Zombies! Hyena people! Snyder!

Student ,'Touched'


The Great Write Way  

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


victor infante - Sep 02, 2003 8:21:37 pm PDT #1813 of 10001
To understand what happened at the diner, we shall use Mr. Papaya! This is upsetting because he's the friendliest of fruits.

Man, it's been years. I may have seen him maybe twice since the WB release party, but not terribly long after it.

Maybe the painfully reserved is the wrong phrase, but you know that sense you get off someone that, as friendly and upbeat as they're being, part of them is definitely elsewhere? I got that off him a lot. But then, I get it off a lot of writers.

I do remember him being a nice guy, though. And again, very pretty.

EDIT: Huh. Maybe "distant" is the word.


Rebecca Lizard - Sep 02, 2003 8:22:33 pm PDT #1814 of 10001
You sip / say it's your crazy / straw say it's you're crazy / as you bicycle your soul / with beauty in your basket

I just read Reema's copy of K & C. I liked it very much (it made me want to dig out the Steven Millhauser I own).


deborah grabien - Sep 02, 2003 8:31:28 pm PDT #1815 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

See, I didn't find him distant, or even elsewhere, but it would be hard to do that with a kicking three-week-old child in a papoose carrier around your neck. And Ayelet was the indrocuing element, so, his wife. Also, I'm a local fellow writer, for him. He teaches at Berkeley.

And here's Nic, so me, signing off.


deborah grabien - Sep 03, 2003 9:23:14 pm PDT #1816 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

OK, a wail for help. Crossposted - sort of - in Bitches.

Can anyone point me towards a picture, site, anything at all, of a stately home family crypt?

I just to know what it looks like, stairs down, interior layout. Next scene in Matty Groves is Char (daughter of the house) and her father down among the dead men, looking for a grave, and something nasty happening.

And the setting is the Leight-Arnold family crypt. And no one will tell me what theirs looks like. And damnitalltohell, I've even been a weekend guest at frellin' Castle Howard. But it didn't occur to me to ask John to show me the family's dead people, where they were stashed, I mean. Besides, at least one of them, Henry's fifth wife, had no head at the end.

But I need a crypt. For Callowen House. Soon, too.

Help? Acknowledgements at beginning of book would ensue, and maybe baked goods.


Beverly - Sep 03, 2003 9:51:22 pm PDT #1817 of 10001
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

All the crypt references I could find were for Metairie or Savannah, not so helpful, I'm thinking. Although there's an outfit that will sell you a private family mausoleum with six crypts around a center vestibule, solid granite carved with roses around a bronze door. No? Sorry. I'll continue looking tomorrow.


deborah grabien - Sep 03, 2003 10:06:52 pm PDT #1818 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Nice Bev. We loves our Bev.

Would it maybe be in the family's chapel?

DAMN it.


Beverly - Sep 03, 2003 10:36:47 pm PDT #1819 of 10001
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

Going just from gothic-type novels and movies, I would think a family crypt would be on the grounds, but away from the house, while the family chapel would be in, or attached to the house. You actually could lay out your theoretical crypt exactly like the one in Welcome to the Hellmouth, a little larger or smaller as needed, and there's not a body could say you were wrong. It seems to be the default layout for all the ones I'm remembering, including Zeffirelli's R&J. The half-round ones tend to be in churches, below the nave, and reserved for saints or influential friends of the church.

I'll continue the hunt tomorrow. 'Night.


Deena - Sep 03, 2003 10:54:27 pm PDT #1820 of 10001
How are you me? You need to stop that. Only I can be me. ~Kara

Deb, insent with quite a lot of links about family and chapel crypts. Some really good pictures in there, I think.


Am-Chau Yarkona - Sep 03, 2003 11:05:35 pm PDT #1821 of 10001
I bop to Wittgenstein. -- Nutty

deb: this page has a picture of what looks to my untutored eye very much like a crypt that's now missing the roof; this page gives information about the crypts of St. Bride's church, London. Lots of places have crypts, but pictures are nearly impossible to find and descriptions on websites tend to go "dark, gloomly, scary, cramped, lead coffins, mummified remains, come and pay our entrance fee and see for yourself".

Quite a lot of stately homes have crypts, often though not always containing family members (the other favourite place in the crypt under the local church), mostly under the chapel in the castle or stately home itself, underground as the word implies, dark: what I've gathered from my web surf (and seeing some in churches) is steep steps down, then a room, basically square, with shelves around three walls, large enough to store a coffin on. They seem to normally be built to hold about nine coffins.

In a cathedral, of course, it's larger; but the design seems to be much the same.

This page has a picture of the vaulted Norman crypt at Warwick castle (scroll down a long way, or do ctrl+F "crypt"); this page has a picture of the crypt at the Tarbat Discovery Centre, which seems to be an early site in Scotland; and this page has plans of two Anglo-Saxon crypts in Bradford-Upon-Avon.

Not a lot, and most of it not very specific, but I hope that helps a little.


deborah grabien - Sep 04, 2003 8:45:48 am PDT #1822 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

I love you guys.

And.....

AHA!

[link]

I'm thinking that the family will have its own private vault under St. Giles, the church in the story. After all, Purbury (mythical Hampshire village) is part of the Leight-Arnold family demesne. But I'm going to have a mausoleum, rather like the Wentworth one above, as well; the only family member buried there will be the "good" ghost, Lady Susanna, with the mausoleum erected in her memory by her grieving husband. Buried in unconsecrated ground on the property will be Andrew, the "bad" ghost.

So yes, absolutely, the crypt info for churches now becomes incredibly useful, and bless you both, Deena and Am.

But I'm really unreasonably cross that John Howard simply said, that? Oh, that's one of the follies. Why not tell us it was a mausoleum, damnit?