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Eric Luper

Eric Luper


Last Updated: 7/7/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: Married
Age: 39
Sign: Capricorn

City: Albany
State: New York
Country: US
Signup Date: 9/3/2004

Blog Archive
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Tuesday, August 25, 2009 

Current mood:  animated
Category: Writing and Poetry
So, I've been quiet on the blog lately. Much of that is due to the fact that my car broke down and I've been busy getting rides here and there for several days. A few stressful days, a new alternator and $750 later, I'm back out on the road and enjoying life again. It saddens me how dependent I am on a vehicle, but there you have it, I'm a car addict.

On Saturday, I had a wicked awesome book signing at Spotty Dog Books and Ale in Hudson, NY. Proprietors, Kelley and Al, do so much to make the author experience a good one. And this signing was a good one. They brought in an actual horse for the event. Yes, you read that right. I said a HORSE! Sure, he was a miniature horse and his name was Fritz rather than something mega-cool like BlazeFireKiller. But we had ourselves a horse! Thank you to Little Brook Farm for bringing him down!



In case you can't quite see his saddle pad, here's a closer look:



How cute! And Fritz was a total doll. He stood there for three hours and let all the kids (and some of the grown ups) pet him. Fritz rocks. Kelley and Al rock. Little Brook Farm rocks. Thank you all for making Saturday super special!
Tuesday, March 31, 2009 

Current mood:  bouncy
This came in the mail today:



It's a beautiful cover. It's got great motion and it conveys an old-time feel while still feeling contemporary, which is exactly what I tried to do with the prose. I'm so pleased with this. So much so that I had to put the cover on another book to see what it will look like:



This is a book I'll be proud to sit next to at a book signing. Thank you, Jay Colvin (jacket design guy), Jaclyn Sinquett (jacket art woman) and Seth Holbrook (wicked excellent photographer).

Now I know I'm not the only author who does this, so I will share. I put the mock book on the shelf to see what it will look like next to other books:



See how nicely Bug Boy plays with others? Sorry for the low-res pic, so I'll credit the books keeping Bug Boy company:

Don't You Know There's a War On? by Avi
Hope Was Here by Joan Bauer
The Boy in the Striped Pajamas by John Boyne
Tracking Trash by Loree Griffin Burns
The Adventures of Michael MacInnes by Jeff Carney
Summerland by Michael Chabon
Frindle by Andrew Clements
When It Happens by Susane Colasanti
Artemis Fowl by Eoin Colfer
The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
Because of Winn Dixie by Kate DeCamillo
The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane by Kate DeCamillo
I Love You, Beth Cooper by Larry Doyle
The City of Ember (books 1 and 2) by Jeanne DuPrau
Stuck in the 70s by D.L. Garfinkle
Nory Ryan's Song by Patricia Reilly Giff
Soul Enchilada by David MacInnis Gill
and a little slice of
The Life and Crimes of Bernetta Wallflower by Lisa Graff

I also received a copy of FSG's fall catalog (that's spelled 'catalogue' if you're from England). I made page 7:



Now please excuse me while I go stare adoringly at my new stuff some more!



web counter
Currently playing:
Playstation 2 Rock Band Special Edition
Release date: 2007-12-18
Wednesday, March 11, 2009 

Current mood:  bouncy
Can you think of an instance when you were a kid where an adult showed interest and excitement in what you were doing? Something you loved to do?

It could have been coloring (colouring if you're from Australia), dancing, playing a musical instrument, your love of reading, memorizing the Pledge of Allegiance, whatever.

Can you remember that emotion? How it made you feel inside? Maybe is was a parent or some other relative who offered the encouragement. Maybe it was a teacher. A daycare provider. It doesn't matter.

I'm a strong believer in how those tiny, little, seemingly insignificant positive (and negative) experiences shape us into who we become. I believe that we don't necessarily have to remember the experience for it to have an emotional hold on us either. In fact, I think the younger these experiences happen, the more ingrained they become, sort of like a flashlight illuminating a larger area if it's held further away from the wall.

Well, meet Electro Man



Electro Man is the Lego creation of an 8 year-old by the name of Jack Sossner. I can imagine Jack sitting at the kitchen table snapping together the Legos, working diligently to get Electro Man's black eyes in the right spots, getting that flag to stick out of the gun in just the right way. It's obvious that Jack likes Legos, nay, that he is obsessed with Legos. So much so that he went to the lengths of taking a digital photo of Electro Man and posting it on the Lego website. Now, Jack is clearly no Legonardo DaVinci, but it's also clear that he loves what he does. He builds Lego things with unbridled passion.

Now Jack just needs to know his creations are being shared with the world. Imagine what a difference we can make to Jack's life if we all went to Jack's Lego page and commented on his masterpiece. Go ahead. click on the link. Take ten seconds to make a difference in a little kid's life. It feels really good.

As for the contest, post a comment below that you've commented on Jack's Lego page and you will be entered into a random drawing to win an autographed copy of Big Slick. Post a link to this blog entry or directly to Jack's page on your own blog, website, MySpace or Facebook page, etc and let me know. You'll get another entry into the drawing.

If you've read this far to see why I write for young people, it's because we as authors have the chance to reach kids with the words we put in our books. And instead of reaching one kid at a time (like with Jack and his Electro Man), we have the potential to reach thousands, if not millions. Think about how good you felt giving Jack Sossner a little encouragement. When I write, I know my words have the potential to do that and more.

And if you've read this far and still have not commented on Jack's page, do it now! Then share this blog entry with everyone you know. Who knows, twenty years from now Jack might look back on Electro Man and all the comments on his Lego page as one of those things that helped shape his future. And you could be a part of it.

Contest ends at midnight on 3/18/2009.
Tuesday, June 17, 2008 

Current mood:  bored

I am not going to complain about my weekend.

I will not sit here and complain about how my car was broken into on Friday night (for the second time in a year). I am not going to complain about how the perpetrator stole my 30 gB video iPod. I am not going to complain about how I spent the good part of my Saturday morning vacuuming broken glass out from the cabin of my van. I am not going to complain about how the wet/dry vac I purchased from Home Depot to suck the broken glass from the cabin of my vehicle was missing many of the parts promised on the box, including the casters and the car vacuum attachment.

I also will not complain about the bird which flew into the front door of my house while I was vacuuming my van and crapped on my 1860's sofa.

I believe in karma and can't help but wonder what it is I did to deserve such things. However, I also believe that things always get harder just before a huge leap toward things getting better. I believe someone is always testing my resolve to complete a task.

And the task at hand is finishing my third novel.

I am making great progress on my work-in-progress (here forward to be called EMLM since the actual title is top-secret). Things are coming quickly. In fact, a bit too quickly. My writing time is severely limited these days and it's tough to keep up with the changes that pop into my head. Even more limited in the face of a smashed driver's window and a crapped upon Civil War era sofa. Time to consider a full weekend away to crank out the rest of EMLM.

Anyhow, it was a good Father's Day. Fret I will not!

Currently reading:
The Death of Captain America, Vol. 1
By Ed Brubaker
Tuesday, March 04, 2008 

Check it out:





Sunday, September 23, 2007 
Monday, June 25, 2007 

I'm pleased to tell you that I've received another nice review here on MySpace. In case you are too lazy to click on the link I've provided, here is an excerpt:

"BIG SLICK is filled with colorful characters, poker action, humor, romance, and illegal deals that will keep you turning the pages.  Teen readers - both guys and girls, poker fans or not - will be fighting over who gets this one first."

--ReadingJunky

Thanks, ReadingJunky for such a nice review.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007 
..

I hinted at getting my first review for BIG SLICK last week, but did not blog about it. The reason I did not blog about it is because I didn't have a link to send you to so you could read it yourself. Now that I have the link, I'll blog away...

I woke up one morning a few weeks back, put the coffee on and trudged to my computer. I wiggled the mouse so the bouncing ball would disappear and I saw an email sitting there from David Lubar. The email congratulated me for being one of "Richie's Picks." Now for those of you who don't know David Lubar, it's not easy to tell when he is being serious or not.

So, I fired off an email back to him asking him what he was talking about...and wait, was he really serious?...and get back to me soon or I'm going to explode!

Mercifully, David got back to me right away. He cut and pasted Richie Partington's review into his reply.

The review sent my head spinning. I must have read it ten times, then printed it out, then read it again a few times. I called people and emailed people and then began to breathe again. All I can say is that I hope getting reviews gets easier with time. And I hope getting bad reviews doesn't send me over the edge... Strike that. I hope I never get a bad review!

Anyhow, among the great thing Mr. Partington had to say were:

"BIG SLICK is an action-filled tale involving hot girls, hot cars, very dangerous people, serious desperation, and some seriously bad choices."

and

"I couldn't stop reading the book as Andrew Lang sinks deeper and deeper into that proverbial hole of his own making. With the action and danger--and the enigmatic Goth girl--I'm betting that BIG SLICK is going to be both extremely popular and a great new title for reluctant readers." 

Needless to say, it's all very exciting and it makes me look forward to this book getting out there more than ever!

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Saturday, February 17, 2007 

Okay, cover number three is posted as my MySpace pic. I just received this file yesterday along with the entire jacket flap design. All I have to say is, "sexy!" Thanks to the graphic design department of FSG! 

Each day brings along with it more excitement regarding the release of this book. I've been speaking with my editor, the company's publicist, and marketing people. There are some exciting things abrewin' related to this book release, which incidentally is officially 9/9/2007.

Stay tuned, everyone. More information is coming.

Just keepin' you in the loop!

And to stay closer in touch with my goings on, check out my more frequently updated blog at:  dubya dubya dubya dot eluper dot livejournal dot com.

Friday, December 29, 2006 

This is a story about putting my dog to sleep, but I promise, promise, promise there is a point to it. And, that point has something to do with writing.

I woke up this morning, the day after Christmas, to the sound of sleet clicking against the windows. Cold. Rainy. It was going to be a dreary day, the kind where no matter what you do you can't seem to get warm. My cell phone was buzzing too and after fumbling with it for a few seconds I answered. It was my colleague who told me not to bother coming to the office today. The roads were treacherous up at the lake and patients were canceling left and right.

He told me to enjoy my birthday with a few hours peace. Oh yeah, it's my birthday. I'm thirty-seven today. I'm not one who typically thinks about age, but thirty-seven is definitely on the downslope of my thirties. It's where the sine curve of this decade really starts to drop off. Aging is an odd thing.

With an entire day free I gave thought to doing what I've been dreading. My dog, Loki, was 14 years old and feeble. His back legs were going and hen had lost bowel and bladder control. He was unable to climb stairs and, although he was in no discernable pain, his quality of life was extremely poor. He was a shadow of the black lab he once was.

I called the vet.

The receptionist was extremely comforting on the phone. She told me about my options and explained what would happen. I told her I would be there in an hour with Loki.

In the shower, a spider lowered itself into the mist. Reflexively, I knocked it free of its thread and let it spiral down the drain. I took a moment to contemplate life and whether the life of that spider was any less significant than the life of my dog. Was what I was about to with Loki any different than what I had just done to the spider? Morbid thoughts, yes, but nonetheless ones that crossed my mind.

After my shower I redressed my wound. I have a martini injury. I had a house full of people on Saturday night and while drying a martini glass to make my famous appletini the stem cracked and sliced deep into the pad of my thumb. With 50 guests at the house, I rushed off to the hospital to get six stitches.

Anyhow, when I was ready I gathered the dog, put him into the back of the van next to a box of empty wine bottles and a bag stuffed with discarded wrapping paper. The vet got me in right away and the procedure was over within a half hour. He went peacefully slowly dropping to the comforter and giving a long, last exhale that blew a small ball of his shed fur onto the linoleum.

$162 later, I was back outside. When I started the car, the radio kicked on. Enya was playing. If you are not familiar with Enya, I can assure you that you would recognize it if you heard it. I could not help but laugh. Total over-the-top cliche. I could not escape the thought that today was so filled with cheeseball symbolism and overwrought images that if it were written into a story I would have no choice but to groan.

Think about it: cold rain, buzzing cell phone, day after Christmas, death of a spider, thumb injury, empty wine bottles, discarded wrapping paper, Enya, etc. I could dredge up plenty more too. Today was chock full of symbolism.

So, I gave thought to symbolism and here is where we get to the bit about writing.

Symbolism is not a bunch of details that are crammed into a story to make it seem contrived and utilized to give headaches to high-school sophomores. Symbolism is the writer's use of particular details that help create a mood or more effectively communicate an idea.

If I didn't put my dog to sleep today, it's likely that I would not have noticed any of the things I described above. I would have been thinking about my kids singing Happy Birthday to me over breakfast or how the colored lights on the far side of the Christmas tree are more interesting because they seem to sparkle when I move my head.

Symbolism is detail observed by a subjective onlooker. Whether that onlooker is the protagonist or a secondary character or a disembodied narrator, it makes no difference. What we notice or what we think about is entirely dependent upon our mood. If I am sad, sad things will resonate with me. I will notice those things. Likewise, happy things will irritate me. If I am happy, I'm likely to turn up the happy music and change the channel when a sad one comes on. It's not forced. It is simply how our minds filter (i.e. embrace or reject, take in or ignore) information.

They say art imitates life and this is a perfect example. We notice things that are pertinent to us. We are less likely to notice things that are not. A good writer will select details that enhance or resonate with the story and omit details that are not pertinent or undermine the effectiveness of the story. The trick is to do it with grace and subtlety.

And the better your symbolism is the more you will successfully irritate high-school sophomores. It's just the natural by-product.

Good luck.