Zoe: So you two were kissin'? Book: Well. Isn't that... special?

'Our Mrs. Reynolds'


The Great Write Way, Chapter Two: Twice upon a time...  

A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.


erikaj - May 23, 2005 8:19:57 am PDT #2285 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

Uplifting thought about writing: Margaret Atwood didn't publish her first novel, either. And she used to be broke and think she was hopeless and have to borrow money from her parents. Well, I think MA is a genius, so it made *me* feel better.


Susan W. - May 23, 2005 8:53:47 am PDT #2286 of 10001
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

I always find those kinds of stories uplifting. Those authors who sell their first books straight out of the gate, however....

ION, I'm supporting my local chapter by entering its contest. To meet the page count requirement on an appropriate scene break, I switched that section from Courier to TNR. Gosh, that looks tiny once your eyes have adjusted to Courier.


Steph L. - May 23, 2005 9:20:31 am PDT #2287 of 10001
the hardest to learn / was the least complicated

If it's Monday, this must be new drabble day!

Challenge #58 (shadow) is now closed.

Challenge #59 is: the ways we communicate without words. Obviously, that doesn't mean no words in the drabble, because that would just be a blank page. And it also doesn't -- necessarily -- mean no dialogue. Just drabble about extra-verbal communication, and see where it takes you.

If this is confusing, and/or you have suggestions for future topics, by all means, let me know!


deborah grabien - May 23, 2005 10:20:17 am PDT #2288 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Jeepers. Yes, relating to the new non-Ringan thing I'm working on. One hundred words on the first shot:

It's All There

It's all there.

It's there in the way she watches me play. Her shoulders start out tense, pulled back hard; I play and she hears me, she bloody gets it, and the shoulders relax.

It's there in the way she kicks the world to the kerb when I get home from the road: no one gets in, no one touches us, just each other. It's there in the way she reaches for me, in the way I pull her down to me, hips, hands, the lot.

It's there in the way we touch, the only language needed.

It's all there.


Gris - May 23, 2005 10:20:59 am PDT #2289 of 10001
Hey. New board.

It's sad that I'm tempted to write an entire drabble in 1337-speak, isn't it?


erikaj - May 23, 2005 10:25:59 am PDT #2290 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

Most of our communication is my halting, shy, self-hating words and your talking computer, which you do not bring to my bed. I am a dialogue junkie even at twenty and I hate that you deprive me at such a time of your usual baroque skein of compliments.While I just lie there, naked. That is how I come to understand your voice...the one you were born with, not the assistive-tech voice(The curse words are the clearest. I love you takes a couple visits. Is that your problem, or mine?) When we kiss, we could be any couple in America.


Connie Neil - May 23, 2005 10:49:07 am PDT #2291 of 10001
brillig

drabble

The Intensive Care staff try to keep me out. The drugs Hubby's reacting to are making him thrash. The sedative should have knocked him out enough for them to get the IVs in to stabilize him. Somebody breathlessly suggests restraints. I hear him try to scream around the tube in his throat.

"Ma'am, you can't--!"

I get a hand on his foot. He twitches and goes quiet. Panic, then they see the vital signs coming off their frightening spikes. The head of the team waves back the nurse reaching for me.

"It can wait."


dcp - May 23, 2005 11:34:57 am PDT #2292 of 10001
The more I learn, the more I realize how little I know.

Drabble:

Speed whistles past the canopy and trembles in the controls as we cruise toward the next turnpoint. A dip of the wing first one way, then the other, hints at the lift we are passing by. A pulsing buzz from the instrument panel coaches, "A little faster...now slower...." The unwinding altimeter feeds that little knot of fear that we'll have to land in some farmer's field, while the sight of distance made good tries to reassure us that it was height well spent.

A kick in the pants tells us we've found the next good thermal, just in time. We circle, and climb, and dance the dance again.


Steph L. - May 23, 2005 11:38:24 am PDT #2293 of 10001
the hardest to learn / was the least complicated

Connie, that officially freaked my shit out.

It's sad that I'm tempted to write an entire drabble in 1337-speak, isn't it?

Try it, and I KEEL YOU!!!


Connie Neil - May 23, 2005 11:47:29 am PDT #2294 of 10001
brillig

Connie, that officially freaked my shit out.

Sorry. Somehow he always knows when it's me touching him.