Yeah, I can do the boring entry thing, too. ;)
Mum and I were shopping today. We went to the Campona Shopping Centre, which is easy to reach from where we live (you don't even have to change the bus). Not that we'd particularly need anything, just because we like the place. It's relatively small, reasonably structured and pleasant.
So, we went there and dropped in the Internet Café, which is on the upper floor of this really god bookstore (the coffee they sell is fantastic). The store keeps English books, too, not many, but a lot of classics in the Penguin paperback edition. In a fit of Gier I bought three of them.
So, I'm now the proud owner of Ivanhoe by Sir Walter Scott, The Canterbury Tales by Chaucer, Tales from Shzakespeare by Lamb, The Black Arrow by Stevenson and Scottish Folk and Fairy Tales, chosen and credited by Gordon Jarvie.
These, together with Tolkien's collected works and the Earthsea books that
ithilwen sent me, should extend my miserable English vocabulary a little. Maybe it would be less of a pain to write Tolkienfic in English.
When I started writing in the Tolkienverse, at first I didn't worry too much about grammar and style and vocabulary. I just wrote the stories as they came. Soberly seen, they are probably a lot weaker than my later stuff. But writing made a hell of a lot more fun when I didn't worry al the time about these things. And about canon.
Just to get something straight: I have great respect for canon. In all of my fandoms. And I'm all for grammatical correctness, too. One should respect one's own work, after all. But there seems to be a disturbing tendency among readers and fellow writers, one that I've discovered on many forums I sometimes visit, GAFF being the mean one among them. People, who are devoted to a particular fandom, don't really care about if a story is good or not. All it seems to count nowadays is whether or not it matches "canon" perfectly or not.
Actually, I can understand canon sensitivity if we are talking about fandoms of great literary worth. Like Tolkien's books. Or Shakespeare fic. Or anything else like that. But getting one's pants in a knot because of Buffy?? For God's sake, Joss Whedon changed his mind about what'd be official for the Buffyverse almost every season. And I could list half a dozen other fandoms where the same intolerance is shown.
Another thing what I really don't like is when people tell me that a crossover between fanon A and fanon B would never work. I don't believe that. Some crossovers would be certainly rather hard to pull out, but a really good writer could make almost anything work. Almost.
So, I defiantly stuck to my opinion that the Buffyverse and Kindred could work together. God knows it's not easy, and I'm not one hundert per cent sure that my version would work out in the end. But it is doable, and I like keep trying.
I found a way around FSFF's refusal to accept my stuff. Lasse-lanta succeeded to upload one of my stories from her PC. So I hope that - once school starts again - I'll be able to upload from there. It seems that my ISP is the culprit that interefers somehow.
Mum and I were shopping today. We went to the Campona Shopping Centre, which is easy to reach from where we live (you don't even have to change the bus). Not that we'd particularly need anything, just because we like the place. It's relatively small, reasonably structured and pleasant.
So, we went there and dropped in the Internet Café, which is on the upper floor of this really god bookstore (the coffee they sell is fantastic). The store keeps English books, too, not many, but a lot of classics in the Penguin paperback edition. In a fit of Gier I bought three of them.
So, I'm now the proud owner of Ivanhoe by Sir Walter Scott, The Canterbury Tales by Chaucer, Tales from Shzakespeare by Lamb, The Black Arrow by Stevenson and Scottish Folk and Fairy Tales, chosen and credited by Gordon Jarvie.
These, together with Tolkien's collected works and the Earthsea books that
When I started writing in the Tolkienverse, at first I didn't worry too much about grammar and style and vocabulary. I just wrote the stories as they came. Soberly seen, they are probably a lot weaker than my later stuff. But writing made a hell of a lot more fun when I didn't worry al the time about these things. And about canon.
Just to get something straight: I have great respect for canon. In all of my fandoms. And I'm all for grammatical correctness, too. One should respect one's own work, after all. But there seems to be a disturbing tendency among readers and fellow writers, one that I've discovered on many forums I sometimes visit, GAFF being the mean one among them. People, who are devoted to a particular fandom, don't really care about if a story is good or not. All it seems to count nowadays is whether or not it matches "canon" perfectly or not.
Actually, I can understand canon sensitivity if we are talking about fandoms of great literary worth. Like Tolkien's books. Or Shakespeare fic. Or anything else like that. But getting one's pants in a knot because of Buffy?? For God's sake, Joss Whedon changed his mind about what'd be official for the Buffyverse almost every season. And I could list half a dozen other fandoms where the same intolerance is shown.
Another thing what I really don't like is when people tell me that a crossover between fanon A and fanon B would never work. I don't believe that. Some crossovers would be certainly rather hard to pull out, but a really good writer could make almost anything work. Almost.
So, I defiantly stuck to my opinion that the Buffyverse and Kindred could work together. God knows it's not easy, and I'm not one hundert per cent sure that my version would work out in the end. But it is doable, and I like keep trying.
I found a way around FSFF's refusal to accept my stuff. Lasse-lanta succeeded to upload one of my stories from her PC. So I hope that - once school starts again - I'll be able to upload from there. It seems that my ISP is the culprit that interefers somehow.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-08-09 02:34 am (UTC)Actually, everywhere but in Tolkien's universe, I prefer AUs and crossovers to canon fics. Writing an AU gives me the chance to change what I didn't like in the original. I only wish people won't ignore the AU label and expect that everything went according to canon. As if I wouldn't stay as close to canon as possible anyway...
(no subject)
Date: 2004-08-09 03:57 am (UTC)Cross overs are a bit the same, you can have heaps of fun! Witness the dreadful things I did in a Monty Python/Silm cross over!
(no subject)
Date: 2004-08-09 04:23 am (UTC)Hmmm. I'm afraid I don't know a thing about MOnty Python - that kind of humour will forever be incomprehensible for me - but I'd like to se what you've done. Which story is that?
(no subject)
Date: 2004-08-09 05:02 am (UTC)http://www.fanfiction.net/s/1677806/1/
Is the link to cross over with the Quest for the Holy Grail. I have a very good friend here in Australia who could never understand Monty Python until I explained, 'don't try to understand this stuff. Just accept it, and accept the weirdness as normal, and their strange logic as if that's how everyone thinks.' She's been able to find some of it funny now. Good luck, and please, let me know what you think as non-python fan.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-08-17 12:14 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-08-18 02:47 am (UTC)Thanks for the comment!