Tuesday

I'm an American.

It may come as a surprise to some people that I hold somewhat conservative views. I was not a supporter of the man taking the Oath of Office today.

I'm happy that we've got a peaceful transition of power. I'm grateful for a process that allows me to have a say in who will and who will not be governing. I can appreciate the history involved in electing Barak Obama as the President of the United States. I remember the atmosphere the day after the '04 election, and walking around my law school campus was like I was visiting a funeral.

That's not going to be me.

I wish the new President all the best. I hope he'll govern well, and I'll support him as my President. My congratulations to him and to all his supporters. I may not agree with all of his policies. In fact, I may agree with darn few of them. But in those places, he'll have my support.

Thursday

Reading, Writing, and the Education Necessary to do both.

blog readability test Looking at another blog earlier today, I saw that they had a handy badge explaining that you would need a college degree, and possibly some post-grad work to understand their blog.

Being one who's curious about things like readability and reading levels and whatnot, I immediately plugged in the address to the typepad version of this blog and got the result you see here to the left. Now, initially it took me back a little bit. I mean, I've got a bachelor's degree. I've got a Juris Doctor, for crying out loud. I'm supposed to be writing in impenetrable legalese. You should need a post-grad AND Sanskrit AND Benjamin Franklin's magic bifocals from National Treasure to be able to read this blog. Right? Right?

Well, maybe not so much.

I got something of a similar result when I wrote my manuscript. If I pull up that handy dandy Google Doc right now, there's a tool that evaluates the "readability" of the text, which I imagine is based on my vocabulary, length of sentences, number of sentences per paragraph, etc. Looking at "Eyes of the Marauder" (Yes, it's a corny working title.), I get the following results:

ReadabilitySelectionDocument
Average sentences per paragraph: - 3.84
Average words per sentence: - 9.54
Average characters per word: - 4.47
Average words per page: - 974.66
Flesch Reading Ease: [?] - 83.68
Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: [?] - 4.00
Automated Readability Index: [?] - 4.00

Wow. That sure is a lot of numbers. What does this really mean? Well, I note that the Grade Level of my manuscript is Grade 4. Queso is in Grade 4. So, I should be able to drop my printed manuscript in her lap, tell her to go for it, and she can do her 20 minutes of reading per night. Or I can stick her in front of my blog and do the same thing, though reporting either of those to her teacher might be taken as a sign of narcissism on my part. Or just plain crazy.

My personal feeling is that it takes real skill to be able to describe complex issues in such a way that a ten-year-old can understand it. Parents, you know what I'm talking about, right? Authors, what's your take? Is the sign of a good writer the way they use the four-syllable words or are the best authors the ones who write simply? Or (as is so often the case), am I just totally off base?

Finished

My first draft of my first novel is done.

As always, it's posted up at Google Docs. Here's the link.

Or, if you prefer, here's a link to a PDF of the first draft. I still need to tweak the formatting, and in a few weeks, I'll probably start a second draft, but I just wanted to put this up as quick as I could.

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