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Topics - stacer

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136
Everything Else / Another job listing
« on: August 31, 2004, 10:15:19 PM »
Just thought this might be of interest. Mainly thinking of SE, though he may or may not want to relocate to NY.

Associate Editor
Publication or Company   Wizard Entertainment
Industry   Magazine Publishing
Salary  
Benefits  401K, Bonuses, Health
Job Duration  Full Time
Job Location  Congers, NY USA

Job Requirements Wizard Entertainment seeks an experienced copy editor familiar with AP Style who will be responsible for content editing/copy editing/proofreading of pages for Wizard: The Comics Magazine. Interested candidates should have strong knowledge of the comics industry, possess the creative vision to brainstorm ideas in group settings, be comfortable supervising columns/departments/freelancers and have the phone acumen to maintain relationships with comic industry professionals.

Contact  Mr. Joe Yanarella
Address 151 Wells Avenue
Congers, NY 10920 USA

Fax  8452680053
Special Instructions  To be considered for this opportunity, please send a cover letter detailing your expertise all things Wizard-related, resume and appropriate clips via e-mail ([email protected]) or hard copy to:
Joe Yanarella
Senior Managing Editor
Wizard Entertainment
151 Wells Ave.
Congers, NY 10920
No phone calls please.



137
Rants and Stuff / What would you do?
« on: August 23, 2004, 09:10:10 PM »
I've got a dilemma.

Background: I'm 5 classes into a 9-class master's program. I took spring and summer this year off to work full time, because it's an expensive program. When I attend school full time, student loans cover my tuition and leave me with enough money to cover rent for the semester, but little more. Most of you know this already.

The solution seemed to be getting tuition reimbursement through my company, and to finish one class at a time over the next year-ish. But the department has final approval, and since it isn't specifically department-related, even though it's company-related, funding for my class wasn't approved on that front.

So, I have to make a decision: continue with school full-time and hope I can make it through the semester on the tiny amount of money I have, plus whatever I can pull in through an as yet non-existent part-time job, or, give up on the program altogether.

So, I talked to my boss about it. What are my options? Could I go part time within the same job?

She came back to me today saying that this fall will be the "big push" and that they really need me. If I go to half time, that leaves them with two unexperienced girls (one who just started today and one a couple weeks ago) to cover what I could do. They just don't have enough people.

So, the management isn't really thrilled with the idea of me going to less time at work when they really need me. They value my work, and think I have great potential as an editor. They're trying to come up with solutions that could work for me and for them, so they can keep me and I can afford one class. They've offered to write the school to ask them to consider giving me financial aid for the one class, but the problem is, as most of you former and current students in the U.S. would probably know, if you're not going 1/2 time, you're not eligible for federal aid--and my school doesn't have any private programs for aid for grad students in my program.

Okay. So, they want me to stay. They even suggested that maybe I could wait to go back to school till January, because the big push should be done by Feb.

Should be--but the nature of these things is that even though my job wasn't supposed to last through *last* February, here I am working for the same department because things come up, and there's always something to do. But I trust my boss--if we made an agreement that I could go to half time in January, she'd honor it, and the new girls would be more seasoned by then.

And--Well, the truth is, I could use the money, too. Working full time pays the bills.

I had been considering just applying for a job with the children's department of Simon & Schuster (thanks for all the help, guys). But even though it looks perfect for me (associate editor in a children's department) as I've pondered and prayed I've decided that I need to be in Boston for now, and that I'd like to finish my program if at all possible.

So--what would you do, in my shoes? Give up the job and try for some random part-time work? Postpone another semester (totalling a full year out of school)--and miss a really good publishing class, which may or may not be offered again before I graduate? ... Or give up on the program altogether and try for a New York job like the S&S one?

138
Books / Tokyopop hiring freelance copy editor
« on: August 21, 2004, 12:59:26 AM »
Just found this on copyeditor.com. I don't know much about manga, but this would be great for any of you who do who are looking for an editorial position. You have to have quite a bit of experience, though.

Title: Fantasy Fiction Copy Editor
Posted: 8/17/2004
Job Number: 1310
Description: Leading graphic novel (manga) publishing company seeks experience Copy Editor for new novels line. Especially interested in eagle-eye canidates with a serious flair for fiction and firm grasp on dialogue. Must be well-versed in Chicago Manual of Style, and a genius with tense, grammar, and punctuation. Knowledge of Japanese culture/anime/manga a definite plus.

Experience: Requirements:
1. Full-time freelance status
2. Ability to meet tight deadlines
3. Minimum of five years experience copyediting & editing fiction/novels with a listing of published titles.
4. Ability to use Microsoft Word tracking and comment features
5. Do not use the reply function on this Web site (send resume as Word doc or RTF attachment)

On-Site? No
Status: Freelance
Salary:  
Contact: Nicole Monastirsky
Email: [email protected]
Phone: n/a
Fax: n/a
Company: Tokyopop
Address: 5900 Wilshire Blvd, St. 2000
City, State: Los Angeles, CA
ZipCode: 90036

139
Everything Else / Need a reviewer
« on: August 20, 2004, 01:24:11 AM »
...of a cover letter and resume, tomorrow (Fri.) sometime. My friend just told me about an opening at Simon & Schuster that fits my experience perfectly. So I've decided to apply, but I never feel like my cover letters go very far, and I wonder if my resume isn't that great either. I've had a friend who's an economist look at it from the job standpoint, but I need people who are in publishing to look at it, too, I think.

So, anybody going to be online tomorrow during the day, about noonish or early afternoon my time, that you could look at my stuff and chat with me about it online?

140
Rants and Stuff / Dental work
« on: August 18, 2004, 12:10:17 PM »
I've never really had a problem going to the dentist. You go, get your cavities filled in if you have them, and hope you can pay for it. No stress or anything. I didn't even worry when I had to have a root canal twice in the same tooth (once at age 16 and once when I was 23 or so).

I went to the dentist for the first time in 5 years or so the other day. (Haven't had insurance for a while.) Even that was fine. I needed a cleaning (which they still haven't done, this was a new patient exam), and he was going to look at my jaw and see if I might need a mouth guard for grinding my teeth. Nothing too serious, nothing that required immediate attention. I even didn't think too much about it when they couldn't seem to get me in for a cleaning till Dec. 22.  ::)

But then I got a call from the dentist's assistant today, asking if I could come in for a consultation *tomorrow* because they found something "of concern" on the X-rays they took the other day. What could they find of concern that would have them getting me in the very next day for an appointment? Now I'm freaking out. What if I have cancer of the mouth or huge bone loss in my jaw or something crazy like that?

Somebody reassure me, because it doesn't feel like it would be a simple cavity for this.

141
Everything Else / Dachshunds plot world domination
« on: August 17, 2004, 10:16:22 PM »
^ Subject line of a recent thread on the childlit listserv.

Can't you just see it now? Hundreds of little weiner dogs just waiting for their chance to make us play catch 300 times a day! Make us find their squeaky toys! Kick us out of the bed!

(My little dachshund friend, Fritz, already does that last.)

142
Rants and Stuff / Ah, chocolate...
« on: August 13, 2004, 12:53:41 PM »
So my roommate got me a $10 gift certificate to the Lindt store down the street from where I work. Man, that is just too much chocolate to have on hand. I can't keep away from it. Add that to the cheesecake from when my coworkers took me out to lunch for my birthday, the "birthday pie" we had as a decoy before the surprise party, the birthday cake at the party, and sundry leftovers, and I think I've gained 5 pounds since my birthday.

But it tastes so good!

I've ridden my bike to work 4 out of 5 days this week, though. Would have ridden today, too, but it's been raining--tail end of Bonnie, I think? I think I need to go for a long run tonight and work it off! I was making such progress at getting in shape, and then the birthday happens.  :P

Oh well. It was an enjoyable way to gain 5 pounds.

143
Movies and TV / The Village--spoilers/no spoilers, who knows?
« on: August 10, 2004, 05:12:16 PM »
The thing about this movie is, it was already done in a children's book 9 years ago. I didn't read the spoiler threads in various places because I hadn't seen the movie and didn't want to have a Shymalan spoiler, but now that I've read this article, it sounds to me like it's not Shymalan's twist at all. I still want to see the movie, however. The book in reference, Running Out of Time by Margaret Peterson Haddix, is a great book--published in 1995.

http://money.cnn.com/2004/08/10/news/newsmakers/village.reut/index.htm

144
Everything Else / Pics of my trip home
« on: August 06, 2004, 02:21:34 AM »
Or, more to the point, pictures of my nephews. You'll have to put up with more pictures of my family than you'd probably care to see, but it's all in the same slide show, and you have to see how cute my new nephew is and how great his big brother is.

Here they are!

145
Books / Bad writing, bad editing
« on: August 01, 2004, 05:00:19 PM »
So I'm reading a Forgotten Realms novel to review, and it's just so badly written. And edited. Seems that the guy that wrote this novel, Ed Greenwood, is the guy the came up with Forgotten Realms? Correct me if I'm wrong. So there might be a bit of celebrity-writer editing going on here, the hands-off approach.

But it's so bad it's practically comical. Take the following paragraph, for example. This could have won the recent "It was a dark and stormy night" award (Bram somebody? forget who the guy is they named it after).

Quote

It came down like a -- well, like a toppling suit of armor that had been badly wired together and home to nests of mice for some seasons and therefore free to come apart and missily spew its contents in a bouncing, clanging chaos that carried the franticallly cursing merchant down the last flight of stairs, windmilling his arms for balance and frightening the sleepy door-steward (who'd snatched down a vicious battleaxe to defend himself and found it so heavy that he'd almost fallen over) hastily aside.


Yes, that paragraph was all one sentence.

146
Books / Worldbuilding: being faithful to the reader
« on: July 15, 2004, 09:31:10 PM »
So I'm reading along in this book, and it's normal medieval-era-style fantasy. The characters are traveling singers, going from town to town in a horse-pulled cart, and they use fire for heat, etc. Halfway through some bad guys come along, and they use swords. So I'm reading along, and come to the final scene, and out of NOWHERE, the bad guys start shooting. Bullets.

What? Where in the world did they get GUNS?

I mean, it's one thing if the author sets up a world in which, though you've got mainly medieval-ness going on, the gun has been invented. But she hadn't. What's up with that? And the final scene hinged upon the gunfire. Couldn't they have used arrows?

147
Books / Worldcon participants
« on: July 12, 2004, 04:32:44 PM »
So I was looking at who would be presenting at Worldcon, and I see Tamora Pierce, of the Alanna series fame, will be presenting. I'm not sure who all I'll recognize will be there, as the list is really long and I've just been glancing. Interesting, though.

148
Writing Group / DAW looking for SF/F
« on: July 08, 2004, 09:06:46 PM »
I was browsing on the Penguin Putnam site and found this:

Quote
DAW Books is currently accepting manuscripts in the genre of Science Fiction/Fantasy. Please refer to DAW's Submission Guidelines for more information.


They still take unsolicited manuscripts. Just thought I'd throw that out there for anyone who might want the info.

149
Table-Top Games / Best place to buy a game online
« on: June 27, 2004, 06:35:37 PM »
So I think I like Settlers well enough to buy it. In fact, I want to buy it this week because I got a raise and promotion at work, and to celebrate, I'm inviting a few friends over to play Settlers. So, what would be the best place to get it? Through a link on amazon, I found Newspiel.com had it for $26, which is the cheapest I've seen so far. I'm wary of buying online from a site I'm unfamiliar with, though, but I don't want to spend 2 hours on public transportation to go find the game, so I figure what I would pay in higher retail prices, I'll just pay in shipping instead.

Any recommendations?

150
Role-Playing Games / GURPS
« on: June 21, 2004, 11:42:21 PM »
I don't actually know if it goes under here or another games category, because I'm that games-ignorant, but I'm proofreading Jeffe's article right now and I'm not sure about the term. Does GURPS stand for something? If not, is it a game title, Gurps? Just want to know for consistency's sake. (That is, is it "GURPS," where each letter stands for a word, or is it "Gurps," a word?)

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