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questions
Pam:
Waddaya think of mixed metaphors or invented euphemisms that don't work? Wordplay, I guess. Is it pretentious, irreverent, or is it essential to the development of our language? Also - and this is personal (so I'll post it on a blog, hah)- I just returned to work from a mat leave and have found I'm now responsible to write articles for the company magazine. How do you handle criticism from an editor you barely know - or is that better than one you do know? Should I get to know her better? Have you addressed this before, and if so - please point so I can click. Keep up the good fight.Alison:
What I want to know is, when you are researching and come across an amazing fact (eg, running with toes turned inward is more efficient), do you not want to grab the nearest person and say "Did you know...." or "guess what I just found out"? Well, I would. I also confess I tried to test the toes turned inward theory. I'm not a runner by any stretch of the imagination so, alas, couldn't really tell if it made the task any easier but I could imagine what a difference it made to Elizabeth after her years of boot-wearing.Jacqui:
1) Actually this one is just a repeat of a question I had on the discussion board (getting from A to B). How do you move your action along without it reading either forced, vague, stilted or full of unnecessary detail? you have just had your characters do A and you want them to do B, but what about the in between?Kaylea:2) I think you might be going to a "little" get together in California. So ... my question is, how was it? (as I'm assuming you'll read this when you get back).
Odd question maybe, but Im a new journalist and I am just discovering this anxiety myself: Do you ever - even at this stage of your success - worry about what people are going to think about the way you worded a sentance, a phrase or how you create an image? Does it ever slow you down, or are you so confident now that you dont need to have to those "aw, that was crap *delete delete delete*" moments?VyperBB:
My question may also have been covered somewhere else on your wonderfully insightful blog, but I can't recall seeing it anywhere (and- yes, I think I have read every page/entry/etc)asdfg:In the movie, The Last Of the Mohican's, Cora's husband is called Nathaniel and yet you've named him Dan'l in Into The Wilderness. Why?
Questions: When you set out on a new book, do you have an outline that you start with or do you just start somewhere and go in both directions or what? For a new character or for a old character that becomes more significant, do you develop something like a character profile for that person or just let him happen or what?Observation: I stopped looking at much television years ago and discovered that I didn't need the news instantly. Reading the newspapers the next morning was current enough. If something is critically, instantly newsworthy, someone always seems to let me know. Thus, I managed to remove a great stress factor. My husband has recently started to try this and is a more settled person for it. You might give it a try.
November 25, 2004 07:13 AM
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