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Fairytale Creepshow - What Would Draw You In?

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message 1: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
I'm suffering from a wee-bit of writer's block the last couple days and appealing to the kindness and creativity of my fellow Fringe folks to help me out of the rut before it becomes a shallow grave.

I'm outlining a book which is embracing fairytale/folklore tropes and stock characters (i.e. a Distressing Damsel and Dark Stranger) who are trapped in a creepshow place that resembles a broken home. Everything's staged and theatrical, people are told to play their part or risk getting recast. It has booby traps, dangerous playthings and puppets and deadly games with cutthroat competition.

By no means the blurb and I don't mind elaborating but that's the general premise to try and open up a dialogue of what expectations people might have going in, things they would hope to see, so forth.

I'm just getting frustrated spinning my wheels and prodding my keyboard so - seriously - if you guys have suggestions or random thoughts that could get my muse to jog back in here, you would make my attempt at writing tomorrow so much more productive...


message 2: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) Have you read Neil Gaiman's Snow, Glass, Apples ?

It was one of the best fairy tale creep show I've read.

If you have read it, or if that's not what you're looking for, how about freak circus shows? Nothing like a molting mermaid in a tank to really creep you out.


message 3: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
I have and heard the audio play through Seeing Ear Theatre - OMG chills! So good...

I might have a Fiji Mermaid and pickled punks - thanks for affirming freak shows have appeal.

I kinda want to have magical items - like canned laughter and bottled lightning - to go with people fighting with suitcases and candlesticks lol


message 4: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) Go for it!

Oh, another suggestion for research. Ray Bradbury's Something Wicked This Way Comes. There's also a movie if you want the cliff notes lol


message 5: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
Hmm...I do love that phrase and it matches the vibe...

Did you read Neverwhere? In any case, I really giggled at how their were play on words that were literal - like Black Friars and the Knight Bridge. Is that too specific a humor or something people appreciate?


message 6: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) Honey, I memorized Neverwhere lol

Totally appreciate. How about the variations of the word "door"? That was clever.

Puns are great. They instantly give readers something fun and familiar.


message 7: by Michael (new)

Michael Benavidez | 1605 comments loved the short fairy tale of Gaiman's.
I read manga Negima. it really takes twists and turns on what the manga starts off as turns into, genre wise. it's a nice relaxing read, that also kinda turns the gears for me as far as inspiration goes


message 8: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
I couldn't get into Negima for whatever reason ;p

I don't know - for me, play on words, puns, that ilk are great because it's like an inside joke everybody can get in on! It can be a riddle sometimes and people feel clever for catching the meaning/joke which makes them feel good and enjoy themselves more. Or that's the affect on me.

I think a certain amount of familiarity is inviting because we can still be intrigued by what's happening while feeling like we have insight into what's going on. Like...a false sense of security.


message 9: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) Sounds like it's time for Dr. Who...


message 10: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) How about Jim Henson's The Storyteller? It was a short running tv series but at that fairy tale creepiness to it.

I'm pretty sure you can find all the episodes on Youtube. I really don't feel like looking up all the links. You;re on your own. Sorry.


message 11: by Tabitha (new)

Tabitha Vohn This may seem like a broad response but I think the best way to draw readers into any story is to give them a reason to care about the characters and to care about what happens to them.

Why are we rooting for these two characters, or are we rooting for them? What's at stake if they lose the "game"? Also, who's behind it? Do we meet the villain? Do we know why he/she is staging such an elaborate (and forced) scheme?

Hope this helps :0)


message 12: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
I swear I saw Storytellers a couple years back. We need more anthology shows.

Tabitha - no wrong answers, I'm just happy if people have any thoughts :D

I actually know the answers to your questions!

1) The Damsel (and everybody) can't remember who she was or anything that happened before waking up in a box, dressed in bed clothes, in the House's cellar. I'm hoping readers can relate to the scariness of the situation and wonder how they would react.

2) "Elimination" and being "departed" are thrown around a lot...which is about as pleasant as it sounds. Anybody trapped in the House has to either choose whether they will "resign" automatically and agree to permanently adopt it as their home or "contest" being taken into its custody and try to fight for their release.

3) Yes - The Vile Veil of Vicious Vesper AKA the Reigning Champion and present "owner" of the House. She's smug, self-possessed, valiant and violent and never stops smiling...

4) It is a series, so the first book gives insight and speculation into some of her motives and expectations. If I don't end up writing a show-stopper at the end for what her Grand Scheme is, it'll definitely get elaborated on during the next book.

Thanks for those questions, seriously! It was like taking a quiz on my book and being able to confidently give those answers makes me feel like it's not shaping up too bad :D


message 13: by K.P. (new)

K.P. Merriweather (kp_merriweather) | 512 comments fairytale creepshow... sounds like an interesting survivor horror title :)


message 14: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
lol - it's just my generic catch-all for the premise, not a working title.


message 15: by Michael (new)

Michael Benavidez | 1605 comments Courtney wrote: "I couldn't get into Negima for whatever reason ;p

I don't know - for me, play on words, puns, that ilk are great because it's like an inside joke everybody can get in on! It can be a riddle somet..."


it's a guilty pleasure lol
I remember that Henson one, vaguely, but I remember it haha


message 16: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) The Storyteller - The Soldier and Death


All episodes are on Youtube. Look 'em up.


message 17: by Tabitha (new)

Tabitha Vohn Courtney wrote: "I swear I saw Storytellers a couple years back. We need more anthology shows.

Tabitha - no wrong answers, I'm just happy if people have any thoughts :D

I actually know the answers to your questi..."


It sounds fabulous. I'd read it :0)


message 18: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
OMG that's so encouraging! Seriously, way to make my birthday :D

I'll have to keep fine-tuning them details and charm to warrant enthusiasm for the idea. Makes me glad I'm extensively outlining and looking up theatrical motifs.


message 19: by Tabitha (new)

Tabitha Vohn Courtney wrote: "OMG that's so encouraging! Seriously, way to make my birthday :D

I'll have to keep fine-tuning them details and charm to warrant enthusiasm for the idea. Makes me glad I'm extensively outlining ..."


Happy Belated B-day!


message 20: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
Thank you for the birthday wishes :)

Oh yeah - Damsels have problems and I don't pretend otherwise lol. For instance - Damsels can chase down anything that fascinates them, haul ass leaps, bounds and leagues ahead of other parts if its headlong into trouble BUT are Damsels are slowest in the pack if something is trying to catch them.

Stereotypes associated with a given part are basically super powers or weaknesses depending on what they are or the circumstances.


message 21: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
Just so I know I'm not far off-base - grinning mannequins pantomiming and playacting all over is creepy, right?


message 22: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) Creepy as hell. Now finish the damn book :P


message 23: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
Lady - you are not helping all the stress I'm already under doing just that! Let me vent and get feedback before I commit thousands of words to paper lol

Nah, seriously, I'm still plotting and outlining the series so it'll be a while. I'm just making sure clever to me isn't lame to everybody else ;p


message 24: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) Meh, fair enough :)


message 25: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
Yeah, I'm just getting nutty on my own trying to make sure the system works in my book, interesting things are happening, so on. And - being a series - I'm afraid I'll burn bridges or paint myself into corners if I just write the first book without any idea of where it's going and how it ends.


message 26: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) Painting yourself into a corner is the best thing you can do. Seriously, don't avoid. The best writing always comes from the author figuring out creative ways to get out of that painted corner. It's a very good thing.


message 27: by K.P. (new)

K.P. Merriweather (kp_merriweather) | 512 comments While you continue that book, I'm working on that survivor horror title. Carry on :)


message 28: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
I don't mind a little improv but "making it up as I go" has failed me in the past. Personal experience taught me I do my best and am happiest when I take the time to outline, so I'm learning from those mistakes here. Hopefully :D

Best of luck K.P.


message 29: by K.P. (new)

K.P. Merriweather (kp_merriweather) | 512 comments Stop flying by the seat of your pants and plot a *loose* outline! I typically pants until I write myself into a corner, then I look at where I'm going, rip out what doesn't work and plot the rest to its logical conclusion.

Sometimes I deviate from my outline... but it's there just in case :P

You know how it starts and ends, right? The middle might be murky, but as long as you have an ending, pants baby pants! ^_^


message 30: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
I'm favoring a meticulous outline - something basically a book, just told in a simplistic fashion - so I can see what's happening without investing too much in something that may need to be changed later.

Presently, I'm creating a user manual for world-building. This process has served and suited me the best so I'm just investing here rather than paying for it later.

Writing process isn't a problem - I've got that handled - I'm just trying to feel passionate about the material since my ideas have stalled out on me. It's good old fashioned writer's block atm, not an inability to tell a story ;p


message 31: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) You might want to take a break from outlining then...


message 32: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
I would if I felt that would do me any good. I'm not inspired enough to write any scenes for the book and am trying not to tempt myself back into bad habits. Some authors write as they go, I've always been proudest/least frustrated with the results when I write something from an outline.

It could be possible I'm burnt out - which is why I'm trying to recharge my batteries a little - but I'm actually really proud of myself for sticking to my guns, doing my due diligence rather than indulging my impatient tendencies.


message 33: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) Whatever you need to do, and whatever works for you.


message 34: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
Exactly - sigh. It's my process, it works, it's just slow. Some authors write several books a year, others write a book every seven. I don't want to take that long but I accept I might be in the latter category for the time being.


message 35: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) If you want to get technical, I've only written about 3 books in my life. But I spread out the stories. That's what works for me *shrugs*


message 36: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
Hey, no shame in that. Obviously I agree quality is better than quantity - or that's what I'm comfortable putting my name on :D


message 37: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) Join the club lol


message 38: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
Okay - brainstorm session! Here are a couple things that are irking my creative process. Let's see if great minds can stimulate some ideas into mine.

What is good word for blood that holds the same imagery/significance but deviates from "human" properties? I'm toying with making my characters...different in that respect.


message 39: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) Hmmm...

Essence.
Spiritual leaking.
Gut tears. (If a gut open wound caused by a sword, let's say).
Exposure. (Like, their insides are exposed. I'm making shit up).
Wound vomit.

Okay, that last one wasn't great, but whatever.


message 40: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
- nodding - I'll play with those, see if they form into thoughts. Thank you :D


message 41: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) I'm just happy I made sense.


message 42: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
Oh yeah! I'm just debating how to follow through on that idea and that imagery will dictate terminology


message 43: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) Bes of luck!


message 44: by Andrew (new)

Andrew Lawston (andrewlawston) | 44 comments Courtney wrote: "Okay - brainstorm session! Here are a couple things that are irking my creative process. Let's see if great minds can stimulate some ideas into mine.

What is good word for blood that holds the sa..."


"fluid"


message 45: by Rachael (new)

Rachael (r4ch4elreads) | 32 comments I LOVE this concept, and I'm excited to read the final story... keep up the good work Cour and stop doubting yourself - you're a wonderful writer and your idea is awesome. Believe in it, and it WILL reach its full potential.


message 46: by The Book Queen (new)

The Book Queen | 1 comments Good luck Courtney, all these ideas sound amazing!


message 47: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
Thanks, Andrew :D

I might keep blood (just to avoid confusing readers with flowery speech) but may include "humour" and "gore", here and there.

Racheal, Royal Me - I so appreciate that. Everybody likes a thumbs up and ego pet but it seriously means a lot when people sound intrigued or excited by this odd-ball stuff.


message 48: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
I just completed the "one-star review challenge" for The Last Damsel, so I figure I might as well throw something out here for a little feedback:

Lingo - A lot of my outlining atm is getting the terminology situated and straight. I swear, I'm not trying to overburden people but I do want readers to feel like they're in an otherworldly place.

My (generally) good characters are known as "contestants" - because they contest being taken into the House's custody and are trying to fight their way free.

They're called "Sols" (puns and star motifs)

My (generally) bad characters are "champions" - those who won a position of esteem and fight for the Vile Veil of Vicious Vesper (AKA The Reigning Champion and Darkness Behind the Stars) keeping control of her House.

They're called "Glints" or "Fades", depending on how well the Refinement Process "perfected" their "flaws". (More puns, like "flash in the pan", "glint in the Vile Veil's eye", "shadow of oneself" or "beneath one's shadow".)

My (generally) neutral/amoral characters are "Residents" - those who resigned from contesting along with themselves to the House's custody.

They're called "Cols" (Like a "diamond that never came to be, never mind shined")

So it's like a cross between "species" (Cols, Sols, Fades, Glints) and "classification" (Contestants, champions, residents of the House).

I'm hoping it's not much different D&D or Harry Potter's division of character types and world-building - something to get people curious and make the wonder about the various inhabitants of the premise.

Any thoughts?


message 49: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) My only thought, have you tried saying Vile Veil of Vicious Vesper out loud and ten times in a row? It's a bit awkward. There's only so much alliteration a reader can take. If it's once in the whole book, that's fine, but if it's repeated frequently, you might lose readers.


message 50: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
Oh, yeah, I know it's nothing by pomp and flourish. Most of the time she's referred to as "The Vile Veil" or "The Reigning Champion". I doubt her full title will given more than once every few chapters.


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