Life is the stories
we leave behind.
Stace Dumoski
Editor of Artful Blogging, Life Images and Art Doll Quarterly.
Aspring fantasy novelist.
Eclectic artist.
Sporadic gamer.
Failed Medievalist and Folklorist.
Novice poet.
Proud Mom.

My Favorite Words
(and yours)

Elsewhere
Via LiveJournal
Flickr
DeviantArt

June 29, 2006

About

Filed under: Uncategorized — Stace @ 11:04 pm

About the Site

This site is not meant to be an authoritative, comprehensive presentation on the subjects of Myth and Story. Rather, it is a record of my own explorations of these topics; a travelogue, if you will, of a journey to further my own understanding of my chosen art. I have chosen to share this journey here in hopes of finding others with similar interests, so that we might encourage one another towards elucidation and inspiration.

The site is built and maintained using the WordPress blog/content management software and based on a template by priss. The artwork in the banner is my own. If you notice any problems while browsing, be sure to leave a note so that I can try and fix it.

About the Author

ShallotI’m a native Californian, having spent most of my youth in the Suburbia of Los Angeles…a pleasant if undistinguished little town called Placentia. I spent four memorable years at Mount Holyoke College in Massachusetts, where I earned a bachelor’s degree (cum laude even) in Medieval Studies. People invariably ask “why Medieval Studies?” The answer is simple: I love the Middle Ages. I still do. It didn’t matter if my studies had any direct bearing upon my future career or not, I simply relished the opportunity to spend four years in an idyllic country setting studying something I really enjoyed. Everyone should have such an opportunity.

After graduation, I bummed around awhile, working the odd job here and there, trying to figure out just what it was I wanted to do. It was during this time that I became interested in the concepts of comparative mythology, primarily through the works of Joseph Campbell. While indulging this interest, I thought I figured out my future and started graduate school at UCLA, pursuing a degree in Folklore & Mythology. After time, I realized that it wasn’t for me, though: I loved the subject, but I wasn’t enjoying studying it in an academic environment.

I have had a small but constant presence on the web since the mid-1990s, my most successful online project the publication Phantastes, a journal for writers of fantasy fiction, that featured articles by and interviews with many well-known writers, and was listed three years in a row in the Years’ Best Fantasy and Horror anthology. Unfortunately, time and money forced the closure of Phantastes, though some of the articles I wrote for that site are available here.

For a time, I made my living as a freelance writer and editor. My favorite job during those years was, because it combined both my career and my hobbies, was working as a designer on the online, text-based roleplaying game, Castle Marrach. As the chief architect of the characters and story arc, I take some pride in the continued success of the game nearly eight years later. Though my involvement with the game is marginal at best these days, I do maintain an interest and it comes up every so often as I post.

In the spring of 2006 I started working as a freelance instructional writer for Stampington & Company, a publisher of some of my favorite arts and crafts magazines. Less than a year later, I was brought on board as managing editor of, not one, but three brand new magazines: Artful Blogging, Life Images and Artists’ Cafe. Immersion in this world of artistry and visual expression has changed my life considerably. Before now, art and crafts were always a fun diversion, a way to make something pretty and unique and special, but always a sideline to what I considered the primary mode of creative expression: words. Granted, I’m still much better with words than I am with ink and paint, but I’m learning to trust my visual instincts in ways I never did before, and enjoying the process of art as I discover a new side of myself.

To say that I am a hopeful novelist is probably not a surprise at this point (who isn’t ?) and I usually have several writing projects ongoing at once. I’ve one story published online. I also continue to be interested in interactive narrative, and hope to experiment further in this area, discovering new ways to tell stories with the aid of technology. That takes things up to about now. What’s to come is a work in progress.

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1 Comment »

  1. Hi,

    I am avoiding vacuuming my house and searched your name. I am going down to see Lima tomorrow. Her daughter Serena will be 3 next week and I am way overdue for a visit.

    I am married 1 dog and 2 cats I teach ESL at the middle school level and live in NH.

    e-mail me if you get the chance

    Jane Pollard

    Comment by Jane Pollard — April 19, 2008 @ 1:24 pm

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