EmilyMiller
Good men did nothing
- Joined
- Aug 13, 2022
- Posts
- 11,601
Depends if you have the right equipment available.But I don't think it can be forced, either.
Emily
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Depends if you have the right equipment available.But I don't think it can be forced, either.
There really isn’t a consistently dominant voice. Might be me in one area, him in another, neither of us in a third. I think our strength is we listen and we respect each other’ point of view.
I suppose the obvious thing I haven’t said is I can’t imagine co-writing with anyone who wasn’t first and foremost a friend.
Emily
I'm fairly certain its not just my mind that went there and built a story concept around that mental image.Depends if you have the right equipment available.
Emily
...two heads are often better than one. I don’t have any IRL experience of E/V, but @Djmac1031 writes about it a lot.
YupAgain, different strokes, different folks.
Again YMMV but I’ve never felt at all constrained working with @Djmac1031 - it’s actually kinda freeing, I think we come up with stuff that neither of us would by ourselves.It's more about creative liberty.
Again YMMV but I’ve never felt at all constrained working with @Djmac1031 - it’s actually kinda freeing, I think we come up with stuff that neither of us would by ourselves.
Emily
Face it, hun. We’re just this crazy outlier .The interesting thing is, @EmilyMiller and I have two very different writing styles.
And very different kinks. Usually.
I went back and looked at the first Traffic, and it's pretty obvious who wrote what parts, especially for anyone whos read any of our solo work.
Rereading Traffic 2, it's a little harder. Even I have to stop and think about some parts as to who wrote what.
I mean again, the tells are still there, of course. I just think we blended them better this time.
Instead of feeling "constrained" to mimic someone else's style or be shoehorned into writing their ideas their way, we've actually found it liberating and productive to work together, sharing ideas, styles, kinks etc.
I've definitely come up with ideas, written things I'd never have dreamed up without Emily's input and inspiration.
And she obviously feels the same.
Face it, hun. We’re just this crazy outlier .
Emily
I agree, there's no constraint in terms of story or narrative.Again YMMV but I’ve never felt at all constrained working with @Djmac1031 - it’s actually kinda freeing, I think we come up with stuff that neither of us would by ourselves.
I kinda get that.I agree, there's no constraint in terms of story or narrative.
A second writer can expand horizons, help with inspiration, encourage discipline, etc. - and all that is very valuable and very normal. Plenty of people have success with it. The creative liberty I'd lose if I co-wrote something would not be practical, and it would not reduce the size of my canvas.
But there is still liberty lost in the creative process. By virtue of introducing another dimension, collaborative works intrude on my solitary writing process. That doesn't have to be a bad thing, but for me and my workflow it doesn't work. I've always written alone, since I was ten, so that lonely internal process of building my stories is tattooed into me.
That quiet discovery of a beautiful image, or of a new character trajectory; those dinners where I'm thinking about my novel, pretending to engage in conversation, and nobody else in the whole world knows my thoughts or plans - those personal, solitary moments that I love about writing have to be solitary. You can have equally valuable moments when you're sharing that discovery with another creative mind, but they would be different moments. Not for me.
I love my editor, but we have our meetings after I've been on my own journey of discovery. She fills a similar role to what others have said about their co-author, but in a more retrospective way that lets me be lonely while I'm figuring out the story for the first time.
Collaborating can work. Many, many people manage and produce amazing results. I'd even be open to it for more experimental stories, but not my main novels. I'm sure a co-author could make me produce some of my best work, but that's an experience I am happy to have considered, said no to, and moved on from. It's not a matter of being impossible or difficult, just a contradiction with what I personally value in my writing process.
Yup. It's psychological: I could get over it, and could probably co-author something great. But I don't feel like it hahaI kinda get that.
It wasn’t like it was a plan or aspiration for me, just kinda happened.Yup. It's psychological: I could get over it, and could probably co-author something great. But I don't feel like it haha
I think you have to have something of a shared vision and then be willing to allow that any differences are things to discuss, not to fall out over.I did collaborate here once upon a time that I remember. I recall the writing process being fraught with lack of communication and that being a problem. We all also felt differently about the stories- arguing over characters inclusion, plots, and whatnot- and felt challenged by the demands of writing something every week then not getting great reviews. We also didn’t have a clear plan for how the story would go. So we ended up scrapping everything when the chaos of the art creation process overwhelmed us. But I also remember enjoying swimming in the current for a time. And enjoying what was created as long as it survived.
I think the big problem was we didn’t respect each other’s boundaries and egos. Or we expected each other to subordinate ourselves recklessly to the process. Collaborating can be great when the personalities mesh. When they don’t and there’s unreasonable pressure in play… things crash.
Ultimately I think I’d welcome a collaboration in my stories if the personalities of my partners meshed well with our time and expectations. If we couldn’t coordinate well, though… it’s like anything else. You have to take a leap of faith and dare to imagine success, then find it if you can.
Many babies have two parents.I don't think I could. I've wondered how the writing process works when 2 people are writing and I don't see that I could do it. I see a story as my baby
That’s kinda the whole point. The grit in an oyster that generates a pearl. Totally pointless writing with someone who you agree 100% with on everything. In trying to reconcile different viewpoints, you can get to something that neither of you would have created yourself.and I feel pretty sure another person would have different thoughts about which way to take a character or the story arc.
It’s not about better. That couches the exercise as a competition with a battle over each sentence. It’s really more of a conversation.No doubt, their ideas could well be better than mine.
Which is no different in a collab. Just you both get the credit and criticism.But still, it's my project and I want the credit or criticism if it succeeds or fails.
Why? Not being provocative. Many human endeavors (sex for example) are collaborative. It’s just as fulfilling when a co-authored work does well, and just as frustrating when it doesn’t. It’s not like you can blame the other person for something you both did.I want to know that if the story succeeded, then it was my writing that did it and not someone else.
It’s really, really, really (am I over stressing this?) NOT* about riding on coattails. It’s about working together.Maybe after I have a lot of success as a writer then I might change my mind. I don't want to ride someone else's coattails.
It’s really, really, really (am I over stressing this?) about riding on coattails. It’s about working together.