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.


Atropa - Oct 12, 2005 11:54:26 am PDT #4567 of 10001
The artist formerly associated with cupcakes.

People who work retail can gain more insight into human nature than anyone should have to know.

Which is why my recurring stress nightmare is about having to work retain again.

I didn't deal with phone pervs, but there were an awful lot of guys who would walk up to me, some bit of trashy lingerie clutched to their chest, and say "You look like you're the same size as my girlfriend/wife, could you please try this on so I can make sure it'd ...look right on her?"


Pix - Oct 12, 2005 1:53:39 pm PDT #4568 of 10001
The status is NOT quo.

I didn't deal with phone pervs, but there were an awful lot of guys who would walk up to me, some bit of trashy lingerie clutched to their chest, and say "You look like you're the same size as my girlfriend/wife, could you please try this on so I can make sure it'd ...look right on her?"

I worked at Victoria's Secret at age 17. 'Nough said.


Susan W. - Oct 16, 2005 12:58:20 pm PDT #4569 of 10001
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

t hyperventilates

I just emailed my partial and synopsis to Mary Balogh for critique. Maybe half an hour after I sent it, I got an email back saying she was already printing it out, and that she looked forward to reading it, and that she already liked the sound of it from the synopsis.

Total OMG SQUEE! territory for me, because I'm 99% certain the partial reads better than the synopsis. And if Mary Balogh ends up liking my book and/or the way I write, that's just all kinds of huge and flattering.


SailAweigh - Oct 16, 2005 2:04:59 pm PDT #4570 of 10001
Nana korobi, ya oki. (Fall down seven times, stand up eight.) ~Yuzuru Hanyu/Japanese proverb

Susan, that is such exciting news. Sending much fall-in-love-instantly~ma her way.


Susan W. - Oct 16, 2005 3:58:57 pm PDT #4571 of 10001
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

I can't believe I'm asking this, since I'm usually the kind of person who knows this stuff, but when you send an editor or agent a partial, do you use a binder clip or just leave the pages lose? (This particular partial is going to come in around 70 pages counting the synopsis, so a regular paper clip wouldn't do the job.)


Amy - Oct 16, 2005 5:43:53 pm PDT #4572 of 10001
Because books.

Rubber band, Susan.


Gus - Oct 16, 2005 5:52:45 pm PDT #4573 of 10001
Bag the crypto. Say what is on your mind.

Rubber band

Seriously?


erikaj - Oct 16, 2005 5:56:30 pm PDT #4574 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

Well, you don't want to staple, in case somebody wants to take pages home.


Susan W. - Oct 16, 2005 6:17:52 pm PDT #4575 of 10001
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

For something this short? I thought that was just for full manuscripts, once you're in 200-page-plus territory.


Jesse - Oct 16, 2005 6:39:17 pm PDT #4576 of 10001
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

I can't imagine a binder clip being substantially different than either a regular paper clip or a rubber band -- they are all easily removed ways to keep papers together, just for different volumes of paper.