On the Job Front:
Applied for another government admin position.
Sent resume to Barbara Personnel.
E-mailed Justin at Randstad (have yet to hear from him. Grrr...)
Hey, Ami: Which agency is this one that is being so helpful? :-)
***
In other news: I've decided that my Nano novel is going to be the YA one about the faerie fight. Setting: My Highschool.
I've been working on plot outlines, trying to sort out what I know about my characters and what their motivation for doing X, Y, or Z might be.
I've broken Faerie down into four different sub-groups instead of the usual two.
Urban Fae: House Faeries, for the most part, but not enitrely. They are okay with iron and humans to a *much* greater extent than the Courts. Get a little nervous outside of obvious human habitation, although there may be (Hah! Are) more reasons for this than just being creatures of habbit. Are usually nice(-ish) with humans. Aren't necessarily nice to each other, though.
Seelie: Mainly Air and Fire based entities. These are critters than have to do with the air, or the world above-ground. Can be friendly or not-so-friendly (towards humans, I mean). Most bird-like and insect-like faeries would fall under this heading. But so might a storm-rider who lived in the sky, even though storms are watery. Can't stand iron. Like open spaces.
Unseelie: Mainly Earth and Water based entities. These are critters than have to do with the ground. Roots, the dead (who end up rotting into new ground), driads and such-like, kelpies, non-flying animals and birds. Some insects. Most spiders. Can be friendly or not-so-friendly (towards humans, I mean). Can't stand iron. Like encolsed spaces.
Wild Fae: These critters can come from any of the above three groups. They are made up of outcasts and misfits and people who left where they came from for one reason or another. They gnerally all have Reasons. Some of them are in hiding (like Alex) for one reason or another. When the Courts start fighting, it's the Wild Fae who get caught in the cross-fire and can be hurt by both sides because they have the protection of neither.
Ner.
Anyway. That's my break-down. :-)
- TTFN,
- Amazon. :-)
Applied for another government admin position.
Sent resume to Barbara Personnel.
E-mailed Justin at Randstad (have yet to hear from him. Grrr...)
Hey, Ami: Which agency is this one that is being so helpful? :-)
***
In other news: I've decided that my Nano novel is going to be the YA one about the faerie fight. Setting: My Highschool.
I've been working on plot outlines, trying to sort out what I know about my characters and what their motivation for doing X, Y, or Z might be.
I've broken Faerie down into four different sub-groups instead of the usual two.
Urban Fae: House Faeries, for the most part, but not enitrely. They are okay with iron and humans to a *much* greater extent than the Courts. Get a little nervous outside of obvious human habitation, although there may be (Hah! Are) more reasons for this than just being creatures of habbit. Are usually nice(-ish) with humans. Aren't necessarily nice to each other, though.
Seelie: Mainly Air and Fire based entities. These are critters than have to do with the air, or the world above-ground. Can be friendly or not-so-friendly (towards humans, I mean). Most bird-like and insect-like faeries would fall under this heading. But so might a storm-rider who lived in the sky, even though storms are watery. Can't stand iron. Like open spaces.
Unseelie: Mainly Earth and Water based entities. These are critters than have to do with the ground. Roots, the dead (who end up rotting into new ground), driads and such-like, kelpies, non-flying animals and birds. Some insects. Most spiders. Can be friendly or not-so-friendly (towards humans, I mean). Can't stand iron. Like encolsed spaces.
Wild Fae: These critters can come from any of the above three groups. They are made up of outcasts and misfits and people who left where they came from for one reason or another. They gnerally all have Reasons. Some of them are in hiding (like Alex) for one reason or another. When the Courts start fighting, it's the Wild Fae who get caught in the cross-fire and can be hurt by both sides because they have the protection of neither.
Ner.
Anyway. That's my break-down. :-)
- TTFN,
- Amazon. :-)
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