Spike: Ladies. Come on in. Plenty of blood in the fridge, don't be shy. Dawn: You mean like, real blood? Spike: What do you think? Dawn: Mostly I think, 'Eew!'

'Potential'


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 - Jul 07, 2008 5:28:34 pm PDT #329 of 6681
Because books.

Well, edit your f-bombs if you want. But the likelihood of lurkers hanging around to steal story ideas is pretty slim. Plus, like everyone said above, an idea is an idea. How you execute it is what makes it yours.


Susan W. - Jul 07, 2008 6:23:34 pm PDT #330 of 6681
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

Well, it's not that I think lurkers are going to steal my story. It just feels weird to have it not be a secret anymore. But I guess I'll leave it up as a reminder to myself that it's not the idea, it's the execution. And maybe leave the f-bombs, too, as a reminder that it's fine to control emotions, but I'm never going to be perfect at it.


Atropa - Jul 07, 2008 9:57:12 pm PDT #331 of 6681
The artist formerly associated with cupcakes.

Wizards of the Coast?

They're the game company that makes Magic: the Gathering and Dungeons & Dragons, and are owned by Hasbro. Them looking for original fiction is news to me, but I may be out of the loop.


Susan W. - Jul 08, 2008 6:42:36 am PDT #332 of 6681
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

I found a little bit about it online: [link]

So far I've only been able to find submissions guidelines, not a list of what they've published recently. Anyway, I'm waiting to hear back from the conference coordinator about whether this is someone who asked to meet me based on my contest entry. If so, I'm going to learn as much as I can about what he acquires and go to the appointment, since it seems stupid not to meet someone who's already interested in me. If nothing else, it's a connection. But if they just assigned me the appointment based on the genre of my book, I think I'll cancel, simply because I'd rather not make a big push to market it until I've at least finished the first draft.

I'm feeling a bit better about life this morning. I mean, if there can be multiple romance series about school friends with corny nicknames who fight Napoleon together, or friends with even cornier nicknames in a spy brotherhood, or large families with cornily memorable names, there's room for two series where Arthur Wellesley fights Napoleon in England, right? And if I sell this book, it's unlikely to come out before 2010 at the earliest, so by then the similarities to this one particular Temeraire book won't seem quite so stark. I hope. Maybe. I haven't completely recovered my optimism yet, and I have a little over a week left to buck up, because even if I'm not pitching to an editor at the conference, I need to be prepared to talk about my work with confidence and not apologize for it.


Susan W. - Jul 08, 2008 11:02:07 am PDT #333 of 6681
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

Turns out the conference organizers just scheduled the appointments for me because I'd left them blank.

Oh well. So much for that ego boost!


Lee - Jul 08, 2008 11:40:30 am PDT #334 of 6681
The feeling you get when your brain finally lets your heart get in its pants.

coughdrabblescough


Liese S. - Jul 08, 2008 12:05:23 pm PDT #335 of 6681
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Ooh, yeah, drabbles! I was thinking how disconnected I feel when I've got limited online time, but how I surely had enough time to do some drabbles. But then I forgot. So thanks for the prompt!

It's still "by the book," right?


SailAweigh - Jul 08, 2008 12:34:57 pm PDT #336 of 6681
Nana korobi, ya oki. (Fall down seven times, stand up eight.) ~Yuzuru Hanyu/Japanese proverb

I love my Doctor Who to bits and I'm afraid it had its way with me when I tried to write a drabble. So, full warning, spoilers for DW 4.13 in this one. I'll spoiler font for those who aren't up to speed with it. It probably won't make sense to those who don't watch Who, but the prompt just played into the series so well, I couldn't resist.

The Darkness

He said the memories would kill her.

Kill what made her special, spacial, space-time relative distance, diversion, divorce, divorced. No, she’d never been divorced. Never been married, married, married to Lee.

He said she couldn’t keep them.

Why did she have to give them up? They were hers, her children. That’s what made her special. They, they, he was special, spacial, space-time relative distance, distaff. No, he had no staff for all he was a doctor.

He made the rules.

She never followed them. Even in the library, she hadn’t done anything by the book, book, look him up.


Lee - Jul 08, 2008 5:52:52 pm PDT #337 of 6681
The feeling you get when your brain finally lets your heart get in its pants.

YAY Sail!


javachik - Jul 08, 2008 5:54:37 pm PDT #338 of 6681
Our wings are not tired.

Fantastic!