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Yuletide? FTW. Me? Epic Fail.
*sigh*
If it weren't for LiveJournal's latest round of wacky hijinks, I'd have never realized that my Yuletide letter was privacy-locked.
*sigh*
So here it is again, in the hopes that my patient, long-suffering Yuletide writer might still find it of use. If they did poke around futilely trying to find it, I hope they found last year's letter, since it's pretty much the same information.
Dear Yuletide writer,
My Yuletide philosophy: this might be the only chance to get a story in a certain fandom. I'm not going to get too caught up in pairings and specifics. I'd rather get a good, solid, re-readable story to set the bar and attract more fans.
That said, I was a bit specific in my request details as to story prompts. If any of them spark something for you, great. If not, don't worry. What I've got listed here is more atmospheric; these are broader story elements and themes that I find attractive.
All of my fandoms deal with crime and/or law enforcement (a loose assessment of Live Free or Die Hard, I know!) -- I like teamwork and competency and characters who are really good at what they do (hello, Dexter!) . I like seeing the toll being that good takes on them. I like snark and banter and loaded questions. I like life-and-death secrets. I like style and flash but never at the cost of substance. I like days-in-the-life and I like the fate of the world at stake. I like romance and subtext, slash and het and gen. I like characters who'll die for each other and live for each other and know each other better than anyone else and still have each other's backs.
I like show, not tell. Even the most thoughtful of these characters are people of action, used to making quick decisions and living with the consequences.
For purposes of Yuletide, I'd rather not see: fantasy and/or sci-fi elements in "mundane" fandoms, PWPs, totally downbeat endings, character death (Dexter, and, well, Dexter are exempt from that caveat, as we wouldn't want to cramp his style).
Really, though, in the end, I'm easy. I like good writing. Write a story that you enjoy, that you're proud of, that you're thrilled will be one the stories people point to when they talk about this little fandom. Write that story and we'll both be happy.
Hope that helps and doesn't add to the inevitable, and traditional, Yuletide pressure!
If it weren't for LiveJournal's latest round of wacky hijinks, I'd have never realized that my Yuletide letter was privacy-locked.
*sigh*
So here it is again, in the hopes that my patient, long-suffering Yuletide writer might still find it of use. If they did poke around futilely trying to find it, I hope they found last year's letter, since it's pretty much the same information.
Dear Yuletide writer,
My Yuletide philosophy: this might be the only chance to get a story in a certain fandom. I'm not going to get too caught up in pairings and specifics. I'd rather get a good, solid, re-readable story to set the bar and attract more fans.
That said, I was a bit specific in my request details as to story prompts. If any of them spark something for you, great. If not, don't worry. What I've got listed here is more atmospheric; these are broader story elements and themes that I find attractive.
All of my fandoms deal with crime and/or law enforcement (a loose assessment of Live Free or Die Hard, I know!) -- I like teamwork and competency and characters who are really good at what they do (hello, Dexter!) . I like seeing the toll being that good takes on them. I like snark and banter and loaded questions. I like life-and-death secrets. I like style and flash but never at the cost of substance. I like days-in-the-life and I like the fate of the world at stake. I like romance and subtext, slash and het and gen. I like characters who'll die for each other and live for each other and know each other better than anyone else and still have each other's backs.
I like show, not tell. Even the most thoughtful of these characters are people of action, used to making quick decisions and living with the consequences.
For purposes of Yuletide, I'd rather not see: fantasy and/or sci-fi elements in "mundane" fandoms, PWPs, totally downbeat endings, character death (Dexter, and, well, Dexter are exempt from that caveat, as we wouldn't want to cramp his style).
Really, though, in the end, I'm easy. I like good writing. Write a story that you enjoy, that you're proud of, that you're thrilled will be one the stories people point to when they talk about this little fandom. Write that story and we'll both be happy.
Hope that helps and doesn't add to the inevitable, and traditional, Yuletide pressure!