Fantasy Book Club discussion
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Are you a reader or writer?
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Barry
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Feb 28, 2012 12:50PM

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I'm dead impressed with all of the people who started writing so young! I wrote my first fantasy at about age 10 by ripping off the ideas that an author I just read has also ripped off and haven't written seriously until the last 6 months or so.



The publisher Malachite Quills often has cover art requests and contests for fantasy art - check out their website for info.

The publi..."
Will do, thanks!


Thanks! Tomorrow is publication day - so excited! *lol*"
Dont blame you, hehe :)
I bet it must have been a long and tough road to this point... and I cant wait to one day hold a book of my own in my hands as well, haha :)



Anyone else find that?


I mostly share my stories with friends and family (mainly hubby :) if I share at all.
My first love has always been reading with writing being an unwelcome intrusion for the most part. My husband wants me to write and try to publish because he thinks it would a) make me more focused and b) cut down on the amount of books I sneak into the house... (like that could ever happen, lol!)

Believe me, MrsJ, being a writer in no way decreases the number of books I sneak into the house! Reading seems to feed the frenzy of ideas and stories running amok in my brain.

That's what I told him! I told him that as anal as I am...if I were to really try to write something I would need to do research which equates to more books *insert evil laughter here* The bookcases will continue to multiply!




how about Silmarillion :P?

Lol no, it was too much for me, I'm afraid:) Though you have reminded me to revisit it;)
I am a writer primarily, since I was sixteen I have written books, short stories, and poetry only to pass time, usually all fantasy and fiction. as a reader, I prefer long books based on fantasy.

I both write fantasy and read what I can. I don't have an awful lot if time to immerse myself in other worlds other than those I create.
Harrison.


Ereaders are the best...ever. ;-D

I got my first Kindle out of necessity because I was published with ehouses so at first my books were published electronically and I needed to see what the readers saw but then I began buying ebooks for myself. Now while I still won't completely give up print books, if you can get an eReader of any kind I'd highly recommend them.

So... yeah..a lifelong love affair with books.


Now it's a contest to see how many books I can read on my Kindle, lol.
As a writer, I write primarily fantasy with some soft sci-fi and paranormal. I wish I could write about quantum theory but I'm afraid my understanding of the science isn't deep enough.

I read fantasy and science fiction for enjoyment, to be taken away from the real world and have my imagination ignited.
So far I write fantasy with only a few dabbles into science fiction. I have wanted to write for a LONG time, but only recently did I find the time and the drive.

I just published my debut novel in October. I have my second book in the series coming out in 2 weeks. :) VERY excited about it!

Now it's a con..."
For some reason I always forget "Wrinkle in Time" when I'm thinking of my first fantasy books - it was definitely one of my first as well. I read it again fairly recently, as an adult. It's interesting the different view you can have on a book depending on where you are in life - I also read "The Wind in the Willows" again as an adult and what a weird book that is!



Being a reviewer, now - or at least writing reviews for Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ - that has changed my reading style. I tend to interrupt myself more to note things down, or take time to notice POV shift rather just than thinking "that was confusing".

One of my favorites too, and I find Zelazny's prose to be extremely poetic. So I was surprised to find (e.g. here This Mortal Mountain) that his actual poetry is downright bad. I'm glad he stuck mostly to the prose, considering.

Being a reviewer, now - or at lea..."
I would have to say that is a good way of putting it. These days I do tend to be a bit more critical of something that interrupts my flow. "What was it about what the author just did, how can I avoid it in my own writing?"
Indeed while I do try to keep the two disconnected, book discussions, reviewing, etc the two bleed together a little bit.

I do this a lot more, too.
But as I was trained in crit (long time ago), I try to not do this as it kills the reading experience for me. If I have a notebook while reading I start to get nitpicky. Then when I review I end up throwing a lot of that out cause I know most people don't care about those things - but if it had been for a paper or a crit it would have made a big difference.

I try not to read too much in the same genre as I'm currently writing. It makes me too critical of my own stuff.
But when a new book by someone I really love comes out, I can't resist.
Books mentioned in this topic
This Mortal Mountain (other topics)Dark Tidings (other topics)
Creatures of Light and Darkness (other topics)