You know, two years ago I spent Christmas drinking and telling everyone the world was on fire and we were all fucked. So even though it would be really hard to go downhill from there, I'm still going to take credit where credit is due for not being quite so hopeless as I was in December 2016.
2018 has been one heck of a year. I'm not going to do a complete year in review sort of thing (Not yet anyway...), but Christmas comes with a certain nostalgia. I think about the family members I haven't been around in way too long. I think about past Christmases and how much more decoration went on when I was younger (When your dogs are as ball-crazed as mine are, it's...difficult to hang shiny, round, mouth-sized ornaments on the tree.). I drink the same drinks, smell the same smells, see the same lights, and read the same books (I'll be starting my annual reading of Krampus: The Yule Lord tonight!).
So with that nostalgia comes things that are just a little different than I would have planned. I didn't plan on going through Christmas with a walking boot because my ankle still isn't healed. I didn't plan on starting a proofreading service. I certainly didn't plan on owning so many Bath and Body Works candles (If you don't have Frosted Cranberry in your life, you're missing out!).
But I think most refreshing, and simultaneously most depressing, is that I didn't plan to be so happy. I wouldn't have believed that things could be feeling so downright okay if you'd told me. And it really all happened from my birthday at the beginning of October to now. Yep, while I was still laid up in an actual cast, not the significantly more convenient walking boot.
In October, I got a lovely reminder from my roommate that I'm cared for/about. She acknowledged the sacrifices I make, and it was just...incredible. I don't like to talk about any sort of personal hardships, so to have someone see them and accept them and all that, it was really something. And October just kind of built from there, in ways I would never have expected. Early October was spent with a very dear old friend, and then my local RWA chapter imploded, leaving me and two other friends holding the bag for the board if we wanted to keep the chapter. It was not pretty, but it's honestly proven to maybe be the best thing for the chapter's health, in the end. People are excited again, including me.
In November, I actually made a new friend, which never happens. I'm a 27 year old introvert, currently with a broken ankle. I don't get out much. But she's been wonderful. More money's been coming in. Proofreading is going well.
December is looking much the same. My dearest of dearests, Frances Pauli, gave me a Christmas present that had a ton more impact than I think she's put together (It's an auryn pendant, from The Neverending Story. She's one of the few people who probably has any idea how much I love that book, so for her to pull that out of the ether or memory...well, it's another "you're cared for" reminder.).
So this Christmas, as I'm happy, I hope all of you are as well. I hope you're all going to have a wonderful holiday season. I hope your troubles are vanishing. I hope that, if like me, you break your ankle, ruin your hands, and slice open your toe along the nail bed, you'll still be happy enough you're smiling your ass off. Because everyone deserves to feel like that.
Happy Holidays, everyone,
Voss
Showing posts with label gift. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gift. Show all posts
Thursday, December 20, 2018
Friday, December 9, 2016
Ten Gifts Your Author Friend will Actually Appreciate
So last year I wrote a post about Post
Holiday Gifts for Authors. Partially because after the holidays, people
have gift cards to run through and partially because… I forgot to do anything
with it before that.
Not this year. I’m here with another collection of things
you can get for the authors, aspiring authors, and other book-creating people
(Editors, formatters, etc.) who might be in your life.
Or, you know, you could get them for your favorite author,
too. *cough cough*
(I feel compelled to note this: I link to products on Amazon
through this article, and they go through my Affiliate Account. No extra charge
for you, but I do make a small percentage of what you spend if you buy them
through these links.)
10: Pens
If there’s one thig
that authorial types are always lacking, but never getting, it’s pens. It’s an
interesting and stubborn approach most authors and editors seem to take to
pens. We never have them, because they go missing. We let someone borrow them
at some event, we hand one to our friend at a writer’s group because, being an
author, they don’t have one either, we use them to stir our coffee (I’m very
guilty of this.). Whatever reason, we don’t have them, but we know we just bought two dozen. So we refuse to
buy more on principle… even though we’re the only ones paying for it.
These lovely Z-Grip retractable pens would be a good
choice. Plus they come in lots of colors, which is always a must for me.
9: Whiteboard
Whiteboards are
surprisingly useful little things for anyone who works from home, really.
They’re a quick way to have a to-do list every day without running through
reams of paper every year. They can be a place for a calendar. Writers can use
them for quick plot sketches or brainstorming. Editors can mark down things to
come back to without filling up the manuscript with comments that have to be deleted.
It’s awesome, and I actually love giving them as gifts to my authorial friends.
It’s not something most people get for themselves, but they use the hell out of
it once they have it.
This is the one I have. It hangs up in my
bedroom so I can add my to-do list first thing when I get up. And, in line with
my love of colored pens… a colored marker set.
Dry erase markers are also very
appreciated if you have a teacher in your life. Trust me on this one. A pack of
dry erase markers for a teacher will be received very well.
8: A Mug
Writers, even if
they don’t drink coffee, pretty much all have a hot beverage of choice, and we
pretty much all have a slightly
unhealthy devotion to whatever that beverage is. Me personally, I collect mugs.
I have a bit of a problem, actually. I have to be very careful in thrift stores
because I’ll just buy all the mugs. But I have one in particular that I, as a
writer, adore.
This little number sits on my desk when it’s
really time to buckle down. It’s seen the start of books and intense edits and
tight deadlines, and it just sits there and holds my java, ready for whatever
is to come with its inspiring message.
7: Flash Drive
This is another one
that most authors have—or had—and like. But it’s like pens—they go missing, or
we just break them and never buy a new one for whatever reason. Then we kick
ourselves—and throw things—when our files corrupt and we don’t have a backup…
… like I don’t
because I haven’t used my flash drive in months. Whoops.
This is a nice affordable one with lots of
storage. One this size can last an author a long time, since Word documents
are so very tiny, so for ten bucks you can get them something they can use for
years and year… as long as they don’t lose it in the first week.
6: Timer
One of the hazards
anyone working from home faces is time management. Some authors I know (Or have
heard of.) are incredibly good at it. Nora Roberts, for example, works four
hours, takes an hour lunch, and works for more hours. That’s sort of the ideal
for most authors, or something close to it. 6+ hours every day, barring things
like holidays and emergencies. However, we tend to be… well, we suck at it, by
and large. Sometimes a day of work is 15 hours not moving from the chair
because the writing just sounds really good. Other days—and far more often than
the former—it’s half an hour staring at blank page before giving up and
watching cake decorating tutorials on Youtube.
Not that I would ever… I mean, I wouldn’t… Okay
once. Or twice. Or more.
It’s why timers
come in handy. Now, Google has a timer that pops up if you just search “Timer.”
Most phones and tablets have a timer/stopwatch app, or you can download one.
Even my flip phone has one, I think. But there’s something to be said for
having an external one. You’re not having to involve the internet for anything,
which cuts back the risk of falling into Facebook… or those damned cake
tutorials.
It doesn’t need to
be fancy. This is a basic model that can
either count down (For working specific times.) or count up (Just to keep
track.). And that’s all it really needs to be.
5: An Excuse to
Read
Authors pretty
universally love reading, but we just don’t make the time for it. This is your
chance to help us remember the joy of reading. Buy your author or editor or
whoever a new book from an author they love. That might just be the spark that
convinces them to crack open a book and actually read.
I can’t really
recommend a book to you, since I don’t know your friend, but scan their
bookshelves, get them talking about books, and see who comes up. Or find out
which books they’ve lost over the years. But get them a nice, relatively
risk-free book and they might very well take the time to tear the words off the
page.
4: A Plant
Your lovely author
friend or family member likely spends a lot of time sitting in the same place
looking at the same things and breathing the same air that’s been in there with
them for the past several months. You’re not going to convince them to stop all
that sitting very easily, but you can maybe help clean the air up and get
something exciting to look at.
Buy them a plant. I
would personally recommend going to your local nursery and getting something
that can thrive inside in your area… possibly with minimal care, depending on
the temperament of your friend. But if you want to order online, you can get
this Peace Lily for under $20.
3: Address Labels
This is especially
prevalent if your author runs a lot of giveaways or has one of those publishers
that still insists on snail mail (I have one of them. It’s slightly annoying to
deal with.). They’re constantly writing addresses on things.
While you can’t fix
the whole problem—the address things are being sent to—you can make the return
address easy with address labels. Now, you’ll need to know the address they do
all their businessy things through, which might not be their home address. This
is when asking someone in the know might be good. But you can even get
customized labels on Amazon, which was kind of a shock for me. These ones are super-affordable, and should
last quite a while.
2: Healthy Snacks
If you love your
author enough to buy them a gift in the first place, you probably hope they’re
healthy and all that stuff. Unfortunately, a lot of us just aren’t healthy at
all. Or not as healthy as we should be. When you’re working a tight deadline,
is it easier to make a proper lunch, or throw down half a bag of Cheetos and
call it good? It’s the latter, if you couldn’t guess. Snacking works the same
way. We grab what’s easy, and that tends to be something shelf stable and about
as natural as a drag queen’s breast plate.
Enter this thing
that I’ve recently discovered: snack care packages. You can order them on
Amazon, and can even get them delivered on a recurring schedule if you want to
really shell out the money. They’ve got things like granola bars, dried fruit,
and low fat chips, all individually packaged. Most of them are enough to last
for an average month.
Now, it’s the most
expensive thing on this list, but it’s still not bank-breaking. But maybe save
this for an author close to you instead of just an acquaintance. I’m dropping
my recommendation for this one in particular,
but there are a lot of different options out there. And keep the link so you
can send it to them if they want to keep getting it delivered. Or just stick it
inside the card with your gift. Easy-peasy.
1: Planner
As authors, we can
handle the “putting words together” part. You don’t get into this if you don’t
have some kind of grasp on that. What we—and I imagine a lot of other artistic
types—struggle with the most is organization and planning. Time management.
Motivation. All those pesky things that get in the way of “putting words
together.”
There’s a reason
this is the number one thing on the list, and a reason that so many of these
entries seem to touch on organization and things like that instead of passion.
I’ve never met a truly passionless writer. We all love writing. It’s the other
crap that kills us.
A yearly planner
can really help with that. And there’s even one specifically for authors
floating around out there: The 2017 AuthorLife
Planner. It’s brilliant and it really lays things out step by step. And it
does arrive before Christmas, if you get it today. (That would be 12/9).
So hopefully this
is something that can help you out. A little look into the gifts an author will
appreciate. And before Christmas this time, which is a pleasant change for me.
I really hope, if
nothing else, this was an enjoyable read. Maybe useful. And more than that, I
hope you have an awesome rest of your day,
Voss
Friday, December 25, 2015
Top 5 Post-Holiday Gifts for Authors
Assuming that you’re not reading this in advance for the
2016 holiday season or something like that, it’s too late to get these for Festivus, Hanukkah, Christmas, or any other winter holiday. Sorry. I didn’t get around to writing this up in time.
But fear not! The wonderful thing about the holidays finally
being over is that it’s actually a prime time to pick up some gifts and such
for friends and family, and that hopefully includes your authorial friend. I
mean, sure, we can be a bit distant, and often a bit drunken, but we mean well…
for the most part. Let’s not look at this relationship too closely, otherwise
it might fall apart.
See, once you’re done with the holidays, there’s an amazing
convergence of things going on. Everything that the stores couldn’t move in
time goes on super-ultra-discount, and you also might well have some extra
money because Great Aunt Ida still insists on giving you a hundred dollars
every year, bless her heart.
So, with some holiday cheer in your wallet, what exactly can
you do to make your author feel loved? Well, I can’t speak for everyone, but
these are five things I certainly wouldn’t say no to, if some kind soul
inserted them into my writer’s nest.
Okay, if I’m being frank, this is the best thing you can do.
Snag a copy of your author’s book, read it, review it, pass it on to someone
else, hell, buy it as another friend’s post-holiday gift if you think they’d
like it. It’s awesome, and it will make your author feel unbelievably
wonderful. This is the top thing you can do, but I have it at the bottom. Why?
Because all these sorts of lists have that as the number one thing, and I enjoy
being contrary. Also because it’s more or less an anonymous gift, in a lot of
ways, and giving feels good. I love being able to see someone receive my gift.
But mostly to be contrary, and to get it out of the way.
Seriously, when it comes to spreading cheer to your author, this is the big
one. But if you’re looking for something a little more material…
Liquor. Booze. Alcohol. Goofy juice. Whatever you want to
call it, writers tend to like it. It’s not universal, so use your best
judgment, but I’ve only met a handful of authors who don’t like a hearty nip
every now and then. If you don’t know their drink of choice, you can always get
them a basket of miniatures (My local liquor store will even arrange four
mini-bottles of liquor into a bouquet with chocolates for an extra five
dollars) to cover your bases. But, being the oddballs we authors are, something
classic is always good. Something that makes us feel more like Hemingway.
Whiskey, rum, scotch. Old school writerly drinks. Something off the wall will
normally be welcome, too. If you find a weird flavor or a cool-looking bottle
or something like that, you can bet a writer will crack it open with you. Or
something that goes well with coffee, so we can ‘kickstart our muses’ in the
morning.
3: COFFEE
Maybe you’re not quite comfortable with the booze, or you’re
not old enough, or they’re not old enough, or you know they just plain don’t
drink. Go straight for the heart of the matter. Coffee. Or tea or hot cocoa.
Whatever their morning wake-up drink is. Personally, one of my favorite gifts I
ever received was a collection of hot cocoas. Different flavors you just dump
into hot water or milk. I’m simple like that. But I wouldn’t say no to a bag of
coffee, either, and you can get decent deals on that, too, after the holidays
are over. Especially the more specific flavored coffees like gingerbread and
snickerdoodle and such. One of the best I found was for my sister, at a Ross of
all places (White chocolate macadamia nut coffee. I didn’t even know this was a
thing.), so keep your eyes peeled. Tea is also good, and especially nowadays,
you can go nuts with it. Places like Steeped Tea, Dryad Tea, and FridayAfternoon Tea will ship bags of loose leaf tea to your doorstep. I’m down to
one cup of my vanilla Earl Grey that I got for Christmas last year, and I’ve
been nothing but happy with it. And if you want to get really fancy with it,
there are coffee and tea subscription services, too. Or just a gift card to a
local coffee joint works too.
2: Music
During the whole run of the holiday season, CDs seem to be
on sale (Believe it or not, CDs are still actually a thing.), with instrumental
music being particularly easy to get a hold of. I find that there’s always a
section in the back of Hastings or Wal-Mart with symphonic and orchestral
music, and it’s always super cheap as it is (I got a five-CD collection of
Tchaikovsky music for about 5 bucks), and post-holiday sales make it even
easier to get your hands on it. And as a general rule, writers like
instrumental music. I’m one of the weirdos who actually writes to music with
lyrics, but even I like to use instrumentals. So if you see something lying
around, give it a buy.
1: A Day Out
This isn’t exactly a physical gift, but it’s still one of
the best things you can do for a writer. We’re terribly solitary, reclusive
little creatures. I hear that if you put us out in the sun, we burst into
flames. Okay, not really, but a lot of us do tend to burn something awful. We
don’t leave our caves very willingly, because there’s always another book to be
written, edited, or submitted. Or if not, there’s a short story. Or we need to
do marketing. And if there’s a looming deadline, you’re lucky if we even sleep.
Your writer, like most, will likely be resistant to your
insistence that they actually move. But force your way through the hemming and
hawing and drag their ass out the door. It’s best if you somehow force it. Buy
the movie tickets ahead of time or make lunch reservations. Make sure they know
that there was legwork involved that would all fall apart if they didn’t leave.
If your writer actually does have a looming deadline, they’ll stay in anyway,
most likely, but otherwise, get them out. As much as they’ll hate it at first,
they’ll end up having a good time. See, we might be good with words, but no so
god at self-care. That’s why we need moderately normal people to remind us that
there’s a world out there not made
entirely of pixels on a screen. And even if they never say thank you, they’ll
appreciate it.
But if they don’t say thank you, guilt them into it. Guilt
works wonderfully well on writers. Pro tip.
So, hopefully you’re armed to gift something to your
favorite author buddy. Happy holidays, everyone.
Voss
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