Book Talk discussion
What Are You Reading?
message 1251:
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Keith
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Sep 13, 2012 06:17AM

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Rocksauce!"
You've either picked up Ohio street slang....or you've had a stroke....

Some months ago, I started writing a narrative poem in response to a picture prompt on a poetry board. I had a lot of fun with it, but realized the story was too involved for anything but a book-length poem. I couldn't conceive of any possible market for that. Too long for kids and adults would probably grow weary of it at that length. Reading it would likely become an ordeal no matter how well it was written.
Plus poetry's paying market is so tiny as to be almost non-existent, so though the story might take years to write with the crazy level of care poetry deserves, the writing would have to be entirely its own reward. And I've got plenty of that type of writing done already. Yet it seemed too good to abandon and there was a fun world opening up as I wrote it. So I'm trying to turn it into prose now.
The book of dragon short stories I picked up on a whim, just as a pacer between more grim or serious-minded stuff, reminded me that all writing in the genre doesn't have to be abysmal or simple-minded, either. It refreshed the genre for me, convincing me it wasn't a total waste of time. So now I'm reading in the genre a bit to get my bearings. I've read many fairy tale collections, and a fair bit about mythology here and there, but have next to no background in modern fantasy aside from some of Italo Calvino's work.
Thanks for asking! Sorry for the long answer.

Thanks, Kealan,will do. :)

Some months ago, I started writing a narrative poem in response to a picture prompt on a poetry boar..."
Marc,
When it comes to publishing your book size poem, you should try the UK market as the poetry market in the UK is still going strong and there is a few avenues you can go down.
Try this website:
http://www.poetrylibrary.org.uk/publi...
This is published by the Southbank Centre in London which specialises in the arts, theatre, film and writing. This will include addresses, websites, phone numbers, contact names and often a breakdown on what they are looking for.
Beowolf is the first epic poem and that has lasted centuries. Good luck with your writing.

Some months ago, I started writing a narrative poem in response to a picture prompt on ..."
Thanks, Keith, that's very good to know.
I do plan to make poems out of some parts of the story. I will probably tinker with that as I write the other.

I'm now reading Jack Ketchum's Sleep Disorder. I thought Jack never lets me down though I think everything is going to pale a bit after reading Kin.


I have Game of Thrones but I am putting that off because I know it is an epic and with most fantasies the names start to p*^s me off after awhile.
I have a couple of submissions to read but that is work and can be very frustrating as alot of it is just terrible although a diamond does come through every 550th or so.

That I can understand.
Work reading won't do.
You gotta distance yourself after reading KIN or you're gonna have a horror burnout.

I hope you enjoy it!



Anyway I've got too much half-read to start anything new for a while, regardless.



YAY!

Oddly enough, goblins and fairies are said in this work to historically be the same thing, and ruled by the same king. My reading of goblin lore has them as eaters of the dead, which sounds pretty far from Tinkerbell.

That is because fairies were not considered to be friendly, helpful creatures. They were also creatures of cold blood, luring men to their deaths with their siren songs.

IT'S GONNA BE EPIC!!!!"
How?

IT'S GONNA BE EPIC!!!!"
How?"
Kealan asked people to share a link to the Timmy Quinn series on Facebook in exchange for a chance to read the prologue.

Apparently so. Equally, there are some "good" goblins. And a lot of the creatures seem to be either good or bad near randomly, but especially get set off by being spoken badly of or by the irritating presence of the excessively pious.

By the way, what is the name of the book?

I started on a Gifune novel: Saying Uncle. I have grown quite fond of Greg Gifune since reading The Bleeding Season. I'm psyched to start this one.



I haven't read Christie in years. I like Peter Robinson, Val McDermid and Ian Rankin.


Glen, I have! Since I live in MA where most of his stories are set, (the ones I've read so far), the atmospheres he creates really speak to me. I remember he had one line that said "The sea smelled like work, not play". I've been to Gloucester, MA and I know exactly what he was talking about.

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