But? There's always a but. When this is over, can we have a big 'but' moratorium?

Fred ,'Smile Time'


The Great Write Way, Act Three: Where's the gun?

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


Amy - Jun 02, 2009 5:43:43 am PDT #1640 of 6690
Because books.

It depends on the conference, Gud. Who's presenting, who's attending, what kind of workshops are given. If you're interested in learning craft, or even just how other people write, it can be really fascinating, and it always used to fire me up to write more -- for a long time I was going to a couple a year, as an *editor* asked to speak, but I always got to sit in on other panels and talk to writers, so.


Gudanov - Jun 02, 2009 7:34:49 am PDT #1641 of 6690
Coding and Sleeping

The anti-inspiration!

Very much so. Now I just feel ashamed that I read the books. Well not all the books. I think I stopped when I realized I just read a 600 page book and almost nothing happened. That and the characters ended up being all the same, especially the women.


Gudanov - Jun 02, 2009 10:05:08 am PDT #1642 of 6690
Coding and Sleeping

It depends on the conference, Gud. Who's presenting, who's attending, what kind of workshops are given. If you're interested in learning craft, or even just how other people write, it can be really fascinating, and it always used to fire me up to write more

Hmmmm.... I don't know. It would involve travel, thus money and vacation time. I think my wife is more into the idea because she thinks I can get published based on reading as I'm going along. I am much less optimistic on that score, though I don't have the first clue what the market for fantasy books is.

Interestingly, out of pure curiosity she tried to Google the demographics of fantasy book readers and came up with nothing. I tried as well but struck out too (no surprise, she's usually better at Googling up facts than I am). That seemed kinda weird, it seems like the sort of thing that would Google up easily.


Amy - Jun 02, 2009 10:11:28 am PDT #1643 of 6690
Because books.

Fantasy has a really decent core of readers, Gud, just like any other genre fiction. I'm not sure how easy it is to get published in fantasy, because we didn't do fantasy where I used to work, but there are certainly a fair number of fantasy novels out each month.

The best place to look for information like that is actually books themselves -- who publishes fantasy, first, and then you go to their web sites and see how many new books they have coming out each month, who's doing straight fantasy, who does darker urban fantasy, that kind of thing.


Gudanov - Jun 02, 2009 10:15:19 am PDT #1644 of 6690
Coding and Sleeping

The best place to look for information like that is actually books themselves -- who publishes fantasy, first, and then you go to their web sites and see how many new books they have coming out each month, who's doing straight fantasy, who does darker urban fantasy, that kind of thing.

Thanks for the advice. I'll probably be doing that after writing 9 more chapters, writing a good number of revisions I already know about, and fixing an obscene number of punctuation errors.


Gudanov - Jun 03, 2009 5:35:18 am PDT #1645 of 6690
Coding and Sleeping

I'm now a good ways into Chapter 19 and up to 107k words. I just might be able to finish Chapter 19 tonight. My outline says just 9 chapters after that.


Gudanov - Jun 04, 2009 5:47:42 am PDT #1646 of 6690
Coding and Sleeping

Chapter 19 is done. It will need a bit of work, but not too bad. I'm now about a page into Chapter 20. Moving along.


Gudanov - Jun 05, 2009 5:30:08 am PDT #1647 of 6690
Coding and Sleeping

Now about 1700 words into chapter 20. After revising my high level outline, it looks like it will be 28 chapters and a brief epilogue.


Liese S. - Jun 05, 2009 9:50:57 am PDT #1648 of 6690
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Doing great! Keep at it!


Typo Boy - Jun 05, 2009 10:40:13 am PDT #1649 of 6690
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

I know "ongepatshket" is a very obscure Yiddish expression. But is it clear enough from context to be OK in the following context?

We have ongepatshket our forests to the point we must clear brush from some of them or they will act as tinder, converting small fires to big ones."

Or is use of obscure dialect too distracting even if people can figure it out from context?