David Erik Nelson

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David Erik Nelson

Goodreads Author


Born
in The United States
Website

Twitter

Genre

Influences

Member Since
March 2008


David Erik Nelson is an award-wining science-fiction/horror writer and essayist. His fiction has appeared in Asimov's, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, The Best Horror of the Year, and elsewhere. Find his fiction online at https://www.davideriknelson.com/FreeFiction
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David Erik Nelson When it comes to writing craft and DIY, I've learned a couple things the Very Very Hard Way:

1) TAKE GOOD NOTES! (Including supply costs, where you sou…more
When it comes to writing craft and DIY, I've learned a couple things the Very Very Hard Way:

1) TAKE GOOD NOTES! (Including supply costs, where you sourced parts, stock numbers, etc.) Everything is clear and obvious while you're developing a project, but let it sit on the shelf for a week or two, and you'll find yourself wondering why you made the decisions you did and how the hell you pulled them off.

2) Work through a project while writing it up, even if you've done the project a hundred times. Actually working through your steps while writing, and then again while revising, makes it much easier to see the places where folks might go off track or get confused.

3) Don't fall in love with insider jargon. There are plenty of folks who never get into knitting, for example, because they can't get their heads around the jargon and codes that knitters use. Feel free to be the person who describes it differently, and thus opens that craft up to the folks who were previously locked out.

4) Learn to take decent photos. Publishers (and readers) will want them, and want them to be as clear as possible (non-distracting, solid-colored background; lots of bright light; soft shadows; no glare; etc.) Similarly, if your work is best described with diagrams, learn to use SketchUp or Fritzing or Pixelmator or whatever it takes to make the images you need.(less)
David Erik Nelson My first homebrew instrument was Tim Escobedo's "synthstick": http://www.davideriknelson.com/sbsb/2... —which is a great project, although some of the…moreMy first homebrew instrument was Tim Escobedo's "synthstick": http://www.davideriknelson.com/sbsb/2... —which is a great project, although some of the materials (certain types of cassette tape and Mylar wrapping paper), which were just the most common back-of-the-closet junk in the world when I first stumbled across his design, are getting increasingly scarce. Still, it's a really great synth circuit to start out with, and I continue to use the same basic core design in lots of projects.

As for selling instruments, I don't, but folks are always offering to buy them (esp. the electric guitars), and I can never really fathom why they'd want to do that. It reminds me of this story I once heard about Jobs and Wozniak. This is back in their blue boxes and garage-tinkering days. Early on, when they were developing that first Apple computer, they got into an argument over whether or not there was a market for a computer, as a finished consumer product. Woz was of the mind that the fun was in building it--that a computer, at most, should be a kit--and Job was of the mind that the fun was in using it, that you should open the box and power up and immediately have easy access to doing something cool. Evidenced by the fact that I'm writing this on an Applie bluetooth keyboard mated to an Apple iPad while listening to music on an Apple phone and running Disk Utility on an Apple laptop, I guess we know who was right. But still, I'm a Woz kinda guy. I don't want to sell guitars and synths that are all just like the guitars and synths I'd build; I want folks to build their own guitars and synths, and then show me what they did and why it's better for them. (less)
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Our Most Important Thanksgiving Traditions 🦃💀

I repost this (or a variant of it) every year. This is a year, and so I repost. QED. After all, without our traditions, we are as shakey as a fiddler on the roof.

1. “What do Jews do on Thanksgiving?”

I wrote this essay a few years back, as a little bonus for the folks kind enough to have subscribed to my newsletter.  A good friend, Chris Salzman, was gracious enough to make something pretty of it.

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Published on November 26, 2025 11:10
The New Guys Always Work Ov... There Was No Sound of Thunder
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3.90 avg rating — 10 ratings

What Hunger
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by Catherine Dang (Goodreads Author)
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Here
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Eight Very Bad Ni...
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David Erik Nelson is currently reading
What Hunger by Catherine Dang
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Here by Richard McGuire
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The Hot Rock by Donald E. Westlake
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I’ve long loved Westlake/Stark’s “Parker” novels, but might just love the Dortmunder novels more, on account of the degree to which Dortmunder is sort of a schlimazel, which I sort of powerfully identify with.
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The Man in My Basement by Walter Mosley
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Yow! I read this entire book practically in a single sitting, riding a slow ferry to an isolated island to hike with my family. I’d never read Mosley before, and pretty much picked this up entirely on the basis of title alone. Fantastic. Absolutely t ...more
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The Man in My Basement by Walter Mosley
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Yow! I read this entire book practically in a single sitting, riding a slow ferry to an isolated island to hike with my family. I’d never read Mosley before, and pretty much picked this up entirely on the basis of title alone. Fantastic. Absolutely t ...more
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The Long Walk by Richard  Bachman
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Another part of my perpetual Stephen King re-read/re-listen. Probably my third time through this novel since I first read it as a teen.

My one observation here is that I grew up in an era (the 1980s and early 1990s) when we were absolutely believed th
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The Long Walk by Richard  Bachman
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Another part of my perpetual Stephen King re-read/re-listen. Probably my third time through this novel since I first read it as a teen.

My one observation here is that I grew up in an era (the 1980s and early 1990s) when we were absolutely believed th
...more
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Topics Mentioning This Author

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Stephen  King
“Life isn't a support system for art. It's the other way around.”
Stephen King

Margaret Atwood
“I had no faith in the wise choices of the Aunts: I feared that I would end up married to a goat on fire.”
Margaret Atwood, The Testaments

Margaret Atwood
“So men had something in their heads that was like fingers, only a sort of fingers girls did not have. And that explained everything, said Aunt Vidala, and we will have no more questions about it.”
Margaret Atwood, The Testaments

Margaret Atwood
“and then she smiled and said that we were precious flowers, and who ever heard of a rebellious flower?”
Margaret Atwood, The Testaments

Margaret Atwood
“Right now I still have some choice in the matter. Not whether to die, but when and how. Isn’t that freedom of a sort? Oh, and who to take down with me. I have made my list.”
Margaret Atwood, The Testaments

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