Flames wouldn't be eternal if they actually consumed anything.

Lilah ,'Not Fade Away'


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.


Amy - Mar 20, 2008 5:28:42 pm PDT #9942 of 10001
Because books.

Lust to Dust! Bwah!

I think (I *think*) I'm going to be a total rebel and call it COLD KISS. My critique group tonight did that collective "ooooh" when I suggested it.


sj - Mar 20, 2008 5:34:09 pm PDT #9943 of 10001
"There are few hours in life more agreeable than the hour dedicated to the ceremony known as afternoon tea."

COLD KISS

I like this one.


Ginger - Mar 20, 2008 6:05:19 pm PDT #9944 of 10001
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

If we're going to go that route...

Icy Grasp; Dead Hand; Grave Accent; A Grave Matter; Shallow Grave; Cold Feet; Heartless ("taken literally, incredibly gross"); Cold, Cold Heart; In Cold Blood; Deathless Prose; Deathless Love; Frozen Smile; Deadly Sins


Lee - Mar 23, 2008 5:43:35 am PDT #9945 of 10001
The feeling you get when your brain finally lets your heart get in its pants.

The threads challenge is now closed.

This week's challenge is bunnies (or rabbits, if you prefer).


erikaj - Mar 23, 2008 2:41:05 pm PDT #9946 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

for the challenge: As she gets ready to move, she wonders if she should take them all; the fake furry creatures that shared her youth. Mickey and Minnie, Snoopy, lions and Easter rabbits. She loves animals but has only recently had her own pet, and every time she had a pang for her childhood cat, she added to her plush menagerie, and now it’s quite a zoo. There is a story attached to each one: holidays, zoo visits, the friends that gave them to her. But it seems kind of like tearing some hearthrob’s photo out of a magazine and planting big lusty kisses on it, at her age, to carry that stuff around again. Maybe she should pass them on and let some other girl make her own story.


Susan W. - Mar 24, 2008 8:07:29 pm PDT #9947 of 10001
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

If I'm right in thinking I'm writing a 500-page book, I've finally reached the halfway mark.

t exhausted but happy writer flops down and peers off into the distance to see if the end is really in sight


Miracleman - Mar 26, 2008 4:32:28 am PDT #9948 of 10001
No, I don't think I will - me, quoting Captain Steve Rogers, to all of 2020

Somebody pointed me to this interesting method/exercise.

The Snowflake Method

I may give it a try. Anybody else heard of this or used it?


Amy - Mar 26, 2008 5:02:51 am PDT #9949 of 10001
Because books.

Oh, yeah, Joe. A bunch of writers I know up here have been using -- I think we had someone do a workshop on using it at one of our RWA meetings.

I haven't tried it myself, although I have tried something sort of like it once.


Miracleman - Mar 26, 2008 5:04:26 am PDT #9950 of 10001
No, I don't think I will - me, quoting Captain Steve Rogers, to all of 2020

I haven't tried it myself, although I have tried something sort of like it once.

How did whatever you tried work out for you?


Amy - Mar 26, 2008 5:20:29 am PDT #9951 of 10001
Because books.

It was a really interesting jumping off point. The method is sort of ... mathematical, which sounds weird (especially for me, god knows), but it's a way to quickly jumpstart a plot.

What you do is decide "I want to write a 400-page book." (You could also use word count. I like page counts better.) Obviously, you need to know your basic characters and their basic conflict, or whatever the seed for the plot is first.

Then you decide roughly how many chapters you want, how many scenes per chapter, etc. To make it easy, let's say 20 chapters, 20 pages each, four scenes per chapter.

You take an index cad for each scene, and then decide how many POVs you'll use. Two? Three? How many scenes from each POV? You split up your index cards into piles for each, and then just start brainstorming scene ideas. Example: Jane's POV, Jane meets John at the laundromat, and is impressed by his well-behaved penguin.

You don't have to do it chronologically. You can write a card from Petunia the Penguin's POV, even if you don't know where it will fit into the plot later. When you're done, you spread out all of the cards, and work them into a story, or some sort of logical progression.

This is, like, a massive oversimplification, but it really is kind of that easy. When I did it, I had to plot a book quickly, no fucking around, and while half of what I had on the notecards didn't make it into the book, I had the overall structure. I had given myself a big pictures, and I was able to see where I needed to turn left, or describe an event from someone else's POV.