Brianna Privett


In progress

June 11, 2010

I forget sometimes that I have this space to log my creative works without broadcasting what I’m up to for comment on Facebook, et al. Since I use brianna.org as a tech playground for testing things like, oh, I don’t know, Google Buzz, anything I post there is distributed instantly to every damned social network I have signed up for – and I sign up for them because it’s my job.

At any rate, it’s been a swift six months, devouring 2010 like lightning. I’ve written some songs, some short stories, and I’m seeing progress on both fronts. I sent out a few queries for my first YA novel, Cheshire Cat Moons, in March, got a good response and am currently revising it before sending it back out. I stopped reading slush for SH because I couldn’t keep up, but boy did I learn a lot.

This past week we’ve finally set up our library in the room formerly known as The Blue Room. Six tall bookshelves and a rough count of 1,000 books unpacked later, I’m revelling in having all our books easily accessible again. And a touch of extra shelf space to fill up with new stuff – we’ve been on a book buying moratorium for the last few years. Ban: lifted!

So that’s what I have been doing – writing, gardening, working the web, and unpacking books. Currently I’m editing a short story about inherited ghosts, and another about walking houses. In spare moments, I’ve been devouring the archives of the Paris Review and trying to get my own writing to a point where I enjoy re-reading it.

Oh yes, and I’ve been informally logging the books I’ve read this year to see if I make it to 100. As a kid, this would have been cake, I read about three times that amount yearly, but this year I’ve been chewing up short stories like they’re going out of style, and I haven’t counted those toward my book reading goal. At any rate, the last book I finished was The Hunger Games (enjoyable, predictable but with lush descriptions of food – I’m a sucker for that) and I am currently reading The Imperfectionists by Tom Rachman and really loving it.


Renewal

January 20, 2010

I’ve done sketches for every IF topic so far this year. This is the first one I actually finished collaging.


McSweeney’s Internet Tendency: Reviews of New Food

January 7, 2010

I ate a lot of gas station taquitos last summer. Here’s my confession at McSweeney’s Internet Tendency. They were insistent that I be specific about location so Crestline gets a shout-out, as does Crestline’s 7-11.


The Authorized Ender Companion

January 2, 2010

A short non-fiction piece I wrote was included in The Authorized Ender Companion
by Jake Black.

Photo 62

Photo 63

The dorktastic backwards pictures are just bonus.


Another Creative Commons Round-Up

December 22, 2009

Wonderful use of one of my photos of the Wood family farm in Missouri for an article entitled:

“Did Missouri Agricultural Conference Forget About Small Farmers?”

The milk barn

Spice Melange:Dill” made me hungry
Baby dill

“Grow an Urban Garden” re-uses my photo of my mojito stash -

Mint

and two of my photos are currently illustrating two different eHow articles: “How to Plant a Chokecherry Tree

chokecherry

and “How to Describe the Growth Process of a Plant Seed

Carrots

and Dian Reed’s 2009 wrap-up “Best of Tea” uses a photo of the first display tea I ever tried (I’ve since enjoyed many more):

Jasmine Dragon Pearl Green Tea

also, Camille of the Svelte Gourmand finally tried kale (well, back in August)


Mortal Lessons & Ties That Bind

October 13, 2009

David Liban contacted me last year about using a few of my family photos for his documentary “Mortal Lessons

“We are all going to die, yet we spend most of our life avoiding this fact, as if to mention death will bring it upon us sooner. Then when death strikes, we are devastated, in part because we are unprepared. And yet, some of life’s most valuable lessons are best learned in the face of death. This is the story of two extraordinary women facing their mortality head on as they battle lung cancer.”

Peony, Mom asleep

And Aileen Roberts contacted me not to use a photo, but to use a caption from one of my photos in the same family series for her project about cancer, “Ties That Bind“:

“The day after the haircutting party was chemo, and after chemo we went wig shopping. Naturally, I bought a styrofoam head of my very own. I wanted 2, but I didn’t have enough room in my bag. This is Clio. Mom found me listening to Mozart and drinking red wine from a jam jar while I was painting her face. Mom just turned around and left the room. “


Indoor Urban Gardening

September 20, 2009

This brianna.org post about last year’s eensy window garden was mentioned at Apartment Therapy’s The Kitchn.

Windowsill

That’s one powerful windowsill!

Kale!

The pics below are going to be used in a book on urban gardening by Spanish publishers
Ormobook.

Cucumber!

Eggplant!


Creative Commons

August 22, 2009

I like to document my life in photos, as do we all, and I keep my dailies licensed for easy re-use under a Creative Commons license. This has some great side-effects – my photos show up in the coolest AND weirdest places:

The Guardian Gardening Blog has used a couple of my indoor gardening photos:

Windowsill garden

Em & Lo’s Love and Sex advice column hilariously (and quite appropriately) used one of the photos I took during my elopement trip to San Francisco:

No U Turn
And I don’t know who this is, but they liked one of my harvest photos enough to re-use it:

harvest  465