Mal: Take your people and go. Captain: You would have done the same. Mal: We can already see I haven't.

'Out Of Gas'


The Great Write Way  

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


Amy - Nov 08, 2004 9:44:55 am PST #7941 of 10001
Because books.

(Also, I am so writing a companion piece to yours, if you don't mind! I'd love to do the other side.)

Ooh, do! That would be very cool. (And he is taller, by an inch. Not that I'm not short, of course, but still. And his feet are like small canoes.)


Nilly - Nov 10, 2004 2:37:33 am PST #7942 of 10001
Swouncing

The bewildered child who still wonders how she can be responsible for a boy in middle school, already taller than her.

I especially like how it makes the mother look even younger than her son, with "bewildered child". It creates a picture in my mind's eye, of a girl sitting in a chair too big for her, so her feet can't reach the ground, dressed up in grown-ups clothes and high-heeled shoes, looking all lost and out-of-place, holding her purse and nodding to the teacher. All that long sentence.

And his feet are like small canoes.

Scary visual place.

deb, backsent from both addresses, as we posted about (sorry I didn't get back to you sooner - we had a network problem here yesterday, no computer agreed to talk with the outside world. But they're behaving now).


Allyson - Nov 10, 2004 5:38:12 am PST #7943 of 10001
Wait, is this real-world child support, where the money goes to buy food for the kids, or MRA fantasyland child support where the women just buy Ferraris and cocaine? -Jessica

Just wanted to thank everyone for the great feedback on the last story. Confirmed many of my own suspicions and made it easier for me to fix some problems.


Deena - Nov 10, 2004 6:09:10 am PST #7944 of 10001
How are you me? You need to stop that. Only I can be me. ~Kara

There's a book "The Encyclopedia of Tanks and Armored Fighting Vehicles - The Comprehensive Guide to Over 900 Armored Fighting Vehicles From 1915 to the Present Day", General Editor: Christopher F. Foss, 2002

The only reference I can find is of the "Crusader Dozer and Crane (ROF): Used by Royal Ordnance Factory in bomb disposal."

There's a picture of a truck being used for bomb removal here: [link]

And here are the handwritten notes of a Cpl. Duckworth who did bomb removal/disposal along with pictures of bombs and such. [link]

I found a mention of armored car use in England (rather than being shipped elsewhere) during the war, but no definite word that they were used specifically for bomb removal or disposal. Armored cars were used in other countries (specific mention Africa) for bomb removal/disposal as they were thought to be superior to tanks, but the implication is that the idea of their superiority was later disproved.

And, AHAH! A land rover! [link]


deborah grabien - Nov 10, 2004 6:56:01 am PST #7945 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Heh. Deena, the problem has been not so much finding out the vehicles used during the war itself, but rather what would have been considered appropriate usage in peacetime, in central London. Plus, it turns out that the UXB units in, say, the Home Counties, had entirely different vehicles than the London units.

I sent an email to the Royal Engineers Museum and Archive at Chatham. Hoping they get back to me soon, since I really want to start this damned thing; my editor's assistant, Toni Plummer, asked for a synopsis. Which I was able to send her, but I feel like a fraud.

The infuriating thing - Susan will understand this - is that all this is needed for one damned scene, in the prologue. The next thing that's going to require extensive looking-up and downloading are sources on the materials used in 16th century architecture.


Connie Neil - Nov 10, 2004 6:59:27 am PST #7946 of 10001
brillig

Deb, do you find that organizations like that are generally receptive to writer inquiries?


Deena - Nov 10, 2004 7:09:33 am PST #7947 of 10001
How are you me? You need to stop that. Only I can be me. ~Kara

Yeah, I hate how a tiny thing can get in the way of getting on with it. I may try again later.

eta: assuming,that is, that nothing comes of your inquiry or it takes too long.


deborah grabien - Nov 10, 2004 7:23:45 am PST #7948 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

connie, it depends on the organisation. I'd actually been referred to them, within a day of sending my original email, to the guy in charge of archives for a different branch of the British Army; he got back to me at once, gave me the name and email to contact, and warned me that they're sometimes slow in response.


Pix - Nov 10, 2004 1:33:37 pm PST #7949 of 10001
We're all getting played with, babe. -Weird Barbie

Deb-I thought you'd like to know that when I popped onto amazon today to check something, it recommending four books that it thought I might like...and one of them was Famous Flower! I just thought that was pretty cool considering I don't use the buffista link or anything.


erikaj - Nov 10, 2004 1:42:51 pm PST #7950 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

I've given myself a deadline of 12/30 to write a draft of The Mystery. Because I am sad and need the, um, external pressure rather than the Fuck Around and Write Two Paragraphs A Day if That's How You Feel method of previously. Although that will probably just make rewrites take longer as I just blaze through commiting errors of fact, but, I figure that will give me a murder to show the murder po-lice that I can't get any attention from.