I kissed him, and I told him that I loved him. And I killed him.

Buffy ,'Same Time, Same Place'


The Great Write Way  

A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.


Consuela - Jul 13, 2003 8:53:38 pm PDT #1603 of 10001
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

238. Without having anyone tell them it was good? t boggles

I don't post to the internet for free without having someone do a read over. Much less ask people to pay me for it without having a writer I trust take a look at it.

These people aren't overly burdened with modesty, are they?

t sigh


deborah grabien - Jul 13, 2003 10:08:56 pm PDT #1604 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

I'm not sure it's conceit, Consuela - I think they're just so focused and committed to this damned thing that here isn't anything else, so why bother with anything that isn't Getting Their Novel Out There?

They're probably really nice people, too. I'll find out tomorrow.

But the first 55 pages suck and blow at the same time.


amych - Jul 14, 2003 2:44:17 am PDT #1605 of 10001
Now let us crush something soft and watch it fountain blood. That is a girlish thing to want to do, yes?

I'm sorry to have to say it, but the "autographed copies can't be returned" thing is the biggest urban legend in the writing world. They can be, and it happens every day.


Anne W. - Jul 14, 2003 3:16:28 am PDT #1606 of 10001
The lost sheep grow teeth, forsake their lambs, and lie with the lions.

The discussion of inborn talent, beginner vs. advanced classes, etc. reminds me of a ninth-grade creative writing student of mine.

S___ was way below grade-level in, well, every subject. She was a new student in the school, and it appeared that her academic problems stemmed in part from some learning disabilities, in part from simply not being the sharpest knife in the drawer, and mostly from simply being promoted through the grades without certain issues being dealt with along the way. I was less than thrilled to hear that she was taking my class as an elective.

Her writing, however, was extraordinary. She did have quite a bit to learn about how to structure a plot, and her spelling and grammar were atrocious. That said, S___ had an amazing eye for detail and understanding of character. She could pick the right detail and the right words (as far as her vocabulary allowed--and she would ask for words if she didn't have the right ones) to convey those details. She also used the kinds of details that said a lot about different characters, their pasts, their attitudes, etc.

Most importantly, she also liked to write, and liked it even more when she told that she was, at the most important level, a good writer. Unfortunately, she transferred out of my school partway through the year, and I have no idea of what happened to her.

I think that the core of what gave S___ this natural talent was that she paid attention to the people around her, and picked up on the quirks and characteristics that made each person unique. She wrote what she saw, and didn't go about making characters to fit certain stereotypes or checklists.


Ms. Havisham - Jul 14, 2003 5:00:16 am PDT #1607 of 10001
And we will call it... "This Land."

238. Without having anyone tell them it was good?

Okay, I may have been guilty of sending out a completely green manuscript to a couple editors.

When I was fourteen.

I guess this is why editors hide behind fake names and keep Tylenol in business.


erikaj - Jul 14, 2003 5:37:51 am PDT #1608 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

I sent one out when it wasn't ready too. I think I was "on to something" but had not reached it yet.But when I got rejected and even my friends were like "How'd they get there?" I took the hint. It makes me sad to think of it now cause I don't think I could write such a happy manuscript now. But I think the next one will be stronger if I ever write something long again.


deborah grabien - Jul 14, 2003 7:00:03 am PDT #1609 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Amych, yes and no on the urban legend: it depends on individual store and chain policies. The local Dalton doesn't return unsold autographed copies - they put them on the "bargain" table.

Which doesn't count as a return, which keeps the numbers up.

Anne, I did some volunteer work as a teenager with severely disturbed kids - children who would deliberately hurt themselves, who were violent, who couldn't or wouldn't talk. At least three of them, all under the age of ten if I'm remembering right, drew in a fashion that reminded me of people like William Blake. Theme, content, extraordinary beauty and power, all right there.

I wish I wasn't such a wuss. I love input and solid crit on my own stuff, but I hate dishing out bad news.


Betsy HP - Jul 14, 2003 7:05:20 am PDT #1610 of 10001
If I only had a brain...

Furthermore, aren't you supposed to reply to queries one at a time? I'd always heard that editors were royally pissed off if you simultaneously submitted a full manuscript to two different houses. It's one thing to simultaneously send queries, but once somebody's reading the full manuscript, s/he's supposed to have an exclusive.


erikaj - Jul 14, 2003 7:05:35 am PDT #1611 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

Although being "a wuss" as well as good manners, kept you from saying it sucked and blew, so probably better they heard it from you. And maybe it will help them learn. But that is why I hate it when acquaintances give me stuff to read...I can only imagine what it's like for somebody published.ETA: I think Betsy's right.


Betsy HP - Jul 14, 2003 7:10:59 am PDT #1612 of 10001
If I only had a brain...

I'm in an online writer's group and a face-to-face. Everybody in the face-to-face is competent. Not everybody in the online is. By FAR the hardest segments to critique are the incompetent ones. Because every single line has something that needs to be fixed, and I can't flag every single one without devastating the recipient. And the standing rules of the online group (which I think are wise) are that there are five questions that must be answered in every critique; two of them are "What must be kept in the manuscript?" "What must be fixed?". Sometimes it's just about impossible to find something that ought to be kept. "Um... nice use of 'the'."