Okay, big DUH for the folklore geeks among us, but I'm all a-squee about this:

Fairy tales have ancient origin.

I know, I know. No surprises there.

But still! Whee! :-D
Tags:


I think this is the first time I've heard his voice.

I think he has good things to say.

I think I need to take them to heart.
amazon_syren: (Default)
( Oct. 22nd, 2009 02:24 pm)
First, a Cute Picture.
I believe it's called "Jesus Loves the Little Goths". Thoughts? Commentary?


Via Naamah_Darling:
One more reason why the US "health care" system is really, really, really fucked up. This will make you really freaking mad. Note: Deals with "rape as a pre-existing condition" and, as such, may be triggering for you.


From Corey Doctorow:
Now, you all know I'm all for hiring sex workers[1]. But was this really the right time and place for a corporation to shout "lapdances for all"?
Yahoo hires lap-dancers to entertain at its open, inclusive Hack Day event. 'Cause all the guys are Obviously Het and all the gals are Obviously Non-Existent. Wonderful. :-P


From FWD/Forward:
< ahref="http://disabledfeminists.com/2009/10/21/the-negative-side-of-positive-thinking/">The Negative Side of Possitive Thinking. I linked (I think) to a similar post by Naamah_Darling a few days ago[3], but this sums it up really nicely, too.


From Geek Feminism:
Yesterday was Ursula K LeGuin's 80th Birthday! Have we mentioned that she's frikken awesome? :-D
Note: Amazon would like to read her latest book, Lavinia. I think the title character sounds cool. ;-)
Related Link: Breaking Into the Spell - an interview with Ursula K LeGuin. :-)


From Caveat Lector:
The sickening grunch -- About what it *feels like* to get cat-called (especially unexpectedly).


Department of Random:
Scatter the Seeds and Stand Back -- On growing amaranth from seed. Apparently it's really easy to thresh (albeit winnowing is a bit of a pain 'cause the grain is really, really light).


- TTFN,
- Amazon.


[1] Although I don't know how strippers get hired in Taiwan or how voluntary their employment may be, as this varies not only from country to country, but from person to person.
I don't know how many of those particular gals think about their jobs in terms like "Sweet! I get to make a mint doing something I enjoy!" vs how many of them are doing the work because their families sold them off to pay the rent[2].

[2] Which may or may not happen in Taiwan, but does happen in, for example, Thailand and Laos.

[3] LJ only.
amazon_syren: (Default)
( Oct. 21st, 2009 04:35 pm)
Question:

Does the direction "northwest" (or north, or west, for that matter) have any significance in South-Indian Hinduism or Santeria?

Suggestions for google-searches I might try for this would also be appreciated as I seem to be having Google Fail today.
Of Wolves and Women -- Naamah_Darling's take on the similarities between how our culture(?) treets wild animals, especially large carnivores, and how our culture treats us.


From The Nation:
Reflections on Marriage.


From The Guardian:
Seeding a Safer World -- Hillary Clinton on Food Security, small farms, and infrastructure.


From Blogging While Feminist:
Heterosexuality, Intercourse and Rape,
AND
Feminism, Lesbianism, Class and Race.


From Hoyden About Town:
Mother of Merciful Fuck, What the HELL??? Intersex Australians who need to take Androcur get put on the national sex offenders' list for life. EXCUSE ME?????


From Shapely Prose:
Would It Kill You to be Civil -- On that awful XKCD strip that ran in early October.


From Fetch Me My Axe:
On Women who have the Gaul to be "Unfuckable". Covers fat-hate, racism, anti-feminism, and all sorts of other stuff.


From The Curvature:
Judge Refers to Convicted Rapist's Actions as "Rough Play" -- Stuff that will make you cry and/or rage.


From Questioning Transphobia:
Trans Virgin Marys and Other Such Heresies -- An LTBG organization in Spain released a religious calendar featuring trans women as various classical images of the Virgin Mary. It was a tad controversial. The QT article talks about trans bodies vs cis bodies and how that relates to western/xian/etc notions of sacred vs profane. Go read.


From The Angry Black Woman:
Verb Noire Call for Submissions -- Seeking original works of genre fiction (science fiction/fantasy/mystery/romance) that feature a person of color and/or an LGBT person as the central character.


Thorn Magazine submission guidelines (a magazine about "Paganism in the Silicone Age"). Takes all sorts of different types of submissions.


From Youtube:
Too Big For My Skin -- A spoken word piece on motherhood and beauty.
AND
"Rise" by the Flobots -- Because Commodorified likes it. Also, I agree that the mingling of U.S. nationalistic symbols with black!flag/Anarchist symbols is very effective.
Mariko Timaki notwithstanding, I think (if I can swing it) I'll be going to First Women, First Voices on Friday, instead of Transgress.

Wish me luck getting a ticket[1]! :-D


- TTFN,
- Amazon. :-)


[1] $10 from Venus Envy or Mother Tongue Books.
amazon_syren: (Default)
( Oct. 15th, 2009 09:27 am)
From The Infinite Matrix, via MostCuriousBlog:
Shame -- On racism in SF/F.


From Naamah_Darling:
Happy Go Lucky -- A response to the Writer's Block Question of the Day asking "Do you believe some people are more fortunate than others or do you think people create their own luck? In your opinion, are some people cursed?" Pertains to privilege and the notion of "choosing your own luck".
Go. Read. NOW.
Related Link: a different take on "positive thinking" (short and accurate).
Quotation there-from: "How ironic is it that this idea that thinking positive and avoiding negative has translated into it's your fault if you fail to think positive, so you get a disease, or you lose your job and can't find another?"


From Feministe:
Save the Date: Love Your Body Bash Oct. 28.


From The Curvature:
So What If Mackenzie Phillips Has a Book Deal? -- On our culture's assumption that there is One Right Way to be a rape survivor (and it *definitely* doesn't involve personal compensation or self-interest. <*eyeroll*>)


From Feministing:
Princeton to add gender neutral campus housing option next year. Awesome!


Are you a queer and/or trans parent? Do you have a queer and/or trans parent?
Take this survey and help out some researchers.
From their website:
"Our research team consists of Beth Haines (who specializes in child development and gender studies), Julie Konik (whose work focuses on personality and LGBT studies), and Siobhan Brooks (who specializes in gender, race, and sexuality). In addition, Katy Fohrman and Kim Vachon are recent psychology graduates from Lawrence University. Erin Henzi and Sarah Bruemmer are current Lawrence students, majoring in psychology and gender studies, respectively.
We all feel strongly about being advocates for the LGBT community, which is why we have chosen to pursue research in this particular area. With this research, we hope to better understand challenges facing LGBT families and promote social policies that support all families.
"


From Mott62:
Do I Have to Scream Into the Wind -- On being a prostituted woman and dealing with sex workers' rights feminists. Go, read, learn.


From Shapely Prose:
Have you tried not being so sexy?
Exerpt: "In other words, the same cultural bullshit that asserts men’s right to invade women’s personal space and/or fuck 13-year-olds also perpetuates the notion that men are more dick than brain."


From the Polyamourous Misanthrope via Prosewitch:
Boundaries,
AND
The Brave Little Toaster,
AND
On the Nature of Love.


- TTFN,
- Amazon.
amazon_syren: (Default)
( Oct. 12th, 2009 11:09 am)
Two links:

Shweta_Narayan would not like John Ottinger III to Shut Up. More stupid, self-entitled white men in SF wanting the rest of us to stfu. Goody. This is a signal boost.

Two from Questioning Transphobia:
London trans activists call for boycott of sham demo on October 17th (via Hyel).
AND
Trans Suicide Prevention - two PDFs worth of information, suggestions, dos and donts, contact numbers, warning signs and the like to help keep yourselves and/or people you care about alive and not in despair.


And one from Shakesville (via Tithenai):
Rape Culture 101.


In other news:
I've sent notes to my Toronto photographers checking studio/shoot times, and have started hunting for a place to stay while I'm in Toronto over Hallowe'en weekend.

I feel (vaguely) like I've accomplished something today.


Still no closer to getting 2000 words done on my story, but some of the other stuff is in the works.

Go me. :-)


Also: Apparently it's National Coming Out Day in Belgium. :-)


- TTFN,
- Amazon. :-)
Totally Awesome Blog About Writing:

This particular post is about describing characters of colour:
.
Is good.

The sections on
A Writer At Work, particularly this post about Action Levels, AS WELL AS the various posts on Coolness, Writerly Income, and Stupid Writer Tricks are super-handy.

I am trying to take her advice on both the "levels" and the "coolness" aspects of story-telling, with regards to how they apply to short-story porn and (eventaully) erotic novels, supernatural romance, and Stuff Like That There. :-)


On a barely tangentially-related note (and only because of the Love Interest character in the story I'm writing), have some information about crow memory!


On a likewise barely tangentially-related note (and only because of, hey look, exactly the same story), have a checklist of cis privileges!


- TTFN,
- Amazon.
Tags:
amazon_syren: (Default)
( Oct. 8th, 2009 10:18 am)
[EDIT:
From Shapely Prose:
Quick appeal: Stories of weight discrimination and health care -- Fat? Adult? Ever been discriminated against by a health-care professional because of your weight? Ginny Graves want to interview YOU! Click on the link to find out more.
/EDIT]


From SFF Media:
Why science fiction authors just can't win. (Lilnked via Shweta_Naryan, I believe...)


From Feministe:
No More Rape by Contract. About the rape of women in the military. There's some scary stuff in here.


From Shakesville:
More Polanski Stuff -- this time on a suggestion of why so many people are signing that wretched petition. Good grief, how stupid...

AND

Rape Reports Hit Two-Decade Low. Hm. Misleading?


From Slate Magazine, via Fem!n*Ally and Ilovefat:
How Fat!Hate Contributes to the Health Problems Associated with Being Fat. Good point. No, really. Go read it.


A Relatively Fluffy Piece from Pandagon:
On Wingnut Ire Over Uppity Women's... Miscarriages? Huh?


From This Ain't Livin':
An Open Letter to Feministing -- About the problem of oppressive language (in particular, ableist language) and its acceptance on the blog in question.
Related Link: Why Inclusionary Language Matters.

AND

Activism and Class -- On the economics of activism and how "living your principles" is a privilege in and of itself.
Related post, from Zero At The Bone: This is What An Activist Looks Like.


From Shapely Prose:
Schrödinger’s Rapist: or a guy’s guide to approaching strange women without being maced. Really good. Also really basic. Includes "How to understand body-language 101" because some people conveniently ignore "forget" what they learn VERY QUICKLY before the age of five, when there's a Hawt Chick involved. <*twitch*>


rom Salon:
Polanski, "Hounddog", and 13-year-old voices. On post-pubescent girls and agency (sexual or otherwise). It's very good. Go read it.
amazon_syren: (This is What a Feminist Looks Like)
( Sep. 28th, 2009 10:06 am)
From Carleton U's Women In Science & Engineering (WISE):
Carleton Offers a Workshop on Preventing Dating Violence -- Aimed at Guys.


From Feministing:
Ask Professor Foxy: How Do I Handle My Boyfriend's Sex Work? On what to do when you're sex-possitive, but know that your partner's job is hurting/scaring them.


From Shakesville:
Comic Fail -- On this morning's XKCD. Which was, I think, absolutely perfect. Right up until the last panel. :-P


From Pandagon:
And that’s why they invented the word 'systemic' -- On racism and the US healthcare "debate".

AND

Searching for Whiteopia (A Book Review) -- On living in a self-segregated bubble. These places sound an awful lot like Barhaven, Orleans and Kanata. "Lego Land", as Lenny calls it.


And now on to the really awful stuff (where we talk about other systemic things that suck):

From Questioning Transphobia:
Cis parolee sought in murder of woman. On the way the media talks about murdered trans women in ways that un-person them as well as un-gender them. This is systemic. Pay attention to this.


From Tiger Beatdown:
"I found two [headlines pertaining to MacKenzie Phillips] that were not [fucked up]! one was on MTV news and it read: “Mackenzie Phillips Claims Her Father Raped, Drugged Her.” one was on E! and it read, “Mackenzie Phillips: I Was Raped By My Father.” Now! you could find some problems with these headlines! BUT, every other source was like “Mackenzie Phillips Confesses Sex Affair With Dad.” leaving out the part where it became “consensual” after several rapes." -- About how the media writes about rape as though it was "just another type" of sex. This is also systemic. Pay attention to this, too.


And now for the less awful, and possibly even awesome, stuff:

From Feministe:
A seven year old feminist speaks articulately about what that term means to/for her.

AND

Why Feminist Bloggers Kick Ass.


From The Angry Black Woman:
Short Fiction Featuring Writers of Colour -- Featuring our very own Tithenai!! :-D

AND

I Want an Earth Ship. Includes links for building in a cold climate! (Tchang, I'm looking at you!)


- TTFN, :-)
- Amazon. :-)
amazon_syren: (Default)
( Sep. 22nd, 2009 11:21 am)
So... For the story I want to write for that Love and Fables anthology, I have some questions:


Firstly: Anyone know of any folklore that would pertain to:

1) Crow-fairies/spirits (or at least *bird* fairies/spirits) who
2) Are from Eastern/South-Eastern Europe (originally),
3) Can shape-shift into human form, and
4) Don't have problems with iron?

Any takers?

Anyone?

<*looks hopeful*>


Secondly: Is there a Czech, Croation, or Bulgarian neighbourhood or two anywhere near The Mountain in Montreal? (This bit isn't quite as important, but it would be handy to know).


And Thirdly: Does anyone know how -- or IF -- a young Canadian woman (around age 21 give or take a year) looking to get rid of her testicles could go about doing so?
As in: getting coverage for that 'cause she's a student with no money?
I know the army covers some SRS stuff, but she's not in the army and I don't know if anything else does.
Basically is there any way for her to get an orchi when she doesn't have a whole lot of money of her own and her family may not be able (or willing, for that matter) to help her out.
It's not all that important to the story that she's lucked out and been able to have this surgery. But it would be nice to know what, if any, her options are.

Anyone? Thoughts? Suggestions? Would T-Vox have anything useful on this subject or is it mostly a US-centric thing?

<*continues to look hopeful*>
amazon_syren: (Default)
( Sep. 22nd, 2009 09:44 am)
From Feministe:
Some Thoughts on Dirty Dancing -- Specifically some thoughts on Penny and Baby/Frances and Class Privilege. Makes some good points.

From QueeredFiction Publishing:
Love and Fables Call for Submissions -- They're seeking 3000-20,000 word mythic/supernatural glbt romance. Deadline: Nov. 30th, 2009.
From the editor(s):
What we're looking for is to create a HEA collection of tales featuring fable (legend/myth) elements in a uniquely queer way; our fables here are stories about mythical, lengendary or supernatural beings or events for example the grail, Tristram and Isolde, Blodeuwedd, Midas, a seal wife(/lover) even the Emperor's new clothes...et cetera. I'm not looking for a re-telling of any of these fables/legends, but more an original tale simulating or borrowing from these.

SCORE!! :-D

I now have a theme to write on.

Wish me luck! :-D



Additionally:
What appears to be a brand new blog: Stuff Trans Men Like -- which talks about transmysogyny, men's privilege, biological determinism, and so on.
There's all of about two entries in there right now, but I think I shall watch it and see what developes. :-)
amazon_syren: (Default)
( Sep. 13th, 2009 10:43 am)
From Starship REckless:
Is It Something in the Water? Or: Me Tarzan, You Ape -- About Sexism in SF.
Tags:
And this is where things get a little more possitive.


In addition to the awesome gal who read the poem about love triangles and her ex-boyfriend's now-ex-girlfriend (ten tonnes of awesome, I really, really liked it), another highlight of the night for me was the monologue done during the open mic by a guy from Montreal. It was gorgeous. Buckets of emotion.
The first lines are: "Yes, I am a drag queen, and yes, I am dying of AIDS. But[...]"
And it was all about having the guts to be yourself despite the weight of every rule you ever learned telling you not to be.
I just about cried.
It was fantastic.
I kind of hope someone got it video-taped and is posting it to you-tube or something because WOW.
Phenomenal.

Let's see...

The amazing Fait Dormi (the cool chickie who's friends with Sara) did a song she'd written about the first stages of exploring promiscuity and polyamoury and trying to deal with reconciling what she wanted to do with all the stuff she'd been taught about being slutty and what the said about her.
Good conversations with that gal, too. I want to continue them. (May or may not start inviting her to the WW parties. But I think coffee is definitely in the future. At least I hope it is). Also: She has cool hair and was one of the few other gals there wearing dramatic makeup. (Three cheers for punk chicks! Woohoo! ;-)


Oh. Yes.
:-D

Getting called upon to stall.

See, the final act of the night (right after mine) was a performance art piece about makeup, and this idea that friendships between women are "always" slightly competitive.
At least that's a big chunk of what I got out of it.
Though that may just be my trust issues showing or something. ;-)

But it took them a while to get ready and do set-up. So, while everyone was waiting, on of the MCs asked me to explain the difference between legalization and decriminalization in terms of how that applies to sex-work.


[EDIT: Randomly: This bug that's been crawling around on my ceiling? Just totally did a suicide dive into my lamp. Bugs are weird. Seriously. /EDIT]


So I got up and talked off-the-cuff (and coherently, and articulately, and accurately and in ways that were easy to understand!) about the differences between the two forms of de-illegalization, as they apply in Canada.
I didn't touch on the "controlled substance" aspect of legalization (see: Nevada and, IIRC, New Zealand, among other places) which is too bad, 'cause I would have liked to add that.
But I think I covered most of the salient points, and people got it and asked questions and I was able to answer them, and I'm really, really happy about how well that went. :-)


I am *also* really happy about how well my piece went!
Fait Dormi video-taped it (including my into, which involved my plugging VoV -- which a few people asked me about afterwords, so YAY), though she ran out of batteries about half-way through. (So it's a teaser. ;-)
I'll have to find another venue to perform it at.
It went over really well. People paid attention. I had a couple of people come up afterwards and tell me that I'm a good story-teller and that, the way I read it and the expresiveness I bring to it, made my story so visible that it was almost like a movie.

Now that? That is high praise for this long-trained singer, let me tell you!

So I'm totally thrilled with how well it went over. More's the pity more people weren't there, but still. It was a full house, and it went well.


Also: There were samosas, brownies, and vegan chocolate cake. :-)

And: I had a white (chocolate) russian (vodka, khalua, Godiva white chocolate liqueur, and milk), which the gal at the bar cooked up for me when I said "I want something that is not comprised of 100% alcohol, and that also involves chocolate in some capacity".
She rocks.


Anyway. So, yes. Rant-induction aside, the evening was awesome, I made a new friend, I got to do a little bit of teachery activism, and I got to show off my unexpected story-telling chops.

So YAY. :-D


I totally want to do this again next year. :-D
amazon_syren: (Default)
( Aug. 14th, 2009 05:25 pm)
TONIGHT

At the MURCURY LOUNGE -- 7pm


RADICAL VULVAS



Featuring: ME(!!!) reading "Dating a Sex Worker in Thirteen Scenes"[1]
AND
A host of other really cool chickies presenting their takes on women's sexuality and women's strength. There will be martinis. There will be Discussions. All this for the low, low, sliding-scale price of $3-$8!

Don't Miss It!



Photobucket
Women At Risk - A New York Times article on rampant misogyny and how we don't freak out nearly as much when someone slaughters a bunch of women as we should, perhaps because as a culture, we view violence against women as normal and to be expected.


Fascist America: Are We There Yet? -- A more than slightly chilling article on political trends south of the border.

Related link: Pandagon discusses the Orcinus article.


Lady Gaga's Genitals are Not Our Business - Questioning Transphobia takes on the rumours/outing of Lady Gaga as being intersex. Raises good points about how Our Culture views women's and "unexpected"/non-normative genitalia as public property.

[EDIT: Related Link: Is posted in the comments by Bifemmefatale! Tigerbeatdown is, upon first impression, all kinds of awesome. I shall be reading it further! :-) /EDIT]


Related thoughts:

What I think is interesting about the Lady Gaga thing is how it touches on both slut-shaming ("What was she doing "parading around" without underwear??") and on our cultural ideas about what a Real (feminine) Woman (tm) is.

Feminine women are heterosexual
Feminine women present themselves in ways that invite (sexual) attention from (heterosexual) men
BUT
Feminine women *don't* actively seek out sex for themselves
Feminine women don't actively seek out sex with other women[1]
Feminine women don't look for casual, no-strings-attached sex EVAR
Feminine women don't bother courting the attention/notice of gay men[2]


So Lady Gaga, presenting herself in really over-the-top, hyper-sexualizing costumes COMBINED with her singing about actively seaking out casual sex-with-men COMBINED with her openly desiring sex with women, too, COMBINED with her fan-base having a very significant gay-guy population...

This all slams right up against out cultural assumptions about what's "appropriate" behaviour for a (feminine) woman.
Which is, perhaps, why she keeps getting gossiped about as being a drag-queen, a "tranny", or otherwise suggesting that she was MAAB.
I think there's a certain breed of idiot (and there are oh, so many of them...) who really can't fathom a "real"[3] woman being
(A) into women
(B) into men, too
(C) actively owning her own sexuality
(D) while working it at the same time
(E) and going after what/who she wants
(F) while also hanging out with a lot of faaaaaaaaaaaaaags

and actually find it much easier to believe someone who is "discreditting" her womanhood by hollering "Lady Gaga is a MAN! Look, look! This picture on my camera phone proves it!" than to actually change their microscopic definitions to fit the existence of the above.


Eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeenteresting.





On a less political note:
Sur La Lune Fairy Tales - a collection of annotated fairytales and folktales. Woohoo!


- TTFN,
- Amazon. :-)


[1] Lady Gaga is openly bi. (And, doncha know, those bisexuals are just big sluts anyway...)
[2] Gay Men being the "can't-compete-for-the-hetero-man-but-can-still-dish-about-how-cute-his-butt-is" version of the BFF in romcoms, for example.
[3] Read: FAAB.
So, I was talking to my dahlink on the phone last night, and told her about a conversation I had with a guy at Amanda's wedding, about writing and plot.

See, when I write stories, I write them in scenes. I write them in fits and starts (in two-thousand-word intervals, because this is usually happening during Nanowrimo) and the first bunch are usually me getting to know my protagonist and the other characters.

Eventually, I get to a point where the characters are crystalized enough that, when faced with a given situation, there are only so many reactions they could go with that would be consistent with their personalities.

Which works great.

If you already have a plot.

See, she was asking me about plot.

And I was talking about characters making choices.

Because, in the kind of character-driven, person-against-self (often), stories I write... characters making choices is the plot.

But I think what she was asking about was what are they making choices about??


Which brings me to some areas where I have problems with writing plot.


Thing one: While I'm getting much better at coming up with situations to stick my characters in, I still tend to gravitate towards getting my characters into a situation where they're stable and happy.
Which is great for *life*, but not so great for *plot*.
I think, to a certain extent, a writer needs to be able to tap into their inner 15-year-old-gossipy-drama-instigator, because fiction needs crisis points in order to function as entertainment, if nothing else.
This is part of why my Matrix Fic Ov Doom, "Live Truly, My Heart", stopped developing. I got to a point where Trin, Switch and Apoc were a happy little triad - with occasional communication problems, but by and large everything was fine - and Neo was still about six months to a year from showing up.
And - aside from not entirely knowing what to do once the AU got really, REALLY obvious (and I started writing past the first movie) - I didn't know how to get the story from where it was Right then to the beginning of the movie when I would be able to rely (more or less) on the Movie's original plot to provide the action parts.
Partly, I didn't want to upset the happiness that these characters had found, this little bit of peace and joy and security in a hellishly chaotic and dangerous world. But also... I wasn't sure what it would take to upset it.
You can only write so many action sequences before they start getting repetitive. Likewise, you can only work phrases like "days blur into weeks of sparring, rations and late shifts piloting the Neb along it circuitous course through the tunnels" before it becomes paifully, stupidly obvious that you're just trying to get the story to where you know what to do with it again.
So that was a problem.
(Granted, around the same time, I also started writing a lot more original fic, and then got bitten by the poetry bug. And then got divorced. So there *were* other circumstances involved. BUT. A big part of the problem was just not knowing what to do next).


Thing two: Which is related. I'm not bad at creating protagonists. But I'm a total wash when it comes to creating villains.

Oh, I've come up with some nasty bastards.
But that's not the same thing.
Creating an abusive ex-girlfriend or a really fucked up parent as a plot device isn't difficult. They don't need a lot of meat to them. Take your protagonist's fears/insecurities. Back-date them by X number of months/years/centuries. Create a character whose purpose is to exacerbate (or instill) those Issues in the protagonist. Apply simple motivation such as "this is the only way I know how to love" or "because I feel like it and you let me" or "why do you have to make life so *hard* for yourself" or whatever.
This is easy.

Creating a person who fills in the blank of the plot-creating phrase "protagonist vs ___________" is another thing all together. Creating a character(?) who has hir own motivations and reasons for doing things This Way, that don't boil down to the Mercedes Lakey formula of "I'm totally depraved because I'm totally depraved!! Mwahahahaha!"[1]


The YA story I tried to write for my first Nanowrimo -- and the George story that I got from a dream and would like to try my hand at writing now... They both involve a (mostly) human protagonist who gets caught in a big confrontation between warring supernatural factions, basically.

But I need to figure out how to make those warring factions relevant to the protagonist in a way that goes well beyond "they're all out to get her 'cause she's meddling" or something.


In Which I Ramble About the George Story )


So it's finding those plot arcs that I have trouble with.


Anyway. I'm tired and sleepy and definitely in need of bed, so I'm off.


SIDE NOTE: I will be performing in Radical Vulvas on August 14th at the Mercury Lounge. :-D
Go me! :-D



[1] This is the problem with making the protagonists of your entire series Mary Sues. If your main characters are supposed to be long-suffering, self-martyring, abuse-survivors, who are the ultimate in compassion and kindness and honour... then you're kind of stuck making villains who are just as over-the-top on the "evil" scale as your protags are on the "good" scale. Which means they end up these horiffic caricatures that, even when I was *fourteen* and took this stuff way more seriously, I had trouble believing in.
Seriously. One of the best villains I've come across is Brandon of Ygrath (from Guy Gavriel Kay's Tigana) because he had a *reason* for doing the horrible thing that he did. He had a deeply personal, deeply fucked up reason for making an entire *country*... unhappen. Brandon was someone who, under different circumstances would still have be a colonial asshole, but clearly wasn't the kind of person who wipes a place entirely off the map (using vast amounts of personal resources, no less) just because he felt like it).
And this made him a sympathetic villain.
The megalomaniac mage who does magical-experiments on the daughter who he regularly rapes (in detail), but doesn't have any motivation beyond "I'm evil. Did you miss the memo?"... just doesn't hold up next to that. Or even *not* next to that. Jaknow?
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