expentio
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- May 8, 2019
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I'm a bit in a creative dilemma.
The issue is, I want to write something like an anthology that plays in one of my established stories, Eldritch. Because it's vastly different, I'd do so as its own thing.
Now, details: Currently, I only have one story for this anthology, around 18000 words of raw text. What I want to write is about a character that already showed up in the story.
I plan to use a style I'm not familiar with, as it's not quite my usual first-person narrative, but more of a dialogue, with the main part of the narration being done by the future character herself as a form of recall.
Now, only read the following please if you'd be interested in helping me in an in-depth way, including concrete details on what I may have to add.
I'm pretty sure generic statements like "that has to be fleshed out" won't help me.
So, the following is only of interest if you'd be willing to help me review what I got. Maybe helping me edit my current raw first chapter.
(In that regard, does anyone have an idea how to give access to my Word chapter?)
The issue is, I want to write something like an anthology that plays in one of my established stories, Eldritch. Because it's vastly different, I'd do so as its own thing.
Now, details: Currently, I only have one story for this anthology, around 18000 words of raw text. What I want to write is about a character that already showed up in the story.
I plan to use a style I'm not familiar with, as it's not quite my usual first-person narrative, but more of a dialogue, with the main part of the narration being done by the future character herself as a form of recall.
Now, only read the following please if you'd be interested in helping me in an in-depth way, including concrete details on what I may have to add.
I'm pretty sure generic statements like "that has to be fleshed out" won't help me.
So, the following is only of interest if you'd be willing to help me review what I got. Maybe helping me edit my current raw first chapter.
(In that regard, does anyone have an idea how to give access to my Word chapter?)
So, Veo. Veo is a so-called water angel. That's more of a nickname, because they use Hydrogen and subsequently water to manifest in. They are basically cosmic agents of balance, tasked with checking up on issues and worlds, whether their balance is screwed, and souls may suffer harm there.
A bit of a problem is that sending an angel is the same as throwing an entropic nuke at a problem. They have immense power and are pretty unpredictable in what they'll be doing. Veo is personally pretty chill, lax, with a hang for escalation.
What I now want to write is how Veo became an angel. This is supposed to be the theme of the anthology, as their responsible goddess usually tricks them into eternal service in a somewhat manipulative way. They need to fully agree to everything, but it's not like they have a concept of eternity. This leads to a slightly strained relationship with their pretty motherly goddess.
Now, for the issue, I want to write how Veo lived in a rather generic fantasy world.
The point is, she's the narrator and she's supposed to think so. Water angels become pretty nihilistic in the long run. It's supposed to be a point that she saw fantasy worlds similar to hers as a daily occurrence, and impending doom is a bit of a daily occurrence for her. It's supposed to convey how she's feeling about a decision that may just as well have determined the fate of her world that now seems so insignificant. How it leaves the question whether she'd still say yes to the offer of eternal servitude.
In this sense, the narration is supposed to feel a bit like coming home and finding that you can't quite tell apart your suburban building from the others in the same row.
For this reason, I may have skipped too much out of the worldbuilding when her story started. Yet I'm a bit unsure how to balance these two.
I still want to write something engaging. I guess most will just check it out because of the relation to my other novel, but I still want it to be interesting by itself. Enough to garner interest. Even if the premise is pretty peculiar.
A bit of a problem is that sending an angel is the same as throwing an entropic nuke at a problem. They have immense power and are pretty unpredictable in what they'll be doing. Veo is personally pretty chill, lax, with a hang for escalation.
What I now want to write is how Veo became an angel. This is supposed to be the theme of the anthology, as their responsible goddess usually tricks them into eternal service in a somewhat manipulative way. They need to fully agree to everything, but it's not like they have a concept of eternity. This leads to a slightly strained relationship with their pretty motherly goddess.
Now, for the issue, I want to write how Veo lived in a rather generic fantasy world.
The point is, she's the narrator and she's supposed to think so. Water angels become pretty nihilistic in the long run. It's supposed to be a point that she saw fantasy worlds similar to hers as a daily occurrence, and impending doom is a bit of a daily occurrence for her. It's supposed to convey how she's feeling about a decision that may just as well have determined the fate of her world that now seems so insignificant. How it leaves the question whether she'd still say yes to the offer of eternal servitude.
In this sense, the narration is supposed to feel a bit like coming home and finding that you can't quite tell apart your suburban building from the others in the same row.
For this reason, I may have skipped too much out of the worldbuilding when her story started. Yet I'm a bit unsure how to balance these two.
I still want to write something engaging. I guess most will just check it out because of the relation to my other novel, but I still want it to be interesting by itself. Enough to garner interest. Even if the premise is pretty peculiar.