


—
Past zine issues are available for purchase in my zine shop.
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—
Past zine issues are available for purchase in my zine shop.
Subscribe for Monthly Zines via Snail Mail! 🐌 📬

This month I’ve leveled up my zine making to including the Provisional Printing Press.
I’m very excited to bring printmaking into the process!


I spent the whole afternoon making test prints to see what worked best and also played with some letterpress type to print the zine title.
Cannot wait to send these out to everyone!

Read the Not About TETRIS zine.
Buy a copy in the Zine Shop
January’s Zine
This month’s zine is a collaboration between 38 year old me and 13 year old me. I made it with stickers and journal entries from my millennial time capsule – created in 1999.
To celebrate waiting 26 years to open this time capsule I’ve made a full color zine this month! To go with the Crayola vibes I used rubber stamps instead of my typewriter this month. Sometimes it’s nice to get your hands dirty.
Patrons watch your mailboxes. The rest of you can buy a copy from my shop.

I was SO sure there was a Tamogotchi inside! But the only “artifacts” were a dried out gel pen (I’m 90% sure it was dried out before I put it in) and a McDonalds Beanie Babies Happy Meal bag. I remember being really confused about what to include that I wouldn’t somehow miss in the next 26 years. 😂
What would you have put in a time capsule to represent the year 1999?

Something I realized during NaNoWriMo is that I want to make my noveling process more interdisciplinary. My first step was printing out images from my novel’s mood board. Holding these in my hands and moving them around was incredibly regulating after an overstimulating holiday season.
10/10 would recommend paper mood boards.
I’m planning to pin these on a cork board so I can continue to move them around rather than gluing them down. I may even use string. (I have a long standing thing for conspiracy corkboards.)
The added benefit will be keeping my story visible to my conscious and unconcious mind throughout the year. Here’s a time lapse since I’m not on Instagram anymore.
Over the last month I’ve realized (reading Ray Bradbury & Dorothea Brande) that my creative ecosystem needs more time for dreaming and ideation. So my word of the year is Reverie and I made this phone wallpaper as a visual reminder. The painting by John William Waterhouse is titled Boreas.

I’m also starting a “writing from life” practice – separate from my self reflective journaling – to keep up my prose writing throughout the year. I both need space to think about my novel and space to write. I’m using this gorgeous spreadsheet to track my progress. Something I love about it is that you track time as well as words. Time researching, writing, prepping all counts. There’s tons of flexibility in setting goals and the spreadsheet even encourages you to allow for missing days.
My kid is 5 1/2 years old and this feels like the first time I’ve had the energy and capacity to stay up late writing most nights. (Brain fog in the morning means waking up early never worked for me.) I’m so grateful to home education for giving us the flexibility to set our own hours.
I posted my 2024 reading wrap up to my blog.
My favorite reads were…
Seaborn by Michael Livingston
Pirates, magic, queer characters, and grounded historical details bring this world to life. The sequel Iceborn comes out later this year!

All of the Discworld books I read by Terry Pratchett.
And these books on the writing process:
Zen & the Art of Writing by Ray Bradbury
A Slip of the Keyboard by Terry Pratchett
Becoming a Writer by Dorothea Brande
Reading these together really formed a constellation of creative process. Observing what overlapped and what differed. I learned years ago I can’t use another creative process wholecloth, but reading about other people’s experience can help demystify the process. Studying early drafts of Tolkien and Sanderson’s work is really doing that for me as well.

Hello from a Human Jungle Gym is a reflection on time and energetic capacity. I had similar goals last year, but continued to sink too much time into Substack. I’m hoping that making the big jump to Beehiiv will help me realize some of these intentions.
We’ll see what happens long term, but I had twice the open rate on my last email as I have on Substack recently. People are starting to treat Substack like a social media and posts get lost in the feed.

Support doing things the old fashioned way by joining my Patrons ($5) and I’ll send paper copies of my zines with the coolest postage stamps I can find.
Not into snail mail?
Here are other ways you can support.

Hit reply to email me directly. Or ask about doing an art / zine / book swap!
Thanks for being here.

I appreciate you.
Compost Heap Illustrations by Gracie Klumpp of Leave the Fingerprints. 🐞

Because The Medium is the Message I’ve given up weekly blogging and I’m making monthly zines instead.
Here’s how it works.
First, I noodle around with an idea. I type up a few notes on my phone and mull it over.
I might browse are.na to find some images or I might use a photograph.
Next, I do 2-3 rounds of edits. This process is powered by my kid’s hyperfocus when playing Zelda Breath of the Wild.
Then, I go out to my studio and load up my 1950’s Underwood typewriter.

Unless there’s a big problem (like above: when I loaded my typewriter ribbon backwards) I do my best to type the zine in one go. The mistakes and typos are part of the zine aesthetic and show it was made by hand.
Then I add any images with double stick tape. I’ve decided to go full analogue and not do any digital touch ups.
I Xerox the final product on my laser printer and send physical copies to my patrons (pledges starting at $3 on Patreon.)
But you don’t have to pay to read. I’ll be sending a virtual zine every month to YOU.
If this works.
I’m not sure how well the zine will read on phone screens so this is a bit of an experiment. You may have to pinch and zoom.
Or read on a computer. You can click here to read on archive.org. It’s pretty cool over there because you can flip the pages and see the spreads as they were designed.
Otherwise I’ve popped the images directly below.

Accessible Version (for screenreaders)
Bibliography (all of my research linked on are.na)
Websites cost money. If we don’t pay directly they are making their money by selling our attention (ads) or mining our data (for advertisers or to train AI.)
Here are some algorithm free websites I have been enjoying. I am happy to chip in my support for the services they are providing.
Like Pinterest for art nerds. I started with a free account and quickly fell in love. There’s also an educator discount.
Here’s a peek at the mood board for my fantasy novel.

A simple microblogging platform. This is the passion project of Manton Reece, author of Indie Microblogging. He created micro.blog as a simple solution to own your own microblogging content. I could write a whole post about how great this is (for $5 a month), but I’ll try to keep it short. You can use it to build a website, make a blog, or microblog (like a Twitter or Instagram alternative.)
I am playing around with a photo blog which automatically publishes to Bluesky. You can also subscribe to it via RSS.
micro.blog is the way the web should work. It can be integrated with so many different things. I’ve even set up Beehiiv to automatically archive itself at sarahshotts.blog
Yes, I did mention bsky.app.
Bluesky is a public benefit corporation with the mission to “to develop and drive large-scale adoption of technologies for open and decentralized public conversation.” (Source)
This is a radical experiment in prioritizing the open web over commercial success.
You have so much control over your experience there and you can even follow Bluesky feeds through RSS or on other platforms (like the micro.blog app).
I’m going to be honest I’m mostly there for Wheel of Time (Season 3 is coming SOON y’all!) But I also made an artist / writer account and we’ll see where it goes. If you sign up let me know I’d love to connect with you there. Another cool thing about it is that they use domain names (if you have one) so I am https://bsky.app/profile/sarahshotts-com.preview-domain.com.
Come on over to blue skies. Claim your name at least!


My biggest frustration the last time I tested Beehiiv was the friction in the comment system. But I overlooked the simplest solution.
I’ve turned comments off.
Just hit reply to message me directly (or text me if you know me.)
So much cozier.

P.S. I should probably port over my “ways to support” banner, but it’s nearly midnight and we are drowning in sales emails this month anyway. I’ll put it back in January.