I have finesse! I have finesse coming out of my bottom!

Anya ,'Showtime'


The Great Write Way  

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


Amy - Jan 15, 2005 5:14:36 pm PST #9483 of 10001
Because books.

The Stand is my very favorite King novel, but I didn't find it scary. Creepy sometimes (the tunnel!) but it was more a character piece to me than a frightener. I loves me some Stu and Franny.

And someone on another thread was asking what "Happy Crappy" was just the other day, I think. Heh.


Connie Neil - Jan 15, 2005 5:15:17 pm PST #9484 of 10001
brillig

King's non-fiction rocks the house for me. He's a wonderful observer, and he's utterly honest. On Writing pulls no punches on how badly he fucked himself up on drugs and booze.


Amy - Jan 15, 2005 5:17:34 pm PST #9485 of 10001
Because books.

King's non-fiction rocks the house for me.

And Danse Macabre is awesome. One of the things I love about his nonfiction is that it feels like he's sitting right there talking to me.


Polter-Cow - Jan 15, 2005 5:17:38 pm PST #9486 of 10001
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

I loves me some Stu and Franny.

I loved Nick, and I identified a lot with Larry.

And someone on another thread was asking what "Happy Crappy" was just the other day, I think. Heh.

Hee hee. Look for a "happy crappy" in my next India installment.

One of the things I love about his nonfiction is that it feels like he's sitting right there talking to me.

I like his EW column.


Lilty Cash - Jan 15, 2005 5:22:15 pm PST #9487 of 10001
"You see? THAT's what they want. Love, and a bit with a dog."

This (besides Red Sox fanaticism) is why I want to read Faithful. I love his non-fiction.

Overall, not much of his actually scares me. Odd ones have given me the shivers- Rose Madder resonated with me. Bag of Bones creeped me out.


Strix - Jan 15, 2005 5:26:16 pm PST #9488 of 10001
A dress should be tight enough to show you're a woman but loose enough to flee from zombies. — Ginger

I just read BoB again and it's one of the better things he's done in the last 10 years. It creeped me out, too.

And he kills important people off. So vital a skill.


Lilty Cash - Jan 15, 2005 5:56:12 pm PST #9489 of 10001
"You see? THAT's what they want. Love, and a bit with a dog."

Yep, he doesn't spare folk the awful bloody deaths. I'm not easily squicked by gore, but parts of The Dark Half almost made me wretch.

I think part of my King-love comes from him being a Mainer, too. I keep trying to get out some sort of further explanation for that, it's more than some sort of "Hometown boy, represent!" thing, more about how it makes me feel connected to his work. But that's for another day.

Now, I go for a beer down to the corner, then come back and keep reading FFoSM!


deborah grabien - Jan 15, 2005 9:45:31 pm PST #9490 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Actually, it occurs to me, we are all nattering. This stuff really belongs in Literary, since we've stopped talking about writing the stuff.

Lilty, sorry, I loathe and abominate The Stand. Had I been his editor, I'd have thrown up and then taken a meat cleaver to it.

P-C, someday I will tell you about the smackdown I gave Kubrick up in Hertfordshire at three in the morning, while he was filming that piece of shit movie.


WildDemon Cornelius - Jan 16, 2005 12:07:43 am PST #9491 of 10001
Take your fingers off it, don't you dare touch it, you know it don't belong to you, to you...

One of the things I love about his nonfiction is that it feels like he's sitting right there talking to me.

Y'know how sometimes someone says something that you agree w/ so perfectly and exactly that it's beyond description? That's what happened when I read that sentence.

BoB is awesome, perhaps his last really good book (Dark Tower VII needed an editor very badly); it doesn't scare me so much as it does make me cry a bit.

Anyways...getting back to the focus of this forum (writing rather than discussing lit.), any tips for someone who's just starting to seriously consider writing? (fiction and poetry)


Topic!Cindy - Jan 16, 2005 2:05:57 am PST #9492 of 10001
What is even happening?

Y'know how sometimes someone says something that you agree w/ so perfectly and exactly that it's beyond description? That's what happened when I read that sentence.
Yep. That's what happened when I read the following:

From It? I loved the book, and read it voraciously, racing to the end with bitten nails and a nervous stomach...but the end was a massive disappointment to me. Maybe nothing would have worked, for me at least, since the whole "what you fear is the evil" theme was carried out so well (i.e. what one thing could encompass all that effectively), but the end felt like a huge copout.

AmyLiz, I'm right with you on It.