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The A.B.C. Murders – not exactly my favorite game of the year

Adventure Gamers has just published my review of Agatha Christie’s The A.B.C. Murders for Nintendo DS.

I can’t say I enjoyed this game. (Luckily, the year is still young…) It feels very much like an attempt to channel Professor Layton, but starring Hercule Poirot. And unfortunately that attempt didn’t work out too well.

In fact, I disliked it so much I don’t really feel like talking about it here. Go read the review and you’ll see why.

The Arthur, finished!

This is a 1:12 house I started a looooong time ago as part of a Greenleaf community build. I never really intended to keep it and every Christmas I thought of finishing up so I could donate it to charity or find someone to give it to as a gift, but laziness got the better of me and I just never finished it.

Last November, again planning to try to do something with it for Christmas, I put furniture in the house for the first time… and fell in love. I have been building dollhouses for almost a decade now, and I had a prefab house for a decade before that, but I’m really, really bad at finishing them. Right now there are three or four houses in various stages of almost-done in my workshop. And when I put the furniture in the Arthur—just for fun—and thought about how close it was to being finished, I decided to keep it, at least for a while.

Then two months passed.

I’m happy to report that I’ve finally put in the last remaining trim pieces, and the Arthur is officially done! I moved it out of the workshop and into our guest room, where I’ll keep it on display at least until another of my houses in progress is ready to be shown off. (Which, based on past experience, could still be years away…)

Since I didn’t intend to keep it, I didn’t obsess over the interior like I usually do. Most of the wallpaper came from a Miniatures.com grab bag and the floor coverings and trim pieces were (mostly) stuff I had lying around. I did have to buy some additional strip wood to cover the exposed edges of the plywood. I’m really happy with how it turned out—nice and clean.

All of this is furniture I had already. Some of it was intended for the McKinley (which I got rid of when we moved last winter), and the rest were orphan pieces that didn’t have a home.

The living room wallpaper has some wrinkles, which really frustrated me when I installed it, but with the furniture in you don’t even see them. The kitchen is pretty cramped but I managed to get in the necessities.

I made this bed out of a Michael’s hutch. The chest of drawers was scratch built from these plans.

This little sewing / art room is my favorite in the house. It’s hard to see, but the little table next to the easel is one of those plastic pizza toppers… I’ve been saving those things for ages, and was psyched to finally use one for something! The painting on the easel is a reproduction of one painted by Karine Swenson; the one from the frame came from a thrift shop (it originally had a pin on the back of it).

There are some more pictures of the Arthur in this gallery, including the living room and kitchen from other angles.

Reality check from the LA Times

Maybe I picked the wrong time to get into this business.

Freelance Writing’s Unfortunate New Model was printed in the LA Times yesterday, taking a look at the current state of freelance writing. It talks about how well-paying journalism jobs are scarce and all people want to pay for these days are short, SEO-friendly articles for the web that regurgitate content that’s already out there.

This is disturbing for someone who’s trying to make a living as a writer, to be sure. But I found it disturbing from another perspective as well—that of the person who likes to hear about interesting news developments and make connections the government / big business / whoever else is involved don’t necessarily want me to make.

A snippet from the article:

“There are a lot of stories that are being missed, not just at legacy newspapers and TV stations but in the freelance world,” said Nick Martin, 27, laid off a year ago by the East Valley Tribune in Mesa, Ariz., and now a freelancer. “A lot of publications used to be able to pay freelancers to do really solid investigations. There’s just not much of that going on anymore.”

Another writer, based in Los Angeles, said she has been troubled by the lighter fare that many websites prefer to drive up traffic. A new take on any youth obsessions (“Put ‘Twilight’ in the headline, get paid”) has much more chance of winning editorial approval than more complex or substantive material.

The rank of stories unwritten — like most errors of omission — is hard to conceive. Even those inside journalism can only guess at what stories they might have paid for, if they had more money.

So there are two problems here. One, the people with the money would rather use it to pay for short, fluffy pieces that are guaranteed to pull up their site on a search engine (regardless of the actual content) than in-depth features. Never mind that it doesn’t take a ton of skill to write some of this stuff, and it definitely doesn’t require much research or put an emphasis on getting your facts straight. And two, crazy things are happening in the world that we may never hear about since no one’s writing about them.

I don’t think good writing will ever really go away, although this article sure makes it sound like the ability to support oneself off of it is becoming much tougher than it used to be (as a journalist, anyway). But I am increasingly bothered by the dangerous way the Internet and the news play together. (Um, Balloon Boy?) Just because something was posted online doesn’t make it true. News outlets don’t always seem to realize this. Fact checking and research have gone out the window in the interest of getting the story out there quickly. And the writers who make their living bringing news to light via well-written, well-researched feature articles might be the casualties.

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