Friday, December 31, 2010
The end is neigh.
Thursday, December 30, 2010
New stuff + update.
Anyway, I spent about 3 days making this scarf, and I think it turned out pretty well:
I wish I had a better camera, because I'm so proud of this thing and the pictures make it look like crap.
Another thing I've been doing recently is working on my Etsy shop. I've been making a variety of items for it as well as adding things I've had sitting around for a while... jewelry, hemp, a painting, and crochet. Still have not sold a single thing. I'd like the get more traffic to it, but I can't afford the advertising program right now.
Speaking of not being able to afford anything, the holidays have made me broke. I didn't buy anyone presents this year, just made some, but somehow I still ended up with no money. I've paid all the bills besides rent, and I have a grand total of $9 in my checking account besides the rent money. Sean and I gathered our change yesterday to buy a loaf of bread at the gas station so we could eat something. Ah, the joys of being a college student.
And then, jumping to being a college student, I have one more semester and I'm done. I need just one class, so I'm taking some useless classes to fill my financial aid requirements. One class I'm taking, however, is equally useless and cool. It's called Folk Art, and in this class they teach you weaving (knitting, crocheting, etc), quilting, tinsmithing and metalworking, bookbinding, dollmaking, and other cool stuff. I'm really looking forward to it, and hopefully it'll add some unique stuff to my Etsy inventory that no one will buy.
On a final note, they are adding a Gloria Jeans to the complex they're building in my town. In fact, they're adding several awesome things that we don't have: a Dairy Queen, the Gloria Jeans, an Orange Julius, and a Little Caesar's (already have that, but it's on the other side of town). I had Gloria Jeans coffee twice: once in a coffee variety pack last Christmas, and once a few days ago when Sean and I went to Morgantown and they had one there. I had a Butter Nut Rum mocha... it was awesome.
I'm thinking about applying to the Gloria Jeans, as it's five minutes away from my apartment instead of twenty-five, and I could work there in the mornings before my evening classes. Plus, free coffee. Who doesn't want that?
Monday, December 27, 2010
Etsy shop is now open!
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
My fingers are bleeding.
The beginnings of a bag, which I'll also attempt to sell when it's done.
On another note, yesterday I very briefly attended my work's Christmas party, only to drop off my present to my Secret Santa receivee. Besides a couple of coworkers that don't hate me, I just felt so unwelcome. I feel like that everywhere. At school, at work, in public. I feel like I don't belong anywhere anymore.
To be truthful, I don't really have any friends in real life. I mean, there's people I'll talk to, but no one I actually hang out with. People I think are friends end up being a completely different person than I thought, or they lose interest pretty quickly. Even though I was among the weird outcasts in high school, I still had an entire group of weird outcasts to hang out with, and we always had a ton of fun. They've all went their separate ways now... out of town, state, and even country.
I've been tempted to come back to WoW because I had friends there. When I had a seizure last year, I logged into WoW because I had no one else to talk to while Sean headed home to see if I was okay.
The only real friend I have in real life is Sean. Still, he can't keep me from being lonely all the time. I feel so alone. Is being an adult this lonesome?
Well, back to crocheting.
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Oh, winter...
Oh, wait. That's right. The 2 feet they were calling for never happened. We got a light dusting and that was that. A sprinkle of fairy dust.
Then today, this showed up.
Watercolor time!
It's nice to get away from realism for a while after doing it for so long.
Finals = over!
Art History (1450-1750): I love art history, but I found this class much harder than my Impressionist/Post-Impressionist and Modern Art class. I think it's because religious art bores me. Plus, the papers and exams were rough. I do have a newfound love for Baroque Dutch art, however.
Water Media: My watercolor class. Oh, I know, sounds like fun, painting with watercolors all day. It is fun, and I've discovered my niche, but this class was demanding. You have to paint several watercolors everyday, as well as finish an enormous final project at the end. Still fun, though.
Area Studies: This class is kind of like an independent work class that meets a few times during the semester for critiques. They absolutely hammer you and don't hold back. I came back after every critique in tears, never wanting to paint again. However, it really pushed my boundaries and I had a positive critique at the end, which was rather satisfying.
Graphics Practicum: My graphics internship. I interned under a wonderful lady that runs the student activities and organizations, where I did posters, pamphlets, t-shirt designs, website updates, cards, and more. There was always lots to do, but it helped me realize my strengths and weaknesses and improve upon them. In addition to the actual internship work, I had to write a brief essay and keep work logs every two weeks. At the end, I had to write a 5-page summary essay, do a presentation on the internship, and lots more to hand in.
Next semester will finally, definitely be my last. That makes for me being in college for five years, which kind of sucks but I guess isn't so bad when I changed my major 4 times (Political Science to Biology to Chemistry to finally Graphic Design/Fine Arts) and transferred from WVU to a smaller university in my hometown. Plus, I have a minor in Spanish, and foreign language minors tend to require several classes.
I want to just be done with academia, but now I am seriously considering undertaking grad school. Of all things, for a Master's in Art History. I know, sounds as useful as a doctorate in Underwater Basket Weaving, but I've always wanted to say I had a Master's degree. Also, the coolest professor I know is my art history teacher, who is the smartest woman in the world and knows everything ever about art. I want a Master's in Art History so I also have the ability to teach undergraduates on a university level, as well as have the opportunity to be a curator. I'm already picking up a second class (Gallery Management) so I can have a minor in art history.
Well, I'm going to go nurse this migraine.
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
More cranes.
Insane cranes.
There is a legend that if you fold 1,000 origami cranes, a real crane will visit you and grant you one wish. I think this is true. After you've folded that many cranes, your sanity starts to collapse and a hallucination of a crane will appear before you, magicking your giant cake or swimming pool full of raspberry jello, and you will believe it. Then, you are carted away by some nice men in white coats where they put you in a comfy room lined with pillows and give you a white jacket of your own.
Seeing as I don't want to even look at my cranes now, I'll post some pictures later.
In the other creative aspect of my life, my novel is going relatively well besides those dreaded speed bumps known as writer's block and "responsibility" (i.e. finals). I've decided instead of writing one massive, unwieldly book that it's turning out to be, Citadel will now be a trilogy. I'm pretty certain I have enough material for three books. Since Kishna is one who controls the elements, each individual book will have a title reflecting this. So far the working titles are Spirit Winds, Chaos Waters, and Forests of Blood and Fire.
I think three books is a good way to go, since it seems like my pace is a little too fast already and this will give some opportunity to even it out. Also, once I finish the first one I can try to seek a publisher and be working on the second one while that's happening. If I ever get good enough to be published, that is.
Monday, December 6, 2010
First painted crane.
Friday, December 3, 2010
Crochet piggies!
He sucks but I think he's cute. I plan on giving it to my mom who collects pigs. Next time I'll try something more challenging, and with limbs.
Thursday, December 2, 2010
100 Questions
1. What is your name and age?
Brittany, 22
2. What's your favorite color?
Green!
3. What languages can you speak?
English obviously. Spanish with near fluency (7 years of it and a minor to boot), some Japanese (enough to get by), and a little bit of Irish Gaelic.
4. If you can live in any time period and place besides the present and where you live now, what would it be?
Paris during the Impressionist Art era. Everything about it is so bohemian.
5. What's your favorite book of all time?
I have lots, but I'm probably going to go with American Gods by Neil Gaiman. I love his work and mythology, and what better book than that.
6. What's your favorite movie of all time?
Once again I have lots, but I'll probably go with Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.
7. What's your sign?
Leo, rawr.
8. If you were to get three wishes, what would they be?
To get my book published and be crazily successful, to be happy, and to live a long life with Sean.
9. What's your biggest fault?
Probably my explosive anger.
10. What's the weirdest thing about you?
Well, lots of things. I'll go with two. I'm 22 years old and every night I sleep with a stuffed tiger (named Shawn) that Sean gave me when I was in the hospital at 19. The other thing, I hallucinate a lot. Not just visual hallucinations, but auditory and tactile.
11. What are some of your hobbies?
I have lots! I like working with my hands a lot. Drawing, writing, painting, watercolor, origami, crochet, video games, studying languages, reading, macrame, and 3D art.
12. What was the worst day of your life?
I guess I have two again. The first was the day I found out my dad was leaving us, and he told me he had never loved me. The second was around my third day in the hospital during a week-long stay with a kidney infection. By that point I was literally on my deathbed and seriously thought I was going to die.
13. Vampires or werewolves?
Mummies.
14. Coffee or tea?
I like both, but I'm usually in the mood for one or the other.
15. Chocolate or vanilla?
Pfft, chocolate.
16. Day or night?
Night, I'm a total night owl.
17. Gold or silver?
Silver, gold looks tacky on pasty people like me in my opinion.
18. Republican or Democrat?
I'm a registered Democrat, though both parties are pretty off their rockers right now.
19. Cake or pie?
Pie! Blackberry pie is the best.
20. Where do you live?
West (by god) Virginia, in a town about an hour away from Pittsburgh.
21. Do you like where you live?
I'm not crazy about the town itself, I prefer the town about 20 minutes away that I plan moving to. I love West Virginia, though, and would never leave it unless the United States really does go insane and I have to move to Norway.
22. What places would you like to visit?
Definitely Ireland, especially Dublin and the Gaeltacht. I'd also love to visit the UK, but especially Scotland. I'd also like to visit Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Norway, Denmark, Argentina, Mexico (the Yucatan Peninsula especially), Spain, Germany, and Papua New Guinea.
23. What's your education level?
After one more semester I'll have a Bachelor's of Science in Graphic Design and Fine Arts with a minor in Spanish.
24. Do you believe in God?
Not in the same sense most people believe in a god.
25. What's your first memory?
Looking out the window when we lived in South Carolina... I think I was 3. The curtains were white and blowing around me and I thought they were friendly ghosts.
26. What's your favorite memory?
Meeting Sean. I was in my second day of Political Science 101 at WVU in my freshman year and a cute guy rushed to sit beside me. I noticed his shirt (Johnny the Homicidal Maniac) and had an urge to strike up a conversation with him, which really never happens with me. He started first though. Turns out he lived right above me in the dorms... exact same room, just one floor up. We've been together 4 1/2 years now.
27. What's your scariest memory?
Almost being stabbed along with my mom in our own back yard by a loony. That and my first car wreck (T-boned a guy going 40, my fault, and luckily didn't hurt him), along with having a seizure about a year ago. The seizure was scary because I had no idea what happened to me.
28. What's your favorite drink?
If we're talking general, Diet Dr. Pepper (which sucks because I'm trying to give up pop). If we're talking alcoholic, Irish trash can or Dr. Pepper and rum.
29. What's your favorite food?
Well, I have lots. Food is pretty grand. I'll either go with the shrimp fajitas from Mi Pueblo or squid sushi.
30. If zombies were to attack and destroy the world, how long would you survive?
I'd like to think a good long while... I've seen a lot of horror movies and have read The Zombie Survival Guide.
31. What's your favorite animal?
I have so many... I love animals. Tigers, okapi, timber wolves, sea turtles, cuttlefish (more like cuddlefish), giraffes, ball pythons, monitors, pigs, blue whales.
32. Are you a dog person or a cat person?
Definitely dog person.
33. What's your favorite restaurant?
The Poky Dot... lots of good memories there, plus good food and the best cheesecake ever (homemade cheesecake in lots of flavors like Twix and Mudslide, plus holiday flavors like Gingerbread and Irish Creme).
34. Where were you born?
Atlantic City, New Jersey
35. Where will you die?
A mile above the earth at 102, skydiving with Sean. That or I'll spontaneously combust in two seconds.
36. Do you want kids?
I want one, a boy, when I'm in my late 20s or early 30s.
37. What is your favorite musician that you're ashamed to admit you like?
Lady Gaga.
38. What's your most embarrassing moment?
I was walking down the stairs during high school, reading my fourth rejection letter from the National Honor Society (I didn't get in because I didn't play a sport, my 4.0 GPA and AP classes didn't matter), when I missed a step and fell in front of 30 spectators.
39. What was your best subject in school?
English. I loved the writing, I loved the novels we read, and I'm a grammar Nazi.
40. What do you want to do with your life?
I really don't know. I'd love to be a writer, but those chances are low, so at this point I have no idea.
41. What's the grossest thing about you?
I have terrible dandruff.
42. Do you believe in aliens?
Of course. The universe is inifite, or at least near-infinite, plus there's the string theory and multiple universe theory. We can't be the only life in the universe.
43. Do you believe in ghosts?
Yep. I don't care what people say, my old house was haunted by an old lady and her fat black ghost kitty.
44. Do you believe in angels?
No.
45. What's your favorite ice cream flavor?
Mint chocolate chip.
46. What's your favorite scent?
Vanilla or Old Spice (reminds me of Sean).
47. What's your favorite holiday?
Halloween!
48. Do you ever want to get married?
Of course! I've already got ideas.
49. What's your favorite season?
Autumn.
50. Name three things that are closest to you right now.
My computer, a skein of yarn with a partial scarf, and a sketchbook.
51. What's the most painful moment of your life?
Waking up from gallbladder surgery with no painkillers. I woke myself up because I was screaming so loud.
52. What social class do you fall under?
Lower middle class, technically.
53. Can you ride a bike?
Yep, and without training wheels too!
54. Can you dance?
Hahahaha. No.
55. Can you sing?
No, but I do anyway.
56. Can you play an instrument?
Guitar.
57. What's your biggest dream?
To become a successful novelist. If not, to own a coffee/wine/sandwich and soup cafe.
58. Who's your favorite celebrity?
I'm not really a fan of celebrities. If I had to pick one I guess it'd be Johnny Depp or Cillian Murphy, and only because they're pretty.
59. What's your biggest fear?
Something bad happening to Sean. That, and slugs. Small spaces too.
60. Who's your favorite band?
I have so many. I cycle through phases of favorite bands, and right now it's between Otep and Jack Off Jill.
61. Would you rather be poor and happy or rich and unhappy?
Poor and happy. I've got the poor part down already.
62. Would you rather be deaf or blind?
Deaf. I love music but I can't live without art.
63. Would you rather be fat and have a pretty face or thin and ugly?
I guess the first.
64. Would you rather live a long, boring life or a short, exciting one?
Honestly, a long and boring life. I have stuff I want to get done.
65. Wine or beer?
Wine. West Virginia Mountain Spice Wine is the best.
66. Summer or winter?
Autumn?
67. What's your clothing style?
My own, I guess. I have a mixture of goth, punk, hippie, and weirdo clothes.
68. What's your hair style?
For now, a short red bob.
69. What's your shoe style?
Uh... comfortable?
70. If you had to choose killing one random person in the world to take a million dollars, or passing both up, what would you choose?
Honestly, I'd back away. I'd be afraid of killing a cute kid or a sweet grandma instead of a serial rapist/killer/cannibal.
71. Why is the sky blue?
Because you touch yourself at night.
72. What's the meaning of life?
To live, do stuff, and die.
73. Whales or dolphins?
Dolphins, they have a better texture and don't taste as bitter.
74. Atlantic Ocean or Pacific Ocean?
Pacific, it's where R'lyeh is.
75. Simpsons or Family Guy?
I never liked the Simpsons and Family Guy isn't as funny anymore. So Futurama and American Dad.
76. True Blood or Twilight?
True Blood, the vampires are actual vampires that burst into flame in the sunlight and don't sparkle and eat people and have lots of crazy vampire sex. Plus, Eric.
77. Harry Potter or Lord of the Rings?
For books, I just enjoy Harry Potter more. For movies, Lord of the Rings by a long shot.
78. New York or Los Angeles?
The country, where I can play mah banjo and chew mah spittin tabacker.
79. Do you watch TV?
Not really. I have some series I watch on Netflix but I haven't watched actual television in four years now.
80. Do you go on the Internet a lot?
I'm an addict.
81. Movies or books?
I love both. I get in the mood for one or the other in cycles.
82. Do you drink (alcohol)?
Occasionally, but it's rare.
83. Do you speed?
I used to but I'm too poor to afford a speeding ticket.
84. Do you curse?
I fucking spout shit like a goddamn sailor.
85. Have you ever been arrested?
No.
86. Have you ever gotten a ticket?
Yep, three.
87. Have you ever been in a car wreck?
Yep, one so far and hopefully it stays that way.
88. Have you ever gotten into a fist fight?
No, but I've sparred in karate.
89. Have you ever broken something in anger?
A few things.
90. Have you ever hurt an animal?
Unless you count the frogs I accidentally drowned when I was 4, no.
91. Do you like football?
American, no. Soccer, yes.
92. The beach or the mountains?
I love the mountains but the ocean air is a nice change now and then.
93. What's the stupidest thing in the world?
Everything, including the things I like.
94. What's the best thing in the world?
At the risk of sounding corny, love.
95. Do you have lots of friends?
I don't really have any friends I hang out with, just those I see occasionally.
96. Are you a procrastinator or a hard worker?
I'm both. I procrastinate then bust my ass to get it done.
97. Are you a good student?
I think so. 3.6 GPA, but I'm starting not to care.
98. What are you proudest of?
How much of my novel I've managed to write despite its suck.
99. What are you the least proud of?
My explosive anger issues.
100. Last question! Describe yourself in one word.
Weird.
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
The hellish winter season begins...
My backyard as of 8:30 AM, bringing terrible tiding from the evil skies, with only more to come.
After last year's winter, I have to say I'm pretty snowed out. When I was a kid, snow was awesome. Snow meant snow days filled with making snowmen and angels and igloos and snowball fights and sledding, to come in hours afterward to hot chocolate and video games. Now that I'm an adult in college, this means nothing. 2 feet of snow? Too bad! Get to class, chump. Freezing rain and sleet and the interstate is covered? Pity, you have to go to work so you can afford your heat.
Last winter, the snow began pretty early. It was smaller snows... 6 inches here, a light dusting there. Then, it keep snowing. And snowing. And snowing and snowing. Snowstorms turned to blizzards. Multiple blizzards raining down flakes so huge that you couldn't see a foot in front of you for all the white. Eventually, we were snowed in.
Being snowed in was pretty sweet at first. It was a state of emergency, so that meant no class. But then, after the 3 feet of snow refused to melt and a 4 inch sheet of ice covered it, we started to get worried. Because we had no food. We had a couple of packets of ramen and some canned vegetables. I hiked to my mom's house with the snow up to my thighs in order to get some deer meat so we could eat something besides chow mein.
This went on all winter. The snow never really stopped. It'd begin to melt, and we cheered. Then it snowed again and we locked ourselves back inside.
The biggest reason I hate the snow is because I hate driving in it. Have you ever driven on the interstate with a foot of snow in a blizzard going 35 so you wouldn't die only to have a tractor trailer speed by you at 80 MPH, barely missing you? It's pretty terrifying.
Last winter, Sean almost had a terrible wreck because of the weather, too. He lost control on the interstate and slammed into a snow bank. Thank god the bank was there and extremely fluffy, or he could've been seriously hurt.
The true face of evil.
So in conclusion, snow needs to go back up into the sky and stay there.
Friday, November 26, 2010
Revisiting Barbarianism (aka Black Friday)
"A good Freya's Day to thee, kind sir. I wisheth that only the best pillaging will come thy way."
People have been killed, killed, over this stupid phenomenon. People have been beaten up, cursed at, spit at, shoved, trampled, screamed at, and bitten over this thing. Does this not seem just completely weird to everyone?
I know some people that go Black Friday shopping because they say that the deals are too good to pass up. There's some arguments against this:
1. What you think are deals are not really deals. Many retailers will bump up the price right before Black Friday so they can claim things are on sale.
2. The sales are vague. Many places will have only a few things that they put on sale, while the rest is full-price. People still buy these full-priced items though, because, hey, they're right there.
3. You can get the same deals, and some even better, from online stores. You can do this in the comfort of your home, completely naked and smeared with mustard if you wanted to.
4. Many retailers also continue having good sales for Christmas far after Black Friday.
I think this event is also incredibly depressing, because of what it stands for. Christmas is no longer about spending time with friends and family, enjoying a good movie with hot chocolate and gingerbread. It's no longer the joy of giving. It's now about who can buy the best and the most things. Material things. That's all it's about anymore.
So instead of kicking an old lady in the face for the last Dell, try something new. Make a Christmas box with treats for a child in poverty. Send handmade cards to your friends, family, and neighbors. Something that goes beyond the pure greed of modern society.
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Orc: Jobsearching.
Argh began look for job today. Job market tough. Economic downturn hard. It very hard for orc... no one want pillage anymore. Says am bad. Argh sad. But me am look for job.
Me am go to lots of interviews. Everyone run from Argh. That make Argh happy! Humans am fear orckind, for us am terrifying and mighty. But that mean no job for Argh. Me am become sad. Finally, Argh give up and apply for job at McDonald's.
Interview man barely look at Argh. He have weak human mustache that am covered with white powder. He nod head and tell Argh that me can start immediately. Me am happy that Argh have job, but me am feel soul shatter as Argh put on hat and greasy shirt. Shirt too puny, and Argh rip through sleeves and back with mighty orc muscles. Interview man no care, and tell Argh to get to work as he pour whole bottle of pills in mouth.
Girl name Jennifer train Argh on register. Jennifer am have acne and metal in disgusting human teeth. Argh try not to smash Jennifer. She am tell Argh to try register alone. Argh take human order: puny cheeseburger and tiny fry with measly chocolate shake. Argh am try hit buttons, but me am too powerful and smash through weak register. Customer yell at Argh, tell Argh he am in hurry. Argh no like be yelled at by human. Human should bow to Argh! Customer say he want speak to manager.
Argh angry. ARGH AM BERSERKER-RAGING! Argh am grab customer by collar and pull over counter. Me am begin to stuff cheeseburgers in weak human mouth! He try scream, but he no can with eleventy puny burgers in throat. Argh stick human head under fountain and wash cheeseburgers down with gallon of Mountain Dew.
Jennifer yell at Argh to stop. Argh smash puny Jennifer through drive-thru window! Argh throw customer out after her! ARGH DESTROY WEAK MCDONALD'S! Humans scream and try run, but they am too fat. Me am pick up entire grill and throw at table of soft fat humans! ARGH AM POWERFUL!
As Argh leave work, me am enjoy fire that engulf building. Humans am screaming. It am most beautiful thing Argh ever see. Me am has tear in eye. Argh walk away and me am smile.
Argh look for other job.
Monday, November 22, 2010
Inspirational post from a cynic.
There's no need to give up on your dreams. Would J.K. Rowling still be richer than God if she said, "Well, I'm a single mother on welfare. This is fine I guess." Would the Wright brothers have invented one of the single most important machines of human history if they listened to the critics laughing at their idea of flying through the air? Would man have discovered fire if they didn't keep banging those sticks and rocks together? Probably not.
Then again, you should still listen to those critics. Some are out to bring you down, while some serve as a good reference point against your flaws. These people will help you master your art and help you improve, so those others that are bringing you down will STFU.
The world is a cold, unsympathetic place. Why let it win? Punch it in the goddamn face. Kick it hard in the throat and scream, "SHUT UP, I just did what I wanted, bitch!" while in huddles in a fetal position and cries. As you leave it to its pain, grasping its choking throat, slide your sunglasses over your eyes and turn dramatically in the sunset, flicking your still-lit cigarette into its eye.
Just do what you want to do. You're going to die someday and the sun is going to explode, and the universe will finally collapse upon itself and wipe out every remnant of everything you ever knew and ever existed. Might as well have fun with it, and do what you want. Besides, you know, become Hitler 2 or something.
Sunday, November 21, 2010
Digital art, part 2.
Such fun! Hopefully I'll get faster as time goes on.
Saturday, November 20, 2010
Digital art.
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Can't stop making stuff up.
Damn this awesomely insane show. I don't even like mecha. I barely even like anime.
Most of my stories are begun by dreams. Usually this is a bad and cliche thing, but I'll roll with it. Citadel was started when I had a dream about an enormous black building that was so high, it reached the clouds. A few months ago, my subconscious decided it wanted to torture me with another storyline and gave it to me in dream form as well. It's a double-edged sword, much like Spiderman's powers.
This is my gift... AND MY CUUUUUUURSE!!
The dream I had a few months ago went like this: There was a girl who lived in an enormous city on the water's edge in the jungle, which was somewhat futuristic and somewhat steampunk. I wish I could describe it better with fewer words, because it was awesome. She had a collar around her neck that she had since she could remember. Her friend helped her remove it, and she transformed into a crane. All hell broke lose, because her kind, those who could shapeshift, had been controlled by the government. The dream ended when she began to plan a revolution.
I wanted to finish my first story, so I wrote it down along with half of a beginning chapter and put it away. Then, last night, my subconscious told me "Fuck that noise" and gave me more. This time it was about an enormous zeppelin that could go into space. Once again I blame watching Tengen Toppa right before bed for the space thing, but the rest of it could be appropriate. Hell, maybe space will be included. Sci-fi isn't my forte, but it's pretty cool, right?
So now, when I'm so close to being finished with my first novel, I'm itching to write the second. It sucks, because I'm churning with ideas for the new story and I feel like I couldn't write my first one now even if I tried. My brain is just too stuck on steampunk and race-class revolutions and magic in sci-fi.
I also blame this sadly underrated movie. DAMN YOU ATLANTIS.
I'm wondering what I should do tonight. Thursday is my Write Like a Fiend night, so I'm torn between working on Citadel and working on the new one. If I work on Citadel, I would be that much closer to finishing it but it wouldn't be nearly as good for the mindset I'm in now. If I work on the new one, it would be pretty damn good by my standards but it'll feel like I'm putting off what I've worked so hard on. Writing is awesome and sucks at the same time.
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Orc: A Vignette
Me am Argh. Argh am orc. Argh have beautiful wife, Urgh, and one... three... seven... two! Two orclings. Argh am businessorc. Me am work for big-wig boss in fancy office, but Argh only have puny cubicle. Boss not respect Argh. Boss says Argh am scary and needs to stop destroying weak co-workers. Boss will one day bow to Argh. But for now, Argh be peon.
This morning, Argh drive to work. Suddenly, Argh cut off by puny human in weak mini-van! Argh furious. ARGH AM BERSERKER-RAGING! Me am burst through roof of car, and rip steering wheel from dashboard. Argh run over mini-van! Mini-van crash into ditch, and Argh rip off mini-van's door! Me am drink blood of douchebag who cut Argh off!
Other drivers stop and stare at Argh. Me am hear human yelling to call cops. Argh no like fuzz! Me jump back into Argh car and put roof over Argh head and drive away. Me am hear the baneful cry of human screams. Argh like human screams. Argh have burnt CD of human suffering that me play in car. It am soothe Argh after long week of work.
Argh arrive at work. Boss yell at Argh. Argh am late! Me am sorry, I tell Boss. Boss glare at Argh. Stupid puny Boss. Argh am powerful! Boss no understand. Argh work on sales graphs. It am tedious. Argh am decide to check on mighty Farmville crops.
Boss catches Argh! Says Argh am fired. Me am say Argh have wife and orclings to raise. Boss no care. ARGH AM BERSEKER-RAGING! Me rip computer from wall and throw at Boss. Co-workers try to calm Argh. PUNY CO-WORKERS! ME AM DESTROY HUMANS AND GNAW ON WEAK BONES!
Security escort Argh out. Tells Argh charges will be filed.
Maybe Argh no should work in office.
Mostly Men Online Role-Playing Girls
Okay, maybe it's not like that for everyone. I mean, I have my own apartment, I hate Mountain Dew, and I don't get camped because I don't suck. I even have a job and college with a GPA of 3.6, too! And I, for one, love MMORPGs. I've played World of Warcraft, Guild Wars, Lord of the Rings Online, Everquest II, and am currently playing Warhammer Online.
For the non-game types, MMORPG stands for Massively Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Game, but it's often joked that it stands for Mostly Men Online Role-Playing Girls. It's true. 85% of female characters in MMOs are guys, yet they still get hit on by lonely straight 20-somethings. Though nowadays more women are playing these games, back in the day it was rare.
I started playing World of Warcraft in 2006 before the expansions came out, when I played a rogue on Alliance. It was my first MMO, and I had no idea what I was doing. I was wielding a spell-caster dagger, wearing stamina cloth, and didn't know what talent points were until level 20. I was awesome. Then I realized how to play and it got fun. The expansion came out and I joined a guild and raided casually and PVPed.
In 2008, when Wrath of the Lich King came out, I got totally for serious. I was playing a shaman healer and was raiding hardcore. It was fun at first, but after two years of that I was sick of healing people and not hitting monsters with a giant sword. Being useful and saving your group? Pfft. I want blood!
I quit WoW for the third time early this year, although this time it was permanent. I left when Blizzard announced that they're going to have everyone use their real name on their forums, and since I had been stalked in-game before, I really didn't want that. I also found out they had made a pact with Facebook that will bring them more money, because the multi-billion-dollar corporation doesn't make enough. Also, Ghostcrawler is their lead dev and also a whiny moron.
Since then and throughout my time in WoW, I've played other MMOs, and it really makes me wonder: Why is World of Warcraft so popular? Is it because it's easy to learn and grasp? Is it because there's always stuff going on with so many subscribers? Who knows. There's better games out there, though.
1. Warhammer Online
(Watch both, the first is cool and the second has an orc-apult)
Warhammer Online, before it came out, was constantly called "The WoW Killer," a conveted title for a game that has the possibility of destroying the MMO Behemoth so other games have a chance at the subscriber base. I played it on release and absolutely loved it, despite its flaws. Warhammer Online made a fatal mistake, however: it was released before it was fully polished. Subscriptions dropped and everyone went back to WoW, myself included.
I just returned to the game last month, and wow, is it ever the most fun MMO I've ever played. You can choose Destruction, the super-evil side composed of Chaos humans that are Ravengod-worshipping Vikings, Dark Elves that are vampires which worship Khaine (the god of hatred. HATRED. That's how hardcore evil they are), and Greenskins, which are orks and goblins that also happen to be soccer hooligans. You can also play Order, which are made up of Order humans that bring up recollections of the Spanish Inquisition, High Elves that are pretty girly, and Dwarves that have ale-powered technology. No, really.
The game is interesting because there are 24 classes, 4 for each race. Each race has an archetype: tank, healer, ranged DPS, and melee DPS. Each class is incredibly unique. For instance, on Destruction I'm currently playing a Disciple of Khaine, which is a healer that goes into the fray and steals life-force from her enemies while she kills them. On Order, I play a White Lion, who wields a two-handed axe and has a faithful white lion as his companion that grows larger as he levels.
The object of the game is Realm versus Realm, commonly called PVP in other games. Both sides fight to control objectives, keeps, fortresses, and even cities. There are also scenarios, or battlegrounds. A lot of people's problem with this game is that it offers little PVE, but what do you really expect from a game that has such an in-depth PVP system? PVP is more fun and more challenging than PVE anyway, in my opinion.
The only problem I see with this game now is lack of players, and since you want as many players as possible since it is a game involving fort and city captures, this can be crappy. However, the Badlands server is vibrant and alive. Join me in killing Order scrum!
4.5/5 Doritos bags
2. Lord of the Rings Online
LotRO is one of the most beautiful games I've ever played. The graphics are incredible yet not hard on your computer, and the landscapes are literally breathtaking. Most of the time spent playing was simply looking around, because the game itself was so beautiful and detailed.
As a Lord of the Rings nerd, it was a great thing to be in Middle-Earth. The game was heavily inspired from the movie trilogy, so the Shire felt like you were actually there. Better yet was the Epic questline, where you followed the story from Lord of the Rings and assisted the Fellowship in their quest. You get to meet Aragorn, Legolas, Gimli, Gandalf, the hobbits, Arwen, and even Tom Bombadil. The crafting system is interesting and in-depth, the instanced quests are epic as all get-out, and classes are interesting and unique. Plus, minstrels actually play music and get to pick between several different instruments, from lutes to bagpipes.
However, there was a problem with the game that caused me to leave. It gets very boring. I reached level 26 on my ranger, and when I was playing with Sean, I was literally bored to tears. I've never experienced such a thing before. I just started crying because I was so bored.
I think the game's problem is the fact that quests start to get stale around mid-game. They start to become "Kill X wolves for me! Bring me back X pelts!" No one likes that.
However, I will give this game a bonus because it has something I adore that many other MMOs lack: player housing. You can choose between a large expensive house or a cheap small house in human, dwarf, hobbit, or elf neighborhoods. I'm super girly when it comes to this because I love decorating. Plus, it's Lord of the goddamn Rings. You can't go wrong.
4/5 Mountain Dew: Code Red cans
3. Everquest II
Sean used to play old Everquest back in the day, and had me try it. I was killed by the first rat I encountered and kept dying. I hated its interface and vowed never to play it again, and then I tried Everquest II.
Everquest II is not only more user-friendly, but its graphics are great for an older game. There's just so much to do in this game. It's somewhat overwhelming. There's a near endless amount of land to explore, tons of races and classes, lots of cities, sprawling dungeons, and a great crafting system.
It's almost a little too big for beginning players. When I started playing I was completely overwhelmed with all the stuff I could do. I spent most of my time in my player house, arranging my bone furniture and dark tomes to look as evil as possible (I played a necromancer).
It's a great game, but new players should take it slow and try out a few different things before they dive in.
4.5/5 Poopsocks
I haven't played other MMOs (besides these and WoW) enough to review fairly, so I'll now discuss upcoming games that I am peeing myself over.
1. Guild Wars 2
I was meh with Guild Wars. It was all right, not great and not terrible. Just... "meh." When I heard about Guild Wars 2, once again, I said "meh." However, the art style piqued my interest. It was so refreshing and beautiful, especially for an MMO, with its painterly style, so I checked into it a bit.
My mind was completely fuckin' blown. Holy shit. If this isn't the MMO to end all MMOs, then the developers are the best liars since Loki.
In this game, you can choose from five interesting races: the hulking and brash Charr, the annoyingly cute Asura with a superiority complex, the Vikingesque Norn, the hippie tree-hugging Sylvari, and humans. This game is interesting for reasons that I can only give coherently in a list:
-You can move, pick up, and affect objects in your environment.
-Different weapons give different skills, depending on class, race, and weapon type
-No grind; you start doing cool stuff at level 1
-Immense, beautiful landscapes and cities
-NPCs that act like actual people and don't just stand around repeating the same scripting conversation for all of time
-You can affect your friends' abilities and spells. For example, an elementalist can lay down a flame wall, while a ranger can shoot through the flames to create fiery arrows.
-Unique and very interesting spells and abilities, that are very real and visceral
-You can choose your personality and build your storyline from there. You can be a smooth-talking swindler, a chilvarous hero, a drunk guy that likes to punch old ladies, or just plain evil.
And the most important point of all:
-What you do will have a complete affect on the environment. An example they give: Centaurs are raiding a town. If you save the town, the town will remain and the villagers will remember you. If you don't, the town is burnt to the ground and everyone in it is either dead or runs away for safety, until the town is moved or rebuilt.
I WANT THIS GAME NOW
2. Tera Online
There isn't much information available about this game yet, but there was one thing in it that was very interesting: real combat. You don't just stand there letting a giant crab-monster hit you. You jump over and under the giant crab-monster, rolling under it to hit its soft belly, or attacking it from behind.
This game also has interesting targetting. Once again, you're not just standing there smacking a cave yeti with your sword. You have to position yourself to hit it. Casters and rangers target it like through a scope. It's really cool and gives a nice challenge.
Two things I hate about it: 1) the adorable dog-racoon things. I HATE THEM. 2) All of the female character armor is beyond slutty. It's a new level of slutty. And the female caster wearing high-heels? HAHAHA. If I'm going to be in the middle of a war, running across the world, the last fucking thing I'm wearing is high heels.
It looks promising, though, so I'll keep my eye out.
Do you play MMORPGs? What are some of your favorites?
Friday, November 12, 2010
50,000 words!
It seems like it's taken me forever to get to this point, but the hardest part of writing a story for me is beginning it. I started actually writing it in July of this year, typing only a few paragraphs a day before I was spent. After I finally completed three chapters, I had some friends read it and the momentum begin. I rewrote what I had and started churning out words. Hopefully, this momentum will continue and I can have my novel done by early 2011.
I really hope that the final product will be decent enough to publish. I'm not looking forward to the piles of rejection letters, but I am looking forward to the day where I'll get that note in the mail that it says it'll be published. I mean, there are some really terrible books out there, so if they can do it, why can't I?
Every author, no matter how famous and how many rejections they've received, have been rejected at one time or another by a publishing. Here are a couple of famous authors and their rejection numbers before they hit that big break:
J.K. Rowling: 12
Pearl S. Buck: 13
William Golding: 20
James Joyce: 22
Madeleine L'Engle: 26
Dr. Seuss: 27
Stephen King: 30
Margaret Mitchell: 38
Keep writing!!
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Origami cranes.
Cranichu, the Pikachu crane. Despite the crane's love of water, Cranichu is coursing with electricity, which is a bummer for other fauna in the waters nearby. Cranichu's best friends are Bulbacrane, Charcraneder, Craquirtle, and his trainer, Crash.
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Panel 3 of Onerionaut.
Inspiration from Japanese horror? You bet your arse.
Read a book, read a book, read a ********** book.
Books are great, aren't they? Who doesn't love to read? Well, a lot of people I guess. Reading not only expands your vocabulary and raises your IQ (IQ is not intelligence, but your potential for intelligence), it's also fun. In today's blog, I'm going to discuss a few of my favorite books of all time, in no particular order.
1. American Gods by Neil Gaiman
Neil Gaiman is my all-time favorite modern author. He writes urban fantasy with so much depth, detail, quirkiness, and fun, and the characters are always interesting. The first book I read by him was Stardust, moving on afterward to American Gods.
I'm a fast reader, but this book took me almost six months to read. That's how I know a book is good: I tend to read slower when I'm enjoying a book more than usual, reading back over specific parts.
American Gods blends mythology and the modern day together with a dash of fantasy. The protagonist, a quiet man fresh out of prison for assault, goes by the name Shadow. As soon as he's released (a few days early), he's discovered that his wife and best friend, who were having an affair together, died in a horrible car accident. He is offered a job by a man named Mr. Wednesday, who turns out to be the Norse god Odin. Shadow discovers that gods and fantastical creatures exist merely because people believe in them, and they are brought over to the Americas by immigrants from Europe, Africa, and Asia. Throughout the book, as Shadow works for Mr. Wednesday, he comes across many characters who turn out to be mythological creatures or gods from cultures around the world. They discover that the New Gods, manifestations of modern technology such as television and the Internet, are wedging their way in and destroying the last remains of the Old Gods.
The book is peppered with vignettes of immigrants journeying to the New World, bringing their beliefs and therefore their mythology in tow. The modern depictions of gods are fitting and wonderful, such as the undertakers Mr. Ibis and Mr. Jacquel (Thoth and Anubis respectively), or Mr. Nancy (Anansi from West African and Caribbean lore).
It's a unique fantasy, and can be appreciated by those who both enjoy fantasy and hate it.
2. The Canterbury Tales by Geoffery Chaucer
I have found memories of reading this book in my AP English class in high school, where each student was to dress as a certain character and read their lines. I was the yeoman.
The book is a collection of stories told by pilgrims as they venture to Canterbury, and their stories even in this modern age are hilarious. Chaucer uses the characters to show an ironic reflection of England in his era. It's like one of those "Types of People You Meet in College" lists, but better.
The Canterbury Tales is considered to be unfinished, but it doesn't matter since each tale works well as a stand-alone. It's a great glimpse into medieval England, with a humorous side.
3. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Hamlet by William Shakespeare
I'm one of those people that love Shakespeare but despise Romeo and Juliet. It's about two teenagers who get the hots for one another and then go emo. It's also the most overrated story of his collections, when there are ones that are leagues better. If you ask someone what their favorite Shakespeare play is and they say Romeo and Juliet, you know it's just a cop-out answer and there's a chance that they think Shakespeare is a type of crepe.
A Midsummer Night's Dream is utterly ridiculous in the best way possible. It follows the story of four Athenian lovers and an acting troupe that are tricked by fairies of the forest. The fairies seriously screw up the Athenian's love life. Puck, one of the fairies, also turns one of the actor's heads into that of a donkey, and antics ensue.
This is one of those plays that you need to both read and see to get the full hilarity. Everything is just ridiculous.
The other Shakespeare play on the list is Hamlet. Not only is Hamlet far more tragic than Romeo and Juliet, it's much more badass. Seriously, everyone dies in the end. (Don't say I ruined the ending for you, you've had 400 years to read it).
Hamlet is the prince of Denmark, who is visited by the ghost of his dead father revealing that Claudius, Hamlet's uncle, murdered him to take the throne and steal the queen. Hamlet more or less goes completely off his rocker. He's partially faking his crazy, and partially actually crazy. He plots his revenge, but Claudius isn't too happy about it and sends Hamlet off to England with Rosencrantz and Guildenstern. Hamlet diverts Claudius's trick and comes back to Denmark to kill him.
It's the Lion King, except by the end Simba, Nala, Sarabi, Scar, all the hyenas, Timon, and Pumbaa are dead along with Mufasa. Pretty harrowing.
4. Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
In the future, reading is outlawed and firemen don't fight fires, but start them. On books. The main character, Montag, is a fireman who meets a new neighbor that shares her openminded ideas. This causes Montag to rethink his own life and his job. He starts to hide books away, curious as to why anyone would want such a thing, but is discovered and goes into hiding. The government destroys itself in trying to kill Montag, and society is left in a pile of ash to start anew again.
This is another book I did for my wonderful AP English class, whereas I made puppets and acted the book out. If you're curious about the title, 451 degrees Fahrenheit is when paper catches fire.
5. Lord of the Flies by William Golding
A group of British schoolboys crash-land on an unhabited island. Everthing seems pretty spiffy at first... there's fresh water, lots of food, and no adults. Slowly, they descend in child savages, some demanding that they should work together for the greater good while others look out for the welfare of themselves. When some of the boys murder another child, Piggy, the main character Ralph escapes into the wilderness alone and manages to be saved by a passing ship.
This book explores the human instinct of survival, whereas civilization will give way to savagery in an attempt to live before all others. It also holds a morbidly romantic sentiment to me (Sean and I met in Political Science 101 the day the professor played this movie).
6. Turn of the Screw by Henry James
Turn of the Screw is a ghost story first and an underlying piece of sexual oppression and dealing with the conservative Victorian era second. The main character is a governess sent to work on an estate owned by a wealthy man burdened by his niece and nephew he is forced to care for. Since he has no interest in raising them, he leaves the governess alone on the estate with the children. It takes a turn for the bad when the boy, Miles is sent home from his boarding school with an expulsion notice, and the children start acting strange.
This is a great novella that has endless interpretations, and is a great read for those who enjoy multiple layers to their books.
7. Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
This book was a big deal because a woman of all things wrote it in the early 1800s, a time when women were best for popping out babies and cooking dinner. Everyone knows the story of Frankenstein, so I won't waste breath here, but there are some common misconceptions you should know:
-Frankenstein is not the monster. It's the doctor who created him, Dr. Victor Frakenstein. Some argue that the monster could be called Frakenstein since it's more or less the doctor's "child," but that just sounds like backpeddling to me.
-Frakenstein's monster isn't evil, but confused, outcasted, and angry at his existence. He takes revenge on Frakenstein by killing those important to him, so Frakenstein would feel the misery that the monster feels.
-Frakenstein and his monster are emo. The monster wears his hair over one eye and has enough My Chemical Romance shirts to clothe China.
Well, there's a handful of my favorite books. Tell me some of yours!
Monday, November 8, 2010
Chapter 1 Excerpt, Part Deux
Kishna raced up the cliff face, stumbling over the rocks with a stitch in her side. The sun had begun to set nearly an hour ago, and now only a thin splash of yellow light was left on the horizon. Kishna burst through Turuna’s curtain, a cacophony of clinking beads breaking the stillness of the twilight.
“I’m so sorry, Turuna,” Kishna huffed, her hands on her knees. “We were watching the dancers, and there were fire-eaters, and time slipped away from us, and-”
Turuna turned, a wolf skull bumbling with sinister viridian liquid in her palm. She patted a blue pillow beside her and said, “No need to worry, dear. Come sit with me.” Kishna complied, nervously eying the green smoke that spun out of the skull.
“Let’s see,” the old woman said. “Quicksilver, a raven feather, imbued earth... I believe that’s it.” She placed the skull into Kishna’s shaking hands.
“Should I begin?” the apprentice asked.“Not yet. First, I have some warnings for you.”
Kishna swallowed. “Warnings?”
“The solution I’ve made is dangerous to anyone else who consumes it, but to a shaman, it allows us to astral project.”
“Separating the soul from the body,” Kishna murmured.
Turuna nodded. “Right. Once you’ve succeeded in transitioning into the spirit realm, your mentor of that world will greet you. I can’t promise what task it will have for you, but I can promise it will be trying. The final test is not easy.”
“Am I... really ready?”
“Ready as you’ll ever be. Now listen, do not stray from your spiritual guide. Your first projection is hard to escape from, and your mentor will be able to guide you back.”“Is there anything else I should know?”
“That should be all. When you are ready, Kishna, you may drink.”
Kishna gazed into the bubbling liquid, holding her nose. It smelled of carrion and musty bones, and the smoke made her eyes water. Taking a deep breath, she lifted the skull to her lips and drank. The solution burned her throat on the way down, the putrid taste sticking to her tongue. Kishna gagged, her fingers tingling as her vision spun like a maelstrom. She looked to Turuna, whose lips moved with speech, but the words were warped and distant.She dropped the skull and her vision went white.
*****
“Kishna.”
It was the voice that had whispered her name at the festival. It sounded like it came from far away on a zephyr, though it also came from nowhere. Kishna rubbed her eyes, blinded by a glaring white light. Blinking, she could see that she was in the middle of the desert, far from Yir’asha, but it seemed different from what she remembered: the sand was much too pale, almost like salt, and the sky was like a bright dreamscape that was spotted with golden clouds.
“Kishna,” the voice repeated. “So you’ve arrived.” Kishna glanced around and almost jumped out of her skin when she saw a white owl behind her. It turned its head curiously, its sapphire eyes inspecting her.
“You,” Kishna said, standing to her feet. “You’re the owl I saw at the festival.”
The owl ruffled its wings. “That was me. My name is Lada, and I am your spiritual guide.” Kishna noticed the owl’s beak didn’t move when she spoke; her voice seemed to be coming from all around the desert.
“Lada,” Kishna said, smiling. “Nice to meet you. Turuna told me you’d have a test for me.”
“Not a test. A vision.” Lada spread her wings and lifted into the air without flapping. “Come, fly with me.”
“Fly?”
“Oh, that’s right. Humans don’t fly too often. All you have to do is jump into the air and swim. Humans can swim.”
Feeling ridiculous, Kishna leapt in the air and stroked frantically, shocked when she stayed afloat. She kicked her legs and looped in the air with a laugh. Lada hooted, almost like a chuckle.
“Follow me.”
The owl flew into the silvery horizon, Kishna following her ivory silhouette. The white dunes below rushed beneath them, glittering like diamonds, though Kishna noticed she had no shadow on the ground. They flew for what seemed like hours, days even, with no words spoken between them.
Finally, they reached the coastline. The water was still as if it were a solid sheet of glass. In the distance, a whirling tempest of smoke rose into the clouds, the stench of burning flesh carried on the breeze. As they neared the smoke, Kishna stopped, gazing at the horrific scene below her.
“No.”
It was a village, its outer walls crumbled to dust and the wooden huts and sandstone buildings smoldering. Bodies littered the ground amongst the rubble, impaled with arrows or reduced to charred bones. Some were still hanging to life by a thread, feebly holding blood into their wounds as they cried ghostly screams. A pyre spat smoke into the village square, though the fire that once burned there was gone.
“This is Yir’asha,” Lada said, “within a single nightfall.”
“But... why? What happened?” Kishna choked.
“I assume you’ve heard of the Noresk Empire?”
Kishna nodded. “They did this... why? They’re the single most powerful nation in the world. What would they want from a village like ours?”
“Do you believe in the gods, Kishna?” Lada asked.
“Well, yes. Of course. What does-”
“What do the gods have that the races of Halrefold lack?”
“Power. Knowledge... immortality.”
“Precisely. That’s what the Noresk king, Falden, is after.”
“But why attack Yir’asha?”
Lada dropped from the air, perching by the dead pyre. Kishna followed.
“Falden is building a citadel,” Lada explained. “Not to the gods, but to himself. In the Noresk capital of Falamäd, he has ordered the construction of a black citadel, so high it reaches the heavens. Falden is imbuing the citadel with magic from mages of all around the world. Once complete, the massive power of the structure would drain the gods, filling Falden with all of their abilities combined.”
Kishna raised an eyebrow. “Would that work?”
“It might. If it does, a human like Falden would be driven mad by the unspeakable knowledge of the gods. He’d be unstoppable. If it doesn’t work, the gods would find out. With the citadel serving as a portal from the realm of deities to the realm of mortals, they would be able to descend, the most wicked of all free to reign chaos on Halrefold.”
“But what does all this have to do with Yir’asha?”
“He needs workers to build it. The laborers of Noresk are not enough for him: he wants the citadel to be built faster. He’s been hiring the Windriders to collect slaves from small villages around Halrefold.”
“Ina was right,” Kishna said. “They have been up to something.”
The shaman glanced around the dreamscape, her ruined home bringing a choke to her throat. She looked into Lada’s bright blue eyes, overflowing with wisdom.
“What should I do?” she said, lost.
“Alert Turuna. She will go to Chief Suranko. Yir’asha will be able to prepare for an attack.”
“And what about the Citadel?”
“Do not worry yourself with it just yet, Kishna,” Lada said. “Save your home before you can help the rest of the world. Are you ready to return?”
Kishna nodded. “Wake me up.”
*****
Kishna’s body jolted. She opened her eyes to see the roof of Turuna’s hut blurred above her, her mentor standing over her curiously. Kishna sat up, drenched with sweat and shivering violently, her mouth as dry as cotton. The world spun.
Turuna handed her a clay cup of water. “That was fast. You were only gone for a half hour. You did well?”
Kishna gulped the water down and her burning throat cooled. “Turuna. We have to go to Chief Suranko. There was Yir’asha and it was burning and the Citadel and-”
“Slow down, dear,” Turuna said, kneeling next to her. “Calm yourself. What did you see?”
Taking a deep breath, Kishna started over. “I met my spiritual guide. Lada, an owl. She took me across the desert to Yir’asha. When we got there it had been destroyed, nearly everyone killed and the strong captured... enslaved. There were so many dead, Turuna. So many... we have to do something...”
“You were shown a vision?”Kishna nodded. “Lada said it would happen tomorrow. An attack from the Noresk Empire, for slaves.”
“Kishna,” Turuna said, her face drawn with concern. “Are you sure it was your spiritual guide?”
“Yes. Well... I think so. She was an owl; a white owl with blue eyes.”
“Hmm. If it was a demon sent to the spiritual realm to toy with you, then that would be a difficult form to replicate. Unless...” Turuna paused.
“Unless what?”
“Nevermind. Come, Kishna, let’s go to Chief Suranko. He’ll have a hard time believing this story, but it’s worth a try.”
Turuna helped Kishna to her feet, whose legs were still uneasy from the journey. Slumping, she followed Turuna out of the hut, the bead curtain clattering behind them and the brisk night air wiping the heat from her body. The stars twinkled like fireflies over the velvet night canvas. Two of the three moons were visible tonight: the golden globe of Sharitku and her shattered son Toritsan.
The two women hurried into town, carts and stages and decorations left abandoned from the festival. Warm candlelight glowed from inside homes, silhouettes dancing over the reed shades. Across the town square rose a sandstone monument, shaped like a pyramid with its top grazed off, lined with statues of the gods of Yir’asha. On either side of the high wooden gate stood two bronze-clad young men, armed with spears and cloaked with coyote pelts. They nodded at Turuna as she approached.
“Turuna,” the first guard said, saluting. “You have business with Chief Suranko at this time of night?”
“I’m afraid it’s urgent,” the old shaman said, leaning on her cane.
The other guard sighed, bored. “You may pass.”
“Thank you.” Turuna hobbled across the threshold, Kishna stepping forward to follow her. Two bronze spears clashed across the entrance, the clamor causing Kishna to leap backwards.
“The girl stays,” the first guard says. “She has no business here.”
Turuna sneered. “This girl is the entire reason I’m here. I’ll have to ask that you move aside.” The two guards remained still, the barrier of spears impassable. With an irritated sigh, Turuna flipped a hand at each guard, a gale blowing them off of their feet and placing them not so gently some thirty feet away. “Come in, my dear.”
“Won’t you get in trouble for that?” Kishna asked, glancing back at the angry guards who struggled to their feet.
“Of course not,” Turuna said. “I’m old, what would they do to me?”
The shamans wandered down the mighty hall lined with blazing torches. It poured into a square room with a single octagonal table, occupied by Chief Suranko. He didn’t notice them entering; he was busy pouring over a long scroll, a hand grasping his temple.
“Suranko,” Turuna said. “I hope I’m not intruding.”
The chief looked up, his brown face slashed with a deep scar. His crown of bronze, lapis lazuli, and peacock feathers rested over his plaited gray hair: it was rumored he never removed it, even while he slept. A leopard pelt was slung over his shoulder and his arms were strong and covered with blue tattoos.
“Oh, it’s just you, Turuna,” he said, rolling up the scroll. “What makes you think you can barge in at all hours of the night upon your chief?”
“Don’t give me that, Suranko,” Turuna huffed. “This is dire.”
“I don’t have time for games from shamans.” Suranko stood and walked to a high bookshelf across from the table, lined with tomes and scrolls.
“Yir’asha is doomed unless you stop being so stubborn and listen to us!” Turuna said, striking her walking stick on the ground. “My apprentice was shown a vision.”
Suranko turned and looked Kishna up and down, unimpressed. “So now you come to me with girls barely past their Adulthood Ritual, crying of nightmares? Would you like me to tuck her back into bed as well?”
“Quit being a grumpy fool. Go ahead, Kishna, dear, tell him what you saw.”
Kishna stepped forward, her mouth open but no sound coming out. Suranko glared at her, impatiently tapping his fingers on the bookshelf. Clearing her throat, Kishna tried again.
“Well, sir, uh... your majesty,” Kishna began. “I’m an apprentice of Turuna’s. And... tonight I was to go on my final test, to become a real shaman. A spirit journey.”
“You have been training a shaman without consent of the Council, Turuna?” Suranko said. “Do you know what this could mean for Yir‘asha if an outsider was to find out?”
“You can’t just expect us to roll over and die off,” Turuna said. “We were the reason our village became what it is today.”
Suranko huffed. “This is a discussion for later. Don’t think I won’t forget about it. Go on, young one.”
“I met my guide, Lada. She led me to a prediction of Yir’asha tomorrow morning. Falden had recruited Windriders to attack and enslave us. Most were dead, the rest, taken.”
Suranko scratched his chin. “You believe this girl's tale, Turuna?”
“She is no liar,” Turuna said. “And her vision could very well become a reality unless you as a chief do something.”
Suranko paced the room, hands clasped behind his back. He mumbled to himself distantly, and then stopped before the shamans. “Very well,” he said finally. “My warriors and archers will be mobilized around Yir'asha’s outer walls at sunrise. Turuna, gather the mystics and tell them to prepare. After you have alerted them, retreat back to your home and hide.”
“Hide?!” Turuna yelled. “Hide? Do you think of me as a coward now?”
Suranko leered. “That’s an order. No outsiders may know of the power that you or your apprentice here hold. That would spell doom for Yir’asha.”
“It would spell doom if you force one of your most powerful allies to cower inside the walls.”
“Enough,” Suranko roared. “Now go. Do as I say or I will consider it treason.”
Turuna shook with anger. “As you wish,” she spat. She turned, storming down the hall with Kishna behind her, silent. The two guards had returned to their posts, eying each other nervously as Turuna came through.
“Now, Kishna,” Turuna said, “I have work to do. Go to the hut and stay there. Don’t leave until morning. I’ll be back in a few hours.”
“Yes, Turuna,” Kishna said. She watched the old woman vanish into the night. Solemnly, she retreated to the hut, her head spinning and her body aching. Upon reaching the cramped cottage, Kishna collapsed on a large pillow with a sigh, her head still throbbing from Turuna‘s potion. The vision of Yir’asha playing over in her mind, she slipped into an uneasy sleep. That night, Kishna dreamed of fire and smoke.
And that's chapter one. It's my third rewrite... the first draft was simply awful and this one is just kind of bad. Hopefully by rewrite six it'll be halfway decent. Let me know what you think, and most of all: Does the story keep you interested at all? Do you care what happens to Kishna and her village, or would you rather it be burned to the ground so the story will be over?