As a Machine and Parts: a novella (12/2011)


Mitchell, a twenty-something Cougar Cub with Marsha, his midlife girlfriend, wakes each morning, living an ever-thinning line between human and machine. As his literal condition progresses he looses his capacity for human emotion, and potentially with it, Marsha.  As a Machine and Parts is a story of Mitchell’s struggle to discover which assembly line he belongs Read more

I Didn't Mean to be Kevin: a novel (1/2012)


Jackson Jacoby is a motherless twenty-two year old boy with only the support of his crazy ex-military Uncle Marve and a kindred motherless peer named Creg. Creg holds fast to the hope of one day reuniting with his mother while Jackson maintains that his own life is so much better off without all the baggage that comes along with being somebody’s Read more

Charactered Pieces: stories


With Charactered Pieces, Caleb J. Ross presents a varied world of familial discord, one where a dead fetus evokes more compassion than its mother (“Charactered Pieces”);  where two brothers offer the destruction of a family legacy as a birthday gift for their aging father (“My Family’s Rule”); where one brother’s love of Holocaust documentaries pushes his family through the aftermath of his assumed suicide (“The Read more

Stranger Will: a novel


In this novel of impending fatherhood, an idealistic teacher recruits a pliant protégé to join her group of Strangers – a devout collection of kindred minds who have dedicated their lives to cultivating a unique idea of perfection. But joining is easier than Read more

» tracking submissions

Writer Help: RSS & Really Sexy Spreadsheet

Posted on by Caleb J Ross Posted in Study (the world/the craft) | 4 Comments

Recently, I mentioned my obsession with RSS to a writer friend, and he was surprised by its capabilities. Maybe I’m too much of a salesman when it comes to nerdy tech things, but nonetheless, I piqued his interest. That got me thinking: what writer tools do I use and unintentionally keep to myself?

Selfishly-kept secret #1: RSS.

You’ve likely seen this icon:

This represents a link to a specific RSS feed.

I won’t go over what RSS is (for that, see here). Instead, how do I use it? Simply put, I use RSS to keep updated with the many, many lit sites whose perusal would otherwise clog my day. Instead of checking each individual site for new posts, I log into one feed aggregator site (I use Google Reader) and see a list of every new post from each of my RSS subscriptions (flip through the screenshots below for a list of my subscriptions – can I play taste-maker and suggest that everyone subscribe to all of them? Better yet, here’s a full .xml file of all my current subscriptions.)

Think of RSS feeds as organized social site friend contacts, only instead of having to share a common site (MySpace, Facebook, etc) with someone, the format is universally acceptable. Even if a site doesn’t promote that it has an RSS feed, it still has one. RSS feeds are standard fare for all sites. Simply type a website into the feed aggregator and the site is automatically parsed for a feed.

Google Reader is very intuitive. Not only can the user organize by folder, but the simple act of scrolling through a blog marks it as “read,” meaning that there is no need to click a button or follow a link to take a new post off of your to-read list. This is extremely important when you’ve been away from the internet for an extended period of time and come back to hundreds of new posts.

Screenshots:

If you decide to utilize an RSS reader, you should subscribe to me. I am witty and nice and I smell like sex. My feed address is: http://www.calebjross.com/?feed=rss2

Selfishly-kept secret #2: my tracking spreadsheet.

I am an unapologetic spreadsheet geek. I love ‘em. If I could organize my sleep schedule by spreadsheets, I would. So it makes sense that I would create a spreadsheet to make story submission tracking easy. I now share this spreadsheet with you. See the screenshot below for descriptions of all the bells and whistles.

Basically, the spreadsheet keeps track of everything about a submission, from number of days out, to any query letters associated with a market. Feel free to modify this spreadsheet. If you add something amazing to it, I’d love to hear about it.

Click here to download the template for yourself.

I’m always on the lookout for ways to be more lazy. If you’ve got ideas, let me (and vicariously, any RSS subscribers I have, -wink-) know.