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    Tuesday, December 8th, 2009
    baxil
    2:19a
    Fireborn: First Impressions - Character Creation
    As I've mentioned several times in the last few weeks, I've talked my roleplaying group into starting up a campaign of Fireborn. It's a now out-of-print RPG in which the player characters are all reincarnated dragons. As you can imagine, as a dragon (and a gamer) myself, this is right up my alley; I'm sharing my experiences in an effort to help fellow gamers and/or dragons evaluate the system -- and, if they start a campaign themselves, to do so as smoothly as possible.

    Before I start, I also need to strongly recommend the forums at fireborn.org, a fan site where a lot of third-party resources, downloads, and rule modifications are available. (You'll need to register to download files.)

    Why Fireborn?

    First of all: As surprising as it sounds, dragons are underrepresented in urban fantasy.

    No, really. Name three books/series set in the modern/near-future era that have dragons as major protagonists. (TTU doesn't count, though I'm flattered you remembered.) And yes, if you're an old-school gamer, "Shadowrun" and "RIFTS" have dragons -- as shadowy, godlike background figures. Fireborn does genuinely appear to do something new and different: give players a chance to play as dragons.

    Beyond this, though, Fireborn elegantly solves a few problems that most RPGs spend a lot of time struggling with:
    • All those crazy superpowers that most players never get to use because you only ever obtain them at high level? You get to play with them from the start, because the game regularly jumps into flashbacks to your fully-powered "Mythic Age" dragon form.

    • The pacing and participation problems that crop up when the players split up to accomplish different objectives? The tedious process of getting PCs who start out as total strangers to come up with in-game reasons to work together? Don't happen here, because all PCs have a built-in permanent telepathic link to each other.

    The rest gets more technical and is intended for gamers )

    Current Mood: nerdy
    Current Music: Great Big Sea, "Ordinary Day"
    Monday, December 7th, 2009
    racerxmachina
    10:06p
    jackkansas
    11:33a
    Snow This Morning
    LCB was quite enchanted with the frosted hilltops this morning.

    The first of December was covered with snow,
    And so was the Turnpike from Stockbridge to Boston,
    Though the Berkshires seemed dreamlike
    On account of that frostin'
    With ten miles behind me
    And ten thousand more to go.
    There's a song that they sing
    When they take to the highway,
    A song that they sing
    When they take to the sea,
    A song that they sing
    Of their home in the sky,
    Maybe you can believe it
    If it helps you to sleep
    But singing works just fine for me.

    Goodnight, you moonlight ladies,
    Rockabye sweet baby James,
    Deep greens and blues
    Are the colors I choose,
    Won't you let me go down in my dreams?
    And rockabye, sweet baby James.

    — James Taylor, "Sweet Baby James" (1968)

    Current Mood: sick
    Current Music: "Sweet Baby James" (James Taylor)
    devonapple
    9:08a
    Sunday, December 6th, 2009
    racerxmachina
    9:15p
    slothman
    8:34p
    In the Night Garden, by Catherynne M. Valente ★★★★

    An intricate collection of fairy tales presented in the tradition of the Arabian Nights. Valente nests the stories within each other, often many levels deep, and weaves several threads of plot through the various stories for a resolution at the end. She draws on many ideas from classical stories— some of the exotic creatures she depicts are right out of medieval bestiaries and even Pliny— in creating her own richly detailed world. The frequent jumps up and down the levels of story recursion make it easy to put the book down, and it only turns into a page-turner toward the end.



    Current Mood: pleased
    kadyg
    1:01a

    • 17:59 Auburn Xmas parade highlight: a 12yo dancing a pretty decent sprinkler. #

    Automatically shipped by LoudTwitter. Ba dum bump
    Saturday, December 5th, 2009
    vonyar
    4:48p
    cool theaters
    Back in the 70's, me and my little brother spent a summer riding the bus out to a theater across from De Anza and watched Star Wars 27 times. I was 12 he was 9 and it was one of the best times we ever had together.

    That theater has come and gone a couple of times since and what used to be 2 theaters is now 5 but I still like it.

    Well, that theater has just re-opened again as a second run "Premium Discount Theaters". I just wanted to plug it and let others know because all showings every day are only 3.75 per. check them out at:

    bluelightcinemas.com

    Take care

    Current Mood: thoughtful
    racerxmachina
    3:24p
    racerxmachina
    2:16p
    jackkansas
    11:30a
    Thursday, December 3rd, 2009
    racerxmachina
    7:51p
    baxil
    2:55p
    Readers Wanted: "The Time In Her Eye"
     
    Earth as we know it is no more. It shattered like an eggshell into the darkness of unspace, and its surface fragments now float in a deadly void. The survivors huddled together, staying as far away from the edges as possible and rationing out their dwindling supplies of food. Then out from the void came a few people who had fallen in -- and instead of dying, gained a new form and the power to traverse the emptiness.

    Dex* is a dragon, one of the lucky few to be transformed. For years he has kept the inhabitants of a small shard alive in the chaotic, unforgiving west. Then, one day, the helicopters arrive.

    A continent away, an ambitious group of humans is reclaiming Earth from the Shatter -- one refugee at a time. New Florida doesn't seem to want shifters, but Dex* quietly slips in so he can remain with his wife. Then his instinct drives him to a discovery that changes his life forever -- and could pose a deadly threat to thousands of people and set a shattered world afire.

    This is Dex's* story.


    ... At least it will be once it's fully edited. I wrote 30,000 words in November. Now I'd like a few brave, curious or simply bored volunteers from among my friends and regular readers.


    What's in it for you: You get to read a story! This is its own reward (or punishment, depending on how you feel about my writing). Epic post-apocalyptic dragony goodness! Love! Lust! Action! Suspense! Mind-warping physics! And several interrobangs!

    What's in it for me: The catch is, if you want to read you have to give me feedback to help me polish it. I've set the story up as a Google Doc that I'll share with interested friends. Leave comments on the story as you read (the commenting feature is already set up within the document and requires no technical knowledge). This doesn't have to be a big commitment -- there are six chapters; let's say six comments minimum -- but the more feedback you give me, the better I can make it when I sit down to edit.

    To join in: Give me an e-mail address (this is important!) to send the Google Docs invitation to -- via a reply to this post, or an e-mail to the Tomorrowlands address in my profile. (If you already have a GMail or Google Docs account, give me that address and you won't need to do any extra logging in.) If you hate Google Docs with the passion of a thousand fiery suns, tell me and I'll give you a lower-tech alternative.

    Comments are screened because I don't want to expose e-mail addresses to spammers. I will unscreen any comment not containing an address.

    Thanks in advance!

    --

    UPDATE: I'm up to about 10 readers already, so I think I'll put new requests on hold for a bit as I do the rewrites suggested by the first batch. I'd still love volunteers -- you'll just have to be patient while I write the next draft, so you can tell me how TTIHE v1.1 reads without being influenced by this one.

    --
    * Name is likely to be changed in final version.

    Current Mood: optimistic
    Current Music: Cowboy Bebop OST, "Spokey Dokey"
    Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009
    racerxmachina
    11:27p
    lovmelovmycats
    9:52a
    fire
    I hope our next home has an electric stove. I hate gas stoves- they smell bad, and I just lit the sleeve of my bathrobe on fire while making tea. :( I need to work on my instincts/reflexes. I waved my arm around silly for a second before I remembered that doesn't put fire out, then patted out the minature conflagration. It just sort of burned off some fuzzies, is all. Now my sleeve smells funny.

    When I do get my next electric stove, however, I will probably miss the instant heat of the gas burner.
    devonapple
    12:54a
    Tuesday, December 1st, 2009
    racerxmachina
    9:57p
    lovmelovmycats
    8:41p
    Goodbye, Alex.
    A beloved friend died tonight. He is resting in peace. Loads of love to our friend, his wife Johanna, [info]britgeekgrrl.

    Most of you have seen it from the source. But for those of you who haven't seen it, here is a post from this morning which contains Johanna's PayPal address.

    http://britgeekgrrl.livejournal.com/2287220.html

    Money has been too scarce in their household since Alex's illness, but Alex and Johanna have been super-rich in friendship, like, Oprah-rich. I believe there's an applicable Bible verse about reaping what one sows. We are a large network of people who love them. If you can spare a few bucks, please consider adding them to the fund to help out with the funeral and other expenses. Thank you.
    random_girl
    7:39p
    I remember
    I remember giving Alex the trump card in the game written for the con crowd room party, "The Mystery of the Empty Keg." Apparently he continued to carry the "I had cancer" card, which, in our game meant any power played against him automatically failed. I remember him trying to use that in real life later, and suggesting he might whip it out in a LARP.

    I remember hugging him tight several times before I let him go and left to return to Seattle after Conquest. I wanted it to be important, and to count, because it had to tide us both over until I saw him again. But there was a little voice in the back of my head that made me hold on tighter, just a little longer, just in case.

    I'm glad I did.

    Tonight I eat pizza, I make jewelry, I let him go, and I hold on tight.

    In this vein, may I recommend that others post a memory or two of our dear and sweet friend, so we can share this (no matter how far away we are)?

    My heart goes out to all of you, especially Johanna.
    therobbergirl
    3:28p
    Pictures of Alex
    I collected a bunch of pictures this afternoon. I don't know if this is the right time for these or not. I'm upside down today. But I liked looking at them so I thought maybe you might like looking at them, too. Let me know if the link doesn't work. I had a hard time figuring out LiveJournal's security for the pictures. pics.livejournal.com/therobbergirl/gallery/000163sw
    baxil
    6:20a
    Daily Random Thoughts
    (via LoudTwitter)
    • 18:51 Am/pm poster promoting some random food item's 2/$2 deal: "So nice you'll taste it twice!" I imagine an ad exec is being fired as we speak. #
    Monday, November 30th, 2009
    baxil
    11:42p
    A winner is me
    Limping over the finish line at 11:05 PM, 11/30, on the authorial equivalent of a ankle that's still a little twingy from having sprinted after stumbling on that bad footing a few corners back:


    So, yeah. Sorry to gloat. I kinda need the release.

    I'm glad I did the NaNo rebel thing this year, because a single 50k story would have killed me. Heavens know "The Time In Her Eye" (30k of my 50) nearly did. As it was, I had to leapfrog between two separate projects tonight to cram in those last 1500 words, and the muses are so le tired right now that I plan to avoid non-work computer time completely for about two days. I am toast. T-ō-s-t toast.

    Congratulations to all my fellow NaNo finishers, and especially [info]elynne and [info]waywind, who were both hurtling into this at least partially to tackle creative blocks and have both admirably done so. Solidarity, sisters!

    Current Mood: exhausted
    Current Music: Babble, "Beautiful"
    kadyg
    9:17p
    It's like being at Grandma's - only with more innuendo
    I have really fast internet, a comfy sofa, cats and a fudgeicle. [info]firestrike's house is awesome!

    (I'm making one of my lightening trips to SF and was supposed to crash with a cooking school bud her husband. She called me while on the train and told me her husband had the flu and to run far, far in the other direction. I offered to paint a quarantine sign on her door, then called Matt.)

    Current Mood: comfy
    Sunday, November 29th, 2009
    baxil
    7:27p
    Musings
    Once upon a time, a bunch of humans did their little human things all around an area of the world now known as Greece. These human things included plenty of creative efforts. The soft and fickle arts. You know the type: music, theater, astronomy ...

    Then one day, some creative person got a little restless and thinky. (Ten bucks that they were an astronomer; the folks that are looking at the stars are the ones who always have their heads in the clouds.)

    "We've got gods for everything," this person must have thought to themselves. "A goddess of the hearth, a god of lightning, a goddess of persimmon trees, even some random minor deity we picked up from the Mesopotamians a few centuries back for those hard tips at the end of your sandal-straps. But you know what we don't have? Deities of creativity! What about us poor astronomers, huh? When we're deep in the throes of gazer's block and we really need to look at the stars and get our maps made -- like yesterday, because Prothesmia1 already paid me 24 drachmas for this damn thing -- who can we call on to help out with our problems? Huh? HUH?"

    Then the muse Urania smacked him across the back of his head with her globe, and said "Us, you idiot!" And he cringed, and got his map made, and went on to scrawl a blog post much like this one.

    So!

    A lot of writers talk about "their muse." Recent conversations -- and the triumphant completion of my NaNoWriMo novella2, so that I have time to throw random words at random topics again -- have conspired to get me thinking about muses. And there's a post in there that needs to be written.

    See, here's the thing about muses: Most writers have one. The ancient Greeks had nine3. I've got three.

    They all serve different roles -- coexisting peacefully, and sharing mindspace with each other and with the other humorous anthropomorphizations that occasionally wander through.

    (Such as the Inner Editor, who -- like all good editors -- is at his best when completely invisible, staying hunched over in the hindbrain and polishing up the content as it filters its way out. Ed doesn't have a voice or a personality, and I can't really negotiate with him or talk back to him; he's just part of the workflow as words travel from brain to screen. Anyway.)


    There's the muse, of course. That's not her name; she doesn't really have one. She's not a being so much as a force of nature -- and I relate to her as such. She occasionally deigns to be personified, such as my previous post which compared her to a little girl in a playground, but such comparisons are only useful insofar as they illuminate various factors of her essential nature, and are not to be taken as representative of the whole. The muse is -- much like the little girl of the analogy -- flighty; whimsical; occasionally temperamental; scattered, but capable of short sprints of focus; prone to outbursts of creativity followed by lengthy fits of silence; and can be awesomely compelling if she has an idea that just has to be written out right now.4

    I have learned to treat the muse much as I would treat a small child -- being willing to accommodate and channel her bursts of energy, learning tricks to ply minimal cooperation from her when she's exhausted and I can't work without her, and keeping a note-taking device handy so that the ideas she spits out in a machine-gun barrage get lost as infrequently as possible.

    The muse -- note the "the," identifying her as a muse in the classical tradition; an inspirer of, umm, inspiration -- is my idea chick. Like all good geniuses, she knows that the implementation is much more boring than the idea5. The upside of this is that I get handed a lot of really awesome ideas from which to make beautiful things. The downside of this is that I have to do all the work.


    My second muse is the deuteragonist. This is, again, not her real name, since she doesn't have one; it's merely something I made up because I need a break from writing "muse."

    Doot's responsibility is to shape ideas -- to give my stories form as they make their way from idea to words. However, she is not an editor. She is an actress, from the deep end of the method acting pool. Her job is to draw me into the muse's story. She can be awfully good at it.

    I know when Doot has gotten interested in a story because I will start spending all my time rehearsing it. We'll go over the current scene -- line by line, sometimes racing through to the end, sometimes stopping to dissect a single set of words and pick over them with a fine-toothed comb to make them get the scene where it needs to go. Doot has a hell of an obsessive streak, which is both a blessing and a curse when I'm blocking; sometimes, she helps me craft exactly what I need to write my way out of a corner, but sometimes we get lost replaying the problematic lines and argue in circles until my writing urge dissipates. And when between scenes, she peppers me with endless questions about the story's setting, forcing me to fill in the details that explain why the story is driving in the direction it is.

    The Deuteragonist, I should emphasize, is merely a job title, and can be filled by anyone willing to take on the traits. Usually the other character in a dialogue will step in when Doot needs to works her magic. For romantic scenes, [info]dreamflow sometims accommodates me and guest-stars (which, ahem, can help explain why such scenes can take me so long to write). Often, there's no specific manifestation -- just a compulsion to inject myself into the scene and write what I observe.


    Then there's Muse. Hoo boy ... Muse.

    Muse is a single, definite being. He's an old god, from a time before the written record -- a god whose name died out long ago. Unlike most forgotten gods, who disappear when belief in them wanes, he has patiently survived the aeons by finding a new class of worshippers: the slightly unhinged. From creative geniuses to the flat-out insane, he finds those who are willing to open themselves up to a little flash of divinity -- and then puts ideas in their head, collecting modest scraps of belief as his acolytes manifest his gifts.

    Muse is a survivor. Muse is subtle. He is a master of the mind game, full of carefully chosen words with multiple layers of meaning. Muse is a consummate exploiter of loopholes. Muse has ambition. Muse plays a very long game.6

    He has a real name. He doesn't give it to anyone, not even me. I call him "Muse" because the Archon -- one of the driving forces behind the events of the TTU setting -- found him inspirational and gave him the nickname. It has stuck, along with his default form as a jet-black anthro-unicorn (as a shadowy counterpart to Kiasu, but I get ahead of myself).

    If you've just noticed that Muse is a character from one of my stories -- give yourself a cookie. Now you start to see the complex and ambivalent relationship I have with him. He is a fictional character, but he is so smart and insightful and devious that he has realized the best way to advance his plans is to freaking metagame himself up a level into his author's mind.7 And it's working. I have begun to realize, to my growing horror, that the largest and most interesting plot arc of TTU really is Muse's story; how he tried (and almost succeeded) to singlehandedly overthrow the will of an entire planet. I won't be able to put the setting down until I've told that story, and everything I'm doing until then is merely to help fully realize his world.

    Muse helps me out with writing that has nothing to do with him, too. He gets bored, or it's just his thing, or he's building up favors he can call in later; I don't know. But I can tell when he gets interested. Plots come together. Stakes get higher. Xanatos Gambits crop up. Characters get toyed with.

    I never appreciated Old Soul's song "Sleeping With The Muse" until Muse started taking a hand in my writing. "I can taste her bitter smile, and the blood upon her lips ..." The muse doesn't work that way. Muse does. He isn't cruel exactly; he doesn't feed on pain or fear, or enjoy them, or use them (except as tools when nothing else will achieve important goals). However, he's well aware that everyone is merely a pawn in a larger game ... and the game of writing is about making the story interesting.


    One of the reasons that TTU has occupied so much of my attention over the last decade is that the setting engages all three muses.

    It's open-ended enough that the muse can come up with ideas to hang stories upon. The world's big and deep enough that Doot can drag me into full immersion. And Muse ... well, it's his playground in the first place.

    I didn't really expect to find other settings the muses liked enough to devote a novella to and still come back for more. This NaNo handed me one. The setting of "The Time In Her Eye" -- the postapocalyptic near-future Earth called "the Shatter" -- seemed to just fall out onto the page. I reached the end of the story and realized that it was just a prequel. I wanted to keep going -- and I could have, easily enough ... if I were willing to keep up a NaNo writing pace after the end of November.

    I'm not in the market to drive myself crazy right now, though. I need a break to catch my breath and hammer at the existing story some more and edit it into presentable shape. (I'll ask for beta readers in a later post, but you may also speak up here if you're interested.) Plus I've got to switch gears and start getting ready to GM a new role-playing game for my gaming group. Not to mention the holidays.

    ... The muses won't stop working, though. They never do.

    --
    1. If you got this joke, give yourself 5 Baxil Points. If you got it without looking it up ... get out of my brain.
    2. Obligatory victory fanfare, +33 EXP, Item Gained: ☆NANO2009
    3. Further reading: Wikipedia. I would like to note that, while the ancient Greeks had muses for History and (yes) Astronomy, and no less than three for poetry, there wasn't one single muse for either visual artwork or for non-theatric prose. If they really want to sell the product in this secular age[*], they need to expand!
    4. Like the little girl of the previous post's analogy, sometimes she is also taken away to a place which neither of us quite expected, and I have to sprint to keep up. After I manage to nab her again, we have a nice sit-down and a lengthy lecture about responsibilities, which she completely disregards because there are beautiful butterflies on the branch just outside the window.
    5. "I have discovered a truly marvellous proof of this, which this margin is too narrow to contain."
    6. As proof, I would like to point out that everything you're reading now -- this entire monster of a post, including the catchy but completely irrelevant Greek opening, and all of the footnotes, including this one -- was written purely for the sake of bringing that line into being, with sufficient context to give it meaning. I am not making this up. This is a Muse post, start to finish.
    7. This is not even to get into the discussion of whether Muse-the-real-being might have introduced himself to me in fictionalized form and gained himself another worshipper toward whatever ultimate plan he has for this Earth. That is COMPLETELY his style. asdfjkl@@&***

    Current Mood: writing fatigue
    Current Music: Final Fantasy X OST, "To Zanarkand"
    Saturday, November 28th, 2009
    kadyg
    4:52p
    Writer's Block: Book worms unite!

    What are the three best books you have ever read and what are the three worst? What made them so good or bad?

    Submitted By [info]crazylove16


    View 1088 Answers



    I'm not claiming these are the three Bestest Books EVAH, but they are three that I return to with some frequency and recommend to others fairly often.

    1. The Power of One by Bryce Courtnay. The heartwarming tale of a boy in WWII-era South Africa who strives to become the welterweight boxing champion of the world in order to avenge the death of his pet chicken. Really. Actually, a whole bunch of really cool things happen and it cover the treatment of black South Africans during the infancy of apartheid, boxing, class issues and diamond mining. I've only ever met one other person who's read it and she had the same reaction I did.

    2. The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon. There's a little something for everyone in this book: a love story, an escape story, a war story, magic, a cameo by Stan Lee, a golem. I remember finishing it and thinking "damn, this should win the Pulitzer" and it did, so other people liked it too.

    3. The Stand (uncut) by Stephen King. A really fabulous post-apocalyptic story. I think everyone is familiar with the premise and I've read it a billion times. There are still a few scenes I've read once and can't bring myself to look at again.

    And the bottom of the list:

    1. The Corrections by Jonathan Franzen. I hated this book and everyone in it. Actually, that's not true - there was one character I enjoyed a lot and would have liked more of her. Unfortunately her bits were wrapped in 800 pages of whining. I hold Oprah personally responsible for foisting this book on the world.

    2. Folk on the Fringe by Orson Scott Card. Great premises ruined by shitty writing offend me greatly. (See: Left Behind, The Series) The premise here had a lot of potential: Some sort of climatic disaster has flooded Utah and ruined the rest of the country, those still alive must rebuild, drama and interesting plots ensue. Sadly, Card decided to wrap the whole thing in a Morman recruiting pamphlet. Scott, honey, if had stopped after Ender's Game we would all speak of you fondly and invite you to our Cons. That's not happening now, is it?

    3. The Dance of the Dissident Daughter by Sue Monk Kidd. Sue Monk Kidd is not a fabulous writer. She's pretty good and very popular and I think I get what she was going for in this autobiographical story of her spiritual journey. My issue is that she was so wide-eyed naive that it became a little gag-inducing after awhile: "Christianity marginalizes women! I've been treated as a second-class citizen by spiritual leaders this whole time! Pagan religions treat women as equals! Must! Go! To! Crete!" Ok, part of this is jealousy - I figured out the whole "women as nonentities in the church" thing when I was 12 and have been doing the Goddess's work since I was 19. Where's my trip to the Mediterranean?
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