Maybe I've always been here.

Early ,'Objects In Space'


Buffista Fic: It Could Be Plot Bunnies  

Where the Buffistas let their fanfic creative juices flow. May contain erotica.


Am-Chau Yarkona - Sep 01, 2003 9:15:20 am PDT #6290 of 10001
I bop to Wittgenstein. -- Nutty

Lets just hope we're not using the same ones.

At the moment, I'm going through the lists and writing a drabble per title, so I'm sort of hoping to be using the same ones as everyone else, actually. Annoying of me, but that's the way the muse has taken me.

(BTW, thanks for the correction in LJ, which can go unspecified on these boards. Something of a "time to fall through the floor" moment, I'm afraid.)


esse - Sep 01, 2003 9:17:18 am PDT #6291 of 10001
S to the A -- using they/them pronouns!

Just thought you should know. :)


Connie Neil - Sep 01, 2003 11:14:01 am PDT #6292 of 10001
brillig

OK, see what I get for watching my Angel DVDs instead of being online. Erika, I gave a much less up-to-date answer to your Batman/Catwoman question over in Fan Fic. I haven't read any comics regularly for months now, since Hubby stopped working at the game and comics store, but I might have to check out that one series to see Batman actually admit to human feelings. I don't know how much "Dark Knight Returns," Frank Miller's masterpiece of Batman future-fic, is considered canon, but there's acknowledgement in there that Bruce and Selina have been together. There's oodles of AUs out there with the two of them together (my favorite is one of the lovely "Elsewhens" [I think that's the title] where they go completely AU and have fun, and Bruce Wayne is a pirate, and Catwoman is a Spanish noblewoman with a sword, mad fun), but I hadn't realized it had gone mainstream. Or as mainstream as a canon can, with who knows how many regular titles and lots of single-shot issues.

But, damn, I loves me some Batman.


erikaj - Sep 01, 2003 11:18:17 am PDT #6293 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

Me too. In my story, Bayliss and Munch bond over a Catwoman fantasy. I'm both proud and embarrassed by this.


P.M. Marc - Sep 01, 2003 1:53:18 pm PDT #6294 of 10001
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

So, I've been writing more of Sunrise.

The Whole Thing.

The Stuff I Just Put Up.

(WIP, all details subject to change, esp. in the last bits, which remain raw like sushi, as always.)


deborah grabien - Sep 01, 2003 3:29:36 pm PDT #6295 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

DAMN, Plei.


P.M. Marc - Sep 01, 2003 4:43:20 pm PDT #6296 of 10001
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

I'm finding myself crushed under the tide of knowing where I'm going and having to sort out the jumble as it washes over me.

And, of course, I decided that it would be a *good* idea to take a break and read Galveston today, and Sean Stewart has just broken me completely, and I haven't even read Part 4 yet. (Started ATPOTL last night, too. I'm reading a lot this weekend, though in patchwork. It wants me to read it at night, you see.)


deborah grabien - Sep 01, 2003 4:55:21 pm PDT #6297 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Night is a good time for that.

But I'm not reading; I'm writing. Chapter 4 of TET is moving along.


P.M. Marc - Sep 01, 2003 4:57:30 pm PDT #6298 of 10001
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

Rick on!

I wrote most of the weekend, and when I wasn't writing, I was reading of revising. My brain is hyperactive like a two year old on speed this weekend.


deborah grabien - Sep 01, 2003 5:03:17 pm PDT #6299 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

This is a good thing, writing hyperatudosity.

I'm taking this bit slowly (and I'm really in the wrong thread; this ought to be in Great Write). I want it as close to perfect as I can get it: full of subtle bits and hints and puzzlement, yet with all of what the reader - and Lucy - needs to know, right there for the grokking, damnit.