Weekly Short Stories Contest and Company! discussion
Totally Random
>
Chat (Cookies and tea allowed in this room)
message 701:
by
Cheyenne
(new)
May 30, 2012 10:26PM

reply
|
flag

I hate the bloody timeline with a passion. It feels crowded on my screen and it just doesn't feel right in general. I plan on leaving once my profile is forced into it. I absolutely refuse to use a website that refuses to listen to it's users. I'm sticking to gaia and goodreads. And writing.com.

How much you want to bet they've never written a book? Because every other person I've ever met who writes books says the opposite. The more books you write the better. Don't know why but them saying that disgusts me.

If you think about it, novels produced during NaNo probably don't have that many more errors than other first drafts; they're just produced quicker. Thus, in my opinion, it seriously lessens the amount of time you spend on the novel(s). I'm not saying there aren't novels that just turn out plain crappy sometimes. Trust me, last November proves that for me but the experience isn't something I would trade for the world. I had only a vague idea of what I was going to write (despite all of my outlining) but honestly, I'm not sure the first draft would've turned out any better if I had written it slower.
Just my opinion. :)

Saira, the timeline is infuriating. It took me forever to find his photos and email. But anyways, we might have a new pirate aboard because I ended up just making him a new goodreads account and made him a member of the group. I asked him to actually interact here, but who knows if he will LOL.


Are your letters coming along? :)



Multiple books! Nice :) Do you have your main focus zeroed in on one?

THOR, yes he is amazing. Especially shirtless. *grins*

Good to hear! I'm doing the last round of edits and putting the query together so I should be querying soon.

THOR, yes he is amazing. Especially shirtless. *grins*"
Lol. *sigh* Chris Hemsworth.

THOR, yes he is amazing. Especially shirtless. *grins*"
(headdesk) I refuse to let you put those thoughts in my adolescent mind!!!... (headdesk again) But, okay, he's okay with his shirt off.


THOR, yes he is amazing. Especially shirtless. *grins*"
Lol. *sigh* Chris Hemsworth."
SIGH! I agree. A very content sigh on my end.


THOR, yes he is amazing. Especially shirtless. *grins*"
Lol. *sigh* Chris Hemsw..."
I saw a picture of him as the Huntsman on FB the other day all cleaned up and I think I might've actually sighed or done something of the sort. Haha

You might know Cyclops or Wolverine better. Rogue. Ice man. Pyro. Storm's pretty well-known. Jean Grey.

They managed to drown half the characters (not fatally, though that was just luck) and get the rest captured, so they're going to have to do damage control. Luckily kobolds are stupidier than goblins, although the Water Lord won't be happy that they didn't manage to complete their mission without destorying his negotiations with kobolds. Oh, well.
This is going to be fun.

The central character - as opposed to the protagonist - of Star Wars is not Skywalker, either Luke or Anakin. It wasn't even Obi-wan. It was someone who skipped an entire move: Darth Sidious.
The whole epic of Star Wars is Sidious manipulating an entire galaxy into making him a dictator. He crafts an enemy for the people, starting with the Trade Federation and ending with the CIS. He creates a climate of fear that makes people trust him more, giving him more and more power.
In the course of this, he finds the curiosity that is Anakin Skywalker and uses him to cement his power and the legacy of the Sith. He triggers a war that spreads the Jedi thin, creates more fear, and hones Anakin's power. He builds the Jedi up as warriors, turning them from faith in the Force to faith in their own military prowress.
The Senate trusts him more and more as the war wears on, while the Jedi trust him less and less, essentially making the Jedi distrust the government. From there it is easy to make them out to be traitors. By placing Anakin in middle of this, and working hard for thirteen years to make Anakin trust him, he forces Anakin to make a decision. Since the Jedi never really trusted Anakin, the decision was swayed in the Sith's favor.
The one Jedi who had remained pure in his faith in the Force throughout all of this was Obi-Wan Kenobi who, incidentally, also brought the "New Hope" into play twenty years later while Yoda punished himself for letting the Jedi perish. Luke Skywalker joins the inevitable Rebellion against the Empire.
The Emperor once again wields fear. He makes them fear the Death Star - sure, they destroyed the first one, but that only made them more determined to destroy the second. Which lead them all into a trap that would've wiped out the Rebellion and any belief that this Empire could be overthrown.
He fails to turn Luke to the dark side when Luke decides to have faith in the Force, and to not demand it do his bidding. He wanted to kill his father, but refused to indulge the arrogance that he could have what he wanted.
It mattered little, since Sidious still controlled the galaxy, still had the trap in place, still had his apprentice. In his arrogance, he forgot that Vadar was not a mindless drone, that he could switch sides again.
But more importantly, he could never see this coming:

He manipulates the entire galaxy ... and is defeated by Ewoks.


Albert: *starts cooing*
Me: ALBERT! It's a picture.
Albert: Hmmmm? *glances away from computer screen*
Me: *shakes head*

"Though we cannot, in good faith, blame the Emperor for not foreseeing this."



Books mentioned in this topic
Falling Worlds (other topics)Worlds with Ruby (other topics)
Worlds with Ruby (other topics)
Falling Worlds (other topics)
Your God Is Too Small (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Elias Canetti (other topics)Morris Berman (other topics)
Noam Chomsky (other topics)
Jane Jacobs (other topics)
Marshall Sahlins (other topics)
More...