So, yeah... hi!
... my second novel is live on Amazon.
Congratulations! It's always rewarding to come to the end of a big project like that.
But it has felt kind of awkward to come out and post that here. I know we're all friends, but I can't shake the feeling that unprompted self-promotion is sort of saying "That thing we all do for fun! Look at me I monetized it for myself and that's why I haven't been around!" like I'm the douchey antagonist of Twister (1996), and I don't want to be that guy. Maybe it would be different if I'd kept a consistent M:EM output but it seems like I'm not awesome at multitasking creative writing projects.
Naw, screw that, man. I don't think anybody can expect you to use your skill for free in something that cannot make you money instead of using it in a way that potentially can. I certainly don't blame anyone for spending their creative currency on non-fanfic projects.
So I guess it's... what doi people want to see? I could talk about my projects both current and future, or my M:EM prospective projects, or just try to small talk but by Yawgmoth I seem to be bad at small talk.
Anything's good. I just like to know that people are doing alright. I get a little depressed when people don't come around for weeks or months or years...
And I'm sorry there's been so few new posts on my part. I think I've gotten to the point where there's so little going on in my life that is I have anything to say or find a way to respond, I just put it off longer and longer and either further about it, or find it awkward to try to come back to.
Yeah, I get that. My life is usually fairly uneventful, so I definitively know what you mean.
I guess I'll try to make a little nominal update.
I finished turning over the army I had been commissioned to paint, and my client ultimately decided not to retain my services to paint a larger piece, claiming he was working on trying to get comfortable enough to do it himself.
He, however, still paid me for the army with what we'd negotiated I was going to do the next piece for.
I'm not sure if I should feel appreciated or snubbed.
The former, probably. I've had a couple of figures painted for me over the years, but I just don't have the disposable income to maintain that. I don't play Warhammer 40k, but I do know that that's WAY more figures, so I imagine that it might become cost-prohibitive after a while. And I do think people just, as you mentioned, want to get to the point where they can do it themselves. That makes sense to me, too.
Lastly, because of the fiasco going on in the actual storyline, I've been tempted to spitefully write a series of vignettes of the supposed invasion of our planes by the Phyrexians where they collectively get stomped into an oily smudge and no damage or fatalities happen to any of our worlds because ours are better than the garbage wizards is coughing up these days and the Phyrexians can suck ****.
I'll be honest, I actually like Phyrexians.
Or at least, I liked Old Phyrexians. They were the baddies when I first got involved in the storyline as a teenager who naturally loves the baddies, and I played their side for years and years in the old forums Wargame.
But Old Phyrexians had a kind of infectious element to them. They converted some very notable characters, but by in large they were cyborg zombies who, if you were an enemy, would mostly just kill you (including with engineered plagues sometimes) and then maybe do freaky things with your corpse. Mostly. There were scattered examples like the short story "Phyrexian Creations" that dealt more with forcible conversion so I can't say the element wasn't there (I even used it myself in the M:EM), but at the same time it wasn't the disease not-quite-a-metaphor that NPH ran with and ONE/MOM pushed to the forefront extreme. Compleation of a non-phyrexian was a detailed surgical process.
To that end I kind of see Norn's Phyrexia as a degenerate Phyrexia, which is (somewhat ironically) called out in text with the jabs at her egoism and lack of devotion to Phyrexia rather than just herself. They went too hard to one corner of their identity and missed a lot of what was traditionally cool about the first run, being a threat with one angle that's horrifically overwhelming rather than a threat with all the angles.
Which is why if I were to contribute a vignette concept it would probably be for Shandrovol, where Ophelia's resistance never learns of the invasion because the local manifestation of Phyrexia violently gives Norn's goons the finger because they're running the Phyrexian equivalent of Linux and aren't compatible with her mindvirus. (Another, if going full comedy, would be Ellia having her current base of operations invaded and casually trying to decide which doomsday weapon to dust off with the energy of your average picking-clothing montage)
I, conversely, have never cared for the Phyrexians, even the old ones, but I find the old ones vastly preferrable to the New Ones. Like Tevish points out here, the "conversion" is so ludicrously easy for New Phyrexia. It's weird, but it just feels like it cheapens all the stakes to have a side that is so nonsensically strong like that. So, you touch a small dab of this oil and there's about a 95% chance that your entire body and mind will be completely rewired with virtually no "saving throw," so to speak. And the oil seems to be self-replicating somehow. Realistically, how can a substance like that ever actually lose? It just feels cheap from a narrative standpoint, and leaves me completely disinvested from the story because the stakes seem so artificial. Add to that the fact that I am already predisposed to disliking Phyrexia due to personal preference, it just leaves me completely uninterested in the story.
Honestly, I've been out of Magic's storyline for a long time now, and this one just sort of solidifies it for me. I really can't see me ever getting back into it at this point.