Chronicle Herald April 10 - May 7

I filled in at the Chronicle Herald for a month and here are some selected stories from my time there:

Johnson living dream as pro bodybuilder

Man shot in Halifax barbershop

Supreme Court: ATVs can use trail in Paradise

New cash for search and rescue

Bezanson back on his bike

MorphMen want you to be noisy

Young brains dissect old game

Klassen tells her story in Cape Breton

Atlantic Canada called cancer research leader

Divers recover body where fisherman went missing

Community works to cut dropout rate at Dartmouth schools

Pathways to Education draws interest

Halifax cop has driver’s licence suspended after drunk driving conviction

Kids miss Ken’s store, hope he feels the love

‘Go meet with God and save me a seat’ - Raymond Taavel memorial

juniorpigeon:

It has been a long time since we last podcasted! Sorry about that. We aim to do better in the future. Today’s podcast is extra fantastic to make up for the lack of podcasts over the last many months. It’s a conversation with Jill Fredericks, Laura MacKenzie and Vincenzo Ravina.

Topics…

Finally got around to editing another portion of the Europe trip Laura and I took last summer. Barcelona! It’s over on Junior Pigeon. Check it out.

chuckgillis:

When I was recently interviewed by Vincenzo Ravina I had no idea what a fun piece he was writing for The Coast. I also had no idea what a great response I would receive from the article.  Quite a few folks in Canada and in Texas have reached out to express their support. The good news - I am not alone! Apparently there is a small army of people in Texas who want to be able to buy Canadian beer here with the ease.  Thanks to Vincenzo, The Coast and everyone else who supports the goal.

This article was a lot of fun to write! I wrote it for The Coast’s annual beer issue. You can read it HERE.
I also wrote the Rockbottom Brewery portion of THIS article (at the bottom).

chuckgillis:

When I was recently interviewed by Vincenzo Ravina I had no idea what a fun piece he was writing for The Coast. I also had no idea what a great response I would receive from the article.  Quite a few folks in Canada and in Texas have reached out to express their support. The good news - I am not alone! Apparently there is a small army of people in Texas who want to be able to buy Canadian beer here with the ease.  Thanks to Vincenzo, The Coast and everyone else who supports the goal.

This article was a lot of fun to write! I wrote it for The Coast’s annual beer issue. You can read it HERE.

I also wrote the Rockbottom Brewery portion of THIS article (at the bottom).

Thoughts on The Hunger Games

I don’t have a whole lot to say about The Hunger Games, but it won’t fit into a tweet, so I’m putting it here.

I tweeted that there was something about the writing that was weird to me. I think it was that the world felt uninhabited, to me. Like mannequins being used in a movie to fill out the crowd shots or having cardboard backgrounds. For instance, in the scene where Katniss has to show her stuff before the Gamemakers, not a single one of the Gamemakers is described. We don’t know how many there are there. We don’t see a single reaction from any of them, other than “people stumble back” and “a few are nodding in approval”. There’s no image. It’s just a vague sense that there are people there. It’s supposed to be kind of a big scene, I think, but it has no weight to it. We don’t see any monocles dropping from eyes. So that’s my main problem with the book: Big moments fall flat and/because the imagery is nonexistent a lot of the time.

I think it’ll make a better movie than a book.

Now I will read Catching Fire.

Doug Kirkaldy’s King’s story.

This guy is awesome. One of my favourite interviews when I was making these videos. He’s a really quotable, funny guy and a great radio teacher.

For more of the King’s videos I made click here.

Ungodly Trifles - a rambling blog post about how I “finished” my novel called Ungodly Trifles

I am “finished” my novel, in the sense that I wrote the whole thing from beginning to end and have begun the process of showing it to other people. I am not finished in the sense that I’m done working it on it. Because there’s still plenty of work to do.

I started writing Ungodly Trifles around October 18, 2007. I’ve been working on it off and on since then. Half the book’s been scrapped in that time, and I’ve written and rewritten all over the place.

I wrote the ending while Laura and I were in Europe. I don’t know exactly when it was, but we were on a train. I didn’t count the novel as finished at that time because I knew I had to write new chapters around the beginning and end of the book, and heavily rewrite other parts and edit a whole lot of the book.

And so I completed that writing, rewriting and editing mission on February 8, 2012 at 11:33 pm, in a parking lot looking out onto Halifax Harbour.

But now it’s “finished”. It still needs a lot of work, but it’s all there. For those keeping track, that means that it took me four years, three months and 21 days to write it.

Laura and Nina are the first two people in the WHOLE WORLD who get to read it. They will contribute the first wave of feedback and criticism and editing suggestions. Then, my friends Cameron and Kathleen have signed up for round two. I’m glad to have people who are so eager to read the novel and help with making it better.

It’s weird and exciting to have Ungodly Trifles being read by other people, because save for a couple of really early chapters that I had floating around, I haven’t spoken a word about what the novel contains to anyone, really. It’s just been me in a vacuum.

But last night, Laura and I talked for an hour or two about all the characters and the various events of the book and who she likes and dislikes and why she likes or dislikes them, and it’s very cool to hear about the world and characters I created from the point of view of someone who is not me.

She’s not finished reading it yet, but she’s really close.

And now I’ll stop rambling and I assure you I will write better blog posts later.

Latest video at Junior Pigeon: This chicken recipe calls for one full pound of butter. And it’s delicious.
Oh, just an insane man writing in his parked car. It’s not a bad way to work, actually. I can bring it almost anywhere and don’t need to buy a drink just to sit here.

Oh, just an insane man writing in his parked car. It’s not a bad way to work, actually. I can bring it almost anywhere and don’t need to buy a drink just to sit here.

These children have been driven insane by the fun of making your own Blizzards.

These children have been driven insane by the fun of making your own Blizzards.

Blue cardigan and Muppet shirt (Animal shirt, more specifically): match made in heaven.

Blue cardigan and Muppet shirt (Animal shirt, more specifically): match made in heaven.

Snow… AND HAIL?! Damned Halifax weather. Biggest hailstone I’ve ever seen.

12 Steps To Success In ANY Field

By Vincenzo Ravina

1. DO something that matters. Drop the chaff from your work-life and focus on the good-times.

2. Leverage your social media CLOUT.

3. Make the most of what’s there by RAISING your profile.

4. MODULATE your vocabulary to include the most popular Google keywords, like ‘cats’ or ‘funny cats’.

5. STOP to smell the roses. Write reviews of how yesterday’s roses compare to today’s roses versus the roses from your childhood and ENGAGE with your SOCIAL AUDIENCE.

6. BE daring.

7. Dress the part. Model your wardrobe after what you see in your mindstream for what you’re projecting to BE in five years.

8. FIND your niche by choosing two things you like and mashing them together. For example: If you like mayonnaise and guitars, trying packing a guitar full of mayonnaise and then selling it to like-minded people on Etsy.

9. ENGAGE with your LIFE-SOCIAL MAYONNAISE GUITAR CONSUMER-FRIENDS.

10. Convert BUSINESS CONTACTS into LIFE CONTACTS.

11. DEVELOP your mantra. Mine is ‘BE successful’.

12. Make a BUDGET for supporting others in your SHARE-CIRCLE. REAP the benefits of success and share them with your SHARE-CIRCLE, like me.

Take these tips into your life and watch your LIFE-PROFIT increase tenfold. Have these tips worked for you?

That’s right. That’s what’s new. Two new buttons on the old Navigation Express Tool-Dongle (TM).
The first new addition is the “Creative Writing / Fiction” button. That will be seeing some new content in the next few months, as I complete my novel. But clicking there right now won’t sending you screaming into a contentless black abyss! NO NO NO. You’ll find Vampires Vampires and the Bittersweet Fudge-Bag, the picture book I wrote, and Ezra James Houndstooth-Clark’s Field Guide to ANIMALS of the WILDERNESS.
The second and final new addition is a link to Junior Pigeon, the site I run with Laura. It has been updated sporadically, but will be seeing a wealth of new content shortly!
I’ve also changed the colour of linked text on the site from grey to blue and removed some of the unnecessary buttons like the “Mobile” button, the “Twitter” button and the “Questions/Comments” button. You may also notice that if you come to this site by means of the domain Vincenzo Ravina Dot Com, the default landing page is now the About page, which has been ever so slightly updated with new information and links.

That’s right. That’s what’s new. Two new buttons on the old Navigation Express Tool-Dongle (TM).

The first new addition is the “Creative Writing / Fiction” button. That will be seeing some new content in the next few months, as I complete my novel. But clicking there right now won’t sending you screaming into a contentless black abyss! NO NO NO. You’ll find Vampires Vampires and the Bittersweet Fudge-Bag, the picture book I wrote, and Ezra James Houndstooth-Clark’s Field Guide to ANIMALS of the WILDERNESS.

The second and final new addition is a link to Junior Pigeon, the site I run with Laura. It has been updated sporadically, but will be seeing a wealth of new content shortly!

I’ve also changed the colour of linked text on the site from grey to blue and removed some of the unnecessary buttons like the “Mobile” button, the “Twitter” button and the “Questions/Comments” button. You may also notice that if you come to this site by means of the domain Vincenzo Ravina Dot Com, the default landing page is now the About page, which has been ever so slightly updated with new information and links.