Jan. 3rd, 2005

krazykitkat: (secretly [secret santa by ditsyaml])
By way of [livejournal.com profile] xochiquetzl and [livejournal.com profile] sangerin

What I posted in 2004:

30 drabbles
10 ficlets
9.5 fics

All in West Wing.

Total of approx 70000 words.

However, Rhythm of the Night was written in 2003, and the majority of How Could I Ever Know was written over the previous 2 years.
So I'm estimating I've probably only written 20-30000 words in 2004. A lot of drabble dribbling.

memeness )
krazykitkat: (secretly [secret santa by ditsyaml])
By way of [livejournal.com profile] xochiquetzl and [livejournal.com profile] sangerin

What I posted in 2004:

30 drabbles
10 ficlets
9.5 fics

All in West Wing.

Total of approx 70000 words.

However, Rhythm of the Night was written in 2003, and the majority of How Could I Ever Know was written over the previous 2 years.
So I'm estimating I've probably only written 20-30000 words in 2004. A lot of drabble dribbling.

memeness )
krazykitkat: (Default)
Subversion: Why Women’s Fiction is Scary
http://www.booksquare.com/archives/2004/12/30/888/

How is it that so very few female authors are remembered and taught today? Well, probably for the same reason that women’s fiction is treated as second rate by many. Fear. Women don’t necessarily write about the big things, the whales, the battles, the climbing of mountains. They write about the day-to-day aspects of being human. And they write about the emotional aspects of our condition. Emotions are terrifying things, especially when they aren’t physical expressions of anger. Early literary mores were largely informed by the spheres of the sexes, and then, as now, the female sphere was deemed lesser. Let’s face it, anything that revolves around cooking, cleaning, or children cannot be important. Now, conquering nations…there you have something.
krazykitkat: (Default)
Subversion: Why Women’s Fiction is Scary
http://www.booksquare.com/archives/2004/12/30/888/

How is it that so very few female authors are remembered and taught today? Well, probably for the same reason that women’s fiction is treated as second rate by many. Fear. Women don’t necessarily write about the big things, the whales, the battles, the climbing of mountains. They write about the day-to-day aspects of being human. And they write about the emotional aspects of our condition. Emotions are terrifying things, especially when they aren’t physical expressions of anger. Early literary mores were largely informed by the spheres of the sexes, and then, as now, the female sphere was deemed lesser. Let’s face it, anything that revolves around cooking, cleaning, or children cannot be important. Now, conquering nations…there you have something.
krazykitkat: (secretly [secret santa by ditsyaml])
My arm looks like it's been bitten by the world's tiniest vampire (answers to the name of Eddie and definitely has wings).

Constituency Of One - West Wing 5.5 )
krazykitkat: (secretly [secret santa by ditsyaml])
My arm looks like it's been bitten by the world's tiniest vampire (answers to the name of Eddie and definitely has wings).

Constituency Of One - West Wing 5.5 )

July 2015

S M T W T F S
   1234
5678910 11
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags