Friday Find: Sarah Manguso’s Thirteen Sieves

You know how just the other day I alluded just the other day to my friend Deonne Kahler’s recent participation in the Taos Summer Writers’ Conference? Well, DK is now sharing revision tips that she gleaned directly from her workshop leader, Sarah Manguso (apparently, Ms. Manguso calls them “The Thirteen Sieves”).

DK will be sharing one tip per post. She began yesterday with this one. And it’s good.

Follow along, won’t you? I know that I will!

Have a great weekend, and see you back here on Monday!

Friday Finds: Tech Tutorials

This week brought two helpful resources to my tech-challenged self.

First, I present David Pogue’s New York Times article, “For Those Facebook Left Behind.” Some people will surely find it too “basic,” but the article does provide a useful, simple overview of major social-networking sites. “You may find absolutely nothing of value to you in these sites,” Pogue writes, “and that’s fine. But isn’t it better to make that decision now that you know what you’re ignoring?”

Second, Jane Friedman has assembled a lengthy blog post titled “Ultimate iPhone Apps for Writers: 30+ Productivity & Creativity Boosts.” As I mentioned in our latest newsletter, I finally jumped aboard the iPhone bandwagon last winter. I’m still getting to know the “apps” that are out there, and this post is one I’ve bookmarked for future reference.

Have a great weekend, folks. (Oh, and in case any of you are envying me the temporary “summer Friday” freedom from the office job I also referenced in the latest newsletter, envy me not: Since we had Monday off for the Independence Day holiday, everyone in my office is expected in today.)

Friday Find: Free Guides to Paying Markets

As some of you may remember, in my former (freelancing) life, I offered a slew of writing-related e-books for sale. As the years passed–and as I transitioned into a full-time staff job–I didn’t have sufficient time to update each e-book as frequently as I wanted. Other reasons prompted me to bid farewell to those guides: The guides to paying fiction and poetry markets, for instance, seemed less relevant once Duotrope became such an established and vital (and free) site. So, over time, I retired several of the guides, making each of them available at no charge for a period of time before sending them to the great virtual beyond.

Ultimately, I was maintaining (and updating, twice each year) two guides. One provides a directory of paying markets for book reviewers, and the other one lists dozens of paying markets for essayists. The most recent updates for both guides were completed last December.

The time is coming to say good-bye to updating–and selling–these two guides, too. But before they disappear from view (which will happen on August 1, 2010), I want to give you all the opportunity to access them (free of charge). They’re still available on the site that has handled the sales from the start: I warn you that you may need to jump through some hoops to access them (you may need a free account on that site, for instance). If you have any trouble, please contact the help staff at the site. I simply have no ability to fix any technical problems you may encounter there.

But let’s be optimistic! Let’s hope that you can access whichever book you want (or both, if that’s the case), and that the markets I’ve researched and updated over the years bring you–and your writing practice–much success!

Friday Find: The Poetry Foundation’s iPhone App

Yesterday afternoon I left work early for the semiannual fun-filled dental checkup. The bad news (this time) is that I have the beginnings of a cavity that “we’ll watch” for the next several months. Oh, and I should give some serious thought to adult braces for my lower teeth (I thought all of that was taken care of with six years of orthodontia way back when).

But the good news is that while I was in the waiting room I finally downloaded the new (and free) Poetry Foundation poetry app. I have to say that it is a vast improvement over the “Poem Flow” app I paid for awhile back. “Poem Flow” ended up giving me a single poem each day—usually the same poem I was already receiving for free from the Academy of American Poets. The Poetry Foundation app, on the other hand, gives you access to so many poems, neatly organized by topic (or to suit your mood). Thumbs up for the Poetry Foundation’s app!

Wishing you all a great weekend. See you back here on Monday!

Friday Find: The Library of America’s Story of the Week

Want to download some free reading for the weekend? Consider “Business Deal,” a fairly brief short story by Nathanael West (1903-40) set in a bygone era of screenwriting and movie-making, which the Library of America has made available from Nathanael West: Novels and Other Writings.

Or check out any of the other offerings in the Library of America’s Story of the Week site/archive.

(For more background on the West story, check Carolyn Kellogg’s Jacket Copy post, through which I discovered this find and the accompanying archive.)

Have a great weekend, everyone. See you back here on Monday.