A New Vocab Menace Update

Last week, She Who Must Be Obeyed toured southern France with Business Daughter on a celebration trip. Meanwhile, I had a stay-at-home writing retreat. (I often started each day flailing at my keyboard with gusto at a local cafe, but same, same.) I also perfected a yogurt cheesecake that would blow your mind.

Besides the cheesecake, steaming the carpets, and cleaning the house, I made substantial progress with my next novel. I’ve been reading a lot of forensic psychology to enhance the plot, plot twists, and verisimilitude. More on that in the future.

During my retreat, I took a break from my Vocab Menace video series. I enjoy these quick little video essays so much, I figured it was time for another VM roundup!*

*Note the rare use of that exclamation point to underline my sincere excitement.

Today’s video:

Here’s the latest group of videos from my Substack, also available on my YouTube channel. (Scroll down the blog for an earlier list of Vocab Menace video essays.)

Star Trek and the Age of Enlightenment

The Age of Virtue is Nonsense

Don’t Let Reality Get You Down

When Others Control Your Thoughts

Are You Suffering from Negative Panic?

People are Trying to Manipulate You

The Difference Between Psychopaths and Sociopaths

Charlie Kirk, Karl Popper, and Conspiracy Theories

What You’re Forgetting

Do You Believe in the Mandate of Heaven?

Keep This in Mind Next Time You Debate a Bonehead

What is The Paradox of Intelligence?

What is Your Place in the Universe?

The Great Gatsby is Overrated

How Serious is Your Anger?

Can People Change?

The Catholic Saint Behind Modern Science Fiction

~ If you dig it, please share it, like, comment, follow, subscribe. You know, all the helpful things.

Also, buy apocalyptic epics and killer crime thrillers by me, Robert Chazz Chute. Adventure awaits. 🙂


Gentle Hint:

If you’ve enjoyed my latest release, Vengeance Is Hers, please consider reviewing it on Goodreads and Amazon. That vigilante justice needs more love and attention. Thanks again.

It’s Vocab Menace video roundup time!

A while back I began a side project called Vocab Menace. Besides working away on my WIP, I decided to have a little extra fun with words. Like my protagonist in This Plague of Days, I’m obsessed with dictionaries, so five times a week, I go down a rabbit hole and maybe add a little editorializing. Stephen Miller is a fascist asshole rattlecap, for instance. (Find that little rant below in Make Old-Time Insults New Again!) Enjoy them all!

Here are some of my recent video links (with scripts) on Substack:

Make Old-time Insults New Again!

Do You Know These OMN words?

How to Talk Canadian

Talking Louder Does Not Make You Right

Defy Those Who Put You Down

The Smithsonian Is Under Attack

What is Gilderoy’s Kite?

Don’t Fall for These Three Ploys

Have You Got a She-shed? A Man Cave?

What is Nutpicking?

Where Cassandra Comes From

Words Matter. Facts Matter. You Matter.

A Warning about Book Promotion Scams

Which Phrases Annoy You?

Watch This Before Your Next Walk of Shame

What English Word has the Most Definitions?

And now, a quick advertisement:

Attention readers of Vengeance is Hers! If you enjoyed my big novel about righteous revenge (complete with book club questions and tips to get back at your lousy ex-husband) please leave a review! Reviews help authors. Without you, my work disappears into the Void of Despair. Thank you!

To read Vengeance Is Hers, click here!

The link between lemurs and goblins

When I started my Vocab Menace series, the idea was to find fun words, define them, and challenge viewers to slip those exotic or rarely used words into casual conversation.

I don’t know how many people are actually making that attempt, but I do enjoy finding these words. We use words to tell a story, but the stories behind the words are often interesting, too.

Some folks are concerned we are losing words or adding silly ones. Remember the furor over the elimination of the distinction between regardless and irregardless? I know that sticks in some people’s craws, but language is constantly evolving. It’s an organic thing that can grow in unexpected ways. You can resist, but you may as well try to empty the ocean with a sieve.

We could try to freeze our level of communication at some arbitrary stage, I suppose. With enough teaching, torture, and torment, we could all speak as if we are upperclass eighteenth-century Brits. I doubt that would fly, though.

Some lovers of the English language would clutch their pearls and retreat to their fainting couches if they knew the truth. Most newspapers are written at the sixth-grade level. That’s not a disaster. It’s meeting and reaching more readers where they are.

I am a word nerd, but I don’t beat readers over the head with my research (at least in my novels, I don’t). However, I must admit, I loved using Latin phrases in This Plague of Days. I made it work by translating said phrases and aphorisms. There was never any doubt what was meant and the use of a bit of Latin was integral to the protagonist’s character development. Jaimie Spencer is a selective mute on the spectrum with a special interest in his dictionary. When the world ends, Jaimie finds comfort in the old wisdom of Latin words.

My 1939 Webster’s was the inspiration for the dictionary Jaimie carries around the apocalypse. She’s a thick one, eh?

Webster’s Dictionary of the English Language, 1939

If you are a word nerd, too, subscribe to my Substack for fun, new vocabulary explorations each weekday.

For links to all my apocalyptic epics and killer crime thrillers, check the links to Amazon down the right-hand side of this page. Enjoy!