Showing posts with label YA Highway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label YA Highway. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Road Trip Wednesday!


Alright, I know, it's late.  ^^;  I have an excuse, though.  I came down with a cold this weekend! My throat is sore! Yay!  And yeah.

This week's topic: What is the funniest book you've ever read?
The funniest book recently? Probably Hold Me Closer, Necromancer and it's sequel, Necromancing the Stone.  It's quirky, fun, it's chapters are titled with lyrics from (somewhat) older songs.  Everything from 'Brown paper packages tied up with strings' to 'C'mon baby, don't fear the reaper'.  The characters have a very sarcastic sense of humor, and it's set in Seattle, Washington.  I've never been there personally, but I used to live near Portland, Oregon and the Pacific Northwest has a special place in my heart.

All time, though?  The first one to pop into my head was pretty much any Patrick McManus book.  He's the kind of person who can't help writing humor (even when he's not aware of it/doesn't want to).  I heard that when he was in a college writing class he got an 'F' because he was supposed to write a serious memory. It wasn't serious.

So it'd definitely be a great idea to write different styles of storytelling. If it pans out, great! If it doesn't, well, at least you've tried.  :)

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Road Trip Wednesday!


Ah!  I totally forgot it was Wednesday!  Eheh!  *looks at clock*  Sorry for it being so late! 

So, um.  Yeah!

This week's topic: What's the best writing advice you've ever received?

I'd have to say that the best writing advice I've ever gotten was don't edit during the first draft.  If I don't do that, I've never gotten past the first chapter of a story.  I keep editing it and revising it until I start getting sick of it or feeling stuck.  I fully believe that's what's happened with Nobody's Hero. 

Sure, it's one thing when you suddenly realize that you sent your character off to the wrong part of the country, but when it comes to the sentences the paragraphs, if you accidentally typed in the wrong color of your hero's jacket... leave that alone until the later drafts.  That's what line editing is once you've got the meat of the story down for. 

So I'm going to go off and finish the reading for my Creative Writing class (it's a beginner one, since the switch to an English major was a recent decision).  Then... more plotting for Nanowrimo.  B)

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Road Trip Wednesday!


Today's Road Trip Wednesday had a pretty fun question.

What animal would your patronus be?

Well.  Goodness.  It took me a while to figure this one out.  I'm not really a psychology major, and since my favorite animal was always a cat I thought it would be some sort of feline (not a regular house cat, but nowhere as powerful and cliche as a panther or a leopard)

Then I thought some more.

Owls.

See, for a long time now I've had a problem with OCD.  Not the sort where I have to make sure everything is in it's proper space, but I tend to over think things and worry about them to the point where it becomes self-destructive.  I'm smart, but sometimes that intelligence can get my mind into trouble.

An owl is smart.  An owl is supposed to be wise and all knowing.  But they represent that knowledge.  Their intelligence can be their downfall.  That, and they can defend themselves but that's hardly the first thing anyone thinks of when they hear the word 'owl'.

So yeah.  :)  I think mine would be an owl.  I'd totally kick dementor butt.

What would your guys' patronus be?

Friday, August 15, 2014

NOBODY'S HERO! O.O

So I really didn't have anything particularly planned out to post today.  When I realized this *coughatmidnightcough* I went back to YA Highway to see if there was anything ultra special amazing to take from past Road Trip Wednesdays, and saw last week's.  The prompt?  Post a line from your current WIP.

So I've already told you a little bit about my story.  It's about a superhero who's been put in a terrible situation by a mixture of bad decisions, who finds danger, romance, and fear along her journey to learn more about her beliefs and also to fight for those she loves.

I'm going to give you a taste of it tonight.  It's a bit more than a sentence, but it's definitely not the full chapter.  Keep in mind, this version is not in it's final state--it's still a rough draft--but it should give you a sense of the story and hopefully it'll make you want to read more of it.  ^^  The people in my writing class certainly liked it.  :)

Also, some of the characters swear in this excerpt.  Fair warning.


CHAPTER ONE (PARTIAL)

I tugged at the fabric covering my nose and mouth, blinking against the rain as it poured down my mask. I tried as hard as I could not to think of the guns strapped into the holsters on my legs while I walked across the gravel, or the daggers on my hips.

A tingle ran across my skin and I shivered, pausing at the corner of the warehouse. All around me people stood at their positions. Some were doing the same thing I was, walking around and keeping an eye on the dark, while others were perched on the rooftops, keeping an eye on everything from above in case we had intruders from that direction.

When the company decided I was ready for a trial run as a night guard, they decided tonight was the best time to test how well I’d been prepared by the superhuman trainers. The next shipment wouldn’t come in for another three days, but thieves could still try and do something.

I shouldn’t even be here.

I wasn’t ready yet.

I closed my eyes for a second and took another deep breath. My hands shoot, my breath caught in my throat, and even through the drumming rain I could hear the guards all around me as they strode around, boots snapping across the cement and stomping through gravel. I would be fine. Blackbourne Industries was one of the only companies who went out of their way to train people with special abilities, and they were the ones who’d taught me how to control my powers in the first place. I couldn’t doubt the quality of their instruction if they managed that.

A quick cry cut through the night and I stopped, my hand flying to the dagger on my right hip. I stood still, frozen, not daring to move or to breathe. My eyes were peeled for something out of the ordinary, anything that would give me a reason for my reaction. But the sound of the rain hitting the metal roofs of the warehouses must have been tricking my ears. There weren’t any further shouts, no orders filling my ear bud giving me directions to follow.

Nothing.

I probably looked like an idiot. Nobody was going to attack a warehouse before a shipment arrived.

My breath escaped out into the dark in giant white puffs, wreathing around my head before dissipating into the night air. I tried not to shiver as the cold brushed against my skin. Rain drowned out a lot of background noise, and it made me feel vulnerable, like one of my senses was cut off. The warehouses stood around me, piled on top of one another as if they were menacing figures just waiting to drag a person into the darkness. It didn’t help that a small orange light was placed over every door, creating even greater shadows around each corner. Neither did our uniforms. We were all dressed up in dark, almost black uniforms with faces covered up to the point where people couldn’t even see our eyes.

I shivered. Self consciously I tugged at the fabric covering my nose and mouth.

“Acid.” I jumped.

“What?”

“Damn it woman, stop fidgeting,” barked a commanding voice in my ear. The ear bud hummed with sudden activity. “Jesus. You practically scream newbie, Acid.”

“I am a newbie, sir,” I said, my shoulders relaxing automatically. It was Boss. He was the one they’d placed in charge of my instruction. Even though his power set didn’t exactly match up with mine, he had experience training up people with volatile abilities. If he had my back, things weren’t likely to go explode tonight.

“Get yourself together,” he said, sounding very exasperated. “Amazon’s at Warehouse 14-C on B-Pattern. Follow her and please try not to make an embarrassment of yourself.”

“Yes, sir,” I said, giving a mock solute before turning north.

Rain continued to pour in torrents from the sky, sliding down the rocks and metal walls and making the ground impossibly slick. The scent of wet dirt and asphalt permeated the air, making me wrinkle my nose as I strode over the gravel. Goosebumps rippled across my skin, and I had to resist the urge to shiver.

“Move to second post,” said Boss’s voice and I jumped. “Keep your eyes peeled.”

“Got it,” I said. I turned to my left and rounded the corner of the faded, beat-up building. I just hoped as I turned that I was no longer within ready sight of Boss from his vantage point.

“Just keep your eyes on the horizon, rookie. With any luck you’ll get to take down a homeless wreck tonight.

“You’re so nice,” I said sweetly, and stopped when a soft clang reached my ears. I narrowed my eyes.  A lump appeared in my throat.

It was nothing. I pushed my hand under my hood and scratched at my ear as I took a step forward. It was probably just a stray cat or one of the structures settling a little. The sound hadn’t even repeated itself—all I could hear was the rain drumming against my hood. But then I stopped again, sighed, and turned back around. I didn’t speak into my ear bud because if I reported to Boss and it turned out to be nothing, he’d tease me about it for years to come. And I was only going back there to reassure myself.

I pulled the gun out of my belt, just in case.

Despite my wishes, images popped into my head of all the possibilities it could be. The hobo Boss mentioned? Some drug dealer’s lackey come to scout the place? What if it was a freaking superhuman, desperate for some money? Blackbourne didn’t exactly produce methamphetamines, but there were some people who would die to get their hands on their shipments.

Stop it. I moved my right hand, spreading out my fingers and feeling the ache as the muscles stretched. I had to stop freaking myself out, or I’d be useless if anyone did try and attack us.

That was when I saw the water dripping on the bucket.

Clang.

Something crawled across the back of my neck, and I shivered. A small knot loosened in the pit of my stomach, and I lowered my gun to rest against my hip. There really was nothing. The drips falling on the bucket were large and fat, and each one echoed through the corridor so loudly it was no wonder I could hear it from the road. I released a breath I hadn’t realized I was holding in. Four more hours. I set my gun back in it’s holster. Only four more hours, then I could leave just as dawn was breaking. The gravel scrunched beneath my boots as I turned around.

I ducked as a fist flew past my head.

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Road Trip Wednesday!


*le gasp* A blog post, not on Friday?  :O  How scandalous!

Actually, I've decided to start posting on Wednesdays as well, because I figure once a week probably just isn't quite good enough.  ^-^  I was recently perusing the archives on Veronica Roth's (now retired) blog*, and saw that when she first began writing it she took prompts and topics from this awesome blog called YA Highway!  Every Wednesday they post a new prompt or topic or quote and ask the readers to tweet, blog, and otherwise spread their thoughts across the internet. 

This week?  It was a simple question. 

What are you reading right now?

And that's a simple answer.  The Hunger Games.  The first one.  ^-^  It's my favorite.   A lot of people think it's a rip-off of a somewhat lesser known Japanese novel called Battle Royale.  The latter is darker, more gory and geared for an older audience--despite the ages of the main characters--but The Hunger Games is a lighter read and more geared, I think, for a wider range of readers.  I know when I was in high school I would've had a harder time with BR if I'd known it existed at that point.

Anyway, a lot of The Hunger Games makes sense, especially the parts where the two main characters had to put on a fake romance in order to draw more people in so that they could survive.  It would certainly happen if this scenario were to play out in real life.  A lot of 'reality' tv shows definitely have staged scenarios to draw in the audience (and in shows like Big Brother, it seems that if the audience loves you or you cause the right amount of drama, you have a better chance of staying 'alive' in the game longer *coughZachcough*)

She's also a strong, female character, and not like the helpless damsels in distress of fairy tales or old movies.  And flawed.  She messes up a lot, she doesn't see a lot of the truth until it's too late, but she also tries to do the right thing and stand up for herself, even in the face of great danger.  When she's put in a tough situation, she does her best even though she just wants to go home and live without any interference from the government (she didn't start out intending to begin a rebellion, after all).

Anyway, I've got to study (just a little more) before I go off to take the last test for my college math class, then the Final.  *shudders*  So wish me good luck!  And I wish you good luck in your endeavors, whether it be writing the next Bestseller or learning how to herd cats.  ^-^