Easy Bake. Flop-a-palooza. Woosh. Pop. I don't skulk.

Angel ,'Shells'


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.


deborah grabien - Sep 26, 2005 10:46:10 am PDT #4345 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

ghosts can be lots of things other than stock Halloween creatures

Sing it, sister. What in hell else is the Kinkaid Chronicles, if not a ghost story?


Amy - Sep 26, 2005 10:49:16 am PDT #4346 of 10001
Because books.

::nodding madly::


Steph L. - Sep 26, 2005 10:50:34 am PDT #4347 of 10001
I look more rad than Lutheranism

Actually, I had a topic, and then my boss came to talk to me and then I went to the hospital and now I'm back. Anyway.

Challenge #76 (strike) is now closed.

Challenge #77 is behind the door[s].

Drabble on!


erikaj - Sep 26, 2005 11:25:33 am PDT #4348 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

Tommy is still lobbying for a book, I think.
It’s a reality Tommy’s tried to adjust to for...oh, Christ, close to thirty years, damn, that went fast. He stands at a lot of doors. Fancy security doors, sunfaded section 8 apartment doors, the “push” marked door of a Jack in The Box in the early morning hours(that place is now a chiropractor’s. He guesses people don’t want to eat anywhere knowing somebody got shot in the storeroom over the deposits they let pile up.) He’s stood at a door hearing screams of “Oh, God, he’s killing me.” from an address most people would think was too fancy for such things and almost taken it in the noggin with a frying pan from She after separating her from He. Behind that door could be anything.


Amy - Sep 26, 2005 11:53:27 am PDT #4349 of 10001
Because books.

Shocker. I did a fairy tale again.

~

Shouldn’t have looked. Should have obeyed.

Forbidding her to open the door had stung. She wasn’t a child. She was a woman now, a wife. Wife to the man no one wanted, the freak who made girls cower behind their hands and seek refuge in their mothers’ aprons. The man whose other wives had not survived him.

Shouldn’t have looked…

Now she knew why. Now she knew where those other poor lasses had disappeared to. Now she knew what death looked like, when it was angry and thirsty for blood.

Now she knew what happened to wives who didn’t obey.


deborah grabien - Sep 26, 2005 4:17:12 pm PDT #4350 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

A happy memory, yes indeed.

Paradise Found

Water running, gargling. So scared.

He has no reason to be nervous. It's his house, his bedroom. You came because he asked you to, weeks ago; he's been too sick, kicking alcohol, kicking heroin, his missed dialysis, to consider bedding the pretty girl who probably saved his life.

You're nervous, though. You're in vintage velvet; you dressed to seduce him. All you want is behind that bathroom door, brushing his teeth.

In a moment he'll come out, and unbutton those buttons. The only thing on the other side of the door will be the cats.

And the closed door opens.


Kalshane - Sep 26, 2005 7:26:31 pm PDT #4351 of 10001
GS: If you had to choose between kicking evil in the head or the behind, which would you choose, and why? Minsc: I'm not sure I understand the question. I have two feet, do I not? You do not take a small plate when the feast of evil welcomes seconds.

No drabble ideas yet, unfortunately.

As for the WIP, I seem to have hit a wall. Only managed to get 500 words done tonight and even those were like pulling teeth. I don't have a good feeling about them at all, but we'll see what the re-read looks like tomorrow. I have no idea where to go from here. I know what the end looks like, but keeping with my average chapter sizes, I've 5 chapters worth to write before the climax and the ending and I don't know what to do with them. And it's not just because I'm aiming for 75-80,000 word count; the characters aren't ready for it yet. The protagonist, in particular, still has some growing to do. I'm just not sure how to get them ready.

I'm wondering if it's worth trying to just plug on if nothing comes to me before I sit down to write tomorrow or if should just skip to the climax (but not to my lou, because that would be silly) get it down since that's what's strongest in my head right now and then see if I can fill in the blanks after that.

This has always been my problems with things I write. I know the beginning and end and a couple of the steps along the way, but the spaces in between are what I have a lot of trouble with. At least I got about 2/3 of the way before the gaps started showing themselves with this one.


deborah grabien - Sep 26, 2005 7:43:19 pm PDT #4352 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Kalshane, do you have WIP readers? I find them invaluable.


Susan W. - Sep 26, 2005 8:06:00 pm PDT #4353 of 10001
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

Kalshane, every writer is different, but in my grand experience of writing two as-yet-unpublished manuscripts, I've had better luck with pushing through more or less in order. With my first book, I skipped around a lot. It took me a long time to finish, and the result was a bit disjointed. The second book I started writing in its current form in February, and I finished my 125,000-word rough draft a little over a week and a half ago, plowing through from Page One to The End in order.

Keep in mind that you'll be editing this thing, so if the character development or whatever isn't quite where you want it, you can layer it in on the next pass through. But really, it's all about figuring out a process that works for you. Writing is the reverse of one size fits all.


deborah grabien - Sep 26, 2005 8:13:32 pm PDT #4354 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

But really, it's all about figuring out a process that works for you.

Yep. Gather as much information as you can and as much as you feel comfortable with, and see what works.