grumbles and a half-assed book review
Aug. 15th, 2005 06:11 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I spent much of yesterday beating my head against the second fight scene in "Apartment Manager" 15 -- you know, the one with Shinkan and whoever won the Yukiko vs. Iruka match. (Not telling!) I wrote it, and the stuff around it, but it was like pulling teeth. Something just wouldn't click, even though everything followed in a logical progression.
I figured it out at about 4am this morning. Woke up from a dream and thought, "Oh, of course. The mist jutsu doesn't extend that far," and it all made sense.
So tonight I'm going to rework the fight and then move on to the final match. :-)
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I also read A Fine and Private Place, by Peter S. Beagle, which is a beautiful, understated book, about a man who's spent 20 years living in a cemetary, two ghosts, and a widow, and about choices and philosophy and love. On the surface it's all about death and endings, and then one level down it's about beginnings, but really it's about middles and muddling on through.
Also, it has talking animals with no explanation, and somehow you never think to ask for an explanation because it's perfectly obvious why some people can understand them and others can't.
That takes skill to write.
I figured it out at about 4am this morning. Woke up from a dream and thought, "Oh, of course. The mist jutsu doesn't extend that far," and it all made sense.
So tonight I'm going to rework the fight and then move on to the final match. :-)
------------------------------
I also read A Fine and Private Place, by Peter S. Beagle, which is a beautiful, understated book, about a man who's spent 20 years living in a cemetary, two ghosts, and a widow, and about choices and philosophy and love. On the surface it's all about death and endings, and then one level down it's about beginnings, but really it's about middles and muddling on through.
Also, it has talking animals with no explanation, and somehow you never think to ask for an explanation because it's perfectly obvious why some people can understand them and others can't.
That takes skill to write.