Inspired by a post- Drop a quote in my ask box (500 letters or less- for a longer quote or paragraph just give the opening and ending sentence) from any of my fics, and I’ll give a DVD style commentary on it. What I was thinking when I wrote it, where in the timeline process it was written, characterization goals, what part of the sentence or phrase I’m really proud of or what part of it I didn’t think is successful, background thoughts that didn’t make it to the page, etc…
Tag: writing meme
What’s the most noticeable/noteworthy thing about my writing style?
Tell me what you like BEST about my writing!
♡: Your narration
♥: Your dialogue
❥: Your internal monologues (thoughts)
❣: Your descriptions
❦: Your details
❧: Your plots
✽: Your ideas
✿: Your characterization
❁: There’s good sentence variation!
✤: Your figurative language
❋: Your use of side characters
☆: Your understandably
☄: WILDCARD! Other: ______
put a fanfic trope in my inbox
and I will tell you:
- how likely I am to write it
- what character(s) or pairing I’d most likely write it for
send an ask: get to know your author
1)
is there a story you’re holding off on writing for some reason?2)
what work of yours, if any, are you the most embarrassed about existing?3) what order do you write in? front of book to back? chronological? favorite scenes first? something else?
4) favorite character you’ve written
5) character you were most surprised to end up writing
6) something you would go back and change in your writing that it’s too late/complicated to change now
7) when asked, are you embarrassed or enthusiastic to tell people that you write?
8) favorite genre to write
9) what, if anything, do you do for inspiration?
10) write in silence or with background noise? with people or alone?
11) what aspect of your writing do you think has most improved since you started writing?
12) your weaknesses as an author
13) your strengths as an author
14) do you make playlists for your current wips?
15) why did you start writing?
16) are there any characters who haunt you?
17) if you could give your fledgling author self any advice, what would it be?
18) were there any works you read that affected you so much that it influenced your writing style? what were they?
19) when it comes to more complicated narratives, how do you keep track of outlines, characters, development, timeline, ect.?
20) do you write in long sit-down sessions or in little spurts?
21) what do you think when you read over your older work?
22) are there any subjects that make you uncomfortable to write?
23) any obscure life experiences that you feel have helped your writing?
24) have you ever become an expert on something you previously knew nothing about, in order to better a scene or a story?
25) copy/paste a few sentences or a short paragraph that you’re particularly proud of
When you see this, share 3 lines from a WIP
When Sarnor greeted his fellow soldiers and patrol parties, he shouted the first word of Quenya that Faron clearly understood and learned, that for survivors. Only later would Faron learn the word had originated in the Telerin dialect.
…
“We are surrounded by strangers wearing our loved ones faces,” Faelindis said. “What a strange torment.”
What’s my writing trademark?
I’ve seen this for art, but what about my writing makes you go, “ah, that’s a _____ production”?
DO IT
Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. Three times, it’s the author’s kink.
ancient proverb (via
)
Let’s make this a meme. Guess my kinks in my askbox based on my fic.
(via sathinfection)
For the meme: 4, 5, 10, 18, 22, 25 (hard to pick tbh!! what a good meme)
4) favorite character you’ve written
Answered before, but expanding: It’s harder for me to write characters whose POVs or opinions don’t align with me, and as a sarcastic shit I like to narrate from POVs that do make these asides to the audience even when not actively attempting full humor. ‘Passive’ characters are easier for me, I feel, though I don’t know if that’s the right term. I don’t usually write about characters I dislike/try to write about characters or places I do (though I have a lot of favorites I haven’t got around to!) I like the slightly outside view on my favorites, hence so many OC narrators. It’s surprising how often I’ve written from Elu’s POV, and I don’t think I’m 100% successful, but my favorite two are melian through his eyes and beren. Not sure if he’s a contender for favorite. Ilsë was all my unadulterated rage and very cathartic to write. So were the Bór matriarchs.
5) character you were most surprised to end up writing
It wasn’t fully from Melkor’s POV because I didn’t want to dive all the way in – more like dipping two toes in, a tiny taste of Humorous!Melkor, but this morning’s whatever-you-wanna-call-it. (There is a fic on the back burner to-do list that would be from Melkor’s POV that would be character study meets sensory deprivation and mind games porn, if I felt comfortable writing pure smut)
Imin- before the Klingon Vanyar eureka moment he wasn’t even a conceived character in my head and speaking of which: boy has my view for Ingwë changed!
10) write in silence or with background noise? with people or alone?
Either silence of background music- generally a soundtrack or whatever song/pair of songs I’m listening to on repeat that day. Try to keep the song appropriate for the mood. Ingwë tends to get written to via the Journey game soundtrack, Squidboy in Angband I try some GoT but usually ends up my selection of indie-pop. Wrote the bits with under the rose hood to the medieval party mix.
Rest of the answers under the cut!
18) were there any works you read that affected you so much that it influenced your writing style? what were they?
I read a lot, professional stuff and fanfic, and I know they have influenced my style. I think I’d blame Robert Jordan’s Wheel of Time – I don’t know how much of my style matches up but I know that has to be a bigger influence on my than even i can clearly distinguish. I’m not comfortable with a sparse style and while i try a little, limited third-person POV where that really has a bearing on the reader isn’t my strength. I try for symbolic and dreamy but can’t get too into it either as a reader or write.
22) are there any subjects that make you uncomfortable to write?
Porn. I love to read it, can’t write it. POVs of characters that have vastly different personalities or opinions that aren’t brief glimpses into the villains. I don’t have a problem writing about violence and torture, but I’m not really good and practiced at fight scenes or long action scenes- I don’t feel I have the knack for those, though I try my hand at them.
The long self-reflective moments when a character reexamines themselves and changes, because I’m uncomfortable with self-reflection and I don’t write long enough stories for characters to really undergo ‘big character development’ – not saying none of them, but it one of those things I like to read and admire when authors do them well and it’s not something I feel proficient at. Like I don’t feel I provide as an author ‘great character development and journey!’ because I don’t sit down and outline that – or ‘long epic well-constructed intrigue and action plot!’
25) copy/paste a few sentences or a short paragraph that you’re particularly proud of
I’m just gonna go to town on this and link to lines that tend to stick out to me as I re-read my works. Consider this a very small sampling:
Her face is hot and breathing muffled and tight as she smothers her weeping into the earth lest the air catch it and carry it to the Bright Ones.
The first tribe of Speakers, Kwendî, were never large in number, and their choices would keep their tribe small. In this time all elves lived near the shores of the Great Mother Lake that had birthed them, Cuiviénen, and there did most remain. Yet some chose to venture away from shore, for in that time all elves were curious. But curiosity and hunger drew the people of the first tribe away from the safety of the lake more than all other elves and thus sealed their fate. (How the first paragraph starts and ends- it’s not the strongest one, but I think I got the tone right and it sets up the quasi-didactic narrative)
Rúth swallowed a laugh, though her eyes were bright. “That, Bledda, is a dog. A hound, like in the stories. The man owns it, like one does a horse. It is no werewolf.”
His gasp, like the very first gasp of air that the first of all elves ever took, wakes his wife Iminyë from her sleep. She opens her eyes and turns to her husband. Sometimes in these moments she will reach a hand to touch him. She reminds him in these simplest of movements that he did not sleep alone, nor does he wake alone.
This passage:
Aegnor looms over him, filling his vision, a hand gently shaking his body.
“Stay with me, Brother. Another sally is coming. We need to move you into the keep. Can you walk?”
Perhaps he knows and says nothing, as all his kindness.
“Carry my song on your winds,” she cries to Ossë, feeling his storms whip at her silver hair. He knows her feelings of sorrow, has shared them with her these long years. More importantly he knows rage, and Ilsë screams her grief in anger, feeling the heady satisfaction that there is finally a way to sate her cries for vengeance, to expel the hurricane of rage and horror and weeping upon targets that can be smashed and drowned. She desires a storm to carry her ships laden with soldiers and spears and the reckoning of the Valar to the shoreline of Beleriand, to the very feet of the Great Enemy. She wishes the very sea to swallow him. The is a dark undertow in Ilsë from too many years of pain. “Hear me, oh stars of the Hinder Shore! Hear me, oh stars of my birth!
“Air has a great weight. You don’t feel it, as it is always pressing in from every direction. You don’t see how much it weighs.”
Aegnor made a slow sort of noise, which Angrod thought was a little ridiculous, considering his brother had an even higher alcohol tolerance and thus completely avoided hangovers, a trait that served Aegnor well while dealing with all his new in-laws.
And of course this one, because I will never stop patting myself on the back for this ending line gem:
“I am finally crossing the sea,” Arodreth said. “Tell her I was too stubborn to go any other way.”
1, 4, 11, 21 (&/or any that you particularly wanted to answer)
I’ll stay with the Silmarillion fanfic for all of these
1) is there a story you’re holding off on writing for some reason?
The Ingwë swaps with Elwë AU because I haven’t introduced Ravennë in Of Ingwë Ingweron yet. The Great Fever of Dorthonion 432 because I hate the ages in canon for the Bëorians but I want canon timeline framework. Of the Beren’s Band of the Red Hand, I know Aglar/Alcar’s is going to be a bitch to get through (AU Robb Stark) because there’s a lot of family plot to set up, plus his focus would heavily feature the Fëanorians and the First Kin-slaying but from the Noldor perspective and the story-line does not think remotely kind of them (Fëanor using the cover of battle to kill ‘Ned Stark’ as to remove a voice of dissent) – there’s a shit-storm heading my way when I write that one.
4) favorite character you’ve written
Of the OCs, Faron because I’ve spent so much time in his head and I have a good handle on his wants, history, inner voice – he has my snark but isn’t too obnoxious about it and it still fits him as the Theon Greyjoy expy. And I get to play with horror and world-building but also fluff and sweetness.
11) what aspect of your writing do you think has most improved since you started writing?
I’ve posted old original fic about, some will stay hidden. It’s hard for me to judge what my strengths as a writer are. I know I’m more confident with the concept of writing fanfic. I think I’ve gotten stronger with sentence structure. Dialogue I think. (I’ve never been afraid of writing it; I’m not sure if I’m good at it. Sometimes I think there’s a unnatural stilted-ness but at least I no longer phonetically awkwardly write dialect) Less glaring substitutions in of non-English terms.
21) what do you think when you read over your older work?
Typo, typo, this sentence was awkwardly written/flows wrong. Nah for the most part I love to re-read my work and most of the time am happy with it. Some of them I think are really good.
And for Author’s Choices – I’ll pick two but I’d love to answer more (hint hint other followers):
24) have you ever become an expert on something you previously knew nothing about, in order to better a scene or a story?
Not expert, but the time I spent on Wikipedia and other sites looking up things like plant and animal species, basic pottery glazing, etc… should be obvious.
3) what order do you write in? front of book to back? chronological? favorite scenes first? something else?
Usually I start with the opening paragraphs, then skip to climatic or favorite scenes if a longer piece. Usually I won’t have the very last scene written, but the penultimate, and then a lot of time spent trying to connect them.