tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8741103706677167354.post1664268567455728688..comments2023-05-24T08:38:09.611+01:00Comments on Crimson Feather: Writing? In too deepAdam Lawhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06671767995565181997noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8741103706677167354.post-27974131879535695802014-08-08T23:20:46.342+01:002014-08-08T23:20:46.342+01:00*Information WITHOUT a destination*
My dingus mome...*Information WITHOUT a destination*<br />My dingus moment of the day.Robithttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04035561083969085646noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8741103706677167354.post-40320381603786911182014-08-08T22:16:56.294+01:002014-08-08T22:16:56.294+01:00I won't be first to consider myself an establi...I won't be first to consider myself an established writer, but I'm confident in my ability to identify a good narrative, and essentially during this beginning stages, that's what you have here, a narrative. They respond, react, and bleed far differently from comics (while simultaneously one and the same... think they call those paradoxes? Or oxymorons, or sheer nonsense I don't know), and sometimes they've gotta be respected as such. Getting in as much insight as possible from your peers is never a problem so long as you constructively utilize their critiques (assuming said critiques are constructive to begin with). If I could ever offer advice, and I may have missed this in reading your post, make sure the narrative has an end point, established to a point that all aspects within correspond with one another properly. You can get advise throughout the day and people would more often than not provide some insightful tips, but information with a destination is a car with no fuel; one big ass paper weight. Don't let your narrative become paper weight, and remember, only you can prevent forest fires.Robithttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04035561083969085646noreply@blogger.com