Archive for the 'General' Category
Main Site (Imagria.com) migrated to WordPress!

Notice something a little different at Imagria.com? Yup, I have finally gotten rid of that albatross of blogging software known as Movable Type (which I’ve been using since 2003) for the faster, far more flexible, and spam-freer WordPress! The theme is not perfectly laid out yet, but that will be fixed in the coming week. (It’s based on an existing theme but with my own graphics.)

WordPress is so full of awesome that there’s even a plugin available to let me crosspost to Xanga automatically, without manual cutting and pasting. I’ve been doing that for so many years now, and it’s always been a hassle…and now those days are over. So the Xanga site is, from now on, a true mirror.

Hooray for WordPress! Hooray for open source!

Swinging Through the Web

Thoughts on Spider-Man

For longtime readers: did you know this is, in fact, a promised but long-delayed followup to a post I wrote five years ago, around the time I saw the first Spidey movie?

I am one of those nerds that, for some reason, never took to the traditional American superhero comic book. (It took anime and manga for me to get into anything similar.) Even today there is still an instinctive part of me that wants to sneer at the superhero genre. Isn’t it supposed to be simplistic, full of black-and-white characters and dumb plots? Childish art for childish brains?

But dang it, I love–I mean love–the Spider Man movies. Ever since I saw the first one in the theater, I’ve always made sure to go to them on opening weekend. (I’ll be going to the third one tomorrow.) The only other movies that I’ve ever shown that kind of loyalty to are the Lord of the Rings movies. Why? What’s so great about Spider-Man?
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Memento Mori

A slightly modified prayer, from the collect for the Holy Innocents:

Today we are reminded, O God, of the slaughter of the holy innocents of Bethlehem by King Herod. Receive, we pray, into the arms of your mercy all innocent victims; and by your great might frustrate the designs of evil ones and establish your rule of justice, love and peace; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen. (HT to Joel at the Boar’s Head Tavern)

I think what’s hit hardest for me is that most of the victims were in the engineering and computer science building, the kind of things I studied, badly, in college in similar kinds of buildings with similar kinds of people. There are (unconfirmed, will update with confirmed info and I really really hope this isn’t true though multiple witnesses at the shootings report this) rumors that the shooter himself was a frustrated Asian student–a South Korean. An English major, even, the other subject I majored in. He cut down his classmates studying German, fluid dynamics, algorithms, physics, linear algebra, programming…and if he was an engineering student, fellow geeks, really. Techies, perhaps like himself, and like me.

We geeks don’t usually think that our lives will ever seriously be in danger, least of all in the classrooms and subjects where we tend to flourish–or complain together, with understanding nods and fatalistic laughter, about how damned hard the projects and tests are and marvel together at 50% test averages that still count as B-minuses. That was what we called trials and tribulations as engineering students and it all seemed so insurmountable because we’d never think there was anything worse that could happen. How small and petty those concerns–back then I wrote blog entries with titles like “Woe to Computer Science”–seem now.

I pray for everyone and their families at Virginia Tech, and my heart hurts for them.

Edit 4/17/07: The name of the shooter has been released, Cho Seung-Hui.

Kurt Vonnegut, 1922-2007

Story about his death from the Associated Press

Kurt Vonnegut was a formative influence on me as a writer. He probably gave me most of whatever sense of humor I have now, and his novels Cat’s Cradle, The Sirens of Titan, and Slaughterhouse-Five are not only fine works of modern American literature, but fine works of science fiction. I remember going through a “Vonnegut phase” in my late high school years, devouring his books, including his less-than-great ones like Breakfast of Champions. I even wrote a short story around that time that mimicked his satirical style, and it was probably the best thing I wrote in high school.

I don’t agree with a lot of his philosophy, such as his atheism, or the fatalism of books like Slaughterhouse-Five. But Vonnegut’s writing made me laugh and made me think, for many fine hours. He’ll be missed. So it goes.

I’m Alive…

…but lately, this is where I’ve been doing most of my posting:

Yes: it’s an entire blog devoted to anime! I waited until now to announce this because I wanted to make sure this was going to be a lasting thing and not another one of my abandoned projects. :) It’s been going on for almost two months now.

Scattered Cels is not only an anime blog, but also a podcast! Believe it or not, there have already been 6 episodes so far, and the 7th is about to go up. You can subscribe to the podcast via iTunes by clicking here:

I do the podcast weekly with my friends Ray and Jeremy. And we are also just about to launch a new feature–MST3k Laugh Tracks for selected anime episodes, which you can play along with the video file. (First one to be released this week, of Kyoshiro no Towa no Sora.) So all my remaining readers who enjoy anime, come check it out and tell all your otaku friends too (and tell us what to make fun of next for our next MST3k!). :)

Coming soon within the month: my first screenplay at the beginning of March, and the possible return of my theology podcast, This Evangelical Life. Theological reflections on this site.

What is Imagria?

A Reminisce

When I was twelve, I devoured novels by David Eddings and Terry Brooks and, thus inspired, spent hours drawing maps of imagrinary places and writing stories about them. The maps usually came first. I knew little about real geography and real cartography. I’d just draw random coastlines with a sharpened pencil–you could only draw the craggy shores with a sharpened pencil–and then, maybe, stick some mountain ranges and forests somewhere. Then rivers, wherever there might be an opportune inlet in one of the coastline’s crags. That much was easy, and I copied the style of the mountains and forests from maps I saw in Terry Brooks’s novels. I think the artist who drew them was named Shelley Shapiro. I can’t believe I still remember her name.

Then came the real magic–the naming. I am no Tolkien, skilled in philology, able to create real languages from whole cloth and with an entire consistent scheme to naming. No, I just developed an ear formed by reading lots of trashy fantasy novels. So many of the names I created ended in “-ia,” and those were the easiest to make up. So were names ending in “-dor.” Most prominently was a desert kingdom I wrote several stories about named “Andor,” which I created without knowing about the Star Trek episode with the Andorians. And yet, as derivative and haphazard as the process was, like with Adam, the naming was a deeply (sub)creative act. Hitting on a good name meant more than coming up with something that sounded nice to say aloud. A good name would echo with entire histories for cities and rivers and countries in my imagination. The city I wrote most about, Peladran, was a place where centuries of people walked past Founder’s Square, which had been destroyed and rebuilt many times and where ships left every day to the trade all around the ports of Northwest Imagria–the world that I created to house all my fantasy stories. 1000 miles to the west lay Sanctuary Isle, where the Spellweaver Academy (later renamed the University of Sanctuary Isle after Imagria’s equivalent of the Enlightenment) trained generations of young Weavers to manipulate Threads.*

Somewhere at home in Maryland, in a manila folder tucked in a crate, lies a ten-page manuscript dated the summer of 1993 that reads “IMAGRIA: A NOVEL.” That was the first time I ever used the name. It was the title of one of the many fantasy novels that I aborted when I was twelve and thirteen. I chose the name because it sounded like the word “imagination,” as well as any number of lands found in your average cheesy fantasy novel. Not long after, it became the catchall name for the entire earth that my fantasy stories were set in; the globe and the theater of my imagination as a teenager. I can’t remember when I decided to start using it as the name of my self-publishing company, though–it was, at least, since 1998, when I placed the name “IMAGRIA PUBLICATIONS” below the title page of my first completed novel, Sanctuary.

I have never wavered from that name since for all my long works. I still put “Imagria Publications” in the bottom of my latest ongoing novel. I even briefly started a computer company called Imagria Systems–to this day the name is still registered with the State of Maryland and I still get business credit card ads for Imagria Systems, LLC. It folded when I couldn’t compete with Dell and other companies with a real warranty service.

Here is a rather late example of a map. It is from 1998, and it was for my novel Sanctuary. It is not my best map–it is much rougher in its “font” than I like–but I set an alarmingly large number of stories in this particular part of Imagria.

nwimagria

Once, maps I drew from 1993-1995–including a large, “fold-out” style world map of Imagria–hung by my bed. I took them down a few years ago and put them in a folder in the same crate with the “Imagria” manuscript, in Maryland, 3000 miles away.

*NOTE: for those who have read my last novel, True Sight: yes, that was where the idea came from. My first novel was about a Spellweaver named Jaran, trained on Sanctuary Isle. I mentioned the idea in passing to my friend Young and he liked the idea so much, he and I decided to bring the concept into the modern world. I’ve toyed with possible links between Imagria and this world via Threads, and several years ago planned a massive novel about a girl from our world being taken to the part of Imagria I never developed well–East Imagria.

This footnote has rambled far enough. :)

Quarter’s Over

I turned in a total of 5 major assignments today–all due at 5 PM. There was also a paper due earlier this Tuesday. I pulled two all-nighters this week, and I still have to get up at 5:30 AM tomorrow morning to catch a 6 AM shuttle to the airport…it’s spring break, and I’m coming home to DC for a week.

Feels good to be done. I have plans to revamp the website for real over break and use it as a showcase for freelance web design work. (I really need the money…) Oh yes, and the next podcast–a good amount of it has already been recorded. Just needs some music–original music. Yes, I’m going to try to write at least some of the music, and look forward to the day when I can go fully public without the RIAA hunting me down.

The next quarter starts on March 27th. Until then…aaaahhhh. the sound of relaxation. How I have missed you.

Quick Update

Hey everyone. I’m still alive, just plugging away at hours and hours of schoolwork…trying (imperfectly) to make sure I don’t use the Internet until I finish my homework every day. But that means I usually don’t come on until the late evenings.

I had a wonderful small group session tonight, the first time I’ve been to a small group at my church.

Podcast will be finished…one day. :) It’s very time consuming, so I may have to cut back drastically on the update schedule for it.

Anyways, back to the finishing touches on my exegetical methods assignment…

Podcast by Weekend’s End

Coming soon.

microphone-1-1

Come on Up For the Rising

Things are slowly returning to normal…I’m getting back on track with my homework as well as the novel I started several months ago (at last…). I’m trying to make sure I do all my homework and writing for the day before getting on the Internet, so I surf and chat “guilt free.” It’s awfully hard when you’re an addict, but I just know that I’m happier when I manage to control myself.

I’m going to try to put up a podcast this Friday again, so stay tuned…

Future plans:
–Get a part time job so I can have enough money to replace my flaky used laptop.
–Revise the look of this website.
–Go to Joshua Tree National Park and take some pictures with my new Nikon D50 camera.
–Write a full review and reflection for my new favorite anime.
–Finish all my school assignments on time.
–Conquer the world.

Until next time, folks!