Zkribbler
Deity
You do recall that some of the greatest SF novels of all time were serialized in successive issues, right?
But they weren't by rookie writers.
You do recall that some of the greatest SF novels of all time were serialized in successive issues, right?
Who says you can't be one of the success stories? (no pun intended)But they weren't by rookie writers.
Who says you can't be one of the success stories? (no pun intended)
Much of my female lead's backstory takes place at a university. Yesterday, I watched the Marx Bros' Horsefeathers to see if I could steal some ideas from their collegiate movie.. No such luck
2084 piques my interest.
Governments lease out territory to corporations to let them handle governance.
The corporations pay in corporate chits, you're housed by the corporation, and everything you buy is branded and distributed by the corporation.
There's still lots of my story to tell, so I'll keep working on it (separate thread coming soon).
The story needs to be about the character arc of my main character. Once I focus on this, the disjointed parts of my story will begin to fall in lineand the flaccid ending will gain some zip.
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Most jesters weren't stand-up comedians. They just did their thing according to what was going on at the time, unless it was during a celebration or ceremony. There's a delightful scene in Philippa Gregory's novel The Queen's Fool where Queen Mary Tudor is sad because her marriage plans aren't working out and her court fool promptly gets down on one knee and proposes to her (in an absurd way that makes it clear that he's not serious but is trying to cheer her up). After his proposal, he warns her that if she decides to spurn his proposal and opts instead for a prince or king and they don't work out, she should remember that "you could have had me!"My main character wants to be a stand-up jester. This means I'll need to sprinkle stand-up routines throughout my story. Writing stand-up is really hard.![]()
Most jesters weren't stand-up comedians.
It's funny because circa 1066 the Anglo-Saxons called the Normans orcs.After turning it out, I noticed my situation bears a striking resemblance to England after the Dunkirk evacuation: hordes of orcs across the water and what's left the shattered, outnumbered armies of civilization facing them.