Jesse - if there is an affiliate account, I think a page and/ or mini store is possible. Either on amazon or on another page.
'Shindig'
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.
Sail, that was perfect!
Congratulations, Susan!
Sail, great drabble!
Susan, congratulations!
Sailaweigh - loved it!
Susan - that's excellent - on both counts.
Congratulations, Susan!
The torn challenge is now closed.
The new challenge is play.
Congratulations, Susan!
Sail, I lovelovelove that drabble. So...US!
I've been trying to explain the difference between a skilled writer and a talented writer (of course, one hopes you have a bit of both, but without talent, you're fuck out of luck).
I've been dealing with someone who thinks it's all very easy. Think of a marketable idea, and write it all down. That's all.
If only.
I'm so frustrated. I can't seem to find a way to explain it in metaphor. I've tried architect/carpenter, physicist/engineer.
He just seems to discount talent as something non-existent. Everything is skill, and anyone can learn a skill. Ergo, anyone can be a great writer. Not just a good writer, but a great one.
Am I explaining this well? I feel like I'm incoherent.
Tell him to get back to you after he's had his first book published.
Oh, you ARE.
I think we need examples.
I'm not good with writers. . .but say - that guy who does the painting on PBS? Sure - he has skills but say, Frans Hals - he's got talent AND skill.
Talent is the raw material - you can't teach it - it's either there or not. Skill includes all the tools you can teach to make talent into something. You can teach someone the skills but if they don't have the talent - it's not going to sing.