thegreatlibraryoffae
thegreatlibraryoffae
Changeling In the Library
981 posts
The rambling writings of a little changeling lost in the stacks
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
thegreatlibraryoffae · 4 years ago
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I'm working on some new original fiction but I don't know where people are reading these days. Help?
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thegreatlibraryoffae · 5 years ago
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Random, but a really handy way to make things seem creepy or wrong in horror is to make them incongruously neat or clean:
In the middle of a horrific battlefield, you find one corpse laid aside neatly, straightened and arranged, its arms crossed neatly across its chest
As you walk through the garden, you gradually realise that the oddness you’ve been noticing about the trees is that they are all perfectly symmetrical
As you move through the abandoned house, you realise that suddenly that there’s no dust in this room, no dirt or cobwebs
You hear hideous noises coming from behind a locked door, screams and pleas, and visceral sounds of violence. When you manage to break down the door, there is no one there, and the room is perfectly spotless
In the middle of a horrific battlefield, a hollow full of churned mud and blood, you find five corpses cleanly dismembered, each set of limbs or parts neatly laid out in their own little row
You witness a murder, a brutal, grisly killing that carpets the area in blood. When you return in a blind panic with the authorities, the scene is completely clean, and no amount of examination can find even a drop of blood
You run through the night and the woods with a comrade, pulling each other through leaves and twigs and mud as you scramble desperately towards freedom. When you finally emerge from the forest, in the grey light of dawn, you turn to your companion in relief, and notice that their clothes are somehow perfectly clean
You hand a glass of water to your suspect, talking casually the whole while, and watch with satisfaction as they take it in their bare hand and take a drink. There’ll be a decent set of prints to run from that later. Except there isn’t. There are no prints at all. As if nothing ever touched the glass
You browse idly through your host’s catalogue, and stop, and pay much more attention, when you realise that several items on a dry list of acquisitions are ones you’ve seen before, and it slowly dawns on you that each neat little object and number in this neat little book are things that belong (belonged?) to people you know
Neatness, particularly incongruous neatness, neatness where you expect violence or imperfection or abandonment, or neatness that you belatedly realise was hiding violence, or neatness that is imposed over violence, is incredibly scary. Because neatness is not a natural thing. Neatness requires some active force to have come through and made it so. Neatness implies that the world around you is being arranged, maybe to hide things, to disguise things, to make you doubt your senses, or else simply according to something else’s desires. Neatness is active and artificial. Neatness puts things, maybe even people, into neat little boxes according to something else’s ideals, and that’s terrifying as well. Being objectified. Being asked to fit categories that you’re not sure you can fit, and wondering what will happen to the bits of you that don’t.
Neatness, essentially, says that something else is here. Neatness where there should be chaos says that either something came and changed things, or that what you’re seeing now or what you saw then is not real. Neatness alongside violence says that something came through here for whom violence did not mean the same thing as it does to you.
Neatness, in the right context, in the right place, can be very, very scary
And fun
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thegreatlibraryoffae · 6 years ago
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Acing pacing in your writing
I’ve read too many books and watched too many shows where pacing has ruined a good story. So, here are some of my tips for getting pacing right:
1. Don’t take too long to get to the inciting incident
Look, showing the ordinary life of your protagonist might be interesting if there’s something strange about their life, but readers want stuff to happen.
At least with genre fiction, you shouldn’t take too long to get to the action - the event that gets the story going.
If you can do it well and have readers invested from the start, you can start with the inciting incident. However, for most works I would recommend having it in the second chapter.
Your readers want to know what the story is about, not what the character thinks of his English teacher
2. Keep it moving, but don’t rush
Action is important. It drives the story and it’s interesting. You should make sure to put enough action in your work. Things should be happening.
BUT a novel is not a play or a movie or a comic. What makes reading a full-length novel so entertaining is the detail. The in-depth characterisation and description. The emotion and thought processes.
So, keep it moving, but don’t sacrifice the juicy details. Don’t skip from one action or dialogue scene to the next without taking your readers deeper into the intricacies of the story and characters.
It’s a delicate balance that can only truly be found by reading a lot and practicing.
3. Avoid a sagging middle
Your beginning is solid. Your end is exciting. But the middle is a chaotic mess that bores the reader. Trust me, it happens more than you might believe.
Sagging middle syndrome is a thing, and the only way to avoid it is to plan.
Look, I like pantsing, but planning the middle of your novel will help your pacing exponentially.
Make a rough outline of what needs to happen to get your characters to the climax. Add a few lighter/character-driven scenes where there are too many action scenes in the sequence. Remove events which are unnecessary. And make sure that everything makes sense!
This counts for second books in series as well. It should be good on its own, not just as a filler.
4. Don’t fast forward to the end
I’m looking at you, Game of Thrones.
If you’ve built up the story and set up everything for the final big bang, you have to deliver.
Keep the pacing somewhat similar to that of the rest of the story. Your readers have gotten used to it. And if they’re still reading at that point, they probably like that pace. Don’t write a relatively slow book and then have the climax be over in three pages.
I know you want the climax to be exciting. So, yes, make it a little more fast-paced than the middle. But not massively different.
5. Trust your characters
As with every aspect of creative writing, character is most important.
Is your character experiencing the scene quickly and choppily? Or are they slowing down and taking in everything?
If you stick with what your characters are feeling, you will get it right.
Look, exams have fried my brain. So, this isn’t the most well-formulated post I’ve made. But I hope that it can be helpful.
Reblog if you found these tips useful. Comment with your own pacing tips. Follow me for similar content.
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thegreatlibraryoffae · 6 years ago
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Here’s an invaluable writing resource for you.
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thegreatlibraryoffae · 6 years ago
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writing tip #2445:
chekhov’s gun is a writing trope that has nothing to do with star trek
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thegreatlibraryoffae · 7 years ago
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WROTE FOR ONE WEEK
Award yourself this badge if you have written for one week straight!
To award this badge, simply reblog it!
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thegreatlibraryoffae · 7 years ago
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Latin phrases to use as incantations.
This is gonna be a long list.
ab intra - from within
ab origine - from the source
absit iniuria - “let insult be absent”
absit invidia - “let envy be absent”
absit omen - “let omens be absent”
ab uno disce omnes - from one, learn all.
abyssus abyssum invocat - deep calleth unto deep
a capite ad calcem - from head to heel
acta non verba - actions not words
ad altiora tendo - “I strive to higher things”
ad astra - to the stars
ad fontes - to the sources
ad meliora - towards better things
ad oculos - to the eyes
ad undas - to the waves
ad victoriam - to victory
adsum - I am here
a fortiori - from the stronger/from strength
a mari usque ad mare - from sea to sea
audeamus - let us dare
audentes fortuna iuvat - fortune favors the bold
audi, vide, tace - hear, see, be silent
beatae memoriae - of blessed memory
bona fide - in good faith
bono malum superate - overcome evil with good
capax infiniti - holding the infinite
carpe diem - seize the day
carpe noctem - seize the night
cave - beware
ceteris paribus - all other things being equal
circa - around
citius, altius, fortius - faster, higher, stronger
clavis aurea - golden key
cogito ergo sum - I think, therefor I am
compos mentis - in control of the mind
concilio et labore - by wisdom and effort
concordia cum veritate - in harmony with truth
concordia salus - well-being through harmony
coniunctis viribus - with connected strength
consummatum est - it is complete
corruptus in extremis - corrupt to the extreme
crescit eundo - it grows as it goes
de novo - from the new
de profundis - from the depths
dies irae - day of wrath
dona nobis pacem - give us peace
ego te provoco - I challenge you
esse est percipi - to be is to be perceived  
esse quam videri - to be, rather than to seem
esto quod es - be what you are
ex animo - from the soul
ex luna scientia - from the moon, knowledge
ex scientia tridens - from knowledge, sea power
ex silentio - from silence
ex undis - from the waves of the sea
experientia docet - experience teaches
fac et spera - do and hope
fac fortia et patere - do brave deed and endure
faciam quodlibet quod necesse est - I’ll do whatever it takes
faciam ut mei memineris - I’ll make you remember me
facta, non verba - deeds, not words
fortis et liber - strong and free
fortis in arduis - strong in difficulties
gloriosus et liber - glorious and free
hic abundant leones - here lions abound
hic et nunc - here and now
hic sunt dracones - here there are dragons
hinc illae lacrimae - hence those tears
hinc itur ad astra - from here the way leads to the stars
igni ferroque - with fire and iron
in memoriam - into the memory
in nocte consilium - advice comes over night
libra - balance
littera scripta manet - the written words endure
locus standi - a right to stand
luceo non uro - I shine, not burn
luctor et emergo - I struggle and emerge
mare liberum - free sea
memento vivere - remember to live
more ferarum - like beasts
natura non contristatur - nature is not saddened
nec spe, nec metu - without hope, without fear
noli me tangere - do not touch me
ophidia in herba - a snake in the grass
pro se - for oneself
propria manu - by one’s own hand
quaere - to seek
quod abundat non obstat - what is abundant does not hinder
resurgam - I shall arise
semper ad meliora - always towards better things
semper anticus - always forward
semper apertus - always open
semper fortis - always brave
semper liber - always free
stet - let it stand
tuebor - I will protect
vera causa - true cause
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thegreatlibraryoffae · 7 years ago
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Attention, Writers Using CreateSpace!
(even if you don’t, a quick reblog could help get the word out; this is serious and can affect authors’ royalties.)
CreateSpace has a longstanding problem of hacking. If you receive an email about your royalty information being changed, go to your account immediately and change it back. You will likely find that the name and bank account numbers have been changed (and, as confirmed by other people posting about this problem online, usually you’ll get a Russian woman’s name instead of yours. No idea why.) Make sure to change them back, obviously.
Unfortunately, there is not much to be done to prevent this issue; CreateSpace does not ban you after attempting multiple passwords or trying to log in from different locations. Hackers just keep trying different passwords until they get in. You can change your password, but it doesn’t seem to help.
I actually contacted CS about this, and got an email back saying, roughly, “thank you for bringing this to our attention; we hope to continue serving you in the future.” So they are not really changing anything.
Again, even if you don’t use CreateSpace, this is a serious issue that 1) is going to continue affecting everyone who does, and 2) is important for people to know when choosing a self-publishing platform. Please spread the word, and if you know anyone using this specific platform, please send this to them.
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thegreatlibraryoffae · 7 years ago
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Scariest Urban Legends In Each State
HERE is the link for those of you who want to read a text version of the list.
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thegreatlibraryoffae · 7 years ago
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Novel Structure
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thegreatlibraryoffae · 7 years ago
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someone in a fanfic: s-stutters in embarrassment
me, closing the tab: sorry I must go
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thegreatlibraryoffae · 7 years ago
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[drawing of a yellow snail in a green and pink shell saying “One day your books will be best sellers!” in a pink speech bubble.]
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thegreatlibraryoffae · 7 years ago
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Welcome?
I uh... I don’t know where you all came from, but hello to all the new followers from the last 2 days! 
No seriously, where did you all come from? 
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thegreatlibraryoffae · 7 years ago
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The Road to Xibalba - Part 1
The Road to Xibalba – Part 1
Here is the story of Taavi and his love for Hadassah, a love so great that he would brave the trials of Xibalba, and the Lords of that place, to save her. Taavi was tall and strong, his eyes dark and sure. He was a warrior, the son of a warrior and grandson of a warrior. When he first saw Hadassah at work in the market with her father, it was love. The very next festival day, they were married…
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thegreatlibraryoffae · 7 years ago
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If you’re a content creator, remember that there’s always a least one person who’s waiting for your next creation. They can’t wait to see what you’ll draw, write, gif or edit next. That’s the kind of fan that matters the most.
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thegreatlibraryoffae · 7 years ago
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Candles are How We Keep Fire as a Pet
Candles are How We Keep Fire as a Pet
The mage sat behind her desk, a notebook open while she scribbled notes down. Her partner was somewhere behind her, humming to himself while he worked on a dissection. She tilted her head to the side, catching the strains of the song. Recognizing it, she smiled to herself and picked up the tune. A candle sat on the desk opposite her but it was unlit. Extending one hand, she touched the wick and…
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thegreatlibraryoffae · 7 years ago
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Favourite youtube channels for research and why:
Vsauce - Actually really educational, dude has a nice voice, knows what he’s talking about. A lot of really sciencey shit, good if you wanna understand something complex.
Forgotten Weapons - Obscure and beautiful guns handled by a competent person who doesn’t use it as a platform for the NRA and really only mentions politics when it’s relevant to the history of the gun 
Hicock45 - A little more political than Forgotten Weapons, but shows off a lot of history and shoots their guns a lot more, showing you the actual operation. 
Townsends - 18th century history and food, obscure stuff done by reenactors. Plus the food’s p. good too. 
Skallagrim - HEMA fighter and weapons reviewer, knowledgeable and a fairly unique channel. Good source for fantasy writers looking for combat info. Has a series on the best weapons for different fantasy species.
CrashCourse - Well researched, pretty funny little videos, on topics from everything from history to biology to quantum mechanics.
Kurzgesagt - In a Nutshell - Great explainer for people looking to get into complex science topics. Not exactly a comprehensive source, but goddamn are they good to start from. 
If you’re looking for information on history, combat, general research, and science, these are good places to start or look for obscure stuff. Don’t use youtube as your ONLY source, obviously, but it’s good to start with.
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