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donutsweeper ([personal profile] donutsweeper) wrote2007-11-25 10:08 pm
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Meta post- on writing drabbles

Recently I was discussing with [personal profile] mad_jaks the wonders of fighting with a drabble's word count.  Far too often you're fighting to reach that perfect 100 words.  It'll want to be 97, or 102, anything but 100.  Or, you manage 100, but it doesn't quite deliver the punch you'd like.

And I've written a lot of drabbles lately, more than 30 in the past 4 weeks alone.

With all the Jack/Jack stories that have been posted lately I've found myself pondering the changes in Jack from DW S1 to TW S1 and DW S3.  If he changed that much in 150 or so years, what changes would there be in 1500 years?  Or 15,000?  And I thought about the constant in his life through all the episodes we'd seen him in, his wrist computer. 

Here are the various drabbles (each, somehow, the perfect 100 words), with commentary on why they did or didn't work, that came about as a result.
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So, with those thoughts in mind I began to write.  In my first attempt I focused mostly on the computer itself. 

He picked up a new wrist computer as soon as he could and wore it on his right wrist.  It was a 52nd century model, snazzier with more bells and whistles than his earlier one.  And it worked, which was always a plus.  But he still wore the old one on his left.  It didn’t work anymore and he told himself he wore it because he’d gotten so used to the bloody thing and besides it looked damn sexy.  But he knew it was a lie, there was something about it that he just couldn’t bear to give it up. 
 
But it didn't really have the punch I was going for.  I liked that he'd go for the familiar, the thing that had been a constant in his life, and a tie to his past, but overall the drabble lacked quite a bit in my book.                  
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Therefore, onto the second, with a slightly different slant.


The strap on his wrist computer gave out somewhere around its seventh century.  Not a bad life span overall, but not quite the lifetime guarantee that had been promised him.  Jack figured he’d gotten his money’s worth out of it though, and since some of the mechanisms still worked he had a case constructed for it so he could carry it around in his pocket.  By the time it reached its second millennium there wasn’t a circuit in the thing that hadn’t fried, so, with a tinge of regret, he relegated it to a place of honor on the mantelpiece.

Again, it was good, much better than the first, but still not right.  I liked the idea of the place of honor on the mantle, but it never exactly got to the point I was trying to make in the drabble.
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So, I tried again.  I felt the premise in the second worked better so I stuck with it.


The strap on his wrist computer finally gave out somewhere around its seventeenth century.  Not a bad life span overall, although far from the lifetime guarantee it had promised.  Some of the mechanisms still worked though, so he had a case constructed so he could carry it in his pocket.  Two thousand years later, when every circuit had fried, he relegated it to a spot on the mantelpiece.  Eventually, the 51st Century came back around and he bought a new one.   He wasn’t sure what was different, but it never felt right on his wrist. 

Ignoring the basic math mistake, this was closer to what I was trying to say, but not quite there yet.  Something was missing in the way the replacement computer failed to properly replace the original one.  I was a little bothered about dropping the 'place of honor' bit, but felt it worked fine without it.
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Now it was mostly done, I just had to do some tweaking.


The strap on his wrist computer finally gave out somewhere around its seventh century.  Not a bad life span overall, although far from the lifetime guarantee that had been promised.  Some of the mechanisms still worked though, so he had a case constructed so he could carry it in his pocket.  Two thousand years later, when every circuit had fried, he relegated it to a spot on the mantelpiece.  Eventually, in the 51st Century again, he bought a new one, the same make and model as his first.   He wasn’t sure why, but it never felt right on his wrist. 

I played with the last line some more, trying to get it to say what I wanted, but I really didn't feel I succeeded. 
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So, I went at it with a hacksaw, which eventually led to the finished (and posted) version:


The strap on his wrist computer finally gave out somewhere around its seventh century.  Since some of the mechanisms still worked he had a case constructed so he could carry it around in his pocket.  Two thousand years later, when every circuit had fried, he relegated it to a spot on the mantelpiece.

Eventually, in the 51st Century again, he bought himself a new one.  Even though it was the same make and model as his first, he found it terribly uncomfortable to wear. He had no idea why; it was the same and he was the same, wasn’t he?

Removing the line about the lifetime guarantee and making it the title turned out to be the key, it left the space to really put into words the premise behind the drabble, asking the reader to think about the changes that Jack himself might have gone though during his long life.

[identity profile] awanderingbard.livejournal.com 2007-11-26 06:35 pm (UTC)(link)
That was cool, miss! I always find it interesting how people work on different things and the stages they go through. I did a similar thing with a piece of Poser artwork I made (here (http://royalsongstress.livejournal.com/24449.html#cutid1) if you're interested, but be warned that the digital figure starts off nude if you have youngins about), because I wanted people to see that what you start with and what you end up with are often very different and how the changes occur or what influences them as you go along. In my stories, I usually have my friend Amalie (who I call my 'how come?' person) listen as I read them aloud and she points out plot holes or 'so and so wouldn't say that' or whatever, which I then have to fix. In the last chapter of Somnus (http://awanderingbard.livejournal.com/25964.html#cutid1), for example, she was the one who pointed out that A) Harry can't drive manual with a broken arm and b) Jake's things would most likely have been removed from his locker after he'd been dead that long. So then I had to rewrite to make those things work, which I then added to the story as part of Harry's narration. ("On the list of things that I had failed to consider, ‘Jake has been dead for nearly a week, even if you have been talking to him’ was next after ‘you can’t drive a manual transmission with a broken arm, you dolt’.") And for Pas de Deux (http://awanderingbard.livejournal.com/9083.html#cutid1), I had a whole plot going on before I realised that I all I needed to sell the story was Harry and Murphy dancing. So I stopped and rewrote it so that the only thing before them dancing was how they ended up dancing.

I'm nattering, but this was a very cool concept. It gives me an idea for a meme, actually...hmmm...

[identity profile] donutsweeper.livejournal.com 2007-11-26 07:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Glad I gave you an idea. In the past few months I've come to rely on beta's for picking up on those things in longer fics (and it's absolutely essential sometimes like when you forget little details and wind up mispelling your own OC's name *headdesk* or forget to mention a vital detail because it's so 'obvious') but I rarely run drabbles by them.

what was most interesting about this was I rarely think about why I make the changes, I just erased and rewrite bit that I feel don't quite work, but by writing this up I had to figure out what it was that motivated me to make the changes.