*Slow breath*. Yeah. Amelia's over, and now I have to think about what to do next and how to do...
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
This one.If Amelia was 'TanaNari attempts Worm', then this is 'TanaNari attempts American Gods'.
You just wanna see me fail, you asshole.This one.
It's ambitious as hell, as you'll be trying to meet or exceed Gaiman.
Not ideas alone, but yeah.Is path the one where magic comes from ideas? So there's baseball team spirits and car spirits and all that?
... If I didn't like the idea, it wouldn't be up there for voting.As to which one I think you shuld do first I think you should do the one you think would be the most fun for you to do because people who enjoy what they are doing are generally the most productive and seriously if you don't enjoy something why choose to do it
Huh. There's a way to look at it.I would read Amelia if I could actually get into Worm, but like I just said, I think Marvel and DC just killed my interest in Superheros entirely. Anyway I voted for Second Nature since it sounds funny as hell, and Path Magic which also sounds great. Can't really decide between those two.
Sticking to online. But don't get me wrong, I am SO not opposed to physical publications. If I find an interested publisher... I'll take it.I would probably read any of them, though I voted to Path Magic and Midara. Are you planning on sticking with the online formula, or were you planning to move to self published or even submitting to a publisher eventually?
I was looking at Wordpress. Seems to have a good rep.I have to agree with the others' concern that Price is too close to Worm to do right after Amelia. Maybe after you finished one or two other stories? As for where to post, both of the web serials I'm currently reading (twisted cogs and twig) are hosted on WordPress so you may want to check that out.
Midara is a big setting. Kinda like Worm, part of why I like it as an option. I can do a series of books with it.All of these ideas sound awesome, and I'd love to see TanaNari write them all. But if he's asking us to only vote for one... Honestly, and mind you these are only my opinons,
Midara sounds like the kind of story that he could etching at for a decade or more, and maybe never be completely do with, so I'd say that's something to aim for, not with as the first original work he writes.
Path Magic... I'm not sure what to make of the description here, if it takes centuries to gather any real power and the main protagonist is young that that's a long way away. She'd have to hang in there on her wits, skill, and the aid of her allies. If done right I could see it being a good story, but from the description given in TanaNari's post alone I'm not sure if it's the kind of story I'd want to read.
Second Nature and Price...
Second Nature sounds interesting enough that I'd really be willing to read either or. I'm not sure what kind of plot Second Nature would have from the description given, but it sounds as if it would be almost entirely the kind slice-of-life goodness Amelia was well-known for (when TanaNari wasn't burying us in GrimDark, Unfortunate Implications, and well, everything else Amelia was well-known for and aptly given title 'Darkest Fixfic' for,) in a comedic fantasy flavor and I have to admit, while comedy isn't normally something I like to read, and still uncommon in my watching habits, I TanaNari could still pull it off in a way I'd love to read.
And if Price is everything we love in Amelia when it still at street-level, with familiar characters where possible, well, I'd love to read it for sure.
So, yeah. Second Nature and Price have my votes.
And the more I look at Second Nature and really try to figure out how I want to *write* it. The more I wonder if I picked the wrong medium. I'm beginning to think it would be better served as a graphic novel or web comic than a text only story. Just based on the sheer difficulty I'm having at writing a chapter that works right.
I actually had an idea for something like that. Not a full story idea, just a tiny fragment of one.What about a story set in a world,where time travail is used in every facet of society,from transportation,to food,entertainment,economics and vacationing,a world like that would look like a utopia at first glance, but looks could be deceiving.
Serious answer: I'd rather see you fail at something ambitions than succeed at something easy, yeah. I suspect you learned a lot more from your failures than your successes in Amelia.
That.... feel like bad advice for a first original work actually. For someone who wants to be a writer the most important thing for the first original book is to finish it. Because afterward you're going to write another, then another, then another...Serious answer: I'd rather see you fail at something ambitions than succeed at something easy, yeah. I suspect you learned a lot more from your failures than your successes in Amelia.
Tongue in cheeks answer: You haven't failed my asshole yet. Keep at it.
I think it depends on your economics.That.... feel like bad advice for a first original work actually. For someone who wants to be a writer the most important thing for the first original book is to finish it. Because afterward you're going to write another, then another, then another...
From everything he's said during the writing of Amelia, it was all about growing as an author, finding his limits, breaching them, and looking for more. Assuming that that quality of self improvement is a consistent thing, sticking with one genre could work just fine, really. There are lots of things that can be explored through nuanced expression within the superhero genre itself.Changing genre is also a risk, and it's one which I think TanaNari ought to embrace. Even if you don't do magic next, I highly recommend doing something other than super heroes. This is both for personal growth, and also for branding: you don't want to be "that supers author" -- well, unless you do want to be a genre author. In that case, go supers and never look back.
It's magic, I don't have to explain shit?I really shouldn't be questioning this rather than the hoverjet in the pants, but people "growing up" and no longer believing in magic when they have all the evidence that it does is one of my pet peeves. Unless there's some bizarre doublethink going on; if you would believe it without proof, then you can see the proof? Eh.
Luckily, don't have to worry about that. The mechanics of the setting will allow an apprentice like Amanda to actually fight a master like Liam in physical combat. There's a cap on what magic can do to improve upon the human body, so if they stick to mere super martial arts, she will be able to fight... for about five minutes... against things that, if they used that kind of strategy, could fight each other for hours.That aside, I voted for Path Magic. Liam doesn't really spark my interest, but the "soap opera and political stylings" were my favorite parts of Amelia. The theme of "real power takes centuries" is also particularly appealing. I do love reading about characters' struggles for power, but I'm sick to death of reading fanfics where the MC becomes a god after a few years.
Continuity doesn't happen in real life, either. I can't justify a legitimate continuity between the modern USA and even as recent as the Second World War.The main reason I chose Path rather than Midara is because of the repeated disasters. This is honestly more of a personal failing of mine rather than a legitimate criticism, but that completely wrecks any sense of progress/purpose/stability in a series. I had the same problem with Tolkien. I would totally read the shit out of Reclamation, though.
Yeah. Honestly, that was the part of Worm I hated most. The Endbringers. Scion. I'd have been much happier writing my 'fic without those coming into play.In the interests of completeness, I might as well talk about my feelings about Price, too. I can't really be objective coming off of Amelia, but I'm a bit habituated to superheroes right now. Ask me again in a few days. Setting aside my low tolerance for darkness, I have been absolutely craving a superhero series without some kind of cosmic-scale threat in-universe. When they exist, they really overshadow any other potential conflict even if they're never mentioned. it's hard for me to care about some random mugging when the idea of the planet being destroyed is lurking in the depths of my mind, you know?
Don't worry. I will.
Price doesn't function like Worm. For starters, it's a "the earliest records of supers are drawn on cave walls" type setting.I really like Price, but you will need to be very careful in untangling your characters from the WORM world setting.
Heh. Then you'd probably like Midara and Path better than you'll like Price. The first two at least take time to study their magic and treat the harnessing of power as a science unto itself. It's closer to Full Metal Alchemist in its approach than, say, D&D.I don't like purely magic settings, and would rather there be a sci-fi explanation for 'magic' in my stories.
Luckily, there's only one post-apoc in the Midara setting. All the others are somewhere between "dark ages" and "renaissance" and a couple are "disaster/action" where it's set right in the middle of said apocalypse.I disagree with the others, in that I feel the post-apocalyptic settings are the ones with the least potential growth. They're overdone so much, and having "centuries" between books means that they're sequels in name only. On a more selfish note, there is less incentive for people to get emotionally invested since they are different enough that they wouldn't tie in.
He is fun. I never did get to explore his character as much as I'd like. Really, I went out of my way to avoid letting the OCs dominate the story, knowing full well I'd one day unzip them and create my own story from them.I think Zach is a very interesting character, and a modern urban setting is more in tune with what I'd like to read.
Valid points.Serious answer: I'd rather see you fail at something ambitions than succeed at something easy, yeah. I suspect you learned a lot more from your failures than your successes in Amelia.
Tongue in cheeks answer: You haven't failed my asshole yet. Keep at it.
Fair enough. To be clear, there will be no romantic anything between those two. Masters getting involved with apprentices is viewed as pedophilia. In a world where a mage's powers can be stripped by the same forces that grant them powers if they break the wrong rule.I think the others things that make Path less attractive is the presence of uber-powerful beings with one being mentor of the heroine. Liam saving Amanda edge into the "romantic supernatural man/girl" plot-line and the jaded/inhuman reminds of ageless edgy!not-SI that infest fanfiction and sadly fiction. The other point might be that Amanda not becoming high-tier isn't something you can easily fit into a summary... so reading the story might easily let me expect Deus Ex Machina power-ups at any moment.
Overall, I'd say Path might send very mixed signals depending on the readerships and I wouldn't take it as a first original work.
It basically is. Powers go unexplained in the setting, in the "why and how" sense, at least. Plenty of knowledge about "what" out there. It's mostly out in the open. Phrases like "the Mark of Cain" are used to justify the 'why supers don't kill' trope.Price, I would say, might feel... more right as a supernatural setting that happens to have traits from superheroes settings than a taken superhero setting.
Yeah. You'd be amazed at how many times I wanted to explore plotlines in Amelia only to be stopped by "fuck, that's too dark for this setting".You do make a very good point in saying that Worm was an easy mode : criminals could be found easily rather than hiding behind disguises and inside buildings. Traps, blackmail and advanced social-fu weren't used against parahumans. Money too, how I laughed at the countless fanfictions where the answer to Taylor financial's problems was to rob gang-members...
Anyway my point was that in such a setting, why use costumes? Fake identities and masks would most certainly be common, notably to shield families, but the true terror of super-powered people for everyone is when they can hide (As countless stealth games demonstrated : Deus Ex and Crysis anyone?)
I also approve of greater powers having greater costs. It feels far more right when characters earns their power-ups rather than win the lottery... and keep winning it.
Well, it's *meant* to be silly... so... but, yeah, this is the kind of thing I'd rather do as a webcomic. I'll focus on something else and maybe stumble across an artist that'd be interested in working with me after I get a little better known.On Second Nature, I'd tend to avoid the story as a first work because : it seems that a lot would need to be explained for the reader, and it could easily end up too silly. The explanation problem is concerning because it meant limiting both events and explanations to what is actually relevant... with theoretically much greater length restriction for the story than for Amelia. The silliness problem is one I had myself and was noted in Amelia with the difficulty to juggle between fluff horror and fluffy fluff.
I think Second Nature is a different kind of story than Amelia with a different structure that might make it difficult to use the experience gathered by writing Amelia. Thus it's, for me, a story to breach once you know you can keep a story focused on a part of a setting and a plot-line for 90,000 and calling it done.