Irtor wrote:
Mistress Rwebhu Kidh wrote:
I've checked out your site, a little bit, and.... o.o You need a badge that says 'professional world builder' to pin on you. Yes.
I second this.
Thank you, guys!

But I can't be a professional world builder because I've never been paid. You could make me one, though, if you started paying me.

Seriously, though, on my website you don't see all the holes and impossibilities that are scattered throughout my world thanks to my eight-year-old self. If I was really serious, I would get rid of some of my old work and redo it...but I can never get rid of anything I've created. So ultimately I forgo believability in order to please myself, and that's how I always do things - the joy of the creating above the final product. So in that way I'm not serious enough about my end product to be really good...but I don't care, it's too much fun!
Mistress Rwebhu Kidh wrote:
That sounds fascinating. I love stories like that. How far are you on it?
I've gotten through the first account, which is a short prophecy of the events to come. Here's another manifestation of my obsession with symbolism and parallel: there are, in the end, three accounts in the story - one in future tense (a prophecy), one in past tense (an account the narrator wrote himself some years ago), and one in present tense (the account he finally writes showing what he believes to have really happened - he has some philosophical reasons for writing it in present tense). So I've gotten through the future-tense account, and I've also introduced my awesome side character. But I need to go back and rethink some stuff before I continue...my narrator is, at the moment, a bit too...angsty. I also need to figure out how exactly I can show instead of telling when it's his journal, and generally in a journal you'd write, "I feel sad," not write a long description of an event that shows you're sad. But I do hope to continue.
Mistress Rwebhu Kidh wrote:
sheesania wrote:
I recently read a book by G. K. Chesterton, too, that made me want to immediately go and read something else by him...
Which one was it? Chesterton is one of my favorite authors, and I snagged practically everything he wrote a little while ago, though I haven't finished reading it all yet.
It was
The Man Who Was Thursday. I actually stayed up late reading it (I have never, ever done this before) and then when I finished I couldn't sleep and began to wonder if it was my new favorite book. It has so many twists it's ridiculous...and even when I anticipated some of them ahead of time, I eventually became convinced that they wouldn't happen, and then they did anyway. And there were moments there that you only get very rarely with a very good book, where you suddenly feel for a moment like the universe has been turned upside down and you suddenly
understand something. Very, very awesome. I have a copy of
Orthodoxy on my Kindle which I'm hoping to read soon...have you read that? In particular, Chesteron's love of paradox really, really, really appeals to me...throughout my life I've gotten used to seeing very different things, being very different things, and enjoying their difference, so it really resonates with me.
Jonathan Garner wrote:
I need to read Sanderson! Lewis is one of my favorites, and I also enjoy Chesterton.
His Alcatraz series is completely brilliant IF you go for talkative narrators and a large dose of silliness...and you don't mind the fact that the fifth and final book may never be written, which is truly tragic.
Steelheart was okay - the writing, plotting, etc. was pretty good, not amazing, but it just wasn't my thing. It will probably improve with later books, though - Alcatraz certainly did. By the way, he has one of his standalone books,
Warbreaker, available on his website for free:
http://brandonsanderson.com/books/warbreaker/warbreaker/ I haven't read it yet (I'm saving it!) but it got good reviews. In general he's very good at plotting (particularly endings), developing magic systems, and messing with old plot devices. He definitely has down how to write a good story...I just wish sometimes that he'd use his stories more to develop ideas, make points...
Jonathan Garner wrote:
What instrument do you play?
I play piano most seriously, but I also play pennywhistle (not really in an Irish style, though) and survival guitar, e.g. just how to play chords so you can lead worship decently.

Someday I may want to learn a normal orchestral instrument, though. Do you play an instrument?