Blog Posts in "podcasts"

"Playing for Keeps" launches on November 1st

Posted at 18:03:31 on Sat, October 27th 2007 by graham
in: mur lafferty podcasts

Playing for Keeps iconMur Lafferty, podcasting goddess, has created a site for her new free podcasted novel Playing For Keeps, the first instalment of which is set to go live on November 1st.

Based on the quality of her previous work it's sure to be a blinder, so I suggest that you all go and subscribe and wait, breath baited, for pearls of auditory goodness to rain from your speakers. 

Farewell to Geek Fu

Posted at 18:59:17 on Mon, June 25th 2007 by graham
in: geek fu action grip i should be writing mur lafferty news podcasts

Mur Lafferty, writer, podcaster and tiara-wearing queen of wannabe writers is putting Geek Fu Action Grip on indefinite hiatus for reasons which I have no business repeating here (go there, use ears, understand).

I first came across Mur and her work when, Googling for writing resources, I found I Should Be Writing. I subscribed to Geek Fu some time after that. Mur's great gift is in making one feel like an equal, no matter the subject matter. Geek Fu will be missed, though I'm glad that ISBW will continue since it gives me a great deal of motivation (and also acts as an archive of those bits of advice that I need to have repeated to me constantly).

For more of Mur's work, such as the highly acclaimed Heaven and Hell podiobooks and their successor, Earth, take a look at geekfuactiongrip.com and ishouldbewriting.com.

Pointedly pointless posts sometimes have a point, you know

Posted at 22:50:00 on Mon, June 05th 2006 by graham
in: podcasts writing

I was going to write a post about what I hate about professional sports. But when I got most of the way through it I realised that I had written a self-defeating argument so I'll just have to save it for later when I can think up something coherent to say.

I'm very, very tired right now, having not slept well for several nights. Tonight's trip to the gym seems to have worked wonders, though. Instead of feeling mentally tired but physically wide awake I'm now in a position where everything is just about hanging on to consciousness.

But I've been very productive for a tired man. Besides work on Das Projekt I've managed to do some (though not a whole lot) of editing, and best of all I've started on a new story, the first in some time, plucked from the pages of my fast-filling ideas notebook.

But the point of this otherwise pointless post is this: I still have a libsyn account and figured that I might as well use it. If I were to podcast some of my shorter fiction, would you good, kind people want to listen to it?

And I genuinely want to know the answer, by the way. Comments or emails (binnsblog at googlemail dot com) are welcome. Let me know.

Bearded and Broke

Posted at 22:21:00 on Mon, April 03rd 2006 by graham
in: photography podcasts writing

The BeardieYou can tell I'm working hard when my procrastination involves, variously, installing Fedora Core 5 on a VMWare virtual machine, just for the sake of having a play, taking photos of my currently bearded self and listening to the umpteen editions of the Celtic Music News Podcast that have slowly accumulated in my CastPodder downloads folder like a drift of mp3-compressed snowflakes.

As you can see from the sidebar the work-in-progress is going not-too badly. My work rate has been decreased a little by the fact that it's currently all handwritten. The lack of a laptop hasn't impacted on me over-much other than to make me learn to write a little more readably on my spiral-bound pads, but it has slowed me down a bit because I can't manage more than three or four sides of A4 (about 1,000 words) a time without getting cramp. I had thought that the story was only going to be about 5,000 words long, but at the moment it's looking like it's going to be nearer the 7,000 mark. As long as it works that's fine with me. Most of the work I've done so far has been done in Lancaster's Caffé Nero, which has made it a somewhat expensive 4,000 words as words go. There's no better place to write than in cafés. It's easy to get lost in the susurrus and there's nothing to distract you, but it is prohibitively costly to do it for any length of time. I don't know how Rowling managed to afford to write Harry Potter in cafés, though I suppose she wasn't going into one where a single cup of coffee costs you a quarter of the money you'd usually spend on lunch in a week. Perhaps I should find a slightly cheaper drink to drink whilst I'm writing (Starbucks, though we don't have one in Lancaster, do serve ridiculously cheap but ludicrously big cups of tea). Maybe I need to find a cheaper place to write, too.

I'm wondering how to get back round to podcasting again. I still have the libsyn account, which seems a bit silly if I'm not producing anything. I'm loathe to ask whether anyone wants me to start podcasting again, partly because you can count the readers of this blog without ripping off anyone else's limbs, and partly because of the stubborn person in my head saying 'It's not up to them, it's up to you, fool.' At the moment I'm thinking of restarting the podcast when I start the hard copy edits on the novel, and podcasting that experience. We shall see.

Voices

Posted at 13:44:00 on Wed, March 01st 2006 by graham
in: podcasts writing writing ideas

Enjoying the hiatus from writing, but itching to get back to it. Tonight I'll be getting started on - or rather getting to the middle on - a short story that I've been scribbling away at during downtime (usually when waiting to pick Sarah up or at spare moments during the day) for the last couple of weeks. I think I know pretty much all of the story at this point; it's more of a vignette than a full blown story and should be a couple of thousand words at most, and hopefully it won't take more than a couple of days to finish. After that, well, the world's my mollusc. I've got more ideas than you could shake a goat at, so I'm looking forward to having some fun. I'll probably be podcasting some of the shorter stories too, depending on how they turn out, so watch this space for news.

In the meantime, here's something to keep you entertained. Mur Lafferty of I Should Be Writing and Geek Fu Action Grip has edited Voices: New Media Fiction, a podiobook anthology of stories, which is now online at Podiobooks.com. From the blurb:

Voices: New Media Fiction brings together the pioneer short fiction podcasters. Experimenting from putting short-short fiction to novellas over their podcasts, these writers were the first to test the new medium for storytelling. Some wrote specifically for podcasts, some read previously published fiction, and some read entirely new stories. Some listeners asked if they could get just the stories in audio form, and that request brought about this podiobook. Cory Doctorow tells us a story about a post-apocalyptic government run by sysadmins and James Patrick Kelly narrates a story of a strange reconciliation. We've collected 18 stories for you, the first short fiction to go out over podcast, and look forward to bringing you more.

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About

Graham Binns is a writer, photographer, musician and software developer from Lancaster, England, with far too much hair, a penchant for odd t-shirts and a magnificent hat. He has been making things up for as long as he can remember and has been making code work for long enough to make a living from it.

He has written one novel, which is in the process of composting, and is working remembering how to write before embarking on a second. In the meantime, he photographs things, since it's easier not to have to make the world up in his head all of the time.

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