Mal: We're still flying. Simon: That's not much. Mal: It's enough.

'Serenity'


The Great Write Way  

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


deborah grabien - Apr 29, 2004 9:45:54 pm PDT #4333 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Huh. *Finally* got my damned AIM up, and Holli, I think I missed you. Let's try again in the morning or tomorrow night.


Nilly - Apr 30, 2004 1:49:35 am PDT #4334 of 10001
Swouncing

Thanks, Kristin, erika, and especially deb. It's funny that you used the word "instinctive" - I more often than not find myself being criticized for filtering things too much, thus mostly preventing myself from doing things instinctively.

Oh, and I think that the biggest advantage for me, when reading in not-my-first-language-English, in which I need to actually read, as opposed to Hebrew, in which it's a completely automatic process and if anything I have to stop myself from reading, is that I have to pay more attention in order to follow the words and their meaning, and this way I can discover things that would escape me in Hebrew. Either that, or I'm just reaching to find something good about reading slower, and therefore less.

Holli, I really liked your piece. Something I don't think anybody has mentioned before - I loved the contrast in the images that were build in my mind, of the two "backgrounds", in the lack of a better word, for each story. You being alone in a cool basement for the first one, you being with your friends and the description of your costumes, in the other. I especially liked this:

shook my head and set my antennae wobbling, and wished that I had known Peter so I could know which story to believe.

because of that contrast, the sweet costume and the death, being together in one sentence. I don't know why, but it made the point of the finality of death even stronger, for me.


Connie Neil - Apr 30, 2004 5:08:41 am PDT #4335 of 10001
brillig

I have found the writing book i've been looking for. "I'd Rather Be Writing", by Marcia Golub, from Writer's Digest Books. It talks about self-defeating behaviors, coping with a family who think they have a right to your time, and stuff like that.

This woman is me! She's saving her manual typewriter for when the comet hits, and when her parents died she found herself taking mental notes for use later. Now I just need to stop squriming when she says something that I don't want to do.


erikaj - Apr 30, 2004 6:27:25 am PDT #4336 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

Yeah...this is true. Only kidding. I know you don't have a perfect partner, Mitch.


Katerina Bee - Apr 30, 2004 7:08:55 am PDT #4337 of 10001
Herding cats for fun

Holli, wow. Your last sentence brought the tears to my eyes. It seems to me that this sums it up perfectly.

...I have a manual typewriter tucked away, too.


deborah grabien - Apr 30, 2004 7:36:52 am PDT #4338 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Ah, Return of the Underwoods....


erikaj - Apr 30, 2004 8:09:04 am PDT #4339 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

I don't...my fingers are not strong enough and I'm Typo Queen...I do miss the productive-sounding click though.


Connie Neil - Apr 30, 2004 8:13:47 am PDT #4340 of 10001
brillig

I've got an idea for a drabble theme--the first time you really appreciated music, be it rock/pop/classical/the blues, whatever.

(Yes, I'm listening to some music, and it's made me thoughtful)


Katerina Bee - Apr 30, 2004 9:05:39 am PDT #4341 of 10001
Herding cats for fun

I have fond memories of learning how to type on Grandpa Stanley's old gray steel Royal typewriter. I had to hold my hands at shoulder level and build up some speed or I couldn't hit the keys hard enough. Good times, good times. Then I had to learn how not to pound the crap out of today's more sensitive keyboards.


Beverly - Apr 30, 2004 12:13:54 pm PDT #4342 of 10001
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

I never mastered a manual, but I tore up jack on an IBM Selectric. Come the apocalypse, it's a rock and a...harder rock for me, I guess, when the paper runs out.

Well, I know how to make quill pens, and I have beaucoodles of dip pen and extra nibs, and I know how to make ink. I'll betcha I could learn to make paper, too. Faced with the rock option, smelly papermaking seems the better way. Less toe-injury, too, from dropping documents.