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Becky ([personal profile] sarashina) wrote2010-04-20 07:47 pm
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Quid pro quo, Clarice.

So I just came off a hellacious couple of weeks (which I will explain properly sometime soon) and I am feeling FREE AS THE WIND BLOWS. Best part? So many of my mental processes have been freed up, and I've been thinking about writing a lot more than I have been lately. Which feels so, so good.

I was thinking of a simple exercise I used to do with writing partners - I was actually telling [livejournal.com profile] moonsheen about it the other day - and I thought I'd put it up here so that we all could play.

Here's how it goes: you ask me a question about a writing project, I answer, and ask a question about yours. Simple as that! It could be about a specific project, or something in general (like, say, "Who is your most ____ character?" or something like that.) And the questions can keep going back and forth for as long as you like.

I've always found that it's easier to get enthusiastic about a project and dive right into it when you can share your enthusiasm with someone else. And there are my ulterior motives, of course - I get to find out about everyone else's writing, too.

Just to remind you all, my big projects are:

Completed:
In Descending Order
Grandmaster Draw

In progress:
Catalyst
The Imperial Guard
The Hungry Ground
Possession is Nine-Tenths of the Law

And there are also short stories like "The Mountain Sleeps" (and the not-yet-written universe based around that story), and cowriting and such.

Let's play?

[identity profile] lacunarity.livejournal.com 2010-04-20 11:50 pm (UTC)(link)
I'll bite!

What character surprises you the most when you write him/her?

[identity profile] noelleno.livejournal.com 2010-04-20 11:54 pm (UTC)(link)
*BODYSLAMS THIS POST

What sort of antics would you like in future coprojecting?

[identity profile] ruffwriter.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 12:01 am (UTC)(link)
Right now, definitely The Hungry Ground's protagonist, Kalinda. At first I didn't really know how I would do with her. I sort of decided to try to write her as the POV character on a whim because I haven't done a female POV character for a long time.

But she's not the usual type of character I write from the perspective of. She's not really outwardly snarky, and is a lot more thoughtful and serious in general. But when I actually started writing her, it was a lot easier than I thought it would be. She's got a much more dry sense of humor that's a lot of fun to write, and when it comes down to it, she's probably ten times more of an alpha, protective type than the frat boy-ish male protagonist. She was unexpectedly my type of character after all, and I probably wouldn't have figured that out if I hadn't decided to try her as the protagonist.

All right, and for you, I would like to know about this rumored YA novel of yours. What's the setting?

[identity profile] ruffwriter.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 12:05 am (UTC)(link)
Definitely more Office-funtimes! We haven't had the fab foursome working together in some time. We need some way to bring their plotlines together.

We haven't done much with the airship lately. I would love to throw Jasper and Charlie into a dire situation together to play with their dynamic more, maybe give Charlie a chance to shine and show Jasper that he's a little cooler than she thinks he is. And when are they going to find out about Nick's sudden but inevitable betrayal?

More de Rossi brothers to be sure - what's going on with Toni, and what are Amano and Angelo doing about it?

And of course, more Jasper/Angelo, Hannah/Ilario, and Sam/Marissa.

And for you - how did you come up with the concept for Elimay?

[identity profile] lacunarity.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 12:08 am (UTC)(link)
Set in a normal, boring American town that's unique only in that it has a somewhat thinner border between Earth and a particular section of hell, and that it's infested with little invisible demon blobs wandering around making that border even thinner. They're easily dispatched with a baseball bat or a combat boot, but the damned things just keep multiplying.

Also, the town has a surprisingly high population of angels and former angels, not that any of them actually realize that. :D


For you: how do you decide how to clothe your characters, and how to get their image across to the reader?

[identity profile] ruffwriter.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 12:25 am (UTC)(link)
HEE. I am totally all over this story when you write it. It sounds like fun! ♥


I think I am probably the least specific when it comes to clothes! I usually only mention a few details when it comes to clothes - whether they're wearing a leather jacket, or a uniform, or what have you. Most of the time I don't make a conscious decision about how they should be dressed, but there are some cases where what the character's wearing is significant to the scene.


Okay, back to you: who's the protagonist of the aforementioned story? What's s/he like?

[identity profile] noelleno.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 12:26 am (UTC)(link)
YES TO EVERYTHING we'll have to knock out some timelineyness to get to some of that hoohah yes indeed. AND WE'LL NEED SOME MORE BADGUYS as stuff heats up.


I have no idea actually. It devolved from some hideously cliche magical group adventuring thingie and then I ditched that and uhhhh
*SO HELPFUL



Who are your hardest characters to write :V

[identity profile] ruffwriter.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 12:34 am (UTC)(link)
HEE. *pets*


Ooooh. Cantata Anwar is the hardest, hands down - I can't say why, she just kills whatever scene I'm writing. Those sorts of cool, collected schemers are always hard: Mrs. Ferris, Radha Kaur, those kids.


And to you: have you ever made yourself cry while writing a scene?

[identity profile] lacunarity.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 12:41 am (UTC)(link)
Ah, I thought Mary had such an interesting visual, you must have had some process for that. Either way, nicely done on it!


Oh God she's like the one character whose name I still haven't figured out. Everyone else was so easy, but whenever I want to call her "Anna," she's like, "No, Sarah," and so on. ANYWAY. She starts out an unremarkable teenage girl (she's not, btw) who is sadly very attractive to the little demon blobs. Unfortunately, at first she can't see the blobs, so all she knows is these two crazy people keep running up to her, do bizarre things, then run off, and let me tell you, after the first couple of times SHE DOES NOT PUT UP WITH THIS SHIT.

But eventually she makes friends with the two angels because she's a pretty good person, they're actually pretty fun to be with, and she doesn't mind helping them with their quest, and also, sometimes they let her touch their wings, which is very ♥. She is a simple girl with simple needs, and cooing over angel wings is one of them. But she makes them promise not to thwack the one little demon she's adopted because he's just too cute.


Your turn: do you have any stock characters you've developed a little or otherwise think would be fun to write, but are still waiting for a story to put them in? (And if so, please share) Or if you don't do that, then how do you develop the minor characters in your stories?

[identity profile] noelleno.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 12:44 am (UTC)(link)
Dem crafty ladies..


No. I cry talking them out because I am a humungous tool and I talk out my scenes instead of putting them to words (WHILE MUSIC BLASTS LOUDLY SO NOBODY CAN HEAR ME OKAY). >:|;;
Iore on sickbed, Chiinah and the Big Bad, Cass and Rivven at the end of things, Chemin and Merrek at broken Tüknor, blablablabla...............


What's the skeeviest thing you've written/planned to write

[identity profile] ruffwriter.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 01:04 am (UTC)(link)
I like her already! I mostly enjoy the visual of her blissfully stroking the angel wings while they look at her a little askance. Sort of like Taki with Nyanko-sensei. ♥


Ooooh yes, absolutely. They usually come about when I'm sitting around watching/reading something, and I dig the basic concept and tropes, but I would have gone a completely different way with it.

For example, I came up with two characters recently after I flipped through a book about a girl who can see other people's dreams, and her condescending magical boyfriend. So I decided that dreamwalking girl needed to be less angsty and more deadpan, and condescending boyfriend needed to be way more ridiculous. (He still acts like a typical urban fantasy boyfriend at first, but heroine cannot take him seriously because of his recurring dreams about piloting giant robots.) So once I flesh them out more and make them mine, they may show up in a story some day! Quite a few characters I've made have been like that.


H'okay, back to you: tell me a little about the angels! What's the mythology there?

[identity profile] sandvich.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 01:08 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, this looks like fun! ♥

What types of settings do you prefer to write? When you write fantasy, how much of your worldbuilding is done beforehand and how much of it is supplemented as you go along?

[identity profile] evilsimon.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 01:16 am (UTC)(link)
How do you get a sense for how characters will interact? Does the relationship come before the fully-formed personality, vice versa, or simultaneously?

oh god incoherency

[identity profile] lacunarity.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 01:23 am (UTC)(link)
Hee, I would like to subscribe to your character modifications. I'm always in favor of serious characters being secret dorks.

Alright, while the angels are here on Earth, they are DELIBERATELY VAGUE about all theological things and any time one of the idiot angel duo says anything about heaven, God, or any other higher up things, the other is quick to point out that everything said is just a metaphor and is 90% inaccurate, but there's no way to explain it all in human language (or rather, they could, but it would take more than Sarah's lifetime to actually explain it).

The general idea is that God is like the President and Big Boss of the universe, and the angels are the workers in terms of figuring out the little details of how things work. And, of course, in that process, you have the Research & Development departments, and in particular, the beta testers, which is where the main angel cast comes from. They're the ones who really got into whatever assignment they were given, trying out and testing the loopholes and nuances of things like Family and Happiness and Sarcasm. This means they're actually the best equipped for life on Earth, because they have such a wide variety of emotional experiences.

The other big part of the mythology is how, while God is All Knowing, that doesn't mean he's thinking about everything at every single moment. Which means that if you do your best to stay below the radar and not draw attention, you can potentially get away with stuff long enough to fix your own problems before He notices. It's sort of like remembering who your second grade teacher was--you probably know their name, but how long has it been since you actually thought about them?


Alrighty, next question. Have you ever developed a crush on one of your characters, or designed them to be particularly sexy, adorable, moe, whatever to your own tastes?

[identity profile] ivory-and-horn.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 01:37 am (UTC)(link)
Have you ever unshipped any your characters? In the sense that the idea of them together provokes a reaction like "oh man that would be a train crash of EPIC PROPORTIONS".

[identity profile] glass-icarus.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 02:13 am (UTC)(link)
FAVORITE CRACK PAIRING(S)? ;D

[identity profile] ruffwriter.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 02:25 am (UTC)(link)
I like that iteration! The idea of the "beta testers" especially.


Hmmm... strangely enough, despite the fact that I'm a heterosexual woman, I have way more sexy women than men! I've never crushed on any of my characters, but I definitely write a lot of characters that fit my idea of cute. Possibly because I am a whore for cute things. Notable examples are Isha from The Hungry Ground (weakness for precocious and socially inept geeks), Cat from The Imperial Guard (weakness for snarky but utterly failastic protagonists), and Liam from Grandmaster Draw (weakness for... everything in a YA protagonist, really.)


And for you! What are your favorite relationship tropes to write?

[identity profile] ruffwriter.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 02:26 am (UTC)(link)
Awwww. ♥


Probably the Jester and his mindrape? It's pretty questionable. ;;


Okay okay ummm... most secretly adorable character?

[identity profile] ruffwriter.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 02:28 am (UTC)(link)
Though I'm not big on high fantasy, I love writing new worlds. I guess I start out with an image in my mind - the city built high above the ground in The Hungry Ground, for example - and I do really flesh things out as I write further and have the characters explore.


And for you: what's your preferred genre?

[identity profile] ruffwriter.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 02:30 am (UTC)(link)
Sometimes I go into writing a relationship knowing which dynamics I'd like to have, but usually they sort of hit me by surprise after I flesh out the individual personalities. It really helps me dive further into the story when those sorts of relationships click: I didn't know Cat and Chris were going to be BFFs at first, and Kalinda, Dev and Isha didn't have any sort of relationship at first. But when I realized that those relationships would click, the stories got so much easier to write. ♥


What sort of character have you never written before that you'd like to try?

[identity profile] noelleno.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 02:31 am (UTC)(link)
UhhHhhh
Prince Donovan actually gets rather precious as he starts to learn life isn't all about him. It's very Kuzco-tastic in ways and I would call that adorable?


OKAY SO HOW MANY CHARACTERS DO YOU HAVE SLATED TO DIE AS OF NOW.

[identity profile] ruffwriter.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 02:32 am (UTC)(link)
Aidan and Tobias from In Descending Order were supposed to be a couple, but I decided that if it would ever happen, it would have to be years later when they got more used to each other. I also constantly vacillate on who Tuyen will end up with, and I occasionally entertain the notion that Cat will hook up with someone someday...


Have you ever written with an unreliable narrator?

[identity profile] ruffwriter.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 02:36 am (UTC)(link)
Oh man. CAT/DAMIAN. They're always falling in love. Or falling off cliffs. One of the two.

One of the more interesting examples of my favorite crack pairings was Jasper and Angelo of one of my cowriting projects. She's an airship pilot with a hell of an alcohol tolerance and a dude's name, and he's a whiny Italian antihero who likes animals better than people. When they absolutely despised each other at the beginning of the story, I thought they would be the most hilarious couple ever. Then, naturally, he developed a crush on her, and now they're dating. They are, indeed, the most hilarious couple ever.


Your turn! What's your favorite kind of setting to work with?

[identity profile] ruffwriter.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 02:38 am (UTC)(link)
YAY. Pari and Jahad will be happy to hear that.


Oooh. Um. For major characters... three.


So is Hubie ever going to get some?

[identity profile] noelleno.livejournal.com 2010-04-21 02:46 am (UTC)(link)
DANGIT i had hoped it was worse than my list. 8|


I am debating this
I'm a huge sucker for true love and all that cliche crap, and I do have some stuff panned out for a sweet little romance with Yvonna, but idk. It seems kind of too cheesy?? I might not do it. Idk. There's also some fun stuff with Tina the Hawk, but wahey.


So does Cat get a happy ending?

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