Aw, man. So BTDT. Spent money I didn't have at the bookstore again. I mention this here because I bought some more mysteries by my Secret Literary Boyfriend who's teaching me to write mysteries whether he knows it or not.
The Great Write Way
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
Working on editing this essay for possible publication and let it be known that I'm a terrible emdasher in the worst--or I would argue best--way possible. In my non fiction if I'm clobbering a point, I like to clobber right down to the form of the sentence itself. Prof who suggested it, thinks I should go the semi colon route, but I don't know... Are emdashes really that evil? Is a complex-compound sentences broken down into simple sentences really better writing? I mean, Dickens, he was writing fiction and his run-ons are beloved by all, non?
The thought of you asking me, Fragment Girl...or, alternately, Dances With Parens? Makes me laugh really hard.
I mean, Dickens, he was writing fiction and his run-ons are beloved by all, non?
Problem is, if Dickens were writing today, he'd get in trouble for it.
I, too, am the em-dash's bitch. In my rough drafts, I let myself em-dash and flirt with run-ons with wild abandon. In what I think of as first-and-a-half drafts, when I take what I've written out longhand and put it into the computer, I try to clean up the complex sentences, and I do my best to limit myself to one em-dash a page. Then when I'm editing, I question every dash. A lot of them stay, but they have to prove their right to be there.
What I wrote yesterday doesn't suck half as much as I thought it did. I'm not saying it's a brilliant piece of writing, but all it took to bring it up to my usual rough draft standard was reordering a few paragraphs where I'd let narrative interrupt dialogue and replacing some of the "he saids" with action tags. It still needs the emotion enhanced a bit, and I'm not sure I've managed the structure just right in one section, but I really can't see why I thought it was one of the worst things I've ever written. Not only is it salvageable, I think it's a decent skeleton to build a scene upon.
Now I'm going to stack some cats and go to bed.
I finished that essay finally! It still needs some work, but one of my dearest RL friends helped me a lot. What a relief.
Now I'm going to stack some cats and go to bed.This cracks me up.
New topic, Teppy?
Suggestions, at least partly pulled from random objects I can see from the computer:
Bread
Fruit
Calendar
Doors
Love scenes (can be sexual, but don't have to be)
How about discovery or opposites? Or looking at a view?
ION, tonight I discovered that one member of my writers group has been imagining my lovely hero, Jack, as a Robert Redford type.
A world of no.
Of course, the problem might be that this guy is a good 20-25 years older than me, so it's entirely possible his mental Robert Redford looks better than mine. But still, Nathan Fillion needs to get more famous, so when I say to my writers group, "Insofar as Jack looks like anybody but himself, he looks like Nathan Fillion, only not as extremely tall," I won't get blank stares.
Robert Redford was a stone hottie back in the day.