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.
Yes, but since I've posted the drabble that would be the core of the story both here and in my livenjournal, it might count as "prior publishing", especially since this is a web magazine.
But I didn't see anything in the submission requirements mentioning that. And anyway, while the core of the story would be the drabble, it wouldn't be on one continuous form.
Will ponder.
both here and in my livenjournal, it might count as "prior publishing"
Hmmm, that is a good question. Since the internets are pretty much public domain, anything ever put on it could be considered priorly published. In my head, though, I think of "published" as having taken money for it. Kind of like the difference between amateur and professional in sports.
The net publishing area is extremely grey, and the courts (so far as I know) have yet to hand down definitive rulings on what constitutes "already published" in the electronic media. So, at the moment, it's very much in the lap of the individual publisher.
Definitely something to think about. Because I'd love to get a story up there.
erikaj -- I imagine that they leave the crime scene tape up until the c.s.i.s have processed the scene.
That could take a while then, couldn't it? Although I don't expect they have to wait for the labs and junk, being as how they take the lab-worthy stuff away.ETA: Eh, I've probably contaminated a lot of the scene by having my intrepid witness' stomach be less than intrepid upon discovering the battered body of the vic. I thought to have her not fall apart in some way would be Mary Sue-ish.
Erika, that's a tried and true method. I believe one of the things the other characters used to twit Anita Blake for was that she supposedly threw up on a body one of her first times on the scene.
Giardello was "Gee" because that was what he said on his first murder. Twenty-five years later, still Gee.Yeah, I figured, unlike me, she could hold back the tears and verbalizing, but we both have traitor stomachs. Otherwise, SuperCrip, ugh.
(Let's hope I can restrain myself from giving her ardeur, shall we? So far I'm safe. She's hot for a married man that won't leave his wife, and her crazymaking client.)
erika, why aren't you ringing up the PR section of the Phoenx PD and asking these questions?
San Francisco and London can't be the only urban centres whose police have people delighted to share that information, surely?
It will probably be easier now that I have more specific questions.(Being that I was unwilling to actually kill to get face time.) I should track that down Monday. I think I ran into "Is anyone dead? Then she's not ours." But PIO's are *supposed* to answer stupid questions, uh, I mean "sincere inquiries from the public."
What I did was, I called the main number and asked for "community relations" or whatnot. I explained that I was a writer, with some specific questions about a) how homicides were handled, b) who handled them, and c) some verisimilitude questions, such as jargon and slang.
I ended up with Lieutenant Jerry McCarthy, and also with a visit to forensic pathology (I discovered I was cool with the bits in the jars, although the dead guy on the slab with the toe tag didn't thrill me much) and a drivearound.
This was for Still Life With Devils.