Destroyer2000 wrote:Well, I want a long story...like my friends. I was put to shame by his 300 page novel, when I thought my 15-20 page story was good. Now that I think about it, well...heh. I need to describe stuff...I'm somewhat good at writing now, but anyone got any tips?
Why is length an issue? Sci-Fi authors like Bradbury and Asimov wrote short stories all the time. Some of the best Philip K. Dick and William Gibson works are short (20-30 pages). Check out Stephen King's
The Mist sometime - 130 pages, not even a novel. Plenty of excellent short works out there. Rather than focusing on a novel, why not just focus on a story -- and let the life cycle of the story determine the length?
As for "Angels", consider the following: The lands Columbus discovered in the 15th century were called the West Indies, the inhabitants Indians, all because of a mistaken impression that Columbus had found India. The term "Indians" has been set aside within my lifetime (being replaced by "Native Americans") because of a concerted effort to re-name the indigenous inhabitants; otherwise, they would still be collectively described by that name 400 years later.
If an alien race were to be named "Angels", therefore, it would likely be because they were misinterpreted to be some sort of supernatural beings when first encountered -- and the name just stuck. Otherwise, there seems to be no really good reason why an alien race would be called "Angels".
As for not being offensive: forget it, you will offend someone somehow (presuming enough people read your work, which is not guaranteed by a long shot). Instead, focus on the essentials: Why do you write? What are you trying to say? What makes your ideas, your concepts, your plot any different than the plethora of dreck already available online, in pulp sci-fi magazines, in that used paperback store on the corner, in fanzines... I think you are putting the cart before the horse. First, write something worth reading. Then I'd start worrying about public reaction.
If this sounds overly harsh, it is because I've had the opportunity to read the works of "nascent authors" many times. The vast majority of it is garbage: no structure, poor grammar, no character development, no continuity, "deus ex machina", Mary Sue self-referential wish-fulfillment fantasy masquerading as fiction. The worst part about this is that many writers fail to see -- even after much criticism -- where they are falling short, and continue to churn out works suffering from the same maladies time after time. If you wish to succeed, you must be open to having yourself flayed. Worrying about offending someone is not a good starting point.
Your comparison to your friend worries me. You want a long story "like your friends'". That seems a long way from the creed of a true writer -- "We do not write because we want to; we write because we must." Perhaps you should examine your motives. If "success" equals "a work of approximately 300 pages", the point of writing is missed. Pay no attention to your friend or, if you must, only attend to what mistakes and errors he made in his writing, and avoid them.
Writing fiction palatable to Christians is tricky. I enjoyed George MacDonald immensely. I liked Frank Peretti, although his narrative ran out of steam before he ran out of pages. I think Larry Burkett should never be allowed to write a work of fiction again -- the stuff he has put out so far is abysmal. So, it is not an easy undertaking even in the best of circumstances. But you will go nowhere if you can't write well in the first place.
So, you asked for advice, you got it. Write. Write well. Be very open to criticism. Don't worry about your friend. Don't worry about offending people. A "Christian who fights and kills" will offend a portion of the population, Christian and non-Christian alike. Write about him/her and see what happens. Good luck.