No, probably not likely. I was just talking about reviews and such.
'The Girl in Question'
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.
I'm toying with the idea of attempting NaNoWriMo. Or maybe it's toying with me. I have an idea for a story, anyway. Except now I'm invested in it, so I don't know if I can write it without caring if it's good or not.
Go for it! Join us! One of us! One of us!
You really do have to turn off the little squeaky mice and just concentrate on typing or you'll never win. Not that I have won. I think I got to 100 pages last time I tried. 100 very crappy pages iirc.
Crank it out and edit and polish later, Zenkitty. I'm using it as a way to get the plot all worked out, almost a really really detailed outline.
That's exactly what my problem is - this would have to be a training exercise in It's Good Enough Dummy Stop Editing Now And Just Write. I can't stop editing long enough to write anything.
It was AmyLiz who had something to do with Big, Spankable Asses, right? Have y'all seen this? [link]
I remember AmyLiz not sure whether to laugh or cry (or just get drunk) when she was writing cover copy for it.
That was me, yup.
I'll write anything for money, baby.
I usually end up writing anything for no money, too. I need to do something about that.
There's a great line in William Gibson's new book, about how the protagonist's mother viewed her (the prot's) musical talent as something like an unfortunate but not debilitating condition, and the money that she made from her musical career as disability pay.
The protagonist says that echoes her own sentiments about the relationship of art and money, but unlike her mother knows that you can have the condition without getting the pay.