This thing is so freaking long, but it looks like tons of fun. OC meme! ♥
1. Tell us about your favorite writing project/universe that you've worked with and why.
Despite my current agent-related bouts of insecurity about it, Grandmaster Draw is probably the best thing I've written up to this point. Because it's actually finished, for one. But also because, on the whole, the setting is better described, the plot is more psychologically driven, and the relationships are a bit more complex than in my earlier stuff. I love it dearly, even if right now I just want to put it aside and work on something else to get my mind off of it!
The Imperial Guard also deserves a mention for just how long it's been with me. It's the most epic story I've written yet, with a fuckton of characters, including Cat, who is my snugglemuffin. I haven't been in the groove for it for a while, but I have no doubt it will come back swinging.
2. How many characters do you have? Do you prefer males or females?
Oh shit. Let's count 'em up, only including the main and key supporting characters.
IDO: Aidan, Tobias, Lily, Silas, Loki, Anton, Theo, Hawthorne
Catalyst: Tuyen, Lanh, Aurel, Sorin, Casimir, Lev, Radha
Imperial Guard: Catalin, Chris, Damian, Saphie, Kite, Talia, Victor, Amara, Reiselle, Baltus, Rakan, Fanel, Celeste, Gwen
Grandmaster Draw: Liam, Thom, Mama Lockhart, Papa Lockhart, Mary, The Minotaur, The Jester, The Gardener, Jack
Possession: Alex, Felix, Boss, Irina, Cass
The Hungry Ground: Kalinda, Dev, Isha, Jira, Chandra
Misc/cowriting: Seb, Nia, Ginny, Sola, Leo, Hokuto, Terese, Jasper, Ilario, Nick, Marissa, Isabel, Luke, Cole, Bryce, Pari, Jahad
Okay. I count 65, not counting minor characters or the unnammed characters from the cowriting project I will soon start with
ivory_and_horn. I don't prefer males to females, but I probably have more of them.
3. How do you come up with names, for characters (and for places if you're writing about fictional places)?
Usually lots of searching the internet until I find something that clicks. And then if it's a non-European name, I usually do a lot of checking to make sure it's an actual name that real people use, and not, say, the Vietnamese word for "Bubble bath." It was a little bit easier for The Hungry Ground because there are so many people from India at Brandeis.
4. Tell us about one of your first stories/characters!
It was about a little angel whose best friends were kidnapped by an evil monster, and then she got a hold of a magical scepter that blew the monsters to bits, and then the angel was a hero and everything was awesome. I was three years old and I dictated the story to my mother, who had it bound and laminated for me. I started young.
5. By age, who is your youngest character? Oldest? How about “youngest” and “oldest” in terms of when you created them?
Among the youngest are Seb, Nia, Isha, and Liam: the former two are twelve, Isha's thirteen, and Liam's fourteen. The oldest would have to be the True King and Queen, the Jester, and the goddesses Surya and Kavya. And I don't actually know how old they are.
My "oldest" characters would have to be The Imperial Guard characters, especially Cat. The "youngest" are The Hungry Ground characters.
6. Where are you most comfortable writing? At what time of day? Computer or good ol' pen and paper?
I write on my computer nine times out of ten, but the mood strikes me at different times. Sometimes when I'm up really early, sometimes on a quiet afternoon, and sometimes at three in the morning.
7. Do you listen to music while you write? What kind? Are there any songs you like to relate/apply to your characters?
I have specific songs that I listen to for writing/brainstorming every project. For example, Grandmaster Draw went best with FictionJunction songs (mainly Parallel Hearts and Hanamori no Oka), The Imperial Guard went best with songs like Knights of Cydonia or kickass instrumental music, and I came up with everything for The Hungry Ground while listening to Howl by Florence and the Machine.
8. What's your favorite genre to write? To read?
What I like to write is what I like to read: urban fantasy, or straight-up fantasy without too many bells and whistles. (The kind of fantasy I like takes place in a made-up setting and has magical elements, but it doesn't interest me if it gets too wrapped up in worldbuilding to focus on the plot/characters.) I enjoy mystery and horror stories, especially stories that blend those genres with fantasy. Paranormal stories are hit-or-miss for me because paranormal romance is so big these days, but I'd love more books along the lines of Tanya Huff's Smoke series.
9. How do you get ideas for your characters? Describe the process of creating them.
More often than not, I'll read about a character or see them in a TV show, and think, "Hmmm, that's interesting... but I'd do this." And then I play around with that character type and make the changes I want to make, and soon, I've got a new character that's all my own. And sometimes I just think about certain character archetypes I haven't played with yet and get new characters that way. Either way, the character almost always comes before the plot.
10. What are some really weird situations your characters have been in? Everything from serious canon scenes to meme questions counts!
Story by story--
In Descending Order
- Lily's dead mentor left her a book of equations with hidden messages about the conspiracy they were trying to solve.
- Aidan is pushed into being an on-call doctor for a group of crazy mercenaries to support his sister.
Catalyst
- Everything Lanh does, ever.
- At one point, Tuyen has to pretend to be slightly insane. And who better to coach her through this but Aurel?
- The Third Sector, full stop.
The Imperial Guard
- Damian kidnaps Cat by throwing him out a window in the middle of a banquet hosted by Anwar himself.
- Cat climbs up the roof of the capitol building and sets the Carmine flag on fire while pretending to be his dead cousin.
- Cat crossdresses. And then fights dozens of armed men in said dress.
- Too many crazy things to name, really.
Grandmaster Draw
- Well, the entire story is about a control freak kid who gets pulled into a Wonderland-like place where the villain is trying to draw out the suppressed part of his personality, and the only way he can fight it is to take part in an epic chess game. So yeah.
The Hungry Ground
- Kalinda and company explore a deserted city that may or may not have been devoured by an Ax Crazy goddess.
Possession
- Everything the Boss makes Alex do.
11. Who is your favorite character to write? Least favorite?
A lot of my protagonists are also my favorites: Tuyen, Cat, Chris, Kite, Liam, Thom, Mary, Alex, Felix... too many to name. I tend to write characters with some level of awkwardness better, whether they're awkward in the sense that they're too shy, not shy enough, or just prone to foot-in-mouth disorder.
Really intelligent, scheming characters are really hard. The True Queen and King, Anwar, Cantata, Lanh, Radha, etc. I can write scheming characters when they're absolutely bugfuck, like Fanel or the Jester, but the subtler ones are tough for me.
12. In what story did you feel you did the best job of world building? Any side-notes on it you'd like to share?
Grandmaster Draw has the most fleshed-out world, I think.
13. What's your favorite culture to write, fictional or not?
I like playing around with the Myrrh traditions from The Imperial Guard, but East and West Chokma from The Hungry Ground are already tons of fun.
14. How do you map out locations, if needed? Do you have any to show us?
I draw boxy diagrams if I need to visualize it, but otherwise, I don't do too much mapping.
15. Midway question! Tell us about a writer you admire, whether professional or not!
Neil Gaiman and Diana Wynne Jones are my IDOLS and my biggest influences. I would kill to write like them. And of course, I have so many great writers on my flist, too.
16. Do you write romantic relationships? How do you do with those, and how “far” are you willing to go in your writing? ;)
I tend to enjoy UST more than outright romance - I like to see how many different pairs of characters I can build sexual tension for. XD I'm also a fan of unrequited crushes like Kite and Cat, or BFF bromance like Cat and Chris. (Cat's the little black dress, to be sure.)
As for actual romances, I do more established couples, like Anton and Theo or Lev and Casimir. And occasionally I like to play with the tragic romances - I love writing Baltus and Celeste, or Reiselle/Victor/Gwen. I haven't done a whole lot of developing romances, but I'll get to play with that with Kalinda and Dev.
I don't really write smut. It's so not sexy when I do it.
17. Favorite protagonist and why!
It's a tough call, but at the end of the day, I still adore Cat more than any character I've ever written. I love playing with his spazzy tsundere ways and his badly-hidden insecurities, and his relationships are some of my favorite to write, as well. I love the way he's come to trust Chris and Kite especially, I love writing his ill-fated friendship with Rakan, and he has some really fun interactions with Talia, Amara and Damian as well. (I think Saphie is the only main character he doesn't connect with as much, but Chris and Saphie get along better for some reason...)
18. Favorite antagonist and why!
The Jester is amazingly fun. I love playing with his jealous rants, and all the resentment is so cathartic. Where sympathetic antagonists are concerned, I enjoy playing with Baltus, who is such a villainous woobie. And so romantic. ♥
19. Favorite minor that decided to shove himself into the spotlight and why!
Cat was like that, actually! He started off as a sidekick who became a protagonist. Kalinda, Dev, and Isha were also supposed to be a background trio, but when their personalities came through more strongly, I made them the main characters. Chris is a better example of a minor character who didn't become the protagonist, but has a much bigger role now. I didn't have a good grip on him for years, then I shoved him and Cat together and he wouldn't shut up.
20. What are your favorite character interactions to write?
- Tuyen and Aurel. I love her relationships with Lanh and Sorin as well, but there's just something so interesting about these two together. He thinks her worldview is utterly idiotic, but he also admires her for reasons he can't quite justify, and he doesn't want to admit that she might be changing him for the better.
- Cat and Chris. Their situations are alike in so many ways, and in some respects they're the only ones who understand each other. Neither of them have really had the benefit of a trusting friendship before; even though Cat had Rakan, Rakan always put his country first.
- Kite and Cat. Kite's just so devoted, and he just thinks Cat's stubbornness is the hottest thing there ever was. And even though Cat's mentally five years old, he recognizes that loyalty and answers it with his own.
- Alex and Felix. Bickering BFFs for the win! I especially love writing scenes where it's clear that Alex is the "tougher" of the two.
- Alex and the Boss. I love that she actually has a soft spot for him. She can't say that about many people.
- Kalinda, Dev, and Isha. The former two fit into that "charming playboy and the ambitious lady he's slowly falling for" dynamic that I adore, and I enjoy the way they fuss over Isha.
- Liam and Thom. They're themselves around each other in a way that they can't be around anyone else.
- Mary and the Minotaur. Anything I put here would be a spoiler.
21. Do any of your characters have children? How well do you write them?
Unless you count Mama and Papa Lockhart? They have a fun family dynamic, though. They trust Thom and Liam to make the right decisions, but are wildly protective anyway, especially of their youngest.
22. Tell us about one scene between your characters that you've never written or told anyone about before! Serious or not.
I have messed around with smut scenes between Cat and Kite/Chris/Rakan before. And you will never see them.
23. How long does it usually take you to complete an entire story—from planning to writing to posting (if you post your work)?
Grandmaster Draw was almost exactly nine months, and In Descending Order was about the same. If we count planning, Catalyst has been going for five or six years, and The Imperial Guard for even longer.
24. How willing are you to kill your characters if the plot so demands it? What's the most interesting way you've killed someone?
I don't kill too many characters. Technically Mary and the rest of the door characters are no longer living, but they're not dead, either? I kill the most characters in The Imperial Guard, because hell, it's a war. I guess the most interesting death was Celeste's, since she managed to take out Anwar's eye before she was taken down.
25. Do any of your characters have pets? Tell us about them.
... you know, I don't think I have any.
26. Let's talk art! Do you draw your characters? Do others draw them? Pick one of your OCs and post your favorite picture of him!
Some nice other people draw for me, like
fightfair and
noelleno especially. Here's a great pic Endy drew of the Myrrh Imperial Guard.
27. Along similar lines, do appearances play a big role in your stories? Tell us about them, or if not, how you go about designing your characters.
Appearances only play a big role when the characters think they're important: for instance, Cat's similarities to Celeste, or Liam getting annoyed when people point out how little he and Thom look alike.
28. Have you ever written a character with physical or mental disabilities? Describe them, and if there's nothing major to speak of, tell us a few smaller ones.
- Alex is asthmatic, on top of a whole lot of other health problems lingering from being an eldritch abomination's chew toy for two years. He was bedridden when he was little, but now it's just a propensity to catch every disease there ever was. People tend to treat him like he's very fragile, but he can actually deal with pain and illness a lot better than the average person because he's so used to it.
- Isha, while not autistic, displays some similar issues understanding people in social situations. He's also hopelessly nearsighted.
- Conversely, Cat's a little farsighted. He loves reading so much that he's willing to put up with the headaches, though.
- Tuyen's powers used to put an enormous strain on her heart, but less so now that she's grown up a bit.
- Lev is dyslexic.
I don't have too many disabled characters! D: I will have to make a note of that.
29. How often do you think about writing? Ever come across something IRL that reminds you of your story/characters?
Every second of every day.
30. Final question! Tag someone! And tell us what you like about that person as a writer and/or about one of his characters!
Anyone with OCs should do this, 'cause you're all awesome.
*PHEW*
1. Tell us about your favorite writing project/universe that you've worked with and why.
Despite my current agent-related bouts of insecurity about it, Grandmaster Draw is probably the best thing I've written up to this point. Because it's actually finished, for one. But also because, on the whole, the setting is better described, the plot is more psychologically driven, and the relationships are a bit more complex than in my earlier stuff. I love it dearly, even if right now I just want to put it aside and work on something else to get my mind off of it!
The Imperial Guard also deserves a mention for just how long it's been with me. It's the most epic story I've written yet, with a fuckton of characters, including Cat, who is my snugglemuffin. I haven't been in the groove for it for a while, but I have no doubt it will come back swinging.
2. How many characters do you have? Do you prefer males or females?
Oh shit. Let's count 'em up, only including the main and key supporting characters.
IDO: Aidan, Tobias, Lily, Silas, Loki, Anton, Theo, Hawthorne
Catalyst: Tuyen, Lanh, Aurel, Sorin, Casimir, Lev, Radha
Imperial Guard: Catalin, Chris, Damian, Saphie, Kite, Talia, Victor, Amara, Reiselle, Baltus, Rakan, Fanel, Celeste, Gwen
Grandmaster Draw: Liam, Thom, Mama Lockhart, Papa Lockhart, Mary, The Minotaur, The Jester, The Gardener, Jack
Possession: Alex, Felix, Boss, Irina, Cass
The Hungry Ground: Kalinda, Dev, Isha, Jira, Chandra
Misc/cowriting: Seb, Nia, Ginny, Sola, Leo, Hokuto, Terese, Jasper, Ilario, Nick, Marissa, Isabel, Luke, Cole, Bryce, Pari, Jahad
Okay. I count 65, not counting minor characters or the unnammed characters from the cowriting project I will soon start with
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
3. How do you come up with names, for characters (and for places if you're writing about fictional places)?
Usually lots of searching the internet until I find something that clicks. And then if it's a non-European name, I usually do a lot of checking to make sure it's an actual name that real people use, and not, say, the Vietnamese word for "Bubble bath." It was a little bit easier for The Hungry Ground because there are so many people from India at Brandeis.
4. Tell us about one of your first stories/characters!
It was about a little angel whose best friends were kidnapped by an evil monster, and then she got a hold of a magical scepter that blew the monsters to bits, and then the angel was a hero and everything was awesome. I was three years old and I dictated the story to my mother, who had it bound and laminated for me. I started young.
5. By age, who is your youngest character? Oldest? How about “youngest” and “oldest” in terms of when you created them?
Among the youngest are Seb, Nia, Isha, and Liam: the former two are twelve, Isha's thirteen, and Liam's fourteen. The oldest would have to be the True King and Queen, the Jester, and the goddesses Surya and Kavya. And I don't actually know how old they are.
My "oldest" characters would have to be The Imperial Guard characters, especially Cat. The "youngest" are The Hungry Ground characters.
6. Where are you most comfortable writing? At what time of day? Computer or good ol' pen and paper?
I write on my computer nine times out of ten, but the mood strikes me at different times. Sometimes when I'm up really early, sometimes on a quiet afternoon, and sometimes at three in the morning.
7. Do you listen to music while you write? What kind? Are there any songs you like to relate/apply to your characters?
I have specific songs that I listen to for writing/brainstorming every project. For example, Grandmaster Draw went best with FictionJunction songs (mainly Parallel Hearts and Hanamori no Oka), The Imperial Guard went best with songs like Knights of Cydonia or kickass instrumental music, and I came up with everything for The Hungry Ground while listening to Howl by Florence and the Machine.
8. What's your favorite genre to write? To read?
What I like to write is what I like to read: urban fantasy, or straight-up fantasy without too many bells and whistles. (The kind of fantasy I like takes place in a made-up setting and has magical elements, but it doesn't interest me if it gets too wrapped up in worldbuilding to focus on the plot/characters.) I enjoy mystery and horror stories, especially stories that blend those genres with fantasy. Paranormal stories are hit-or-miss for me because paranormal romance is so big these days, but I'd love more books along the lines of Tanya Huff's Smoke series.
9. How do you get ideas for your characters? Describe the process of creating them.
More often than not, I'll read about a character or see them in a TV show, and think, "Hmmm, that's interesting... but I'd do this." And then I play around with that character type and make the changes I want to make, and soon, I've got a new character that's all my own. And sometimes I just think about certain character archetypes I haven't played with yet and get new characters that way. Either way, the character almost always comes before the plot.
10. What are some really weird situations your characters have been in? Everything from serious canon scenes to meme questions counts!
Story by story--
In Descending Order
- Lily's dead mentor left her a book of equations with hidden messages about the conspiracy they were trying to solve.
- Aidan is pushed into being an on-call doctor for a group of crazy mercenaries to support his sister.
Catalyst
- Everything Lanh does, ever.
- At one point, Tuyen has to pretend to be slightly insane. And who better to coach her through this but Aurel?
- The Third Sector, full stop.
The Imperial Guard
- Damian kidnaps Cat by throwing him out a window in the middle of a banquet hosted by Anwar himself.
- Cat climbs up the roof of the capitol building and sets the Carmine flag on fire while pretending to be his dead cousin.
- Cat crossdresses. And then fights dozens of armed men in said dress.
- Too many crazy things to name, really.
Grandmaster Draw
- Well, the entire story is about a control freak kid who gets pulled into a Wonderland-like place where the villain is trying to draw out the suppressed part of his personality, and the only way he can fight it is to take part in an epic chess game. So yeah.
The Hungry Ground
- Kalinda and company explore a deserted city that may or may not have been devoured by an Ax Crazy goddess.
Possession
- Everything the Boss makes Alex do.
11. Who is your favorite character to write? Least favorite?
A lot of my protagonists are also my favorites: Tuyen, Cat, Chris, Kite, Liam, Thom, Mary, Alex, Felix... too many to name. I tend to write characters with some level of awkwardness better, whether they're awkward in the sense that they're too shy, not shy enough, or just prone to foot-in-mouth disorder.
Really intelligent, scheming characters are really hard. The True Queen and King, Anwar, Cantata, Lanh, Radha, etc. I can write scheming characters when they're absolutely bugfuck, like Fanel or the Jester, but the subtler ones are tough for me.
12. In what story did you feel you did the best job of world building? Any side-notes on it you'd like to share?
Grandmaster Draw has the most fleshed-out world, I think.
13. What's your favorite culture to write, fictional or not?
I like playing around with the Myrrh traditions from The Imperial Guard, but East and West Chokma from The Hungry Ground are already tons of fun.
14. How do you map out locations, if needed? Do you have any to show us?
I draw boxy diagrams if I need to visualize it, but otherwise, I don't do too much mapping.
15. Midway question! Tell us about a writer you admire, whether professional or not!
Neil Gaiman and Diana Wynne Jones are my IDOLS and my biggest influences. I would kill to write like them. And of course, I have so many great writers on my flist, too.
16. Do you write romantic relationships? How do you do with those, and how “far” are you willing to go in your writing? ;)
I tend to enjoy UST more than outright romance - I like to see how many different pairs of characters I can build sexual tension for. XD I'm also a fan of unrequited crushes like Kite and Cat, or BFF bromance like Cat and Chris. (Cat's the little black dress, to be sure.)
As for actual romances, I do more established couples, like Anton and Theo or Lev and Casimir. And occasionally I like to play with the tragic romances - I love writing Baltus and Celeste, or Reiselle/Victor/Gwen. I haven't done a whole lot of developing romances, but I'll get to play with that with Kalinda and Dev.
I don't really write smut. It's so not sexy when I do it.
17. Favorite protagonist and why!
It's a tough call, but at the end of the day, I still adore Cat more than any character I've ever written. I love playing with his spazzy tsundere ways and his badly-hidden insecurities, and his relationships are some of my favorite to write, as well. I love the way he's come to trust Chris and Kite especially, I love writing his ill-fated friendship with Rakan, and he has some really fun interactions with Talia, Amara and Damian as well. (I think Saphie is the only main character he doesn't connect with as much, but Chris and Saphie get along better for some reason...)
18. Favorite antagonist and why!
The Jester is amazingly fun. I love playing with his jealous rants, and all the resentment is so cathartic. Where sympathetic antagonists are concerned, I enjoy playing with Baltus, who is such a villainous woobie. And so romantic. ♥
19. Favorite minor that decided to shove himself into the spotlight and why!
Cat was like that, actually! He started off as a sidekick who became a protagonist. Kalinda, Dev, and Isha were also supposed to be a background trio, but when their personalities came through more strongly, I made them the main characters. Chris is a better example of a minor character who didn't become the protagonist, but has a much bigger role now. I didn't have a good grip on him for years, then I shoved him and Cat together and he wouldn't shut up.
20. What are your favorite character interactions to write?
- Tuyen and Aurel. I love her relationships with Lanh and Sorin as well, but there's just something so interesting about these two together. He thinks her worldview is utterly idiotic, but he also admires her for reasons he can't quite justify, and he doesn't want to admit that she might be changing him for the better.
- Cat and Chris. Their situations are alike in so many ways, and in some respects they're the only ones who understand each other. Neither of them have really had the benefit of a trusting friendship before; even though Cat had Rakan, Rakan always put his country first.
- Kite and Cat. Kite's just so devoted, and he just thinks Cat's stubbornness is the hottest thing there ever was. And even though Cat's mentally five years old, he recognizes that loyalty and answers it with his own.
- Alex and Felix. Bickering BFFs for the win! I especially love writing scenes where it's clear that Alex is the "tougher" of the two.
- Alex and the Boss. I love that she actually has a soft spot for him. She can't say that about many people.
- Kalinda, Dev, and Isha. The former two fit into that "charming playboy and the ambitious lady he's slowly falling for" dynamic that I adore, and I enjoy the way they fuss over Isha.
- Liam and Thom. They're themselves around each other in a way that they can't be around anyone else.
- Mary and the Minotaur. Anything I put here would be a spoiler.
21. Do any of your characters have children? How well do you write them?
Unless you count Mama and Papa Lockhart? They have a fun family dynamic, though. They trust Thom and Liam to make the right decisions, but are wildly protective anyway, especially of their youngest.
22. Tell us about one scene between your characters that you've never written or told anyone about before! Serious or not.
I have messed around with smut scenes between Cat and Kite/Chris/Rakan before. And you will never see them.
23. How long does it usually take you to complete an entire story—from planning to writing to posting (if you post your work)?
Grandmaster Draw was almost exactly nine months, and In Descending Order was about the same. If we count planning, Catalyst has been going for five or six years, and The Imperial Guard for even longer.
24. How willing are you to kill your characters if the plot so demands it? What's the most interesting way you've killed someone?
I don't kill too many characters. Technically Mary and the rest of the door characters are no longer living, but they're not dead, either? I kill the most characters in The Imperial Guard, because hell, it's a war. I guess the most interesting death was Celeste's, since she managed to take out Anwar's eye before she was taken down.
25. Do any of your characters have pets? Tell us about them.
... you know, I don't think I have any.
26. Let's talk art! Do you draw your characters? Do others draw them? Pick one of your OCs and post your favorite picture of him!
Some nice other people draw for me, like
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
27. Along similar lines, do appearances play a big role in your stories? Tell us about them, or if not, how you go about designing your characters.
Appearances only play a big role when the characters think they're important: for instance, Cat's similarities to Celeste, or Liam getting annoyed when people point out how little he and Thom look alike.
28. Have you ever written a character with physical or mental disabilities? Describe them, and if there's nothing major to speak of, tell us a few smaller ones.
- Alex is asthmatic, on top of a whole lot of other health problems lingering from being an eldritch abomination's chew toy for two years. He was bedridden when he was little, but now it's just a propensity to catch every disease there ever was. People tend to treat him like he's very fragile, but he can actually deal with pain and illness a lot better than the average person because he's so used to it.
- Isha, while not autistic, displays some similar issues understanding people in social situations. He's also hopelessly nearsighted.
- Conversely, Cat's a little farsighted. He loves reading so much that he's willing to put up with the headaches, though.
- Tuyen's powers used to put an enormous strain on her heart, but less so now that she's grown up a bit.
- Lev is dyslexic.
I don't have too many disabled characters! D: I will have to make a note of that.
29. How often do you think about writing? Ever come across something IRL that reminds you of your story/characters?
Every second of every day.
30. Final question! Tag someone! And tell us what you like about that person as a writer and/or about one of his characters!
Anyone with OCs should do this, 'cause you're all awesome.
*PHEW*
no subject
Date: 2010-03-10 09:58 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2010-03-10 11:35 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2010-03-10 11:39 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2010-03-11 12:30 am (UTC)From:I love reading about the YE OLDE characters of In Descending Order and everyone else. ♥
no subject
Date: 2010-03-11 09:12 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2010-03-11 12:41 am (UTC)From:[is only on question 10, has already run out of steam and had to shelve it for a while]