[identity profile] slytherincesss.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] hd_writers
DAY ONE - How did you get into fan fic?
DAY TWO - What fandoms have you written in?
DAY THREE - Favorite characters?
DAY FOUR - "Muse" character?
DAY FIVE - Pushy characters?
DAY SIX - Male or female characters?
DAY SEVEN - Fic affecting your view of a character?
DAY EIGHT - OCs
DAY NINE - Favorite Pairings
DAY TEN - Pairings and your comfort zone
DAY ELEVEN - Favorite Genres
DAY TWELVE - Adaptations
DAY THIRTEEN - Canon or Fanon
DAY FOURTEEN - Ratings
DAY FIFTEEN - Warnings
DAY SIXTEEN - Summaries
DAY SEVENTEEN - Titles
DAY EIGHTEEN - Bunnies
DAY NINETEEN - Herding Bunnies
DAY TWENTY - Baby Bunnies
DAY TWENTY-ONE - Sequels
DAY TWENTY-TWO - Fests
DAY TWENTY-THREE - Where do you archive?
DAY TWENTY-FOUR - Beta Readers
DAY TWENTY-FIVE - Music while writing?
DAY TWENTY-SIX - Research

27 – Where is your favorite place to write, and do you write by hand or on the computer?

We welcome your participation! There is no minimum or maximum requirements for your answers -- they can be as long or as short as you'd like. I will include my answer as a comment.

Date: 2011-09-28 02:43 am (UTC)
icicle33: (Coffee is love)
From: [personal profile] icicle33
When I took creative writing, the professor claimed it was better to write everything by hand because on paper you don't use as many unnecessary words. You just write what you think rather than what looks pretty on the screen. I don't know if I agree because I feel that typing helps me correct mistakes and rethink my sentences, but I can understand his point. I definitely have a problem with my writing being too convoluted and not getting to the point immediately. When I write on paper, I'm less inclined to include lengthy details that are only clutter.

Date: 2011-09-28 03:12 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] themaohour.livejournal.com
I think the reasoning behind this is true, but that doesn't necessarily mean it's always-applicable advice. Longhand doesn't allow for the same degree of self-editing, but if one struggles with actually getting the words onto the page, then it's probably a good thing.

If you're like me and CAN'T STAND TO HAVE MESSY SCRIBBLE PAGE, then...not so much.

Either way, writing longhand is good for you, because the operative word here is "writing," and it definitely beats sleeping through your pharmacology class.

Date: 2011-09-28 04:06 am (UTC)
icicle33: (Laugh out loud)
From: [personal profile] icicle33
No, I definitely agree with you. I'm not a fan of the messy scribble either, so I attempt to write in elegant cursive and always fail. It looks more like loopy chicken scratch. I can't imagine how awful I would write with an actual quill.

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