soupoftomato wrote:
PlutoIsHades wrote:
soupoftomato wrote:
Why do all myth based stories have to be demi-centric ever since Percy Jackson?
Get some imagination.
Try a "fractured myth", which I guess would be a parody of myths, considering "fractured fairytale".
It would actually be interesting to see a good humorous take without random teenagers.what happens to Xylon that doesn't happen to Percy.
So there will be a lot of similarities aside from this?
I don't have the whole story mapped out(I hate writing like that), but the plot is currently headed in a different direction from Percy Jackson.
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Haha, part of a story I'm writing is made up of emails (most of it is journal entries, but the emails are shorter)
Dhanus 26
Subject: Journals
All staff members, please make sure that all students are typing in their journals every day. You know this is required for the MTE records, even if they don’t. No more slip-ups again; last year was disastrous, nobody was recording anything towards the end! (Not even you, Jan—our English teacher.) We can’t afford for our school to lose any more status points. That would mean cutbacks.
By the way, we have two new students. Make sure they are both quickly situated with electronic journals. We’ve got some in the storage cabinets.
Thanks,
M. Adler
P.S. The coffee pot seems to have been misplaced in the teachers’ lounge. Does anyone know where it is?
[3 long journal entries]
Dhanus 27
Subject: Hi staff
I’m relieved to report that the coffee pot has been recovered. Please don’t hoard property belonging to the staff at large, Derrick.
Yesterday we did not have 100% journal participation, which is what is to be expected every day. Thanks for keeping tabs on the kids, Jan—I’m glad the new seventh grader is contributing already to the MTE journal compilation. It was your oversight, however, that we didn’t send an e-journal home to the new fourth grader. Do make sure not to let that happen again.
Note—what incompetent fool up in registration offices forgot to give the King kids maps of town? Catherine told her homeroom teacher she was lost until another student showed her the way to school. I suppose we’ll have to provide her with one.
Thanks,
M. Adler
[3 long journal entries]
Dhanus 28
Subject: re: Hi staff
Marta,
I wasn’t “hoarding” anything. The coffee pot happened to have been forgotten in my classroom when I had my morning espresso.
D. Blake
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Wickimen wrote:
Haha, part of a story I'm writing is made up of emails (most of it is journal entries, but the emails are shorter)
Dhanus 26
Subject: Journals
All staff members, please make sure that all students are typing in their journals every day. You know this is required for the MTE records, even if they don’t. No more slip-ups again; last year was disastrous, nobody was recording anything towards the end! (Not even you, Jan—our English teacher.) We can’t afford for our school to lose any more status points. That would mean cutbacks.
By the way, we have two new students. Make sure they are both quickly situated with electronic journals. We’ve got some in the storage cabinets.
Thanks,
M. Adler
P.S. The coffee pot seems to have been misplaced in the teachers’ lounge. Does anyone know where it is?
[3 long journal entries]
Dhanus 27
Subject: Hi staff
I’m relieved to report that the coffee pot has been recovered. Please don’t hoard property belonging to the staff at large, Derrick.
Yesterday we did not have 100% journal participation, which is what is to be expected every day. Thanks for keeping tabs on the kids, Jan—I’m glad the new seventh grader is contributing already to the MTE journal compilation. It was your oversight, however, that we didn’t send an e-journal home to the new fourth grader. Do make sure not to let that happen again.
Note—what incompetent fool up in registration offices forgot to give the King kids maps of town? Catherine told her homeroom teacher she was lost until another student showed her the way to school. I suppose we’ll have to provide her with one.
Thanks,
M. Adler
[3 long journal entries]
Dhanus 28
Subject: re: Hi staff
Marta,
I wasn’t “hoarding” anything. The coffee pot happened to have been forgotten in my classroom when I had my morning espresso.
D. Blake
Ooh, cool! It's futuristic, right? Slightly dystopic/utopic?
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Wickimen wrote:
Thanks
Yeah it is
I seem to be on a scifi kick
Scifi is awesome. I write almost solely scifi and fantasy and it's very fun to write.
Last edited by PlutoIsHades (2012-03-18 15:17:21)
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PlutoIsHades wrote:
Wickimen wrote:
Thanks
Yeah it is
I seem to be on a scifi kickScifi is awesome. I write almost solely scifi and fantasy and it's very fun to write.
Quite so
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Wickimen wrote:
Haha, part of a story I'm writing is made up of emails (most of it is journal entries, but the emails are shorter)
Dhanus 26
Subject: Journals
All staff members, please make sure that all students are typing in their journals every day. You know this is required for the MTE records, even if they don’t. No more slip-ups again; last year was disastrous, nobody was recording anything towards the end! (Not even you, Jan—our English teacher.) We can’t afford for our school to lose any more status points. That would mean cutbacks.
By the way, we have two new students. Make sure they are both quickly situated with electronic journals. We’ve got some in the storage cabinets.
Thanks,
M. Adler
P.S. The coffee pot seems to have been misplaced in the teachers’ lounge. Does anyone know where it is?
[3 long journal entries]
Dhanus 27
Subject: Hi staff
I’m relieved to report that the coffee pot has been recovered. Please don’t hoard property belonging to the staff at large, Derrick.
Yesterday we did not have 100% journal participation, which is what is to be expected every day. Thanks for keeping tabs on the kids, Jan—I’m glad the new seventh grader is contributing already to the MTE journal compilation. It was your oversight, however, that we didn’t send an e-journal home to the new fourth grader. Do make sure not to let that happen again.
Note—what incompetent fool up in registration offices forgot to give the King kids maps of town? Catherine told her homeroom teacher she was lost until another student showed her the way to school. I suppose we’ll have to provide her with one.
Thanks,
M. Adler
[3 long journal entries]
Dhanus 28
Subject: re: Hi staff
Marta,
I wasn’t “hoarding” anything. The coffee pot happened to have been forgotten in my classroom when I had my morning espresso.
D. Blake
Cool
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Those emails are quite uneventful, but interesting to read the style and concept of.
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They were planned to be more useful as the story progresses, and just as comic relief or whatever for now
But after two days, I scrapped the story already and am back to Will and Eyre, whom I have neglected
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"give Me Coffee And Write Everyday"
"i Found The Coffee Now Write Everyday"
"i Didn't Take The Coffee"
Stupid caps filter.
Pretend like I said this in sarcastic large letters
Last edited by soupoftomato (2012-03-18 16:36:26)
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Honestly, shortly written e-mail communications seem a better way to write anyway.
I get mad at characters in journal styled books.
"You hate your life, tell someone else!"
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Haha you're right, it's too easy to write as like, "I HATE MY LIFE"... it can be slipped into without realizing because that's what journals are usually like ahahah
This story is no better
Most of it is written like a journal--here's a segment of Liam's journal I'll put up for fun
It's too long and boring to put the whole thing
I liked writing as Catherine's perspective the best
Liam McClelland
Well, this morning was strange.
I was rushing to get out of the house this morning, because Mom would be in a bad mood if I was late again. And guess what? I forgot my lunch. I knew I couldn’t go back to the house, or Mom would be mad. So I went to buy something from the baker’s shop on Fifth Avenue, the one that sells really good slabs of chocolate fudge cake. I swear, I almost ordered eight of those things. I might have, too, except then I realized I didn’t have any money.
I know Mom says I don’t pay attention, but I don’t think that’s true. I’ve just got a lot of stuff that needs getting done, and I’m always trying to do it, so sometimes things other people think are important get left behind.
I guess I have different ideas about what’s “important.”
Homework is not that important. Journal-writing is boring and so is writing in general. School sucks. There are other things I do that I really consider very important. One of them is drawing. I’ve been drawing since before I could talk—even though it looked pretty bad then. Dad doesn’t encourage it much, but Mom says I’ve got talent. All my teachers tell me to get my nose out of my sketchbook and do something useful.
Drawing is useful to me.
I draw all the time, always. I’ve drawn maps so I don’t get lost. I’ve drawn when I’m mad or frustrated or upset and it helps. I draw something funny and it helps me laugh. Can you say that’s not useful?
Maybe if I had drawn a map I wouldn’t have gotten lost. (Well, that’s not true—it’s the route I take to school every day.) I did get lost, though, but only because I was hungry and feeling absentminded so I wasn’t thinking and then all the sudden I wasn’t sure where I was. It is really busy on Fifth Avenue morning, because there’s lots of shops and everyone is trying to get to their jobs all at once. I kind of like it, but not on school mornings when I’m already sort of late. I was swept up in the crowd. I just kept walking in the wrong direction.
So I got lost, and I was on Eleventh Avenue where I usually don’t go alone because there’s less shops and it’s kind of creepy. I wasn’t really wanting to ask anyone for help, because I’m not a little kid anymore and I didn’t want anybody to think I was weird.
Then I ended up at the library on Seventh Avenue and I knew the way from there.
Jeez, I’m not going to tell Mom or Dad or anyone about this. They’d crack up—“How did you end up six streets off, Liam?”—or else they’d get mad. They get mad a lot lately. I just hope Catherine doesn’t say anything (but then, how could she, she doesn’t know them, right?).
Oh yes, I forgot to explain about Catherine.
Writing in a casual voice really doesn't suit me ._.
Last edited by Wickimen (2012-03-18 16:51:19)
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Oh and I edited Chapter 1 of Will and Eyre again if anyone cares
Nothing important, just word choice, paragraph transition
and sentence flow, et cetera
13
It seemed to Will that that number, 13, had followed him around like a curse for bad luck for almost two hundred years. It was said, of course, that there was no need for any sort of fear anymore, but the old superstitions never did seem to fade. Everyone had a number; that was the way of things, it was not as though this were exclusive to him. Numbers were just so much simpler and more structured than cumbersome names. He himself was not actually called Will, but 13, if anybody besides Eyre talked to him. Names were not forbidden, but discouraged, so he kept his own borrowed name, William, hidden. He had to keep many things hidden, including his pale blue eyes, an unlucky and unwanted defect, under the brim of an old graying cap.
Will adjusted this once-tweed cap as he lingered apart from a group of people, who stood across the alleyway. The morning was rainy and dark, and the only light was a faint orange glow cast from the streetlights, spilled down over wet cobblestone pavement. Arcade, read the dull flickering red letters on the sign of the dingy brick building, alongside the number 10 in glowing yellow. Even in the heavy torrents of rain, none of the group waiting outside left. They jabbered incessantly and waited impatiently to be let inside.
To the casual observer, it would seem that this group was a jumble of cultures, their clothing an assortment of coats and shoes of all kinds. People wore Victorian top hats, t-shirts, battered sneakers and vintage blazers all at once. But if one looked closer, they would see only young faces with noses and foreheads curved in the same way, vapid brown eyes of the same shape and expression, the same pale complexions, the same brown hair of a common length, and the same accents. For everybody was exactly alike.
In the distance the Clock chimed six times, signifying that it was six o’clock. The doors to the Arcade opened, allowing the group to shove their way inside building number ten, laughing and exchanging conversation with increasing rapidity.
When they had all disappeared into the Arcade, Will was joined by a girl whose hair and eyes were concealed by an aviator’s cap and goggles.
“Hello, Eyre.”
“Hi, Will.” She wiped away the fog and rainwater smearing her goggles. “Let’s go, then.”
The library was a considerable distance away, along the line where the road met the railing separating the city from endless ocean. The walk through town always did bother Will. Besides the Arcade and the dilapidated little library, there was not much to see: only the Cinema, where movies—two-hour long thrilling slaughter fests—were shown occasionally; a few small, deserted buildings that might have been in use before the disaster; fields of wheat; the ugly factories; the clock tower; and the apartments where the inhabitants of the town all lived in their own separate rooms.
The apartments, especially, he hated: those neat pale-cream cube blocks with floral-patterned curtains and green lawn outside. Normal apartments, it appeared, but the glass window panes were never dirty, and the curtains hung as stiffly as rods. The lawn was cut painfully short and was untouched—it had none of the familiar worn places where shoes often tread, no muddy gaps.
And he hated them. He thought of a little blue house with white trim, overgrown grass and weather-beaten muddy boots out on the porch. He had always left a saucer of milk outside on that porch, for the stray cat with charcoal-gray fur and bright lemon-colored eyes. A funny half-smile flitted over his face. Thumbs, he had called her, because of the extra toe on each paw…
He jolted suddenly, realizing he had remembered something, but at once the rest of the memory dissolved and he was left staring at the sunken library in front of him.
They pushed through the doors and walked in, their wet shoes clicking on the old hardwood floor. Water dripping from the slick surface of Eyre’s brown leather bomber jacket collected in a puddle on the ground.
Inside, the library smelled strongly of dust and old paper. It was hard to believe that a little under two centuries ago, many people had gone to libraries almost as frequently as they did.
Those books were the only window they had into how life used to be, before the disaster. Recalling his own memories was to Will like recalling the vaguest memories of someone else’s life. He could not remember anything past the age of eleven, or if he had once been older than he was now. His recollections even then were very limited. Books were important; their names and knowledge came from books; but a book did not live forever, and Will and Eyre were careful to preserve them.
All of the books were needed. Will liked Shakespeare’s writing, and Eyre, Charlotte Bronte’s, but they read them all. Sometimes they helped Will remember things from the time before the disaster. Strange, alien-sounding words, phrases, descriptions of both the familiar and unfamiliar somehow connected in his mind. He had never in his current memory, for example, smelled cigarette smoke, but the term stirred something in his brain and allowed the ghost of a burning sensation to enter his nostrils. While reading a thick little brown volume by Jack London, another, more pleasant smell resurfaced: pine trees. It was associated with what he supposed was a happy day, a day mentioned in several books—a day called Christmas.
Even the dictionary and encyclopedia had to be carefully perused. Though they were considerably duller than most of the books, they contained by far the most knowledge. At the moment, Eyre was poring over a copy of the dictionary, and commented aloud every so often about strange words starting with the letter q. She had unfastened her aviator cap, and her close-cropped hair stuck up in all directions like a bright red porcupine. Anybody could plainly see that her eyes were green.
Will didn’t bother to warn her about being more careful. Besides them, nobody had entered the library for two centuries. And why should they? Next to the Arcade, with all its gleaming brilliance inside, a library was nothing. The Arcade was a paradise, full of incredible games to play all day with no work or school to care about.
Being Unusuals, as was the popular term (accompanied by an obligatory look of distaste), Will and Eyre were not allowed in the Arcade. In the beginning, when it didn’t matter very much, they used to sneak in anyway. With hats and sunglasses, they could pass for being Usual while wearing hats and sunglasses—the genetic alteration had worked on them for the most part, freezing them at about eleven or twelve years old forever, but leaving their eyes and hair the same.
Then a third Unusual—16—with whom they did not associate, had been caught and turned into the Sovereign’s Administration. He was never seen again.
After that, Will and Eyre did not return to the Arcade.
They did not know where the other Unusuals went while the others stayed in the Arcade for hours. There had been at least fifty to begin with, but they had all gradually vanished throughout the years. Unusuals had been turned in for the crime of a different eye color, without violating any other rule. Will and Eyre had gone unnoticed by the carefree Usual people, who did not know or care why the two of them no longer visited the Arcade. 13 and 29 were not missed.
Will found it funny, even after all these years, that everyone remembered everybody else’s number. He knew that before, people must have remembered others’ names, which, said the Administration, was very confusing. Some people had the same names. Names were dull and used; a number was unique and only applied to you.
That was true in some respect, thought Will, but somehow names were better and different in a way he could not explain. The characters and authors of books never had numbers instead of names.
He settled himself into a musty, sloped chair with a copy of Macbeth and began to read, as he had dozens of times before. The words were magic in that old library. He was limited to the physical, emotional and mental capacity of an eleven-year-old, and stumbled over a few gnarled and complicated sentences, but soon was swept up in the play. Macbeth always sent welcome chills up his spine. He scarcely minded the most confusing parts; the story caught him within its pages like only the best authors’ words could do. It allowed him to forget, for the time being, that the Sovereign had ever existed.
“Quid pro quo,” Eyre called out abruptly.
“Interesting,” said Will, though he felt a slight stab of frustration with her for interrupting Macbeth. “What’s it mean?”
“ ‘One thing in return for another.’ Cool.”
“Yeah…,” he said absentmindedly. Try as he might, he couldn’t quite return to Macbeth after that. Instead, he focused on the windows. Pale light was seeping through the shutters, though the rain was still bucketing down. Eyre extinguished the candle she had been reading by and shoved the remaining stub of wax deep into the pocket of her coat.
“It’ll be eight o’clock soon. We should go.”
“All right.” Will closed his book and returned it to its proper place, a lonely shelf reserved for the few paperback copies of Shakespeare’s works. He had done this perhaps thousands of unaccounted-for times, but this time he accidentally pushed the book against the back panel too hard and too far. It caved in and revealed a hollow dark space behind.
He froze. “Eyre?”
“Yes?” she said, glancing up.
“Come look at this.” He pushed on the panel with his hand. It fell down. Lying down inside were stacks of booklets—big flat glossy covers stapled over paper. They were like magazines but too big, like picture books but too thin. He pulled a few from one stack.
“What’s Beethoven?”
“I don’t know,” Eyre said, stepping closer to better examine the booklets.
Will gingerly lifted a whole stack of them and flipped through one. He was greeted by the inviting rustle of crackly yellow pages and rising dust. The pages were covered with interesting titles, lines and odd symbols. He didn’t completely recognize them, but…
“Liszt,” said Eyre, reading aloud from the books. “Chopin. Mozart.”
The words struck him as familiar. Will thumbed through more pages. Once, Eyre had found a drawer full of maps, but they hadn’t discovered anything new for several years. The booklets were an exciting find. He scrutinized the pages and had a sudden mental image of long fingers—his own?—flying across black-and-white keys. Disjointed soft sounds floated through his mind. They were part of the same song, but he only remembered bits and pieces.
He became conscious it was called “piano.”
“It’s sheet music.”
Eyre’s eyes lit up. She seemed to understand. “Really? I don’t know any music notes,” she said with regret.
“I… think I know a few,” Will said hesitantly. He placed a finger on one line, tracing the notes and humming as he went along. The notes came to him with shocking ease, and he was amazed he had not remembered them before. He was able to figure out what the song may have sounded like—almost, almost—but it was not enough, he would need a piano just to come close.
“Hey, what’s that?” Eyre’s hand in its black woolen glove blocked Will’s view of the page. He brushed it away to see faint pencil annotations in the margins.
“It looks like someone owned it and wrote notes,” he said. There were tangled masses of cursive in which the person had jotted things like, “Always get that part wrong” or “Dec 7, practice this piece for recital.”
“Oh,” said Eyre, clearly disappointed, but Will was fascinated. He leaned against the wall and searched for every penciled word, every dog-eared page, every strawberry jelly thumbprint. Eyre, chin propped in hand, watched him for a moment, picked up the dictionary, then grew bored and turned to the children’s section of the library for something more entertaining.
Upon the eight faint clangs of the Bell, Eyre hastily stuck the book back on the shelf, jamming her aviator cap and goggles back on, and Will brought the sheet music with him.
The gatekeeper stopped them as they went into the pavilion for breakfast. “Hang on, what’s that?” he asked, gesturing to the booklets in Will’s hand.
“Just something from the library,” Eyre said shortly, looking up at him.
The gatekeeper, being part of the Administration, was about fifteen, much older than the general population. His blank brown eyes tinged on puzzlement. “I don’t think those are supposed to leave the library, are they?”
“I thought we could borrow anything from the library,” Will said, staring at the ground so that his eyes weren’t noticed. Eyre’s were obscured enough by the goggles.
“That is true, but…” The gatekeeper shrugged. “The Administration wouldn’t like it. Hand them over. We’ll take them back to the library ourselves after inspection.”
Will knew better than to argue. He handed over the sheet music, not liking to see them passed into the gatekeeper’s hands.
“What was that about?” Eyre wondered aloud, taking a tray of breakfast. The Administration had set up factories that produced nutritional, artificial food, which they ate for all three meals of the day. Will thought wistfully of hot apple pie and warm spaghetti, things he remembered from before.
“No clue,” he answered, picking up a tray for himself.
The afternoon came, slate-gray and dreary. It was only raining lightly and the ocean just beyond the railing was no longer swaying dangerously. After lunch, a group of Usuals were milling around outside the library.
“What’re they doing?” Will said, frowning. “Why aren’t they in the Arcade?”
“I don’t know…”
They walked up the crumbling steps, glancing uneasily at the Usuals, and tried to open the door. It was locked.
“What’re you doing?” one of the Usual boys demanded. “Don’t you know that’s a demolition site?”
“A demolition site?” Will repeated, not fully grasping.
“It’s been on the Arcade bulletin since after breakfast,” the boy said.
“Has it?” Will asked bleakly.
“Well, yeah. Where’ve you been? And who are you, anyway? I don’t think I’ve seen you at the Arcade.”
Will didn’t respond. He and Eyre exchanged glances.
“What did the bulletin say?” Eyre asked.
“I don’t remember. It’s gonna get wrecked sometime today though. They already took the books.”
Will’s mind raced. Took the books? Had the books been burned, or just been moved away? It was impossible to tell with the Administration. Two hundred years and they had left the library untouched. But now…
He studied the moss growing through the cracks in the bricks. “Anything else?” he asked quietly.
The Usuals had no helpful answers. Instead they peppered Will and Eyre with inquiries concerning how they felt about the new shooter game’s graphics. They both carefully avoided directly answering these questions, and kept polite smiles pasted to their faces the whole time. Finally, the Usuals became tired of the lack of violent demolition, and trailed back into the Arcade looking disappointed.
Will and Eyre looked at the library, so old and weary. It had always been bound to happen, they knew, but they never really expected that it would happen so suddenly. They didn’t say anything to each other, simply sat on the front steps and waited over the long hours as it grew dark and a tangerine moon shrouded in dark storm clouds rose over the lonely last town on Earth.
The team from the Administration came close to midnight and advised Will and Eyre to go back to their apartments. They stood far away on the street, knowing that it was impossible to burn to death, but asphyxiation was another matter.
First the Administration team crushed the empty library with a wrecking ball, reducing it to a pile of bricks and wood. They tried to set fire to it, to let bright flames leap over it and consume it hungrily, but the rain had left it damp. It smoldered there, slowly being charred beyond recognition. Will and Eyre watched the whole time, to the very last minute, until the library, building number 13, was no more.
Last edited by Wickimen (2012-03-18 17:06:20)
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Ever read Tangerine?
Best journal based book I have read, even if that guys life does suck.
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imnotbob wrote:
soupoftomato wrote:
Ever read Tangerine?
Best journal based book I have read, even if that guys life does suck.No
readitnow
Last edited by Wickimen (2012-03-19 10:58:53)
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Wow guys
BUMPINESS
Wicki should I post that thing I sent you when I was banned?
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This is a crucial piece of plot development in a story if you understand it:
13579 24680 35791 46801 57913 68024 79135 80246 91357 02468 #13579 #24680 #35791 #46801 #57913 #68024 #79135 #80246 #91357 #02468 ##13579 ##24680 ##35791 ##46801 ##57913 ##68024 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Last edited by soupoftomato (2012-03-27 21:53:00)
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White fills the sky slowly, like cold, dense cream settling over the horizon and hanging low on the tops of buildings. No one is awake but him, the boy in the safety of his bedroom, soft red hair and light hazel eyes peering through his window. Everything is still and quiet. A village asleep. Yes, it’s today. It’s happening today.
What's a good name for this kid
I probably can't continue until I think of a good one
He was going to be Peter, but I don't like naming characters after people I know
I then considered Caleb, but I don't like naming characters after people whose names I know on the Internet either
He's twelve and his older brother is Trent; his younger sister, Clara
I seem to have named every character but the main one, unfortunately
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Wickimen wrote:
White fills the sky slowly, like cold, dense cream settling over the horizon and hanging low on the tops of buildings. No one is awake but him, the boy in the safety of his bedroom, soft red hair and light hazel eyes peering through his window. Everything is still and quiet. A village asleep. Yes, it’s today. It’s happening today.
What's a good name for this kid
I probably can't continue until I think of a good one
He was going to be Peter, but I don't like naming characters after people I know
I then considered Caleb, but I don't like naming characters after people whose names I know on the Internet either
He's twelve and his older brother is Trent; his younger sister, Clara
I seem to have named every character but the main one, unfortunately
Kyle
Dominick
Ben(jamin)
Jake
John
Keith
Josh
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