Archive for the Fiction Category

I watched the first (new) season of Doctor Who. I loved it. I thought it was wonderful.

But last night, we started the new season. And I fell in geek love.

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Right about here.

He challenged the dude with a sword. In his pajamas! And you can clearly see–he enjoyed it.

*swoon*

For those who don’t know, David Tennant (yes, that’s him) is the tenth Doctor Who. Naturally, since he’s a Time Lord, he can’t age as we do, yes? So they have to keep switching actors. But here’s the brilliant part–it’s not just a new actor. He’s a new man. When the Doctor regenerates, he becomes a different person, though with the memories and feelings of nine hundred years of being the Doctor.

As he said when asked who he was, “See, that’s the thing, I’m the Doctor, but beyond that, I … I just don’t know. I literally do not know who I am. So I’m testing. Am I … funny? Am I sarcastic? Sexy? Right old misery? Life and soul? Right-handed, left-handed, a gambler, a fighter, a coward, a traitor, a liar, a nervous wreck – I mean, judging by the evidence, I’ve certainly got a gob!” (gob = mouth)

Yes, dear, you certainly do. And I can’t wait to learn more about you both.

Not to mention I’m so looking forward to Jack’s reaction to the new doctor. *grin*

That was the question. This was the answer.  (yes, another re-used post. Sorry)

What do I like? Hmm…

It’s well-written. Smart dialogue, sharp characters, good plots. Sometimes it stumbles a bit, but on the whole, it’s very good. And I’m only in the first season. Most shows take a while to find their feet.

The characters are very real. Flawed but not obnoxious, consistent, intelligent (for the most part, and when they make stupid moves you understand why, because there’s a REASON, and you know what it is.) The characters get developed.

It’s well-shot, but not cinematic (well, okay, sometimes.) The show feels real. Gwen, one of the main characters, is pretty, but she’s got a gap in her teeth and when she puts her hair up to get to work, it doesn’t look elegant, it looks like she wanted it out of the way.

It’s earthy, not…glamourous. There’s more sex than I’m used to seeing, but it’s not smooth, perfect, Hollywood sex. It’s just that the characters are real people with sex lives.

I love the characters, but I don’t always like them. Sometimes I want to hit them with sticks.

There’s an effortless lack of prejudice to it, too. When a white character has a black girlfriend, it’s NOT because they want to do an episode about race relations. She just…is black. And they don’t bother to explain why the two are a couple, either. When a woman is very attracted to another woman, she only angsts a bit because it’s never happened to her before–not because there’s anything wrong with it.

And when, after a quick but complex and sweet set-up of the relationship, Captain Jack Harkness kissed that guy in the ballroom–my knees melted, it was so hot. (and so well-written, I might have died if they hadn’t kissed) (here it is on YouTube, don’t watch if you can’t handle it!)

All in all, I find it wonderfully satisfying. (yes, if you’re wondering, there are lots of well-written, complex and meaningful het relationships too.)

I’m so sad we’re at the end of what the roomie owns. Now I’ll have to figure out how to work the DVR, and try to watch the eps in order though for some reason networks don’t tend to show the things in order after the first run…

I’m reading, watching TV and movies, and helping the roomie pack. May go insane if I don’t write soon, but suddenly there’s no time for that. Seems if I don’t spend a week snarling at everyone who interrupts, the word gets out that I’m not writing, and everyone descends to make sure I don’t start again.

Okay, it might not be as bad as that. But still. The simple truth is every time I’ve sat down to write anything in the last week, something has come up. Usually something that will take hours to smash back down again.

Grrr.

I read a book. I ranted about it elsewhere. Here it is. Don’t peek if you plan to read Burning Water by Mercedes Lackey.

(more…)

Hey, remember way back when I used to talk about writing all the time?

Well, more than I talked about snot, anyway. (yes, I’m still congested. Did you want to hear about it? Or, instead, I could share a bit about the re-writing I’ve been doing.)

The first draft of Taro started with meeting Rafe, disrupting Taro’s world on page one. But readers said they wanted to see his “normal” world for just a bit first. So I wrote a pretty stagnant first scene. That, of course, goes against all the noveling wisdom I’ve been attempting to absorb, so I decided that it needed changing again.

So here’s a bit of the process, including some of the rejects:

Knife-edge kick aimed straight at my nose–good thing baby legs were so short.

Nope.

Teeth sank into my finger. Lucky for her and me, the kid only had two.

“Ilsa!” Kat snapped. “Don’t bite Uncle Taro!”

The baby ignored her sister to gnaw on my finger. I let her; it was the first time she wasn’t screaming since I got the kid.

Naw. Re-think. People he could interact with:

  • Eve–training in some form. Crawling under something. What?
  • Ben–could be asking him about training. Could be trying to talk. Could have asked for help with the kids.
  • Plink–yeah, I got nothing for this.
  • Hanna–umm…she’s trying to get him to go off-ship and get in trouble?
  • Ariel–yeah. No.
  • Refil–no.
  • Mikey–heh, he wants a good poker game. No, want Taro against big guy as a surprise.
  • Kat–she’s three. Not very helpful.
  • David–same age as his twin, hello!

Okay, what else? Brainstorm. Fire could be good. A building collapse. Air car crash. Something falling on a child? A kid in danger. Some emergency no one saw coming. A train derailment. A bridge issue. Rescuing a child from the back of a horse.

A Kleptan encounters a fire extinguisher? A Klept creature, maybe. Hmm, going nuts? And there’s a kid hiding under something, it’ll get to him, kill it–And Taro grabs the fire extinguisher. Then someone compliments his quick thinking and offers him a job.

“Father’s Light! Get clear!”

A squeal followed the shout. People pressed back. I pushed forward. If something was happening, I wanted to know. That was why Eve caught me at the site of trouble so often. Not because I’d caused it.

Not always.

Another squeal; something up there was pissed off. I’d wandered down this street following signs promising a show. But from the screams, something wasn’t going right.

“Gerard! Get clear, lad!”

Hells. I used my height–short–and my skills–mean–to hurry forward as a man shouted and a woman screamed and something shrieked.

“Drop it, Gerard! Just drop it!”

Effing hells. A small boy hung terrified from a tree, while a six-legged lizard thing tried to scale it, snapping and clawing. A man beat the thing’s backside with a whip. If he did turn the beast, he’d die.

“Shoot it!” I ordered.

“That beast is worth–”

Bastards. I raked the area, looking for anything–found it. I leaned into a taxi and snatched the fire-can. Ran at the beast from the side and sprayed right in its face. Have to affect the brain–

The creature shook the big-toothed head on its long neck. Lethargic and confused

Bah…

A lot of the problem, I know, is that having him interact with others reveals things I “reveal” in that original first scene with Rafe. So the more I thought about it, the more I realized that I needed to change that scene. And I didn’t wanna. That first meeting is part of the fabric of Eve’s galaxy to me now.

(Note to self: name the place. There’s so much more to that ‘verse than Eve now.)

Fabric or not, I did eventually yank it. *sigh* (okay, “yank” doesn’t equal “delete.” It’s here, should you care to read it.)

For any looking for fanfic, Chapter Two of Shades and Hues is finally up.