100 DAYS PROJECT: Maybe…

July 29th, 2009 by susan


…I’m not completely dead in the water. Guess I’m down below max req for Lunar but won’t be moved until they check again.

In the meantime, with no idea what’s causing the problem still I’ll limp along waiting for approval. Also taking out all enlargements of maps and and I’m not posting any more hypertexts until I figure out a few more things. I do have #67 Revenge of the Kilobytes and #68 An Enth of a Degree Out of Whack and am working on #69 just to keep up with the exercise and the idea of deadlines works well.

We’ll see what happens from here. I’m afraid that even my administration visits to WordPress are using up CPUs.

BLOGGING & 100 DAYS PROJECT: Can’t Get There From Here

July 28th, 2009 by susan


Well, I’ve stripped down to the minimum here and on Spinning, and Lunar still claims I’m exceeding resources and there’s nothing else I can do. The php script they’re saying thats using too high an average is what loads the opening page. Here, I’ve eliminated the K2 theme and gone to default, cut back to 10 posts displayed, and eliminated (or am about to) the “Click to Enlarge” for the maps.

Don’t know what else I can do, but I won’t be posting any more on the 100 Days Project and may be off the air anyway.

BLOGGING: Server Issues & Commenting

July 27th, 2009 by susan


Because Lunar has threatened to kick me off for over-utilizing resources I’m doing everything I can to adhere to their instructions, though I can’t understand how these two weblogs are hogging resources (I suspect rather that the server is under-resourced).

Since the problem according to them seems to be in my main index.php script, all I can do is whatever they suggest which has been updating WordPress, Askimet, knocking out plug-ins while adding two at their suggestion for cache and commenting captcha to keep out the bots.

It’s this latest that I sincerely apologize for instituting but I’ve picked a 5-starred simple one.  You have to add two numbers together and type in the answer.  Sort of strange because even a 50 year-old adding machine can do this, but hey, hopefully, so can you.I just hate that it kills the spontaneity of commenting, and while I have only two dedicated commenters here that I appreciate tremendously, it will indeed discourage anyone else who thought they might one day give it a go.

The only other thing I can do is eliminate the “click here to enlarge map” which is a great feature for this 100 Day Project, but which may have to go as well.

Again, I apologize and while I’ve just renewed with Lunar this month, I may be demanding my annual fee back and go shopping for a more qualified, heartier server.

100 DAYS PROJECT: #66

July 26th, 2009 by susan


Hiding Secrets

66hidingsecretsWhat’s been taking so long with these stories is a general dissatisfaction with my writing lately. The stories need to sparkle just as much as I can make them and that usually takes me days, weeks, months of editing even on short stories.

The time here is spent on the development into the hypertext format. While I’m getting a little better and faster at having all the tools handy and ready as I write the first draft, there’s still plenty of going back and rereading, rewriting. Today I believe I deleted more words than are contained in the final form. And this still for me is not the final version.

In exploring the hypertext aspect I’ve had all different approaches; different endings, all leading to the same ending, carrying the reader through almost the entire story but in different sequences, and depending on the reader to read the story several times to discover all its meanings by leading him out.

It’s ruining my posture, my frame business, my garden, my social life. But it’s something I have to see through to its logical end.

100 DAYS PROJECT: #65

July 26th, 2009 by susan


Voices in Your Head

65voicesinyourheadThis one took a long time coming and I even had to kill off a character since she was taking too much of the story for herself and it wasn’t about her at all. What prompted this story from Steve’s was a phone call out of the blue. While he brilliantly tied the past to the present with a connection between the callers, I ended up (as usual) with a wrong number.

The mapping structure is a wayward path of several similar stories of the same central character that all lead to the same ending. But the ending will be interpreted by the reader based upon what he has read. I’ve tried to link semantically as much as possible within the interweaving of the storyspace  (that’s not the Storyspace, since I’m using Tinderbox throughout this project). There’s just so very much you can do with hypertext; different endings, different middles, that the possibilties far outweigh the burden of planning even as one strives for concise story and brevity of narrative–which is likely why, after reading Steve’s entry on this topic, I ground to a halt in intimidation and fear.

100 DAYS PROJECT: #64

July 25th, 2009 by susan


Annalee and Jacob

64annaleeIn this piece I’ve let the story take whatever turn it desired and entertained all possibilities that offered themselves up. In other words, the author was left just as blind as the reader as to choice.

While there are several points where the story of Annalee and Jacob can recover and change from the path that was chosen, once we get down to the end the result of their connection is completely random. It might make sense to make a story more planned out and predictable, but here there are six different endings of many more different stories.

Sort of like real life.

100 DAYS PROJECT: #63

July 24th, 2009 by susan


When The Wind Blows

63whenthewindblowsI’m having problems with my server so this may be the last of the series. This story started out as a phrase a few weeks ago and I saved it for a better time to develop. When it appeared to tie in with Steve’s daily story I set it up and went to work.

But it didn’t go where I’d expected. It was to be a humorous piece about cloning–what else would you expect when someone’s nose blows off and lands on your forehead? But it soon became a politically charged statement and it dragged out all day.

Finally able to go back and change track to a certain degree, but there’s little humor unless you delight in the macabre.

100 DAYS PROJECT: #62

July 22nd, 2009 by susan


The Story

62thestorySteve’s entire story was like 33 words. Meanwhile, there was a discussion going on at Mary Ellen’s Facebook that has been an ongoing thing since we’ve met, I think, about readerly/writerly, authorly/readerly, and as Mary Ellen appears to be following my own dragmarks in accepting the concept of Barthes, I thought I might use Steve’s story as an example to be interpreted in a classroom discussion.

The linking attempts to cover certain points of the story that are certainly open to interpretation, though only Steve Ersinghaus as the author may know what prompted the story and what meaning he gave to it. And as he taught me, we shouldn’t care about that at all.

100 DAYS PROJECT: #61

July 21st, 2009 by susan


A Compendium of Sixteen Four-Sentence Stories

61theendIn the name of brevity, I’ve tried to follow the concept of short, short story and yet with the hypertext possibilities I expanded the stories into sixteen. While none are earth-shattering story they are dramatic and complete.

As the map shows, all stories start with the same sentence, then branch from there, each writing space a sentence that takes the story into a slightly different direction. The initial branching from the first sentence to the second represents a major difference in story, characters, etc., the first sentence having established two things: narrative pov and setting. Then, in pyramid fashion, the story is refined by its plot and finally, by the fourth sentence, its ending.

While I could see this as a more elaborate concept, with some of the stories connecting to the endings of others to form a huge network of changing stories, I preferred to stop here to keep them all under 100 words each (most run about 85) and in just four sentences exactly.

100 DAYS PROJECT: #60

July 20th, 2009 by susan


On The Question of Ascension

60theascension
When I read Steve’s story the image I got was of Remedios the Beauty, a lovelier part of the family in Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s 100 Years of Solitude. I still see the women folding sheets in the breezes of the day when Remedios ascends into the sky.

So I took those ideas in this story and put it in the first person narrator telling about something that was going on when he was a child that affected his life in ways we can only grab a glimpse.

The mapping appears disorderly–like my early hypertexts–and yet I believe because the story is for the most part non linear there is some fun in hopping about to different thoughts and perspectives with the narrator.