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Messages - Kalshane

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Yeah, the fae don't seem the least bit squeamish about blood. I doubt there's any issues with the iron in it. And as others have said, Lea's whole schtick is draining the blood of the people she inspires and using it to add to her own power.

Also, Maeve points out on Demonreach that Mab arrives in black, "as the judge". I don't think that her clothes turning black at Harry's birthday party has anything to do with the blood itself, but rather her being about to pass judgement on someone.

Also, the restrictions against "spilling blood" and clever characters finding ways around it is a pretty common thread in stories and folklore.

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DF Reference Collection / Re: Dresden Files: Series Timeline
« on: March 25, 2007, 04:54:35 PM »
Age of consent in Illinois (and thus Chicago) is 17. Not to say a 30 year old dating/marrying a 17 year old isn't creepy.

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DF TV Series / Re: TV Series Timeline
« on: February 23, 2007, 08:18:08 PM »
Quote
Of course, nearly an entire year elapses between each book!

True, but as Butters says, Harry's injuries aren't cumulative. If they were, Harry would have quite a few mobility problems, aches and twinges by now. Instead he's more or less good as new by the time the next book starts (so he can get the crap kicked out of him yet again.) :)

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DF TV Series / Re: TV Series Timeline
« on: February 23, 2007, 04:01:47 PM »
Wizards in the books naturally live longer than normal humans, to the count of 300 to 400 years. They also heal a little bit faster and a lot better than normal people, which is why Harry can repeatedly get the ever-living crap beat out of him and, barring particularly grievous injuries, be good to go by the start of the next book.

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DF Reference Collection / Re: Dresden Files: Series Timeline
« on: February 21, 2007, 05:07:12 AM »
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Kinda sounds like he knew Harry all the way back when he was DuMorne's apprentice, or at least shortly afterwards. Thoughts?

Best guess would be he saw something when he soul-gazed Harry when they first met that lead him to a line of questions that involved Elaine and Harry told Michael about her.

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Right. And even Gandalf has to go through moldy old books to find out more about Bilbo's ring. He suspects what it is, but he needs to do research to be sure.

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DF TV Series / Re: The SPOILERIFIC Ask Robert Wolfe Thread
« on: February 11, 2007, 07:28:30 PM »
Is Murphy the SI boss in the show yet or does the SI boss just not rate an office?  Or did you guys change it to a cubicle for space reasons, because shooting in an office is problematic?

http://www.jim-butcher.com/bb/index.php/topic,1788.0.html

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DF TV Series / Re: The SPOILERIFIC Ask Robert Wolfe Thread
« on: February 10, 2007, 05:17:21 PM »
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Yeah, that's pretty much it.  Or when he's upset or emotional.  Or when the stuff is delicate and high tech.

So was Murphy's computer not going out in "The Boone Identity" an "oops"? Harry was sitting right by it in her cubicle and his emotions were running pretty high between having just been shot at and arguing with Murphy. I was completely expecting a BSOD from it in the least.

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Author Craft / Re: Pacing
« on: August 29, 2006, 03:47:06 AM »
I agree, the marigolds was a bad choice of example.  But yeah...it was 2AM!

Well, like I said marigolds have their place. And your point was a good one. I just wanted to mention the whole relevency angle. I've seen people try to add "depth" to a scene and end up being distracting instead.

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Author Craft / Re: Pacing
« on: August 28, 2006, 11:43:15 PM »
Dom has a point about trying to get inside your character's head more and give the reader an idea of what the character feels about what is happening to him, rather than just an endless list of what happens.

As an aside, however, I would hesitate to mention the marigolds during a chase scene, unless they're relevant or you're intentionally writing an off-beat tale. Otherwise your reader might get confused trying to figure out why the marigolds are important and lose track of the real story or get annoyed that you're discussing marigolds then.

Compare: "The mugger sprinted along as if the hounds of hell were on his heels, rather than a slightly pudgy college student with a big stick. Granted, Marcus thought, the stick had some intimidation going for it, but the hell hounds wouldn't be struggling against a stitch in their sides, and have that whole sharp, nasty teeth thing going for them on top of it. Not to mention the fiery eyes of doom angle. Given the choice, three out of four common thugs would probably pick the guy with the stick."

Versus: "The mugger took a hard right, ducking between a set of houses. Marcus glanced at Mrs. Henderson's marigold patch as he passed. They certainly were a cheery addition to the otherwise drab and uniform neighborhood."

The first one--though probably taking a much further detour down smartass lane than it sounds like you're going for-- does, IMHO, work better for the chase scene because even though it's not directly about Marcus chasing the mugger, it's a commentary on the situation. The second has nothing to do with the situation at hand, and commenting on the marigolds is better served in a slower scene and/or "establishing shot" sort of situation unless you're trying to be the next Douglas Adams and regularly go off on amusing tangents.

Of course, not a professional,  so my opinion is hardly gospel.

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Author Craft / Re: Im reference to my works...
« on: August 28, 2006, 10:44:20 PM »
I'm not sure what to tell you. When I wrote my first attempt at a novel, it was also based on an RPG I was playing in. Thankfully, the ST was simply interested in my progress, rather than actively trying to shape it. He did give me suggestions here and there, but no more than any of my other friends who were reading along did. I also tried to stay as faithful to the game as possible, which hurt the story flow a bit (as what makes for a cool game session doesn't always make for a good chapter in a book, and story threads get dropped fairly often in an RPG, whereas the reader will murder an author that leaves too many loose ends.)

The best advice I can make is to tell him that you're writing a book that is 1) based on the game, not a word for word transcription 2) from the perspective of this/these character(s) who are not omniscient and thus wouldn't know every little detail about what is really going on. 3) It's a story, not a biography, so it doesn't all have to be "true".

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Author Craft / Re: One or many documents?
« on: August 22, 2006, 08:03:18 PM »
I always read the previous days/night's work before I start on the next bit and then re-read the whole previous chapter before starting a new one. Never had a real problem with flow or continuity keeping things separate. (The only real problem I have is keeping track of days of the week within the story sometimes, so I keep a timeline in a separate doc.)

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Author Craft / Re: One or many documents?
« on: August 21, 2006, 10:41:58 PM »
I do each chapter as a separate document. No particular reason, just the way I've always done it. Though I have heard that Word gets squirrely once a document starts getting too big.

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Author Craft / Re: Points of view
« on: August 17, 2006, 10:32:12 PM »
I've written a single short story in first-person, and it turned out pretty well, but I prefer writing in 3rd-person. I like being able to get inside the heads of different characters (not within the same scene, obviously). I enjoy taking some time away from my protagonist to explore some things with his love interest, or get his best friend's view on what's going on with the two of them.

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Author Craft / Re: Author In Progress
« on: August 17, 2006, 05:20:17 PM »
So, about 13 years ago I started writing a book, and then later some short stories, about a smart-ass 20-something wizard with a prediliction for wearing long black coats living in Chicagoland who fell in love with a girl who turned out to be a vampire, had a mentor in the form of a talking peace pipe and battled various supernatural nasties. It was very derivative of a certain RPG, considering the character originated in said game, and had some other issues, mostly due to being written by a 17-year-old kid without a clue and while I still made occaisional stops in for a thousand words or so from time to time and I had 10 years of the character's life developed in my head, it never really went anywhere.

Over a year ago, I decided to revisit this character, as he's still the favorite of everything I've ever made, and re-write his story from the ground up, completely divorcing him from his RPG origins. I've gotten about 40,000 words of the new novel done and I'm liking how it's shaping up. However, since there's already a series of books about a dark-coated wizard fighting evil in Chicagoland (maybe you all have heard of it  ;) ) I have a feeling when it's time to do my second draft, I'm probably going to have to re-work things quite a bit so it doesn't seem derivative.

In any case, in its current form, it's a 3rd-person urban fantasy with a sense of humor set in a fictional Illinois college town within a couple hours of Chicago. I'm currently doing my best to slog through "The Great Swampy Middle", as Jim puts it. I know where I'm going, just having trouble getting there.

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