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Sylvester Olson

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Sian Cl...
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Sylvester Olson

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Member Since
August 2015


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Sylvester Olson I've found that, much like lifting weights, I can avoid writer's block when I take every other day off from composing new material. It's just better t…moreI've found that, much like lifting weights, I can avoid writer's block when I take every other day off from composing new material. It's just better to have a fresh mind when sitting down with paper and pen. Writing is a joy and I love every moment of it; I don't want it to ever feel like a chore.

But I still find meaningful tasks to complete on off-days. Typically, I'll spend Day A composing on paper. Then on Day B, I'll catch up on typing the story into the computer, editing and checking for continuity errors along the way. This also gives me a chance to look ahead at my outline and gauge whether I'm still on track (or if I've discovered something worth altering the outline for). Composition is so focused, so "in the moment", that it's easy to make impulsive decisions that could derail the train. Taking days off provides time for reflection that, in the end, results in me being happier with the final product.

Because I self-publish, there are other elements that I'm responsible for, such as cover design and interior design, that take significant time to complete. If I've been busy working hard on finishing a chapter, I may opt to spend time on these for a few days in order to introduce some variety toward the book creation. It's still important work that will have to be completed anyway.(less)
Sylvester Olson I've come to love the entire process: brainstorming, composition, editing, more editing, rewriting, editing, cover design, editing, interior formattin…moreI've come to love the entire process: brainstorming, composition, editing, more editing, rewriting, editing, cover design, editing, interior formatting, expository composition for the appendices, designing of charts and maps for the appendices, and editing. So long as I'm at work on the project, I feel content with being a writer.

Yeah, the final product is nice to behold. But the process itself is thrilling.(less)
Average rating: 3.79 · 24 ratings · 10 reviews · 19 distinct works
Popcorn: A Tale of Cosmic H...

3.25 avg rating — 12 ratings2 editions
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One Digit Off

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Hunting with Eyeballs of Flame

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 2 ratings2 editions
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A Detective from Geoduck St...

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Five Nautical Parsecs from ...

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Piano Happens

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More books by Sylvester Olson…

No, I'm not dead yet.

Wow, it's been almost five years since I've posted here. After attending a con for the first time this weekend, I decided to check out my ol' profile here. Terrific news, everybody: I'm still kicking, and not dead yet!

So what's been going on with Sylvester lately? (It's presumptuous on my part to think that people on Goodreads care when I'm a such a small fish, but sometimes writing something out Read more of this blog post »
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Published on February 19, 2024 22:07
Persephone Enligh...
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The Genius of Birds
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Creator of Gods a...
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Sylvester’s Recent Updates

Sylvester Olson is on page 16 of 310 of Persephone Enlightened
Persephone Enlightened by D.L. Solum
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Phantammeron Book One by Mitchell Stokely
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Quotes by Sylvester Olson  (?)
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“Many real-world Northwestern endonyms have European origins, such as “Portland,” “Victoria,” “Bellingham,” and “Richland.” To address this phenomenon while also contributing a sense of the fantastic, I chose to utilize a forgotten nineteenth century European artificial language as a source. Volapük is clumsy and awkward, but shares a relationship with English vocabulary (upon which it is based) that I was able to exploit. In my fictional universe, that relationship is swapped, and English (or rather, “Vendelabodish”) words derive from Volapük (“Valütapük”). This turns Volapük into an ancient Latin-like speech, offering texture to a fictional history of the colonizers of my fictional planets. Does one have to understand ancient Rome and medieval Europe and America’s Thirteen Colonies to understand the modern Pacific Northwest? Nah. But exploring the character and motivations of a migrating, imperial culture certainly sets the stage for explaining a modernist backlash against the atrocities that inevitably come with colonization.             The vocabulary of Volapük has also given flavor that is appropriate, I feel, to the quasi-North American setting. While high fantasy worlds seem to be built with pillars of European fairy tales, the universe of Geoduck Street is intentionally built with logs of North American tall tales. Tolkien could wax poetic about the aesthetic beauty of his Elvish words all he wanted, since aesthetic beauty fits the mold of fairies and shimmering palaces, but Geoduck Street needed a “whopper-spinning” approach to artificial language that would make a flapjack-eating Paul Bunyan proud. A prominent case in point: in this fictional universe, the word “yagalöp” forms the etymological root of “jackalope.” “Yag,” in the original nineteenth century iteration of Volapük, means “hunting,” while “löp” means “summit.” Combining them together makes them “the summit of hunting.” How could a jackalope not be a point of pride among hunting trophies?”
Sylvester Olson, A Detective from Geoduck Street

“So you want to be a writer


if it doesn’t come bursting out of you
in spite of everything,
don’t do it.

unless it comes unasked out of your
heart and your mind and your mouth
and your gut,
don’t do it.

if you have to sit for hours
staring at your computer screen
or hunched over your
typewriter
searching for words,
don’t do it.

if you’re doing it for money or
fame,
don’t do it.

if you’re doing it because you want
women in your bed,
don’t do it.

if you have to sit there and
rewrite it again and again,
don’t do it.

if it’s hard work just thinking about doing it,
don’t do it.

if you’re trying to write like somebody
else,
forget about it.

if you have to wait for it to roar out of
you,
then wait patiently.
if it never does roar out of you,
do something else.

if you first have to read it to your wife
or your girlfriend or your boyfriend
or your parents or to anybody at all,
you’re not ready.

don’t be like so many writers,
don’t be like so many thousands of
people who call themselves writers,
don’t be dull and boring and
pretentious, don’t be consumed with self-
love.
the libraries of the world have
yawned themselves to
sleep
over your kind.
don’t add to that.
don’t do it.

unless it comes out of
your soul like a rocket,
unless being still would
drive you to madness or
suicide or murder,
don’t do it.

unless the sun inside you is
burning your gut,
don’t do it.

when it is truly time,
and if you have been chosen,
it will do it by
itself and it will keep on doing it
until you die or it dies in you.

there is no other way.

and there never was.”
Charles Bukowski

“Many real-world Northwestern endonyms have European origins, such as “Portland,” “Victoria,” “Bellingham,” and “Richland.” To address this phenomenon while also contributing a sense of the fantastic, I chose to utilize a forgotten nineteenth century European artificial language as a source. Volapük is clumsy and awkward, but shares a relationship with English vocabulary (upon which it is based) that I was able to exploit. In my fictional universe, that relationship is swapped, and English (or rather, “Vendelabodish”) words derive from Volapük (“Valütapük”). This turns Volapük into an ancient Latin-like speech, offering texture to a fictional history of the colonizers of my fictional planets. Does one have to understand ancient Rome and medieval Europe and America’s Thirteen Colonies to understand the modern Pacific Northwest? Nah. But exploring the character and motivations of a migrating, imperial culture certainly sets the stage for explaining a modernist backlash against the atrocities that inevitably come with colonization.             The vocabulary of Volapük has also given flavor that is appropriate, I feel, to the quasi-North American setting. While high fantasy worlds seem to be built with pillars of European fairy tales, the universe of Geoduck Street is intentionally built with logs of North American tall tales. Tolkien could wax poetic about the aesthetic beauty of his Elvish words all he wanted, since aesthetic beauty fits the mold of fairies and shimmering palaces, but Geoduck Street needed a “whopper-spinning” approach to artificial language that would make a flapjack-eating Paul Bunyan proud. A prominent case in point: in this fictional universe, the word “yagalöp” forms the etymological root of “jackalope.” “Yag,” in the original nineteenth century iteration of Volapük, means “hunting,” while “löp” means “summit.” Combining them together makes them “the summit of hunting.” How could a jackalope not be a point of pride among hunting trophies?”
Sylvester Olson, A Detective from Geoduck Street

25x33 Cascadia — 5 members — last activity Nov 17, 2016 08:47PM
A group for readers and writers of Pacific Northwestern literature. Let's celebrate the Cascadia region of North America! ...more
192567 #ComedyBookWeek — 79 members — last activity Aug 29, 2016 08:13AM
This is a group for authors participating in #ComedyBookWeek and readers who love comedy in all genres, from weird to wonderful.
201983 #MysteryThrillerWeek — 222 members — last activity Nov 01, 2020 03:31PM
1. Mystery & Thriller Book Club. Read, comment, recommend, review. Have a good book to consider for the group? Don't be shy! 2. An annual event that ...more
25x33 Esperanto — 85 members — last activity May 22, 2024 06:27AM
Esperanto is an international language invented by Zamenhof a polish doctor to faciliate relations between peoples with different languages.
25x33 Written in the PNW — 2 members — last activity Sep 04, 2016 07:04AM
Books written in or about the Pacific Northwest, USA.
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