chris4150 wrote: One more thing: If you wake up and are no longer 'in love' with the person, I'm assuming this doesn't mean you have no feelings for them whatsoever, right?
Chris4150 wrote:I may get a fanfiction story that's been in my head for a long time down on paper, and 'love' is a major plot device in the story, and I want to be accurate as possible, even though I have no experience in the subject.
Bobtheduck wrote:I'm having a hard time writing my female characters because I want them to be believeable, and also making characters who have personaliteis different from mine, and yet not be 1 dimensional... Even that's very hard... It's so much easier to make the characters that act like me...
EireWolf wrote:Well, at least you recognize that. There are some bestselling authors who can't write a believable female character to save their lives...
MillyFan wrote:LOL, you CAN write things without having experienced them yourself. My best advice is to read a lot and see how others have written what you want to write, then come up with something that isn't a copy of their style but is totally different.
Oh, and Shadsie and I have touched on a lot of issues in the fanfic we're co-writing. I've never been a priest, a doctor, a wife, a killer, or among the many other things in our story, and neither has Shadsie. . .nevertheless, we've manage to write everything so far, in my opinion, very well.
Research doesn't always mean personal experience. It simply means having somewhat of a valid knowledge of your subject matter from any reliable source (books, TV, magazines, other people, etc) and the ability to apply it to your characters in a reasonable way in the context of the story.
Oh, and Chris, I'll toss out some tips for you as a beginning fanfiction writer, if this is indeed your first fic. Original characters by beginning writers (and any original character in a romance with a canon character) are *invariably* Mary Sues, so I'd stick to canon. Also, by doing that, you have a pretty good idea of the way the characters act toward each other already-you just have to elaborate on that.
As you become more advanced as a writer, you can move on to alternate pairings and hopefully your interest in placing an original character in the story to fall in love with a canon character will fade slowly away. . .or at least all of those of us who flame Mary Sues hope it does.
Secondly, you need to research. Read books, watch other shows, talk to people (as you're doing here) on the topics you'll be dealing with, and read other fanfics in your specific fandom at the very least. That leads into the next tip:
Originality is a plus: for example, let's say every other Cowboy Bebop fanfic out there is a SpikexFaye pairing with [spoiler=ending for Bebop] Spike's death[/spoiler] being only a dream. To stand out, you could write a FayexJet pairing in keeping with the ending, or you could have Spike go into a deep coma in an ending AU, and bring him back-but 20 years later or something. See my point? You want to stand out.
Another tip I can give is to add a plot aside from the love story you want to write-something of which the love story is only one facet. Some writers *can* write stories where the love story *is* the plot (and I know of one I'd recommend to show you a fine example of how to do it right if you were my age and more liberal, if it wouldn't get me banned for life to share the link through CAA, and if I had the nerve to link someone to it) an-however, most of these normally head straight for the sewer of bad fanfiction.
If you need any more tips, need someone to review your story if it's anything I'm familiar with (i.e. Trigun, Final Fantasy, Cowboy Bebop, Big 0, Chrono series games) I'll be quite happy to beta read for you or otherwise help you out.
MillyFan wrote:LOL, you CAN write things without having experienced them yourself. My best advice is to read a lot and see how others have written what you want to write, then come up with something that isn't a copy of their style but is totally different.
Oh, and Shadsie and I have touched on a lot of issues in the fanfic we're co-writing. I've never been a priest, a doctor, a wife, a killer, or among the many other things in our story, and neither has Shadsie. . .nevertheless, we've manage to write everything so far, in my opinion, very well.
Research doesn't always mean personal experience. It simply means having somewhat of a valid knowledge of your subject matter from any reliable source (books, TV, magazines, other people, etc) and the ability to apply it to your characters in a reasonable way in the context of the story.
Oh, and Chris, I'll toss out some tips for you as a beginning fanfiction writer, if this is indeed your first fic. Original characters by beginning writers (and any original character in a romance with a canon character) are *invariably* Mary Sues, so I'd stick to canon. Also, by doing that, you have a pretty good idea of the way the characters act toward each other already-you just have to elaborate on that.
As you become more advanced as a writer, you can move on to alternate pairings and hopefully your interest in placing an original character in the story to fall in love with a canon character will fade slowly away. . .or at least all of those of us who flame Mary Sues hope it does.
Secondly, you need to research. Read books, watch other shows, talk to people (as you're doing here) on the topics you'll be dealing with, and read other fanfics in your specific fandom at the very least. That leads into the next tip:
Originality is a plus: for example, let's say every other Cowboy Bebop fanfic out there is a SpikexFaye pairing with [spoiler=ending for Bebop] Spike's death[/spoiler] being only a dream. To stand out, you could write a FayexJet pairing in keeping with the ending, or you could have Spike go into a deep coma in an ending AU, and bring him back-but 20 years later or something. See my point? You want to stand out.
Another tip I can give is to add a plot aside from the love story you want to write-something of which the love story is only one facet. Some writers *can* write stories where the love story *is* the plot (and I know of one I'd recommend to show you a fine example of how to do it right if you were my age and more liberal, if it wouldn't get me banned for life to share the link through CAA, and if I had the nerve to link someone to it) an-however, most of these normally head straight for the sewer of bad fanfiction.
If you need any more tips, need someone to review your story if it's anything I'm familiar with (i.e. Trigun, Final Fantasy, Cowboy Bebop, Big 0, Chrono series games) I'll be quite happy to beta read for you or otherwise help you out.
Shatterheart wrote:Sigh...how many times did you expect to slap the mods in the face before they said somthing Milly? 4 times? 5? I am rather sick and tired of every other of your posts you quipping somthing like....
"Oh better not say this or I might get banned..."
If you were worried about getting banned you would not say anything to begin with...however, if you want to be ignorant to the staff and "make a point" you say it without actually saying it. Cute. Next time you feel the need to slap the staff here in the face...don't be a coward and bend words...just come right out and do it. Also when you want to post nasty liberal links to goodness knows what kind of crap....just keep them to yourself. As you did, though since you are a coherent human being you probably used PM. Consider this a warning Millyfan....don't act like a child with the staff here.
MillyFan wrote: since he is of the opposite gender and underage.
MillyFan wrote:About to turn 17 doesn't make you 17. And I wasn't intending to insult you-I had no idea what your age was except that you weren't my age. Sorry!
Nevertheless, no matter HOW old you are, I don't link people to lemon or even lime via the CAA. I know that's totally against the rules and I don't do it.
shooraijin wrote:Let's get back on subject, as we're fully aware no one on this thread is either asking for, nor sending, that kind of stuff.
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