The Great Write Way
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
Tentatively titled, "Will the Vampire People Please Leave the Lobby"
I wasn't there, but I usually forget that. By the time I am 80, I will think I was at all these events, and so, I must say, I adore this title. When you're working with a publisher, if s/he thinks it is too long, you must insist upon it as a subtitle.
MONIQUE! Hi, hi, hi.
(Lee, the piece flows nicely, but I feel like I am missing a reference. Can you tell me about it?)
Oh, in other news, especially for P-C and Bev - not going to do White Sands, because a) radiation is sort of overused and I don't want anyone to go in expecting science fiction (it isn't) and b) have something far better and far scarier, that I can actually tie into the Hollywood community in the fifties, which is my timeframe for the grandparents of the kids with nasty anemia.
Ooh, does it involve some Hollywood magnate receiving a blow job when suddenly she stops sucking his dick and starts SUCKING HIS BLOOD?
Hey, has Laurell K. Hamilton done that before? I should write her.
Cindy, it is an LA thing, but one a few Buffistas have seen. Youngwiid court is a house near me in a very chi-chi neighborhood. It has a a blindingly white wrought iron fence, with the driiveway painted to match, and 12 (or so) matching statues lining the driveway, all of which are naked men. At Christmas, they put Santa hats on them.
Lee -- ::snerk::!! I love the Davids!
I want to float an idea for a future drabble, to see if y'all think it would require too much extra "work," or if you like it, or if you think I'm just a crazy word nerd.
The idea is -- write a personals ad from the POV of a painting that's looking for the ideal viewer. *Not* the POV of the subject of the painting, like the Mona Lisa herself, but from Mona-Lisa-the-painting.
Thoughts?
t edit
The drabble does NOT have to be about the Mona Lisa; that was just my example. It can be about any painting.
write a personals ad from the POV of a painting that's looking for the ideal viewer
Oooh! That's intriguing. I'd definitely be up for that. (And I promise not to do "Dogs Playing Poker".)
(And I promise not to do "Dogs Playing Poker".)
"They're
dogs,
and they're
playing POKER!
Yeaarrgghhgh!! Aaaagght!"
t /Homer
attempt at the Lies drabble, from the recipient of the lies' pov
"This might squeeze a little."
My upper arm is bruised from the automatic blood pressure cuff, swollen and sore to the touch. Every four hours, unless they want to double-check something, and they come in every half hour.
"You might feel a little stick."
Slow, slow insertion of the needle into a vein, then a wiggle as the nurse tries to get the blood to flow. I have tiny veins, hard to find. She mutters, pulls out the needle, twists my arm to try and find a good vein.
4 AM. When the clumsy vampires come.
Cindy, it is an LA thing, but one a few Buffistas have seen. Youngwiid court is a house near me in a very chi-chi neighborhood. It has a a blindingly white wrought iron fence, with the driiveway painted to match, and 12 (or so) matching statues lining the driveway, all of which are naked men. At Christmas, they put Santa hats on them.
Hee. Thank you. I mean granted, I only know you from here, and although I wouldn't be surprised if you liked statuesque naked men, I didn't peg you for someone who'd have naked men statues lining your driveway, and yet, I couldn't...well, there ya go. Thanks!
The idea is -- write a personals ad from the POV of a painting that's looking for the ideal viewer. *Not* the POV of the subject of the painting, like the Mona Lisa herself, but from Mona-Lisa-the-painting.
Thoughts?
I am not sure I get the distinction. Or rather, I guess I get the distinction, but am not sure if I ... nope. Not getting the distinction. I think it still sounds interesting, unless I am just blinded by my Teppy love.
I am not sure I get the distinction. Or rather, I guess I get the distinction, but am not sure if I ... nope. Not getting the distinction.
It's not Mona Lisa saying, "Come check out this painting of me," it's
Mona Lisa
saying, "Come check me out." Mona can talk about her skin tone, but
Mona
can talk about how it sucks to be trapped in a frame.
I am not sure I get the distinction. Or rather, I guess I get the distinction, but am not sure if I ... nope. Not getting the distinction.
Hmm. I think I'm under-articulating. All I mean is that it shouldn't be a drabble where, for instance, the Mona Lisa writes a personal ad to get a guy, that it's not JUST her as the subject of the painting writing the personal ad, but the 500-year-old painting, what kind of viewer the painting would ideally like to gaze upon it for hours.
Or, if you don't see the distinction, maybe I was just over-thinking it.