kathleen_dailey: (Default)
No surprise that I'm thinking about T'Pring and Spock right now, and wondering whether "Aria da Capo" might be worth revisiting. I'm six thousand or so words into it, and that's a lot of pixels to waste. (Not sure whether I can even find the file--I last paid attention to the draft version two or three computers ago.)

I know the beginning and the middle, but not the end, which is why I abandoned the project. On the one hand, their personalities and values are so (canonically) similar that it's no wonder they ended up where they did in "Amok Time." On the other hand, ADC is set a century or so later, and what was once repellent might now be attractive. (Or at least they might now think it's worthwhile being partnered with a companion who groks you.) On the third hand, ADC is more or less set in the Unspoken Truth universe, which complicates things exponentially. Or maybe it's actually taking place in a UT alterniverse. Hmm--that would make things a LOT easier.
kathleen_dailey: (Default)

Unbelievably, I'm going actively in search of Trek fic once again, hoping to be inspired to revisit at least one of the bunnies (now sadly aging hares, long of tooth, sparse of fur, and very very crotchety) hanging around my hard drive. What_Alchemy's new T'Pring story "On Restless Pinions" was welcome reading, and made me glad that someone else has recently been contemplating the character's backstory and fate.

For me, the definitive T'Pring story is still Rabble Rouser's "Sympathy for the Devil":

www.fanfiction.net/s/452636/1/

"On Restless Pinions" couldn't be more different in plot, subplot, characterization, and style:

what-alchemy.dreamwidth.org/9474.html

Both stories have their structural and stylistic strengths and weaknesses. But they share a deep respect for, and understanding of, the complexities of the principal character.

My own very drafty (as in so full of holes it's gossamerly threadbare) draft of "Aria da Capo" is now in its tenth or so year of non-completion. Every now and again I pull it out and reread it, hoping that an actual story might lurk somewhere beneath all the character exploration. But where the Romulan Commander's story arcs virtually wrote themselves (how could they not, with such a dramatic character and so many galactic-scale events--not to mention a hundred years of rich and malleable canon--at their centre), I find that my T'Pring story is really all about What Makes the Lady Tick. That topic might be fascinating to me, but it's guaranteed to put a reader to sleep in five minutes. As yet, I have no genuine story and very little prospect of one unless lightning strikes.

Part of the problem (maybe most of it) is that I have a hard time writing in any universe that doesn't (at least on its fringes) incorporate my OTP. And while I'm not writing ADC just so I can reunite T'Pring and Spock romantically (too much polluted water under that bridge, prolly), I'd like to know that I'm not automatically closed off from the possibility if the story should happen to head in that direction. I had a minor triumph a couple of weeks ago when I managed to write the last sentence of the story, which is what I've always had to do before I can even hope to get to that point. The line is a poor thing right now, and weak, and a world-class cliche, but at least it's there, which may help. Or possibly not.

I've never forgotten Claire Gabriel's advice from decades ago. You need SUSPENSE--line after line, scene after scene, chapter after chapter. The reader has to be invested in turning to the next page or reading the next paragraph because she just has to know what's going to happen there. I tried to put that advice into practice with every one of my stories, and if I didn't always succeed at least I knew that I'd made my best effort. With my T'Pring story, the only suspense lies in the fact that the protags are older and have had some mighty interesting experiences since their wedding-day; those two things just aren't enough, unless I can convince the reader that  the protags are (1) much wiser, (2) not any wiser at all, (3) even less wise than they were in "Amok Time," or (4) mad, bad, and dangerous to know--at least for each other, and in some dramatically interesting way. 

I believe that the only potentially productive plot thread in ADC is the last one, and that even if Spock and T'Pring have both gone all respectable and establishment in their middle age, they weren't always like that. I don't want to say too much more about that through-line in case it doesn't pan out, but canon is canon, and even when it's frustrating on its surface, it's still there for the deep and delicious retconning.

Maybe I'll take yet another (sigh) look at ADC and search for some evidence of lightning, or at least faint, distant thunder.



 




 

kathleen_dailey: (Default)

Fandom hasn't been much fun lately, partly because of the staggeringly stupid wankage but mostly because there's no source material that's appealing to me right now. My T'Pring story has been sitting half-finished on the hard drive for about six years, and every now and then I take it out and look at it to see whether any new developments are about to reveal themselves. Sadly, answer comes there none. Someday soon I'm going to have to admit that I've said all that I have to say about the TOS universe and its characters.

I've toyed with a few non-Trek ideas. For years I've been wanting to undo Gillian Holroyd's bad, bad decision in Bell, Book, and Candle, and maybe I'll actually accomplish that one day. (For some reason, I've long envisioned a crossover between BB & C and Auntie Mame--crazy, but think of that 1950s New York setting.) I have a few pages of David Addison in fiftyish middle age already written, but that's probably a topic best not explored in depth. And the five futures of Yu Shulien (CTHD) are still waiting in limbo to unfold.

I've been in search of fic--any fic, anywhere, by anyone, in any universe--that makes me catch my breath in awe at the author's skill and imagination. The last story that triggered that feeling in me was "[I succeeded in crawling into the breast of my big boss!]" by Miss_Priss. That was the best piece of fic I've read in years and years.

http://archiveofourown.org/collections/yuletide2009/works/32850

But since then, nothing I've read has even come close to engaging either brain or heart.

Worse, nothing I'm watching has inspired me to write stories. I'm very much enjoying Mad Men, Big Bang Theory, Modern Family, Lewis, and Sherlock, but (like Babylon 5) those shows don't seem to be in need of either post-ep or spackle fic, the only two subgenres I'm apparently any good at. I'm only somewhat enjoying The Closer, Warehouse 13, and The Event. I thought for a while that Castle, White Collar, and The Mentalist had some promise, but they're burdened with derivative writing and uninteresting characters. (Except for Castle's mom--maybe I can find a time-travelling way to write her into a Gillian-and-Mame fic. I have a feeling she'd get along well with both those ladies.) Being Erica has gone all stupid and soppy, and if they're heading for an Erica/Dr. Tom pairing I won't be sticking around to witness it. House, Bones, Doctor Who--for me, all writeoffs. (And I never ever thought I'd say that about Doctor Who, but thereyago.) I think Republic of Doyle returns in January or thereabouts--not much to look forward to, but it's something.

I live in hope that some episode of some show will have the kind of impact on me that "The Enterprise Incident" did.

kathleen_dailey: (Default)
Never have I been so glad to see the end of a month. May was truly awful, and not only (but maybe principally) because of Merc in retrograde. Certainly nothing worked as it was supposed to--including and especially the house search. Whoever thought that there was a buyer's market in this town was, as the RE folks say, dreaming in Technicolor. But we managed to get our offer in and accepted for The Enormous Retro Condo (and, thanks to my agent's wiles, we didn't give the sellers time to think--if we had, they would have been looking at multiples for sure). If all goes well we'll be in there before August. Gigantic sigh of relief all around, except on the part of the cats (one of whom will have to be smuggled in).

Major renos are on the horizon. Stepping into the place is like stepping back in time to 1982, but at least everything is neat and clean and hasn't been mucked up by previous renovators. Thank you, spiffy old gent who lived there so tidily and unimaginatively for the last couple of decades.

I kept hoping that AOS would spur me to tell a story, but now that Romulus has been wiped out in at least one universe I've kinda lost the desire to revisit the characters. I have the T'Pring opus (begun in 2001 and never finished) gathering sand on my hard drive, so maybe I can find a way to rework that one in the new timeline. Or not. Many fans are sure (or at least they hope) that T'Pring has died on Vulcan, and I have to admit that the chances are good that she probably did. Oh, well. At least Wildcat is happy about the S/U, and I'm happy about that!

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