CupofJoe
Istari
I've been in EU project meetings that took 2 DAYS to agree an acronym! It was four letters long!!!Those EU legislators really need to learn how to worldbuild properly.
IstariI've been in EU project meetings that took 2 DAYS to agree an acronym! It was four letters long!!!Those EU legislators really need to learn how to worldbuild properly.
Shadow LordI've been in EU project meetings that took 2 DAYS to agree an acronym! It was four letters long!!!
IstariI've been in EU project meetings that took 2 DAYS to agree an acronym! It was four letters long!!!
IstariIf it was an Entmoot I can safely say that I'd have had more fun and "a-lalla-lalla-rumba-kamanda-lindor-burúme" would not mean a hill, but "hill" might have the acromyn A-LALLA-LALLA-RUMBA-KAMANDA-LINDOR-BURÚME...Sounds like you were attending an Entmoot. Two days would be considered quick for one of those.
Dark Lord
IstariMy random thought for the day: Why is it easier for me to write random stuff, or stuff earlier in the chronology, then it is to actually work on one of my WIPs??
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Dark LordI've been writing little scenes throughout my WIP for practically forever, but for like two years it's been impossible for me to work on it, starting at the beginning and writing the story in a chronological manner...
Dark LordIs there a lot you'll forgive in a book so long as the story is good? I'm currently reading a novel that received some either shotty editing or formatting: words missing, paragraphs lined up funky, sentences cutting off, grammar errors. It sounds like a nightmare, right? But the story is engaging and the errors are minor annoyances at best.
BTW this is a NY Times best-seller.
Shadow LordIs there a lot you'll forgive in a book so long as the story is good? I'm currently reading a novel that received some either shotty editing or formatting: words missing, paragraphs lined up funky, sentences cutting off, grammar errors. It sounds like a nightmare, right? But the story is engaging and the errors are minor annoyances at best.
BTW this is a NY Times best-seller.
IstariIs there a lot you'll forgive in a book so long as the story is good? I'm currently reading a novel that received some either shotty editing or formatting: words missing, paragraphs lined up funky, sentences cutting off, grammar errors. It sounds like a nightmare, right? But the story is engaging and the errors are minor annoyances at best.
BTW this is a NY Times best-seller.
Istari
Dark LordWhy do i not have an emotional connection to this story i'm writing?
Dark LordIs there a lot you'll forgive in a book so long as the story is good? I'm currently reading a novel that received some either shotty editing or formatting: words missing, paragraphs lined up funky, sentences cutting off, grammar errors. It sounds like a nightmare, right? But the story is engaging and the errors are minor annoyances at best.
BTW this is a NY Times best-seller.
IstariHeliotrope said something to me in some thread I can't now find that I wish I'd saved/copied, to the effect that our best writing often comes when we are skating the edge of being absurd/ridiculous/extreme while dipping into our darkest side or most personal side.
I wish I could remember the exact words because it struck me as incredibly important at the time, and I realized that I too often pull back from that edge and in fact probably have a strong tendency to want to avoid writing in that place.
I often start out with a strong emotional connection with a story and then as time passes I discover I just don't give a damn. But the connection comes back at the weirdest times—usually when I'm nowhere near my computer or don't have the time to write.