Tales of the Parodyverse >> View Post
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Post By
Al B. Harper

Member Since: Mon Jan 04, 2016
Posts: 485
In Reply To
HH

Subj: Indeed.
Posted: Tue Jan 12, 2016 at 01:05:51 am EST (Viewed 390 times)
Reply Subj: Re: Probably.
Posted: Mon Jan 11, 2016 at 07:46:19 pm EST (Viewed 1 times)



    Quote:
    Sometimes less is more, and rarer better than common.


I'll apply that to my writing. Oh wait...



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    You may recall that I outlined in my e-mail to you before the current UT mini-revival that I was going to operate on some slightly different writing ground rules (for example, not mentioning the real-life full names of poster-characters).


Yes.


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    Another thing I'm tending towards, though not as a hard and fast rule, is to move away from cast who are directly lifted from or blatant copies of mainstream comics characters.[


I thought you had started to do this a while back to be honest.


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    Thugos is one such carbon version so I thought I'd give him one last good outing and then set him aside. We're still a parody-verse, but in deference to a decade of sophistication and progress maybe we can manage slightly more veiled parodies?


Indeed. However, this sounds as if you believe there is life left yet for new stories! Which is a good thing.


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        And, strangely, it was easier to write about alien pleasure slaves when I was happily married than when I am unhappily divorced.

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        Ah, bummer. I wouldn't know, I'm still unhappily single.



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    It's hard onr a writer to have a real-life daughter who is the age of all these romantic heroines who get chased by all those heroic (and villainous) young men. Writing that stuff was so much simpler at 20.


And you have all that history for the kids to point to and call you on (with raised eyebrow) whenever you try to parent.


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    As for the Caphans, who started as a quick joke about all those nubile slave-girls beloved of Captain Kirk and early SF, they then became a longer-form satire and subversion on those kinds of stories and upon the "Gorean" sub-genre of fiction about worlds where all women are enslaved sex fantasies. And then I just got into telling their stories. But how well all of that might translate outside a literary context where there were also hundreds of in-continuity stories that did not centre upon nubile slave girls I'm not sure.


Quite the challenge. One way would be to just have them end off at the close of the story like the other aliens and not come back to intertwine with the main cast as their PV templates did in the future. Though Artwel Swift could probably do with a girlfriend - I presume you have an almond-eyed Princess from a hidden mountain Kingdom lined up for him.


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    I was very tempted to do a PV story called "Fifty Shades of Green" though, wherein Miiri and her sisters crushingly critique a dashing sadomaschistic playboy and his hobbies.


He sounds like a dolt (the playboy).



    Quote:
    Fun fact: Visionary and I named the nine original Caphans after James T. Kirk's various alien conquests in Star Trek, simply adding a double vowel to each name.


That is a fun fact. And didn't they originate in one of the chats? I seem to recall they sprouted out of a chat.

Al B.






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