‘foreshadowing’)

I finished the book in a DAY, and suddenly Hannah and I were competing for time with New Moon. She would stay up to read it at night, and I would read it while she slept in the next morning. After four marathon days, we had finished it (608 pages this time), and Hannah wanted to give her eyes a break. Naturally, that was fine with me. It gave me a chance to finish Eclipse (under penalty of death should I reveal any key plot points), so she could have it to herself when I was done.

Now I’m biding my time (just 3 more days…) waiting for Breaking Dawn to be released on August 2nd, and we’re counting down the days to the premiere of the movie Twilight on December 12th. To our family’s chagrin, I’m sure, it’s been the topic of most of our conversations lately. What can I say? The books have managed to get myself, a person who is generally reluctant of fiction, and my fourteen-year old sister, a person who is generally reluctant of very long books, completely and totally invested in these characters. So it may not *great* literature, but I’d say it’s good enough.