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05:45
@DForck42 I liked it.
But I think you overused the word "uh"!
06:13
I also didn't like the man's reaction when they told him that they think he took the money.
 
6 hours later…
12:30
fluffs throw pillows
Hi @Donald! Are you interested in the NaNoWriMo preparations?
12:44
I wonder what kind of novel I will write. I'm a bit excited at the prospect
I had an idea on the way home. Then I changed it.
maybe some erotic fiction... sci fi... murder mystery...
I should write an erotic novel. I could do better than the crap I've read lately.
But I don't think I want to murky my head like that.
 
1 hour later…
14:10
Hey @Ladybug, haven't seen you in a while.
 
2 hours later…
15:51
@KitFox Well, I'm busy. Writing ;)
Sweet.
Are you thinking of doing NaNoWriMo this year?
Probably the same issue like last year: I'm already writing a novel. I doubt it's finished before November.
But you guys look like you all want to start. That's nice :)
I can only assist by answering questions during NaNo. If there are any. Writers is more deserted during Nano than usual.
We're gearing up, so I am hoping for a lot of activity during prep time.
You want to come to chat and give advice?
If you still keep the old schedule, I think I do not have time. Damn, when is chat scheduled again?
Usually Tuesdays at 1pm Eastern. We go as long as people are talking, so sometimes until 3:30.
But you aren't the only one to not be able to make it.
So if you have a good alternate, we might be able to get a second group together.
16:07
That's 7pm in Germany if I get this right. Not a good time for me. Two or three hours later I'm maybe available again. I set a reminder to check if you are still chatting then.
Now I'm heading home. Cya!
17:05
I came up with it as a means to naturally divide the work into a gazillion short blurbs.
Good thinking. It sounds really interesting.
17:32
I came here looking for exercise.
Hi @Jack.
If you are looking for the exercises we did this summer, you can start here:
5
Q: Weekly Chat Writing Topics: Summer 2012

KitFoxThe Tuesday afternoon chat was going well, and we agreed amongst ourselves to have an informal writing exercise every week. Chatters are free to participate or not, and to ask for critique or not. The criteria for the exercise are posted and pinned in the chat room. Chatters are encouraged to ...

Here is the the new one for the fall:
1
Q: Weekly Chat Writing Topics: Fall 2012

KitFoxTuesday afternoon chats are continuing to go well We have an informal writing exercise every week. Chatters are free to participate or not, and to ask for critique or not. All are welcome to come, read, and discuss; completing the exercise is not necessary. Chatters are encouraged to post thei...

Next week, we are going to start doing some novel planning practice, for people who are interested in seeing what's involved in preparing for National Novel Writing Month (November).
It should be good for anyone who is thinking about how to get started writing a novel.
We also do ten-minute timed exercises for fun in during chat.
Do you have a blog or a website?
Great. We like to use our blogs for sharing our work. It makes it easier to post a link to the completed exercise.
Most of us never actually finished the August three-part short story, so if you don't feel like doing the novel prep, you could start in on that exercise. Or really any of them.
Hmm, the 9/5 exercise sounded cool.
I vaguely recall in one of my creative writing classes we were once given a number of photographs. We each chose one and had to write a short story about it.
Sweet. Feel free to do whatever one you like. You can share a link here any time, but the regular chat is Tuesday at 1pm Eastern. There are some people who can't make it then, so we might find a second time to do chat as well. Speak up if it doesn't work for you.
Also, there are a few of us who hang out in here and we're happy to critique whatever you've got going or provide moral support or whatever.
I mean, outside of chat time.
17:51
@KitFox i did :-)
Well, yes, but you are more ambitious than the rest of us.
@KitFox :-)
btw, i came up with a pretty awesome idea for a novel
Yeah? Are you going to write it up on your blog and bring it to chat?
@KitFox maybe
...are you going to just tell me now? waits eagerly
17:56
the general concept is: in an alternate world, life's a videogame. but not jsut any video game, an rpg. in order to become someone important you have to level up your life. and the novel will follow the story of a kid that was put into a coma when he was... 13. 7 years later he's woken up, and levels behind where he's supposed to be
Hmm.
Could be interesting.
Perhaps someone here would read this, which I wrote a couple of days ago to see if a 800 word serial chapters would be of interest on the scifi blog.
jackbnimble on September 12, 2012

Chapter 1: The accident

Cara Miller stared out of her lifepod window into the vastness of space. For all she knew she was the sole survivor of the ill-fated Astral Light, a rescue ship that ultimately would need its own rescue. It was all supposed to be routine. The Astral Light had been called out to assist a mining freighter which had suffered a major collision with a dislodged piece of asteroid. Systems were failing and the freighter sent out a general distress beacon.

When the freighter came into sight, Cara could hardly believe anyone was still alive. The ship was a mangled mess, with piece …

@JackBNimble nice, i like it
the only thing i noticed though, was why wouldn't they have had something to detect incoming objects?
@JackBNimble This is a good beginning. Are you thinking you might like to write it into a short story, or maybe a novel?
@KitFox Just a short story for now. I was thinking about doing an 800 word chapter every other week so that the blog doesn't become stagnant.
18:11
Are you looking for editorial suggestions?
I was recently made the overseer of the scifi blog, so I'm trying to bouy up contributions.
Oh I see.
@Matt here is the overseer of the EL&U blog.
Maybe you guys can trade notes.
@MattЭллен hi!
18:13
Well, first of all, You need Kit to rally everyone to the blog.
@KitFox Yeah, suggestions are good. My mother (a science fiction fantasy author) recommended I read a couple of Orson Scott Card books on character building and science fiction theme building.
Then you need to find a good level of pestering
@DForck42 hello!
@MattЭллен how are you?!
If you want to make it a regular blog thing, maybe you could find three or four regular writers and alternate stories.
@DForck42 I'm fine ta, how are you?
18:16
@KitFox always a good idea
@MattЭллен oh, ok. stayed home with a bad sinus headache today
@JackBNimble I like your writing style a lot. This piece is good, especially as an introduction, but I could make a few suggestions. One is, I'd like to feel more claustrophobic and isolated. I didn't understand until the very end just how small the pod was. Also, although I understand that some is necessary especially at the beginning, I felt there was just a hair too much exposition.
Plus, you've got a few typos.
Overall, I'd say it is quite solid.
@KitFox actually i kind of like the idea of having the claustrophia and feeling isolation build over time
@DForck42 oh dear. I hope it gets better
@MattЭллен it's better, still there and annoying, but not like this morning
@KitFox If you can give me the typos I'll correct them.
18:25
Oh sure.
Let's see...You missed italics on the Astral Light in the first paragraph, fourth line.
I just now noticed inconsistent italizing.
Probably ought to have a comma after "For all she knew" in the second sentence too.
@JackBNimble OK, well, there were a few other places of that.
In the fourth paragraph, you have "Cara peered at the controls, a small battery of indicator lights and the thruster controls."
I'm not sure if you ought not to have a colon there.
Also, you've got a double comma in the last sentence of that paragraph, and "spacecrafts" sounds funny. I would use the singular "spacecraft."
I don't think she's going right now, but it's an interesting idea.
Here "To combat this some crewmen would stash a little nap sack in a lifepod. Usually the one closest to their station or to their bunk. " you've got a fragment, so you might want to join them together.
And "Next she examined the protein bars, the date on them was several years old, I guess this little sack has been here for awhile, she thought." is a run-on, but you can easily break it up with periods.
Commas are my friends, periods are my enemies.
18:32
And there's a double period in you last paragraph.
lmao
Another thing I was going to mention is that there is a pretty good amount of redundancy in the first paragraphs especially that could be cut out and would make the story smoother.
Consider this passage:
> The first boarding crew had barely crossed the docking arm when a stray asteroid fragment crashed into the damaged ship. This evidently was the final nail in the coffin for the beleaguered ship. What little air remained in the ship was enough for a massive explosion. Tethered to the ship, the Astral Light took heavy damages. The evacuation siren went off and Cara raced to an escape pod.
"the ship, the ship, the ship"
> The first boarding crew had barely crossed the docking arm when a stray asteroid fragment crashed into the beleaguered ship. What little air remained within it was enough for a massive explosion. Held fast by its tether, the Astral Light took heavy damages. The evacuation siren went off and Cara raced to an escape pod.
Removing the repetition helps the flow.
Yes it does.
I'm sure you would catch all of that on a rewrite. These are really just minor edits.
I particularly like the word "beleaguered" by the way.
My greatest obstacle in writing is rewriting.
18:37
And periods?
:)
Period smeriod, that's what I say. I've never seen a sentence that couldn't be improved by adding a half a dozen commas.
You've, never seen, a sentence, that couldn't, be improved, by adding, half a dozen, commas?
Affirmative,,,
It's amazing how that makes you sound like William Shatner.
Well, then.
Thanks a lot for the help.
18:43
I'm glad it was helpful. I'd like to read more when you've got it written.
Maybe, I'm Kirk, in disguise!
Next week Cara will die, and then we'll spend several chapters with updates on the state of the now lifeless lifepod. Or maybe that is too bleak.
There's always the yo-yo.
The yo-yo lay in the lifepod. Was it wrong to kill the human? The yo-yo pondered this for some time. Suddenly through the window there was a shirl of stars and colors. The lifepod was falling into a black hole.
Hahaha. Spinning like a...like a...like a yo-yo on a string.
18:49
Obviously I'm saying these things to be funny. The real story is that the protangonist (who is a cyborg / space pirate / orphan / jedi) is trying to find their way to Kobol.
Well, duh, naturally. A homicidal yo-yo is not very science fiction-y.
Plot twist, also secretly a princess.
The yo-yo is a princess? Wow. You are hard core.
plot twist twist: secretly a princess look a like
plot twist twist twist: who is in love with a vampire werezombie sorcerer
18:52
From the future...
This story basically writes itself.
See? You are totally read for NaNo.
The yo-yo sat on a throne made from the bones of its fallen enemies. Tonight I dine on turtle soup. it thought, referencing an 80s cartoon show.
2
time to go!
Much like Stranger Than Fiction, the real hero is the yo-yo.
 
2 hours later…
20:30
@JackBNimble Then don't do it. Rewriting is a mastery for itself, and if you don't like it or don't know how to do it, you mess up more by rewriting than just keeping your text as it is.

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