General

Stephen Fry is my New Language Hero

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My use of language has changed considerably over the last year, at least in my own mind. I don't know that anyone else would notice. I've been reading a lot of grammar books, listening to grammar podcasts (Grammar Girl is my hero!) but of everything I've run across, this has to be the most fantastically amazing.

I've been going to all these lengths to learn the "proper" way to phrase things instead of relying on a lifetime's worth of intuitive understanding, as I've always done before. And yet I've long been a champion of the cry that "language is evolving!" when confronted by people who can't stand alterations to English that seem too drastic, like the dreaded nouning of a verb.

It feels like a bit of a contradiction sometimes, though I have been finding as I study more and more what the "correct" way is supposed to be, the more I enjoy it when I see people using language creatively. If you embrace the evolution of language and are able to see past the stuffy rigid bounds of what things should be, I salute you. Watch that video and enjoy!

If you can't let go of the past, of the way it should be, then I'm not sure what to say, other than I'm deeply sorry you feel that way.

Mildly Exciting Tales of Astonishment

Jonathan Strickland knows a thing or two about how stuff works, so when he turns his knowledgeable eye toward how mundane, behind-the-scenes matters work in fiction, I pay attention. That's exactly what he has in mind with META, or Mildly Exciting Tales of Astonishment.

He wants to peel back the veil that usually lies between us and and the mundane reality of superheroes' lives. How do you interview to become a henchman? How do super-moms find affordable daycare? What sort of superpower do you need to easily master the complexities of branding?

Strickland's META Kickstarter project aims at answering these questions and more in 16 web-series episodes, but there's a problem; he's only got 16 hours to go, as of the time of this writing. If your mind is burning to know why it's a bad idea to build your secret lair under the subway system, I urge you to check out the Kickstarter, watch the video below, and help make his dream a reality!

Fighting Fantasy Falls Upon the Mobile World

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Remember the old-school Fighting Fantasy games? They were a lot like Choose Your Own Adventure books with a dash of tabletop RPG mechanics thrown in to make things more interesting for older readers.​

If you said no, then you can get a taste for that classic genre on your favorite mobile device. The guys at Tin Man Games, makers of Gamebook Adventures, have teamed up with Fighting Fantasy to bring legendary FF master Ian Livingstone's Blood of the Zombies ​to iOS and Android.

​I love seeing this sort of project flourish, especially with the backing of such legendary figures in the history of printed game books. As a long-time fan of game books and of computerized interactive fiction, it's great to see the genre entering such a revival in the mobile space. I've long thought that game books were perfect for the Kindle, and while they seem to be doing a lot better on the iPad, their adoption on the tablet side does mean they benefit from fantastic multimedia presentations that (for now at least) the Kindle simply couldn't provide.

Check out the HD gameplay trailer for more if you're not sure you get the concept of a book that's a game that's a book, and let me know what you think!​