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Lauren ([info]ladylauren) wrote in [info]otf_wank,
@ 2010-11-15 13:06:00


Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Current mood:busy
Entry tags:nanowrimo

AnNaNoWaRe (Annual NaNo Wank Report)
It's been a relatively quiet month. Alan Holman has made his triumphant and frequently suppressed return as the user TrutherWriter, whose novel synopsis includes such gems as:

Tim is real, but Israel is a CIA/MOSSAD creation. Black helecoptors, paranoid dreams ... 9/11 was an inside job -- you know it, you feel it, you pump your fist, you're a champion of the truth! Vaccines cause autism whether Tim's teacher thinks different. Why the hell do the girls that chase Tim so violently get a couch in their bathrooms while non-violent Tim gets a not-chocolate surprise that takes some time to wash out the stink!

His regular posts don't make much more sense either, but sadly I cannot link to any of them as they've all been suppressed for being abusive towards others or using profanity.

But I know what you really want, OTFers; news on the infamous marienbadmylove. What's this? you ask. Surely he was banned last year for plagiarism? Well, apparently being banned twice didn't stop Alan Holman, and being banned a mere once hasn't stopped Mark Leach, whose surname is (almost) quite apropos. Thus far his one and only post is in the Extreme Accomplishments Shoutout thread, as follows:

Success! I just crossed the 500,000-word mark with “A Canadian Marienbad,” my Nano entry and literary tribute to the people of Canada. I created the manuscript over a couple of hours by using a do-it-yourself novel kit I read about in the letters section of the infamous Laura Miller story on Salon.com. Starting with the basic 50,000-word template, I repeatedly pressed the copy and paste button in order to push the manuscript past one million words. Then I used my computer’s find and replace editing functions to customize the text with Canadian concepts and themes, turning it into my own story. By the end of the month I expect to expand my manuscript to five million words. Shouldn’t be too hard. After all, it’s just a matter of repeatedly pressing CTRL-V, then adding in my own ideas. But I will need to be careful not to strain my index finger!

Well, at least we assume it's the same author. He's posting under the name bccomox, also on LiveJournal, and so far this is his only post. Time will tell if there is more wank yet to be mined from this source.

The prize for NaNoWanker of the Year, however, undoubtedly goes to Laura Miller, whose article on Salon.com, Better yet, DON'T write that novel drew the ire of a multitude of NaNo participants, who didn't appreciate being told their work was a waste of time, nor the implication that because they were writers, not readers, they were doing the publishing world a disservice. Word of advice to Ms. Miller: writers fairly often also happen to be readers. They also happen to be capable of reading your ill-informed article and taking umbrage.

It just makes this wanka wonder where Miller thinks professional writers come from. Here's a hint: they do not spring fully formed from the forehead of some fantastic literary deity. They start out small and end up big. And for some of them, that start is NaNoWriMo.



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[info]keri
2010-11-15 08:43 pm UTC (link)
By the way, is there a nanowrimo type thing for artists who want to art more often, but get lazy or stuck without prompts/deadlines? I feel like there must be...

But as much as I enjoy imagining stories, I learned several years ago that I am not a writer, and am actually more suited to being an editor or beta. But I can art pretty good, I think. Having recognized this, I don't feel guilty about having absolutely no interest in nanowrimo (I used to feel guilty about it, because of all my friends participating, but whatevs)

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tetradecimal
2010-11-15 08:53 pm UTC (link)
There's like a nanowrimo for comics, but I don't know about prompts.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]keri
2010-11-15 11:49 pm UTC (link)
Yeah, but comics is different from other kinds of art. More storytelling, really.

And I'm lazy about liking prompts, but I'm at the point where I'm still learning techniques and stuff, so it helps if someone else tells me what to art, so that my focus is on the how and not the what. (I didn't have much in the way of art instruction in elementary/high school, so I never really thought of art as something I could do, since I didn't really have a chance to explore different ways of arting, and I didn't have much instruction in how to use the tools available to do things. I took a drawing class on a whim as an elective my last year of university, and fell in love, and also realized how much I don't know.)

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tetradecimal
2010-11-15 11:58 pm UTC (link)
I don't think it's that different, especially if you like imagining stories... you could team up with someone who does write? It sounded like you might be interested. If not, good luck finding prompts.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]puipui
2010-11-15 10:56 pm UTC (link)
But as much as I enjoy imagining stories, I learned several years ago that I am not a writer, and am actually more suited to being an editor or beta.

See, this is why they need a NaNoEdMo. Because if there's anything that NaNoWriMo has taught the world, it's that good editing is really really really important.

Well, NaNoWriMo and Anne Rice. Can't forget Anne Rice.

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[info]rhosyn_du
2010-11-16 12:26 am UTC (link)
NaNoEdMo is in March, actually.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]re_weird
2010-11-16 02:23 am UTC (link)
I know some people on my flist are doing Sketchvember where they draw a sketch every day but I don't think it's related to NaNoWriMo.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]kaesa
2010-11-16 03:50 am UTC (link)
I saw a few people on a Making Light thread talking about how, since a picture is supposedly worth a thousand words, they were going to try drawing 50 pictures this November, with the same spirit of "yeah, sure, this isn't my best work but I am CREATING STUFF!" One of them was doing a graphic novel, but I don't see why you couldn't set a particular goal for creating x amount of pieces of art, or one really big project, or whatever.

Sadly, there's not really a community for it, but as a writer who often finds art inspiring, I bet you could find some NaNo writers who would cheer you on in the spirit of mutual frantic creativity.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]keri
2010-11-16 05:52 am UTC (link)
Sadly, there's not really a community for it

Well, if there wasn't, you made me think about creating one, and there is now. :/ http://community.livejournal.com/art_prompt

Now to see if anybody else is interested. :)

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]kaesa
2010-11-16 02:12 pm UTC (link)
Cool! I wish you luck. And art. And now I want a teapot with a tree on it.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]bienegold
2010-11-16 05:21 am UTC (link)
I bet people would be into it if you started it (though I totally get not wanting to be the person).

There's already NaKniSweMo! There's always room for more ill-advised undertakings in November.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]keri
2010-11-16 05:55 am UTC (link)
Heh. Anything done in November is probably ill-advised, with exams approaching and holidays and junk (especially in the US).

Anyway, I did start a community (http://community.livejournal.com/art_prompt) to at least post some prompt ideas monthly for me and maybe one or two other people I know who'd be interested in doing it with me (I already suggested "art about the way tea tastes" a week or so ago, and it seemed to be a popular idea). Perhaps other people would be interested, and we could do regular monthly challenges, not just in November.

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[info]eevee
2010-11-16 11:07 am UTC (link)
It's even worse for those of us who run on solar-powered batteries, so to speak. I'm still trying to adjust to the tragedy of switching from Daylight Saving Time. Over here the sun sets at ~4PM and I'd be sleeping 16 hours a day if I could. *sigh*

The comm looks awesome! I'd love to join but I'm too afraid that it will be one of those things that I join and never get around to posting to, so I'll try to see if I get the time and inspiration to use your prompt and THEN post it there. ;)

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]ladylauren
2010-11-16 07:35 am UTC (link)
There's ArtSoMoFo; it was in October, but there's no reason not to apply the basic principles now!

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]bigbigtruck
2010-11-16 03:04 pm UTC (link)
Not a NaNo thing, but Harvey James' cat-girl project is running again: http://harveyjames.livejournal.com/164155.html

I've found these to be a good warm-up exercise, at least.

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