[Gossamer's Scrapbook] The Ethereal Canyon I

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[Gossamer's Scrapbook] The Ethereal Canyon

Postby Panna Cotta on April 6th, 2011, 3:49 am

Awww look at the puppy all grown up!!! I can imagine him chewing on more furniture! J/k. The greenhouse, what it is so far, already looks great. I don't have experience in growing anything but roses... and I don't think I'll be growing any plants in the backyard anytime soon.


Mojo looks very cuddly. *steals dog*
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[Gossamer's Scrapbook] The Ethereal Canyon

Postby Gossamer on April 15th, 2011, 4:05 pm

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Patience


My patience with chat has stretched extremely thin. I'm just giving everyone a heads up. If you are seen being a toddler in chat, breaking a chat rule, bringing up some taboo topic like making a rape joke, or just annoying the heck out of the rest of us, you will be dismissed from chat automatically for a month regardless of who you are or how 'cool' you like to think you are. We need a break. If I get any complaints in the HD or PMs about your activity in chat, you will be dismissed for a month. If I even remotely think you're being annoying and catch wind of it in any regard, you'll be dismissed. We need chat to clean up. Consider this your warning.
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[Gossamer's Scrapbook] The Ethereal Canyon

Postby Cayenne on April 16th, 2011, 12:50 am

Amen to that, sister.
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[Gossamer's Scrapbook] The Ethereal Canyon

Postby Gossamer on April 19th, 2011, 3:58 pm

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Boiling Points
I have so many of them these days!



  • Stop making Dire animals. Seriously. Just make normal kelvics. I'm probably never giving anyone permission for another Dire as long as I'm a Founder. I might, but it will have to be exceptional with a killer history.
  • Stop not overgiving. Seriously magic users. Go insane once in a while.
  • Stop making fart jokes in chat. Are you five? Seriously? I didn't know five year olds could type, but evidently they can.
  • Stop picking on Mike's age in a crude way. If your going to harsh Mike's mellow, do it with some sophistication and level of expertise in the clever department.
  • Stop not writing out beautiful combat scenes. If I see one more head cut off with a sword without long flowing beautiful text surrounding it, I'm going to go ballistic.
  • Stop pulling your punches just to spare feelings when someone's being a twit. Tell them they are being a twit, give them an example of why you think this is so, and move on.
  • Stop making up locations that don't exist unless you are a Founder, DS, AS or have permission from one of the aforementioned. This really annoys me.
  • Stop using NPCs you haven't gotten permission to use via the Help Desk or a storyteller. You actually cannot run any NPCs at all unless you are doing a casual interaction (barmaid, bartender, guy on the street who's an average joe) unless you've ran that NPC through the help desk and you have control of it and a SS thread to back it up. This includes local militia and watch or guards. The Syliran Knights didn't kill your baby. They don't do things like that.
  • Stop being a badass if you don't have the character sheet to back it up. Yes, I'm pointing a finger directly at all you assassins, thieves, mercenaries, and meat shields that don't even have competent skill levels in weapons and combat.
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[Gossamer's Scrapbook] The Ethereal Canyon

Postby Tuloth Kaervek on April 19th, 2011, 6:58 pm

Boiling Points. Outstanding!!!

I move that your private rant should be moved to the Rules section.
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[Gossamer's Scrapbook] The Ethereal Canyon

Postby Gossamer on April 20th, 2011, 6:36 pm

Just a quick heads up. I might not be around much during the day the next couple of days. My boss changed my schedule and I'm going in very early. Plus I'm managing some issues with Cloud's chronic illness so hes going into the vet which takes up more time.
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[Gossamer's Scrapbook] The Ethereal Canyon

Postby Gossamer on April 24th, 2011, 7:29 pm

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A Few Thoughts


I've had so much going on lately, there's tons of things I can blog about. It's hard really to pick and choose. Normally I need to blog about what I have weighing on my chest. I'm not so tightly bound at the moment though so nothing really pops as a priority.

I guess I should start with my job. I work a lot. To those of you that don't work or have low intensity jobs, this probably doesn't mean much. However, I generally work insane hours and my job mandates six days a week. Yes. That means one day off only, and that day off is sometimes spent sleeping, recovering, trying your best to catch up with life (like doing the dishes, doing laundry, etc). There's been a coup at work though, and a whole bunch of us stepped up and talked to the management about the hours. As of the first of the month we are going back to a five day work week with far more manageable hours and getting some extra drivers. This should work just fine for us. It should give us our lives back throughout the summer. It will get busy again a few months before Christmas, but we should have a manageable time between times. I worked yesterday and I will definitely work next weekend until the new schedule comes into effect. That means "I won't be around as often as I'd like. But when I'm back, be warned, I will be back full force. This takes a huge weight off my chest, and should be enough to get me moderating again hot and heavily like I used to in the old days on other sites.

Now... onto other things.

I want to talk about teens on the site. I like teens, but in general on the internet they are a huge pain in the butt. Why? They take special consideration and no matter how mature they come across, they are still underage for a ton of things. Mizahar is based in the US and subject because of that to US laws. We are technically a mature site so if you out yourself with your age, you'd better not be involved in any sort of threads that can considered racy. This means no sex, no drug abuse, no graphic stuff that can get us in trouble. Don't do it. I'm not your parent, nor am I willing to babysit, but if I see it, I'm going to say something (or someone's going to say something to me) and I will ask you to stop or edit. If you are knowingly threading with a teen or a child, please keep this in mind and don't put them in situations that put them at risk or us at risk. They are impressionable, but as a society subjected to and teethed on violence, you'd think this would be okay, but truthfully it's not. So, if your a teen consider yourself warned. I don't care how 'mature' you are or think you are (because you all think you're super special and mature)... you are still a child/teen and that's how you rate. Sorry. And don't subject people who have to read these threads to grade them to your teen ideals of perfect coitus even if its not graphic or is just suggested. I'll just hear about it (believe me people talk) and have to comfort them... and my usual response is EWH! Followed, of course, by a few more ewhs then hysterical laughter generally at the writer's expense.

Which leads me to a strangely unrelated topic.

If you are dating someone on the internet, we don't need to hear about it. Seriously. Way too much time in chat is wasted hearing about these things. If you live in Tibet and they live in Antarctica and have not even met your SO for real face to face, this is not dating. Ask anyone. They will tell you so. This is making plans, dreaming, and having pretend relations. Real dating is holding hands, talking hours in person, sharing first kisses, meeting the folks, spending time together face to face. I don't care who you are, what the circumstances are, etc... if you set yourself up into this sort of relationship, you are a FOOL. I can't tell you how big of one, but you know who can? Father Time. Because his wheels will turn and you'll look backwards, and shake your head sadly and realize what sort of ninny you are. Now, if you start flying over to Antarctica to visit your 'boyfriend' and he flies over to Tibet to visit you, this has moved into the arena of a real relationship and then please feel free to talk about it until your blue in the face.

I just needed to say that. Some of you folks are way too silly for your own good. I've noticed a trend too. It's the same folks that are on the site 24/7 or in chat all their waking hours. Go get a life, for gods sake, rather than lurk on the internet like a zombie. If I'm here a lot, its because I want to be and I helped create the site and am needed to run it. You are not. Not unless your name has a blue or teal coloring to it. Then, by all means lurk. And if your a lurker and good at this rp thing, we'll definitely eventually turn your name teal. So that part works out. :)

What did I want to say as well?

Oh, lets end on a positive note. There's been some really fabulous new players lately. Some of them have even complained in chat recently of taking too long to make their PCs. This is not possible. The best PCs are always being 'fiddled with' in terms of their CS's and their histories and their actions. Motivations evolve. Hopes and dreams change. Read all the lore you can. And to those of you who are complaining that you are spending too much time, I just smile and want to offer you hugs. You are doing fabulous and are going to fit in incredibly well here.

On positive notes, Cloudly also seems to be feeling better. Hopefully his feline liver issues will remain calmed down.
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[Gossamer's Scrapbook] The Ethereal Canyon

Postby Gossamer on April 25th, 2011, 4:28 am

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Rejections - They Are Common!


Gillar sent me this list. I loved it. I thought I would repost it for you. It's title was 15 books that got rejected before they ever became a success.



  1. The War of the Worlds by H.G. Wells (1897)
    This alien invasion classic was rejected by publishers before it was serialized in Pearson's Magazine in 1897. One publisher's rejection letter described the book as "An endless nightmare. I do not believe it would 'take'...I think the verdict would be 'Oh, don't read that horrid book.'" Also, Wells' The Time Machine was rejected by one publisher with the note that it was "not interesting enough for the general reader and not thorough enough for the scientific reader."

  2. Animal Farm by George Orwell (1945)
    This rejection story's got everything: a crusader against censorship being censored, a Soviet spy, and famous poet T.S. Elliot. When Orwell first shopped the book around in 1944, everyone viewed it as excessively critical of the USSR, while the USSR was helping Britain defeat Nazi Germany. Four publishers rejected Animal Farm, including Orwell's regular publisher. Another publisher accepted the novel, but then rejected it at the request of Peter Smollett, an official working in the British Ministry of Information. Smollett was later revealed as a Soviet spy. Faber and Faber also rejected the book, with T.S. Eliot penning the letter himself. Refusing the book for being "generally Trotskyite," he added, "We have no conviction that this is the right point of view from which to criticise the political situation at the current time." In fact, the book would not be published until WWII was over.
    After finding a publisher, Orwell wrote a preface to Animal Farm, "Freedom of the Press," about self-censorship during the war. In it he stated that, "Anyone who challenges the prevailing orthodoxy finds himself silenced with surprising effectiveness." The preface was not published. Source: Taylor, David John (2003). Orwell: The Life. H. Holt. p. 197. (Animal Farm cover by Shepard Fairey.)

  3. Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury (1953)
    The short story version, and even the original novel, had little trouble getting published. But back in the early 1950s, if you wanted eyeballs on your words or to get readers interested in your book you got it serialized. Not to mention that serialization rights sales meant you got paid again (sometimes more) for the same book. But nobody was willing to serialize Fahrenheit 451. Except Hugh Hefner. When no one else would serialize it, Fahrenheit 451 was published in Playboy magazine. Hefner and Bradbury recently appeared on stage together to discuss the history of this novel (video here) and Hefner explained that he'd just started Playboy in late 1953, and Bradbury's novel was already out in book form, but nobody had serialized it. "You have to realize what the 1950s were like. A story about book-burning in the future seemed so perfect for its time, and so perfect for the magazine that I was planning on publishing, that all I could do was contact Mr. Bradbury," says Hef. The novel appeared in the third, fourth and fifth issues of the magazine. Adds Bradbury in this other video, "So all of you young men who have stacks of Playboy under your bed, I put them there!"

  4. The Once and Future King by T. H. White (1958)
    White finished his masterpiece about King Arthur in 1941, only to have it rejected because the final section was considered too pacifist — and therefore against the British war effort. Various sections appeared in print thereafter, like The Sword In The Stone. White waited out the war and the publishers, and the book was finally published in its complete form in 1958. Source: Clute, John, and John Grant. The Encyclopedia of Fantasy. New York: St. Martin's Griffin, 1999. Pg 1010.

  5. A Wrinkle In Time by Madeleine L'Engle (1962)
    This classic children's novel of time travel was rejected 26 times by publishers. Not only did it win the Newberry Award, it helped lure in a new generation of science fiction lovers (especially girls). And it sold some eight million copies.

  6. Dune by Frank Herbert (1966)
    Every book publisher — 23 of them — rejected Herbert's masterpiece before it was accepted, for almost no money, by Chilton, a small Philadelphia publisher of business magazines and automotive manuals. Writes Dune's friend Frederik Pohl:
    No book publisher was interested in acquiring the hardcover rights to this rapidly expanding mass of manuscript, however, until an editor at the quite small publishing house of Chilton Books managed to stitch the several existing stories into a single huge novel. He called it Dune, and when he published the result, it became a runaway bestseller, said to be the most profitable sf book ever written.
    Dune won the Hugo Award and the first ever Nebula Award. And it has gone on to sell some 40 million copies. (Dune cover by Tony Easley)

  7. Nova by Samuel R. Delany (1968)
    John W. Campbell rejected the serialization rights to Nova, Delany's ninth book. Delany had already won his first Nebula Award, and was nominated for two more that year. Campbell's reason for rejecting Nova? American readers weren't ready to read science-fiction with a black main character. And yet American readers turned Nova into a bestseller. It was also nominated for the Hugo. Delany writes about this rejection, as well as other race-related experiences in the science-fiction world in this fantastic essay.

  8. The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin (1969)
    Yes, this book won both the Nebula and the Hugo, but at least one editor didn't think it was worth publishing. Le Guin has the letter up on her website. The highlight?
    The book is so endlessly complicated by details of reference and information, the interim legends become so much of a nuisance despite their relevance, that the very action of the story seems to be to become hopelessly bogged down and the book, eventually, unreadable. The whole is so dry and airless, so lacking in pace, that whatever drama and excitement the novel might have had is entirely dissipated by what does seem, a great deal of the time, to be extraneous material. My thanks nonetheless for having thought of us. The manuscript of The Left Hand of Darkness is returned herewith.


  9. The Forever War by Joe Haldeman (1974)
    The Forever War wasn't just a best seller — it also won both the Hugo and the Nebula. And 18 publishers regret that they turned it down. Writes Haldeman in the foreword to one edition:

    It was rejected by eighteen publishers before St. Martin's Press decided to take a chance on it. "Pretty good book," was the usual reaction, "but nobody wants to read a science fiction novel about Vietnam."
    The book wasn't just rejected by book publishers, though — John W. Campbell rejected serializing the novel for Analog, because it had women fighting alongside men. His successor, Ben Bova, had no such qualms and agreed to serialize the book — but wouldn't publish the middle section, "You Can Never Go Back," because it was too grim. (That middle section first appeared in print, in a new edition of the book in 1991.)

  10. Carrie by Stephen King (1974)
    Stephen King's first published novel sold four million copies in paperback. And garnered 30 rejections from publishers. One of them wrote, "'We are not interested in science fiction which deals with negative utopias. They do not sell." Tired of rejection slips, King reportedly threw the manuscript into the garbage — but his wife fished it out again, and he decided to try one more time.


  11. The Female Man by Joanna Russ (1975)
    Russ wrote her second novel in 1970, but it took five years to find a publisher. Publishers rejected this classic of New Wave science fiction, writing things like: "We've already published our feminist novel this year, so we don't want another," and "I'm sick and tired of these kinds of women's novels that are just one long whiny complaint." Source: Larry McCaffery, ed., Across the Wounded Galaxies, (Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1990), p. 194-195.

  12. Kindred by Octavia Butler (1979)
    Butler writes that she had "years of rejection slips" before her first novel saw print. According to her obituary in the Seattle Post Intelligencer:
    Kindred was repeatedly rejected by publishers, many of whom could not understand how a science fiction novel could be set on a plantation in the antebellum South. Butler stuck to her social justice vision - "I think people really need to think what it's like to have all of society arrayed against you" - and finally found a publisher who paid her a $5,000 advance for Kindred.
    Kindred became the most popular book by the MacArthur Genius award winner.

  13. Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone by J.K. Rowling (1997)
    The number bandied around the internet is that 12 major publishers rejected the first Harry Potter book, before someone was willing to take a chance. Rowling recently told Oprah Winfrey, My agent knows better than I do... It was a lot of people. A lot of people just sent it back, virtually by return post. It was like a boomerang. I did really believe in it. I just though, This is a good story.... For some reason, I can even remember being quite pleased with the rejection letters. "F. Scott Fitzgerald got these. It's all part of being a writer!"
    One publisher held onto it for six months before finally rejecting it — and then when Bloomsbury decided to take it on, this other publisher suddenly decided they wanted it too. But Rowling decided that she should go with the publisher that wanted the book right away, rather than the one that kept her waiting and then turned her down. According to the BBC, the entire series has sold more than 400 million books worldwide.

  14. Farthing by Jo Walton (2008)
    Even after this book was published in the US, Jo Walton had trouble finding a publisher. At least 10 UK publishers rejected this alternate history classic, which is set in a Britain that entered a peace treaty with Nazi Germany. Wrote Walton, "'Slipstream' and 'Interstitial' clearly aren't as in as people tell you they are, at least not in Britain." The book was nominated for a Nebula Award, the Locus Award, John W. Campbell Memorial Award for best science fiction novel, a Quill Award and the Sidewise Award for Alternate History.


  15. This Immortal by Roger Zelazny (1966)
    This book tied with Frank Herbert's Dune for the Hugo Award for best novel in 1966, but it had a slightly rough road to publication — although not as hard as Dune's. Piers Anthony writes in his book How Precious Was That While that an editor at Doubleday had rejected this book, originally titled And Call Me Conrad. And then after someone else published the book and it won the Hugo, this same editor wrote to Zelazny to chide him for not showing the Doubleday editor the book before sending it elsewhere. Writes Anthony:
    Zelazny looked from one hand to the other, as if comparing the two letters from that editor: what was he to make of that?
    Source: Anthony, How Precious Was That While, p. 275.
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[Gossamer's Scrapbook] The Ethereal Canyon

Postby Gossamer on April 29th, 2011, 6:55 pm

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A Thought For The Day
Yes, I do think occasionally!


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[Gossamer's Scrapbook] The Ethereal Canyon

Postby Gossamer on April 29th, 2011, 7:02 pm

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The Next Level
It's past time really - seriously past time.!



It's time, don't you think, that we take Mizahar to the next level?


Our development, our goals, are dreams as site designers are always geared towards the biggest and best in a healthy competitive fashion. Those of us working on Mizahar don't know how to 'settle' for something and don't understand 'good enough'. We want, truthfully, for there to be no comparison to the other sites out there on the net. This is especially true of the tired old sites that have been around for ages doing the same boring things. We're succeeding too, because those same said sites are now remodeling after us and copying what we do.

But can they take it to the next level? We can. We are. Stay tuned for details. Hopefully you'll see some in the days and weeks to follow.


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