Buffy: A Guide, but no water or food. So it leads me to the sacred place and then a week later it leads you to my bleached bones? Giles: Buffy, really. It takes more than a week to bleach bones.

'Dirty Girls'


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.


-t - Mar 17, 2006 2:33:42 pm PST #5749 of 10001
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

Insent, AmyLiz.

It's a picture book, though I am not and do not have an illustrator. I see it as along the lines of The Quiltmakers Giftfor audience, if that adds any information.

Oh, and it's full on fairy tale, starts with "Once upon a time", ends with "happily ever after", the whole nine yards.


Amy - Mar 17, 2006 2:51:26 pm PST #5750 of 10001
Because books.

Oooh, it sounds delicious! I just got your email, so I will try to read it tonight after various domestic dramas have been quelled. (And certain picture-book-reading children are in bed.)

Also? Unless you're an illustrator who writes her own text, usually (from what I know of children's publishing), a publisher sets up writers and artists based on what they think will work. So need to worry about that.


-t - Mar 17, 2006 2:59:20 pm PST #5751 of 10001
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

a publisher sets up writers and artists based on what they think will work. So need to worry about that.

That's what I had heard, but it's always good to get that information reinforced.


Karl - Mar 17, 2006 7:03:07 pm PST #5752 of 10001
I adore all you motherfuckers so much -- PMM.

Calling a Spade a Fucking Shovel (100 words)

This is it, now. No more Marshall Plan; we have Halliburton now. No more sponsorship of the United Nations; they're antique and quaint, don't you know? No more benevolent shepherding of the flock of nations through the arduous process of 'civilisation.' No more White Man's Burden. The mask has slipped, the disguise is askew; our government's naked disdain for others' opinions, others' rights, others' beliefs, is right there for everyone to see.

Let's at least have the decency to tear away the rest of the disguise and call it by its name: This is despotism. Where is our Thomas Jefferson?


deborah grabien - Mar 17, 2006 7:24:01 pm PST #5753 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Where is our Thomas Jefferson?

Spinning in his grave, love. Spinning in his grave.


SailAweigh - Mar 18, 2006 4:01:34 am PST #5754 of 10001
Nana korobi, ya oki. (Fall down seven times, stand up eight.) ~Yuzuru Hanyu/Japanese proverb

Nice, Karl, very nice. That should be published on the front page of every newspaper in America.


deborah grabien - Mar 19, 2006 9:02:09 am PST #5755 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Midlife

From the day we're born, we wrap ourselves up.

Clothing, attitude, armour both physical and emotional. We present this persona, this otherness, to the world; things behind which we cower, or rage, or want. Fashion may hide desperation. Humour may hide pain at being unable to fix what's broken.

As we age, those wraps wear thin. More and more, our essential selves become visible.

If you were alive to strip me of my wrap, what would be there? Naked, yearning, needing what I couldn't keep, powerful, still weeping for what broke?

Would you even see me? Am I even visible?


Steph L. - Mar 20, 2006 4:45:07 pm PST #5756 of 10001
I look more rad than Lutheranism

Check it out! A drabble topic that's more or less on time.

Challenge #101 (disguise[s]) is now closed.

Challenge #102 is summer job[s]. Go to it.


deborah grabien - Mar 20, 2006 5:44:55 pm PST #5757 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

For Teppy and my WIP readers. JP's POV, of course.

Summer of Eighty-Three (a Kinkaid drabble)

It was the first real catering gig she ever had, you know?

Should have been easy. First off, rockers? Easy to please. And they were my mates: the Bombardiers, celebrating going into debt to buy their own San Francisco rehearsal studio, south of Market.

Bree's damned good at what she does. But she was barely twenty, just out of the culinary academy. She was scared half off her nut. I couldn't understand why.

Of course, they loved it. It was only later I found out she'd changed every recipe with alcohol in it, because she was afraid of me lapsing.


Beverly - Mar 20, 2006 7:26:32 pm PST #5758 of 10001
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

A year of drama school behind me, I learned the script, and delivered it like a performance. Open, friendly half-smile, inviting the mark in on the joke.

They dropped us off at six, when Dads would be home from work, right around suppertime. For me they looked for upscale suburbs. I killed there, if I could get past the dogs.

(Bing-bong!) "Hi! I'm taking a survey, and I wonder if I could ask you three questions?"

On Friday nights, I'd find some family watching Star Trek, and subside quietly into the couch cushions, hoping they wouldn't ask me to leave during the commercial.