AO3 Meme

Oct. 18th, 2021 07:39 am
marzipan77: (Default)
 An AO3 meme, snagged from [personal profile] paulamcg 


1) How many works do you have on AO3? 36

2) What’s your total AO3 word count? 941,423 words. Yowza!

3) How many fandoms have you written for and what are they?

Stargate SG-1, NCIS, Harry Potter, Torchwood, Quantum Leap, The A-Team, The Magnificent Seven, Criminal Minds, The Avengers (MCU).

4) What are your top 5 fics by kudos?

Earning the Title Earning the Title - Chapter 1 - Marzipan77 - NCIS [Archive of Our Own] NCIS

A Fine and Private Place A Fine and Private Place - Chapter 1 - Marzipan77 - NCIS [Archive of Our Own] NCIS/Criminal Minds

Black and White Black and White - Chapter 1 - Marzipan77 - NCIS [Archive of Our Own] NCIS

Harry Potter and the Persistence of Vision Harry Potter and the Persistence of Vision - Chapter 1 - Marzipan77 - Harry Potter - J. K. Rowling [Archive of Our Own] Harry Potter

A Good Man’s Life A Good Man's Life - Chapter 1 - Marzipan77 - Harry Potter - J. K. Rowling [Archive of Our Own] Harry Potter

5) Do you respond to comments, why or why not?

Yes! Because connecting with readers is fabulous! These wonderful people have gone out of their way to read my excessively long stories and leave me a note! How exciting! As I’ve said many times, fanfic readers are so lovely to connect with. Friends I’ve met in fandom are now my family. I’m so grateful.

6) What’s the fic you’ve written with the angstiest ending?

Oy. I had a whole angst period. Probably The Strength to Fall (SG-1) or Box Out (NCIS)

7) What’s the fic you’ve written with the happiest ending?

I gave Sam Beckett a happy ending in The Leap Home (SG-1/QL crossover)

8) Do you write crossovers? If so what is the craziest one you’ve written?

Yes indeed. I wrote a weird The A-Team/Torchwood crossover called …Sing You to your Rest for the Into A Bar Challenge.

9) Have you ever received hate on a fic?

Yes. I had a stalker on my NCIS fics for a while. Read them, told me how horrible my characters were, how I couldn’t write. But kept reading them. Deleted. Moved on.

10) Do you write smut? If so what kind? No.

11) Have you ever had a fic stolen? Not that I know of.

12) Have you ever had a fic translated? Yes.

13) Have you ever co-written a fic before? Yes.

14) What’s your all time favorite ship?

Not a shipper. I love GEN friendship/found family fics to read and write.

15) What’s a WIP that you want to finish but don’t think you ever will?

I finish all my fanfics. I do have a Harry Potter bouncing around in my head, but I haven’t even started it so that doesn’t count! I am in the middle of writing my original fantasy series The Heir of Time, so lots more books to come.

16) What are your writing strengths?

Discipline. I finish what I start. I don’t think it’s fair to the reader to leave a fic unfinished for months or years. I hope I capture the spirit of the characters from the screen.

17) What are your writing weaknesses?

LENGTH! I can’t seem to write short fics!! Did you see my word count???

18) What are your thoughts on writing dialogue in other languages in a fic?

I put in some badly Google Translated Italian in a fic and met a lovely reader who helped me change it. It’s problematic. Mostly because I can’t figure out how to put in the correct accent marks.

19) What was the first fandom you wrote for? If you don’t count my childhood Mod Squad fics, definitely Stargate SG-1

20) What’s your favorite fic you’ve written?

Wow, that’s hard. I’m happy with And the Truth Shall Set you Free And the Truth Shall Set You Free - Chapter 1 - Marzipan77 - Stargate SG-1 [Archive of Our Own] (SG-1) It feels the teamyest.

marzipan77: (Default)
What a year. I've learned a lot. Learned about myself, about my closest friends and family. I've learned about grief and all the different ways it manifests in a life.

I've also learned practical things. How to publish a book on Amazon. How to format a paperback. How to get engagement on Twitter to advertise said book. How to keep fandom love alive while all the other is going on.

And that's been essential. Because fandom, the people I've met there, the conversations, the acceptance found in fandom has sustained me through everything.

While I'm finishing my Stargate Sg1 story for Open the Iris, I've published book 2 in my high fantasy series The Heir of Time.

Journey of Brothers definitely nods to my experience. Matthias' and Deok's grief and guilt mirror my own, my own journey through loss. The love Matthias finds in his new brother is what sustains him, just like my found family of fandom sustains me.

If you're in the mood for a ya fantasy with an adult twist, check it out here on Amazon. Kindle edition of the first novel, Child of the Scales, is on sale for 99 cents, too.

Journey of Brothers #2

Child of the Scales #1
marzipan77: (Default)


Marilyn Monroe said, "Dreaming about being an actress, is more exciting then being one." Dreaming about being an author, published and proud, can be much more satisfying than doing the work necessary to become one.

Day 13: In your own space, set some goals for the coming year. They can be fannish or not, public or private.

Goal 1 - Query 10 agents (or fewer if I obtain interest right away, haha) with my original book, Avatar's Balance. This is work, the hard, uninteresting, uninspiring work of becoming an author. It's my job over the next month or so. This part is not dreaming, it isn't world creation or character development or plot outlining. This is business.

Goal 2 - Edit book 2 in my original fiction series, Heir's Journey. Make it work. Fill in the holes. Make it cohesive and structured correctly. Also hard work.

Goal 3 - Finish my WIP (fanfiction) and post it. It is unprofessional to keep readers waiting.

Goal 4 - Continue my new way of eating, no matter the temptations. Be healthy. Exercise. Get stronger. 16 pounds to goal weight - do it.

Goal 5 - Serve. Serve my friends/family without complaint. Follow through on my responsibilities at church without swerving.

Goal 6 - Worry less. Anxiety is a horrible disease. My goal is to do what I can to mitigate its effects. To breathe more, think on good things, trust God, look at more pictures of doggos than read nasty tweets. It's a good goal - I also recognize that it will be the hardest to achieve.

Goal 7 - Hope.
marzipan77: (Default)


Day 11: Describe your process for your creating your art.

There was once a song that we sang around the campfire on youth retreats. It began like this: "It only takes a spark to get a fire going, and soon all those around can warm up in its glowing." That's how my process starts. A spark, a tiny match lit that lights a candle, and then a Teal'c's roomful of candles, and then a Guy Fawkes's Day of fireworks.

And then a fizzle.

Fizzle. Fizzle. The gas range set on low. Simmer, simmer, simmer. Flare.

Okay, enough fire analogies.

An idea breaks through the minutiae of my brain. It could happen while I'm watching an episode, while I'm chatting with my fandom friends, while I'm reading someone else's story, looking at an icon, or, possibly, while I'm dreaming or in the shower. The idea flitters around my brain for a while. If it doesn't spark into another flame within a week or so, it flops around on the beach before sinking into the sand. If it catches, if it quickens, then I won't be able to get rid of it until I start working on it.

Sometimes I start writing right away. Get the words on the page and figure out the plot and dynamics and climax later. Those stories take shape quickly, the candles all burning at both ends. But, oftentimes, they fizzle. Fizzle in the middle. I find middles more difficult than both beginnings and ends.

This is where the gas range comes in. This is the time where I have to step back and turn down the fire and get out my tools (Scrivener, Excel, my notebooks) and plan out the rest of the story. Outline. Figure out exactly where I'm going and what I'm going to need to edit and write to get there. What do I want to leave the reader with? How is this story answering the questions I voiced in the early chapters? Letting the characters grow? Resolving the crisis?

Other times, the research comes first. When writing for SG1 in particular, I do a lot of research. Inventing a new Goa'uld, finding her/him in mythology, figuring out how this god or goddess fits into the Stargate universe. Making sure I don't step on any canon – and there's a heck of a lot of canon. 'Apron Strings' was a research-heavy story. But, still, even with these stories, there usually comes a time when I have to stop and reassess.

For my original fiction, the process is the same, but drawn out much longer. My spark of an idea for my first fantasy novel took six years to flame into a cohesive story. It took long conversations with my first readers. A lot of denial before acceptance of their criticisms. The editing took two years and resulted in a story I didn't expect. Working on editing the sequel now while I research agents and draft query letters.

There's another flame that sparked a week or so ago. It's found a half-dozen heavily scented candles stuffed into a box in the basement and is trying to create some kind of Write-Me Sacred Circle to get my attention. No matter how often I tell it I don’t have time for it, it's not going away. Time to make some notes.

*Note: A Plantser is a cross between a Pantser and a Planner. A Pantser writes by the seat of her pants, planning nothing. A Planner, as you might have guessed, plans everything out first.
marzipan77: (Default)
 Go see The Man Who Invented Christmas. It is the best "this is what happens in a writer's mind" film I've ever seen. The Dickens portrayal is wonderful and the way he sees and hears his characters is spot on. The way he procrastinated made me laugh - yes, it can happen even without the internet! His up and down moods? Yep, check that. But what especially got to me, considering I've been trying to write the ending of my novel for a year now, is that he was afraid to finish A Christmas Carol. Afraid he wouldn't get it right. Afraid no one would like it and he'd never be able to write again. This movie. 

PS. Yes, I keep a file of names just like Dickens did.
marzipan77: (Default)
Blog by [personal profile] marzipan77 on wordpress.com

Subject: "Show, don't tell."

Summary: In a visual medium like television, shouldn't it be even easier to follow this basic rule of writing? Why have so many lately ignored it? What's with all the exposition and backstory, anyway?

So, basically my thoughts on the current state of television, especially The X-Files. Spoiler alert - I didn't like it.

Chris Carter ...

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