Welcome to the rabbit hole. In recent times this blog has revolved around self-promotion of my creative-writing blog and my personal blogging. Older post contain recipes and soap crafts - this blog moves with my lunacy. :)
Sunday, 9 February 2014
Era of the tech
We have become so caught up with technology that we take backup devices incase primary devices fail. For example I took my iPad with me incase my mobile (which it did)/ died. Yet when I was younger I regularly traveled the countryside with no commincation device outside fixed public call booths (my god who uses them any more).
Wednesday, 5 February 2014
I'm a busy busy bumble bee ^_^
I made soap! Yay, I successfully did something other than write, or job hunt. Go me! Sadly this is not what this post is about (Soap can have it's own post ;) ).
Today I want to talk about (you guessed it) fiction. I have been consistently writing recently. I am publishing 6 days a week. Most of these are small pieces of flash fiction but I have also started a series and 2 short novels.
Short stories:
Not Pinocchio: I'm particularly proud of this one. Lot's a lovely comments. It's a short piece on the nature of grief.
There will always be Technology: A short piece of Sci-fi cracking a joke about teens.
Gone Wild: Regular Jane lost on an island. Involves pointy sticks.
Series and episodic novels:
Jason and the Darwin Awards: This one is a series taking the piss out of us Aussies. The theme behind the episodes is the near miss of earning a 'Darwin Awake' (a joke award given to those who's acts of stupidity successfully removes their genes from the gene pool.)
And you call yourself a...: Katherine has found herself out on her arse when her landlord goes bankrupt. She is forced to room with oddball housemates. Heavy supernatural theme. Elements of parody.
Sweet Brain Damage: Abigail Lawson was born gifted but lost her powers when she was dropped on her head as a baby. Whats an ordinary teen to do when her powers re-emerge and she is shipped off the psychic equivalent of Hogwarts. Meant as a rom-com with more elements of parody.
Hope you enjoy ^_^
Today I want to talk about (you guessed it) fiction. I have been consistently writing recently. I am publishing 6 days a week. Most of these are small pieces of flash fiction but I have also started a series and 2 short novels.
Short stories:
Not Pinocchio: I'm particularly proud of this one. Lot's a lovely comments. It's a short piece on the nature of grief.
There will always be Technology: A short piece of Sci-fi cracking a joke about teens.
Gone Wild: Regular Jane lost on an island. Involves pointy sticks.
Series and episodic novels:
Jason and the Darwin Awards: This one is a series taking the piss out of us Aussies. The theme behind the episodes is the near miss of earning a 'Darwin Awake' (a joke award given to those who's acts of stupidity successfully removes their genes from the gene pool.)
And you call yourself a...: Katherine has found herself out on her arse when her landlord goes bankrupt. She is forced to room with oddball housemates. Heavy supernatural theme. Elements of parody.
Sweet Brain Damage: Abigail Lawson was born gifted but lost her powers when she was dropped on her head as a baby. Whats an ordinary teen to do when her powers re-emerge and she is shipped off the psychic equivalent of Hogwarts. Meant as a rom-com with more elements of parody.
Hope you enjoy ^_^
Monday, 27 January 2014
Think of of the fiction!!
It has been a productive week for my muse. I have given him so much exercise he must have collapsed from exhaustion by this point. But I have several great projects to show for it and my writing is steadily improving.
The Crown and the cavern started life as 'Picture it and Write' challenge. It is flash fiction that is a cautionary tale about reading the instructions.
Country Guy and City Girl are two separate pieces of flash fiction that happen to be the same story from different points of view. Nice real romance. I may do a continuation.
A parody of 'Singing in the rain' that is deliberately of key about the joys of job hunting. You will be able to tell i have been job hunting for too long that day. I clearly needed a break.
A walk in the rain A nice short poem :)
The Crown and the cavern started life as 'Picture it and Write' challenge. It is flash fiction that is a cautionary tale about reading the instructions.
Country Guy and City Girl are two separate pieces of flash fiction that happen to be the same story from different points of view. Nice real romance. I may do a continuation.
A parody of 'Singing in the rain' that is deliberately of key about the joys of job hunting. You will be able to tell i have been job hunting for too long that day. I clearly needed a break.
A walk in the rain A nice short poem :)
Labels:
drama,
fantasy,
fiction,
flash fiction,
poem,
poetry,
romance,
satire,
short story,
supernatural
Sunday, 26 January 2014
The job hunt continues!
It's depressing being unemployed. Even with a volunteer hob I still have too much time. I've started too spend all my time finding things to do (Not that that is in any way difficult.)
Now I spotted a interesting job ad today: Blogger for Grads.co.uk. What better think for an unemployed graduate student to do: Blog for a student blog! Sounds great. Let's start the how-tos
How to collude your way through your degree
How to wring the most out of your university
Beating the system - knowing your rights
Employment - what's a graduate to do
I could keep going on.
The absolute worse part is I would be good at it. I spend most of my time writing these days. I write applications. I write cover letters. I write emails. Then when I'm really BORED I write fiction. Yay!
It get's better. My creative writing blog is quite popular, given it's been in existence for all of a month.
Let's face it. I would be perfect for the role (Ego deflating pin ready, Sir!).
Bet peanuts would be generous pay.
Now I spotted a interesting job ad today: Blogger for Grads.co.uk. What better think for an unemployed graduate student to do: Blog for a student blog! Sounds great. Let's start the how-tos
How to collude your way through your degree
How to wring the most out of your university
Beating the system - knowing your rights
Employment - what's a graduate to do
I could keep going on.
The absolute worse part is I would be good at it. I spend most of my time writing these days. I write applications. I write cover letters. I write emails. Then when I'm really BORED I write fiction. Yay!
It get's better. My creative writing blog is quite popular, given it's been in existence for all of a month.
Let's face it. I would be perfect for the role (Ego deflating pin ready, Sir!).
Bet peanuts would be generous pay.
Wednesday, 22 January 2014
Musing on a challenge
I have completed yet another short
story: Shouting Fire. This was another random word challenge. Like
all the others, it made me think. But today, it made me really pay
attention to the creative process for some reason.
The word was theatre. Nothing special.
But it struck as I write just how important the first impression is
to the creative flow. For example, my first though with theatre was
the phrase 'never shout fire in a crowded theatre' to which my brain
automatically responded 'oh I so want to do that now.' As can been
seen from Shouting Fire, this had a direct impact on the plot itself.
Similiarly, when I wrote Pepper last week my first thought was on
the burning aspect rather then the versatility in food and this again
carried through to the plot.
It is because of this that we actually
need to be careful to be aware of these impressions because other
wise it is easy to plagiarise without the intention. A good example
of this is the fragments of 'The man from Ironbark' which I have
included into the plot. I made a deliberate choice to work more of
these in on the basis of a second impression I had from 'theatre'.
It brought to mind my yr6 play in school – which is a similar
production to what the character John is watching. I could have
easily let this influence in without acknowledging it (although with
what little I deliberately added it would be hard to accuse me of
plagiarism).
This said, in such a short piece would
the similarity to 'The man from Ironbark' have even been noticed if I
had not gone out of my way to be obvious? This is a very good
question.
Labels:
creative writing,
drama,
fiction,
short story
Location:
Oxford, UK
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