show watchers: wtf is up with this guy raglan james
the titular body thief raglan james whose most famous literary crime is stealing and swapping bodies with lestat: donât worry about it kitten
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show watchers: wtf is up with this guy raglan james
the titular body thief raglan james whose most famous literary crime is stealing and swapping bodies with lestat: donât worry about it kitten

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what I fucking love is how tvl was written in the 80s and lestat is constantly sayinf shit like âas the kids say 𤪠thatâs so rad!!â or whatever, and to me, reader of the vampire lestat in this modern age, that does NOT register the way anne rice intended it.
like it is supposed to feel jarring and insane. it is supposed to feel like lestat has been violently submerged in modern young people trends and culture and is now repeating all the new words he learned like a beautiful fresh baby. but because the book is from 1985, all I think is oh interesting huh I didnât know that slang term even originated in the 80s how vintage how retro how lestat wow heâs so embarrassing aw aw so cute.
but amc in all their incredible genius decided that honoring anne riceâs original vision of writing an extremely modern and weird book that fully embodied the era it was written in was more important then bringing back the 80s nostalgia thing that streaming services love and itâs incredible to me. now I get to listen to lestat say shit like âlabubu FOMO cosplay reddit discord Gen Z more like gen SNOOZE đ¤Şđ¤Şđ¤Ş safe space pronouns donald trump labubu tiktok dance đşđťâ and suddenly I understand what it felt like to be a young anne rice reader in 1985. GodâŚ. I understand.
got a hate comment on a fic i wrote 4 years ago today and uhhh i let it bother me far more than i should have
lottie matthews | macbeth, act 5, scene 1.
A lot of 'eloquent writers' are not going to agree with me when I say this but; write however the fuck you want. Especially if it's for fun online, no one here is grading your shit. Yes it's a little different when it comes to original works you want to get published but fanfic? Nah no rules apply. Write in those run on sentences, fuck grammer, don't capitalize, word vomit your ideas into a google doc, fill those paragraphs up with words that barely make sense, just have fun with it. If it's nonsense it's nonsense but if it made you happy to write then that doesn't really matter does it?
Also, I fail to do this myself sometimes, but give yourself a break when it comes to writing. Your writing does not need to read like anyone else's, it's your writing. Everyone has their own 'voice' in writing and just because yours is different than someone else's doesn't make it any less.

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I would LOVE to read your analysis of louis as byronic hero as apposed to his reading as gothic heroine. lots of the latter and zero of the former in the fandom.
Sure! Mmm, okay, so â
What are we talking about when we talk about Gothic Heroes? Â
When we talk about gothic heroes, weâre really talking about three pretty different character archetypes. All three are vital to the genre, but some are more popular in certain subgenres i.e. your Prometheus Hero may be more common in gothic horror, whereas your Byronic Hero might be more likely to be found in gothic romance. Thatâs not to say theyâre exclusive to those subgenres at all, and there is an argument that these archetypes themselves are gendered (in many ways, I think people confuse Anne being an author of the female gothic with Louis being a gothic heroine, but Iâll get into that later), but this is also not necessarily something thatâs exclusive.
Anyway, Iâm getting ahead of myself, haha, so the three gothic hero archetypes are:
Miltonâs Satan who is the classic gothic hero-villain. You can probably guess from the name, but he was originated in John Miltonâs 1667 poem, Paradise Lost. He is Godâs favourite angel, but God is forced to cast him out of heaven when he rebels against him. As an archetype, heâs a man pretty much defined by his pride, vanity and self-love, usually fucks his way through whatever book or poem heâs in, has a perverted, incestuous family, and a desire to corrupt other people. Heâs also defined as being âtoo weak to choose what is moral and right, and instead chooses what is pleasurable only to himâ and his greatest character flaw, in spite of all The Horrors, is that heâs usually easily misguided or led astray. (I would argue that Lestat fits into this archetype pretty neatly, but thatâs a whole other post.)
Prometheus who was established as a gothic archetype by Mary Shelley with Frankenstein in 1818. Your Prometheus Hero is basically represented by the quest for knowledge and the overreach of that quest to bring on unintended consequences. Heâs tied, of course, to the Prometheus of Greek myth, so you can get elements of that in this character design too in that he can be devious or a trickster, but the most important part of him is that he is split between his extreme intelligence and his sense of rebellion, and that his sense of rebellion and boundary pushing overtakes his intelligence and basically leads to All The Gothic Horrors.
And the Byronic Hero, who as the name implies, was both created by and inspired by the romantic poet, Lord Byron in his semi-autobiographical poem, Childe Haroldâs Pilgrimage which was published between 1812-1818. The archetype is kind of an idealized version of himself, and as historian and critic Lord Macaulay wrote, the character is âa man proud, moody, cynical, with defiance on his brow and misery in his heart, a scorner of his kind, implacable in revenge, yet capable of deep and strong affection.â Adding to that, heâs often called âthe gloomy egoistâ as a protagonist type, hates society, is often self-destructive and lives either exiled or in a self-exile, and is a stalwart of gothic literature, but especially gothic romance. Interestingly too, in his most iconic depictions heâs often a) darkly featured and/or not white (Heathcliff being the most obvious example of this given Emily Bronte clearly writes him as either Black or South Asian), and b) is often used to explore queer identity, with Byron himself having been bisexual.
Okay, but what about the Gothic Heroine?
Gothic heroines are less delineated and have had more of an evolution over time, which makes sense, given women have consistently been the main audience of gothic literature and have frequently been the most influential writers of the genre too. The gothic genre sort of âofficiallyâ started with Horace Walpoleâs 1764 novel, The Castle of Otranto and Isabella is largely regarded as the first gothic heroine and the foundation of the archetype, and the book opens even with one of the key defining traits â an innocent, chaste woman without the protection of a family being pursued and persecuted by a man on the rampage.
The gothic heroine was, for years, defined by her lack of agency. She was innocent, chaste, beautiful, curious, plagued by tragedy and often, ultimately, tragic. Isabella survives in The Castle of Otranto, but sheâs one of the lucky ones â Cathy dies in Wuthering Heights, Sybil dies in The Picture of Dorian Gray, Justine and Elizabeth both die in Frankenstein, Mina survives in Dracula, but Lucy doesnât. Thereâs an argument frequently posited that the gothic genre was, and is, about dead women and the men who mourn them, and Interview with the Vampire certainly lends itself to that pretty neatly.
the odyssey of recollection
okay judgemental free zone here because Iâm genuinely curious: how much of supernatural have y'all ACTUALLY watched
a talking point i often see when defending the consumption of dark content is that itâs a coping mechanism for those with trauma which is very valid and true but i also want to make this abundantly clear: you can like dark content for no reason. you can enjoy fucked up shit in fiction because itâs enjoyable and entertaining. trauma is not required as a ticket for entry. enjoy your dark content bc itâs fun and sexy and donât let anyone take that away from you
became obsessed with iwtv so disregard the last 3 years of posting. jk but itâs literally the only thing i can think about these days

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the worst is wanting to create and create and create but being trapped in a body that is so so so so tired
This is so me.
super simple low-effort ao3 summary methods that are 1000% better and 1000% less annoying than just saying you suck at summaries:
copypaste the first few lines of the fic. u already wrote âem. let âem be their own damn hook
if ur feeling fancy & donât mind showing ur hand a bit, copypaste the first few lines of the fic that u feel are esp. Important or Interesting - the ones where u first start getting into the real meat of things
state the main tropes! theyre probably already in ur tags - just say them again - maybe as a full sentence if ur feelin fancy. or with a joke if ur feelin Extra fancy
ask a question. pose a hypothetical. eg what happens if u take [character] and put them in [situation]?
make an equation. [character] + [thing] = [outcome]
just write like a one-sentence summary of what the fuck is going down. just one (1) sentence. doesnt matter if it doesnât cover every important aspect. or if it sounds bland. any summary sentence is gonna be miles better than âidk i suck at summariesâ
justâŚexplain the fic like u would to a friend? it doesnt have to be a polished back of the book blurb. it can just be â[pairing] coffee shop au, but like, still with murder, and also i made everyone trans. enjoyâ
just stick a meme in there
honestly who cares
just put literally anything but a self deprecating comment in there & ur golden
#itâs okay if you even have to spoil a little bit of the early plot twists#set the lure; cast the net [x]
the problem with reading and writing leading to a strong vocabulary is that you tend to know the vibe of words instead of their meanings.
if I used this word in a sentence, would it make sense? absolutely. if you asked me what it meant, could I tell you? absolutely not.
figure out what the word means from context clues while reading -> use the word in a sentence while writing -> realise you're not actually certain what the word means -> panic about your sentence not making sense even though it hasn't been pinged as grammatically incorrect -> look up the definition of the word because You Must Know -> it means exactly what you thought it meant -> oh, good! :) -> immediately forget the definition -> repeat forever
âwriting fanfics is just a phaseâ what someone told me 8 years ago when I first started writing fanfics.
as of today, I am still finding joy, love and passion in writing fanfics and I can no longer imagine life without fanfic writing.

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i could fix her... (female character who is so clearly a lesbian but the writers or the network wouldn't allow it so she's trapped in heterosexuality) babygirl i could treat you so well...
man, The Character really strikes me as someone who would struggle with Same Problems I Have, for no apparent reason