I would always say that before launching yourself into a full on book, finish your short story series and see what people think of it.
I never plan, and there are probably six ideas my brain is working on right now as well as the two I am currently writing. Plans, timelines and the like always make me frustrated that I'm not actually writing. Everyone's different. Trial and error and see what works for you.
thank you, on many levels.
There WILL be a sequel. it was why the book took so long to finish, because it was a case of write a really long epilogue or write a sequel, and the sequel won.
I am fairly certain that the main treatment for breast cancer is still a large operation to remove damaged and potentially damaged tissue, followed by a course of super toxic chemo.
"close to a cure" is not close like we would all think it is. after all, the advice given currently is: if you are in a risk category and you are done having kids, have a double mastectomy (like Anglie Jolie did, brave girl). That;'s not a cure, that's an amputation.
I like that, "this is how life flows" - you're right of course. and yes, Chaska and Jene were beautiful.Thank you Dughlas for all the nice things you say.
the PC will never be irrelevant to people who actually use them. And I'm not talking about office kids or writers. I mean geeks. and not trendy hipster geeks, but those "bedroom programmers" who are destined to run the future of our technological world.
If you can truly tell a computer what to do, then the world is really your shell-fish of choice. no phone/tablet/laptop/etc will ever be as powerful, as secure, or have the potential for customization that a PC has.
I'm so happy i married a geek...
thank you Suvitar.To me, it will always be summer on the quayside in Kas. always.
I have always been a bigger fan of soft fantasy, the type that appeals to way more than just pro-fantasy readers. I'm glad you enjoyed it.