- Joined
- Oct 14, 2014
I'm now imagining SammyClassicSonicFan shirtless and flicking off Cthulhu while Alyssa Milano is doubled over laughing.![]()
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I'm now imagining SammyClassicSonicFan shirtless and flicking off Cthulhu while Alyssa Milano is doubled over laughing.![]()
That sounds way cooler, I would totally buy a book about sammy fighting Cthulhu. Someone write that please.I'm now imagining SammyClassicSonicFan shirtless and flicking off Cthulhu while Alyssa Milano is doubled over laughing.![]()
Shit, every time I think of Alphaboy, and when I'm actually writing it... God, I am fucking pumped. To fully describe my present emotional state, imagine Sean Gillespie, his shirt torn, flipping off a horde of butt-fucking-ugly terrorist monsters from the depths of Hell, scaring them off as Alyssa Milano is on her knees, looking up at him.
Now, somewhere... somehow...
Someone's gonna pay.
They hunted him down.
They murdered his birth parents.
They threatened his adoptive parents.
And they've kidnapped the one girl he would kill for.
Now, somewhere... somehow...
Someone's gonna pay.
It's just a really thorough book review, with quotes and citations if I am correct. I just started my semester and reading last week, and I'm already about eight chapters in. My copy of the novel is only about 220 pages long.@Connor How far are you into All Quiet on the Western Front? It's a pretty incredible book. I hope it doesn't cause you to sink into nihilism and edgelordness though. Whats the paper you have to write about?
It's a genre throwback to action movies of the 1980's and early 1990's.Connor, thinly disguised adolescent revenge fantasies were passe the moment The Crow hit cinemas, e.g. before you were born.
It's a genre throwback to action movies of the 1980's and early 1990's.
Ye of little faith... It's difficult to write action in prose form, sure, but it's not insurmountable.Well, at least you admit it's derivative.
Why are you trying to write a movie in book form? What works in movies often doesn't work in books, and I think that's doubly so for action movies. Action just isn't very exciting on the page, no matter how well written. This is why "action novels" isn't really a genre.
Ye of little faith... It's difficult to write action in prose form, sure, but it's not insurmountable.
Look at All Quiet on the Western Front, for instance. It's written in the first person, present tense, giving the skirmishes a sense of immediacy and reality. I actually felt I was in the trenches that the writer, Erich Remarque, waded through when he served in the war.Can you give me an example?
Look at All Quiet on the Western Front, for instance. It's written in the first person, present tense, giving the skirmishes a sense of immediacy and reality. I actually felt I was in the trenches that the writer, Erich Remarque, waded through when he served in the war.
You'd still need dedication, skill and experience to make it work, none of which you have.Ye of little faith... It's difficult to write action in prose form, sure, but it's not insurmountable.
marriage
@Dudeofteenage , who pissed in your cornflakes? I know it wasn't an action novel, and already, I'm picking up a strong anti-war/anti-violence sentiment from what I've read so far.
What's becoming apparent to me, at least at this point, is that I have two options when it comes to writing, and neither of them are particularly pleasant..
Look at All Quiet on the Western Front, for instance. It's written in the first person, present tense, giving the skirmishes a sense of immediacy and reality. I actually felt I was in the trenches that the writer, Erich Remarque, waded through when he served in the war.
Thanks for the Wikipedia entry! I've read All Quiet on the Western Front. That is not an action book. It is not at all similar to action movies. I know because they made a movie of it, and it wasn't an action movie! It does not have long, drawn out details of action scenes including who shot when and how. It is also not about some guy seeking revenge for his family's death at the hands of cartoonish villains. In fact it's about the exact opposite, it's about a guy realising the pointlessness of violence, and that the people he thought were cartoonish villains are actually just other people.
In summary, try again.
@Dudeofteenage , who pissed in your cornflakes? I know it wasn't an action novel, and already, I'm picking up a strong anti-war/anti-violence sentiment from what I've read so far.
Newsflash, Dude... I'm not too concerned about originality this early in the game. In fact, I'm of the belief that it's what you do with the tools at your disposal in your own unique way that counts, rather than the simple fact the tool was used. Also, going by Sturgeon's Law, only a small portion of genre fiction (anywhere from 1-10%) is truly great. I'm not writing with some pretentious ambition to create highbrow literature that's going to stand the test of time and be lectured about in college classes. I want to scare people. I want to make them laugh and cry. I want to keep them on the edges of their seats. Above all, I want to tell good, entertaining stories.Your determination to write an "action novel" seems less about trying to do something innovative for innovation's sake and more about your indifference to what makes novels effective, and general ignorance of literature.