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originally posted by: ketsuko
a reply to: NavyDoc
Oh, that's cool. Please keep the predator aspect in the vampire. I could see some real tension there. How can they save each other is she loses her superpowers when they get too close? You can really put the two of them through that wringer with that ... talk about torturing your protagonist although since he doesn't believe he wouldn't see it that way exactly. Not like a reader would.
originally posted by: SaturnFX
When writing a story, do you envision the end first and work back, or just sort of wing it and see where your brain leads you? Ever done a series (with the same question, start from say, book 8 ending and chart out the major points)?
How do you balance between giving enough within a book for a sense of completion without closing off future books should a book fly off into cult classic status and demand a book 2, 3, 4, etc...
originally posted by: ketsuko
a reply to: NavyDoc
There is a character class in the old Palladium/RIFTS games that used to be this type of guy. They were called the Negapsychic. Their disbelief as so strong that they could negate the powers of other supernaturals around them, but you had to play them as the supreme skeptic who always had an explanation for everything.
Sounds like an interesting concept to take into an actual novel setting. My husband finally disallowed them because too many of the players took it for granted that it just actually worked without playing the role, and they'd get miffed if he called them on it.
originally posted by: ketsuko
a reply to: NavyDoc
There is a character class in the old Palladium/RIFTS games that used to be this type of guy. They were called the Negapsychic. Their disbelief as so strong that they could negate the powers of other supernaturals around them, but you had to play them as the supreme skeptic who always had an explanation for everything.