That's not what making out sounds like -- unless I'm doing it wrong?

Willow ,'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.


Astarte - Dec 03, 2003 9:45:43 am PST #2959 of 10001
Not having has never been the thing I've regretted most in my life. Not trying is.

That sounds verra pleasing, deb. NTM, delicious.

May need to fire up my bread machine. Of course, first I'll have to create some sourdough starter, but hey, I got nothin' but time, right?


deborah grabien - Dec 03, 2003 9:53:59 am PST #2960 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Damn. I've forgotten my ebay id and password.

Hopefully they'll get it to me in time to bid.


erikaj - Dec 03, 2003 10:05:55 am PST #2961 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

I'm reading "Weaver" right now and it's FG. It makes me think about style and voice...like what makes one. Cause I would know Deb wrote it if she put Bozo the Clown's name on it, but yet I couldn't explain why...I realize we are are in artificial situation being exposed to each other's voice so often...but I ask cause I feel like I'm trying to find mine.


deborah grabien - Dec 03, 2003 10:17:13 am PST #2962 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

erika, the thing about voice is, there are so many damned definitions of the thing that I expect it's impossible to define.

I can speak about mine, because my editor already did; in the 1993 edition of Writing Mysteries: A Handbook by the Mystery Writers of America (Genre Writing Series) by Sue Grafton (Editor), she cited me as an example of it.

Ruth's take is that voice is a mystical thing that can't be taught, is either there or isn't (and she has to be the world's biggest pragmatist, so that's really extreme, coming from her), and is the one thing every editor falls to their knees and prays to walk in their office. That's the basic quote from her essay in Writing Mysteries.

I also think voice is there, inborn to the writer in the same way it's likely to be inborn to a singer. But I also think a lot more people have that particular quality than are aware of even its existence.


Susan W. - Dec 03, 2003 10:26:07 am PST #2963 of 10001
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

At the editors and agents panel at the writers conference in October, all five panelists emphatically agreed that when they open a new manuscript, what they're dreaming of discovering is a strong, sure, unique voice, because above all else that's what makes or breaks a book, and shows if the author has the talent to sustain a career.


deborah grabien - Dec 03, 2003 10:35:46 am PST #2964 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Susan, exactly.

The thing about the "Writing Mysteries" deal is that I didn't know Ruth had done that until eight or so years later.

But the voice - what she remembered from "Plainsong" and "Eyes in the Fire" - was apparently still there in the first draft of "Weaver" I sent her.

Lucky for me...


sfmarty - Dec 03, 2003 11:56:47 am PST #2965 of 10001
Who? moi??

I like Deena's idea of a plant set up. Editors and agents get lots of signed stuff. Not tha Joss's autograph is something to cough at, but a plant, yeh. An amyrillis. Yum.


deborah grabien - Dec 03, 2003 12:01:32 pm PST #2966 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

mart, she may well be like me, and glare at anything resembling a potted plant in complete dismay. And since she lives in the wilds of the east Coast, no idea what would grow out of doors.


sfmarty - Dec 03, 2003 12:03:58 pm PST #2967 of 10001
Who? moi??

Amyrillis grow on window sills just fine. And they can be tossed out after the season is over. If you forget to water them, seems to be ok. I had one and when it was done I put the pot on the back porch. It has been without water or love for two years. It is sprouting as we speak. You have some in the yard. The 'pink ladies'.


Deena - Dec 03, 2003 12:25:31 pm PST #2968 of 10001
How are you me? You need to stop that. Only I can be me. ~Kara

Marty, would you like to be my mother-in-law too? My current one's not nearly as cool as you are.