Yuletide: the Home Stretch
Dec. 24th, 2008 08:12 pmJust in case of too busy opening presents/pigging out/squeeing over Yuletide stories to post tomorrow: Merry Christmas, everyone!
I'm super excited about Yuletide. I'm excited about the archive opening tomorrow and the reveal on New Years and, well, everything really, although I've forbade myself from writing any more treats as there's no way they would get done in time.
This doesn't mean I can tear myself away from the treat list, though. It's a smorgasbord of distilled story ideas.
Also, I have a worrisome tendency to write stories that hinge on Pivotal Kissing Scenes, or more specifically stories that end right after the Pivotal Kiss. It's an understandable stopping point but a very lazy one, especially given it seems to have become my default ending.
The great thing about Pushing Daisies stories: no matter how much you want to plug in a Pivotal Kissing Scene, it won't fit. (Well, all right, I read one Pushing Daisies story that got around the whole "Ned and Chuck can't touch" thing, but that story was made of so much win that it doesn't really count on account of being beyond the reach of most mortal authors.) So know that I'm not writing for Yuletide anymore, I can dig out the dinosaur museum story again and torment Ned some more.
I'm super excited about Yuletide. I'm excited about the archive opening tomorrow and the reveal on New Years and, well, everything really, although I've forbade myself from writing any more treats as there's no way they would get done in time.
This doesn't mean I can tear myself away from the treat list, though. It's a smorgasbord of distilled story ideas.
Also, I have a worrisome tendency to write stories that hinge on Pivotal Kissing Scenes, or more specifically stories that end right after the Pivotal Kiss. It's an understandable stopping point but a very lazy one, especially given it seems to have become my default ending.
The great thing about Pushing Daisies stories: no matter how much you want to plug in a Pivotal Kissing Scene, it won't fit. (Well, all right, I read one Pushing Daisies story that got around the whole "Ned and Chuck can't touch" thing, but that story was made of so much win that it doesn't really count on account of being beyond the reach of most mortal authors.) So know that I'm not writing for Yuletide anymore, I can dig out the dinosaur museum story again and torment Ned some more.
no subject
Date: 2009-01-02 05:27 am (UTC)Also small fandoms are so much less intimidating, because there's no BNF aspect to worry about.
It's actually an interesting topic, how people pick which fandoms to write for (and which pairings to write in those fandoms) although I have no real data to work with except how I pick fandoms, and I suspect I use somewhat odd criteria.
no subject
Date: 2009-01-02 04:00 pm (UTC)and, may i ask, what are your criteria? i know personally, as someone who only really writes fic when ideas float her way (and then only posts it when those ideas translate well to paper, or i guess to computer screen) it's fairly random. But you write much longer, amazing fics that take up more of your time... so actually i do wonder how/why you choose to devote that time to the fandoms you do.
no subject
Date: 2009-01-03 05:31 am (UTC)Also, I think in really big fandoms it's easy for fics to get lost in the shuffle.
I'd have to think more about the criteria thing. I do have some, but they're mostly subconscious, and also I think it might be an interesting question for a post just to ask other people how they pick fandoms.
no subject
Date: 2009-01-03 05:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-01-03 07:53 pm (UTC)Although its worth noting that she still has a lot of defenders and she's managed to get a real-life book published, despite the fact that the plagiarism allegations seem pretty rock-solid.
Have you read The Ms. Scribe Story (http://www.journalfen.net/community/bad_penny/1074.html)? It's about Fandom Gone Wrong (the Harry Potter fandom, particularly), which colors my more paranoid speculations.
It's also worth reading just because it's absorbing, dramatic, and well-researched. Quite long, though, if time is an issue.
no subject
Date: 2009-01-05 04:56 pm (UTC)hmmm. i'll have to favorite it, because research is awesome, and the hp fandom had a humongous part in jump-starting internet fanfic as a whole.