Nothing beats the pain of outgrowing the story you thought you were in. Also, meet Gary. He sucks. #WritingTips #SliceofWriteNewsletter

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Nothing beats the pain of outgrowing the story you thought you were in. Also, meet Gary. He sucks. #WritingTips #SliceofWriteNewsletter

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Night Watch is one of Sir Terry’s most hopeless novels - and, by the same token, because of the same things, one of his most hopeful.
It’s a parody - and I use that word very loosely, because there’s really nothing funny about it - of Les Miserables. It’s about a failed revolution, and a barricade, and the people who fought and died there for nothing. Nothing changes. Politics with a capital P goes on, and even the most pure and noble of intentions only becomes food for the pit of snakes who pull the strings. The powerful remain powerful, the powerless, despite their solidarity, their desperation, their violence, their hope, remain powerless. Their little lives don’t count at all. Things continue exactly as they always have, minus a few faces in the crowd.
It is also, I think, where we see Sam Vimes at his lowest. Sure, Thud! does similar things in stripping him down, but that is under an outside influence, and he has his family to think of. He has something to fight for.
In Night Watch, though, all of that is taken away. Sam Vimes, eternal cynic, for once has Cassandraic knowledge that his cynicism is absolutely founded. He knows how this will end, and there’s no Corporal Carrot to make the world magically better around him, no Sybil and Young Sam to push through for, no city to protect. The absolute best that he can expect is to succeed, and lose that family, that future, forever. The absolute worst? He dies. Everyone he cares about here dies. And it’s all in vain.
Sam Vimes is an alcoholic. It’s something that we tend to bring up when we’re talking about how amazing he is, how much he’s overcome, but gloss over otherwise. Which is a little sad, because it’s fundamental.
Sam Vimes faced this exact dragon, years ago. Sam Vimes saw there was no way to slay it. He saw the ants eating at the heart of every hope, every effort. He saw the first man he really knew as a good and kind and just - but never passive, never weak - man die, horribly, slain for no reason but petty grudge and Politics. He saw John Keel’s garden wither and die in its bed. He saw the hope of a better, brighter Ankh-Morpork squelched, and the sacrifice of a good man wasted. He saw the world, in all of its rotting, miserable, pestilent despair, spoiling every good thing that dared show its face, its only ordering principle the slow decay of entropy.
Young Sam Vimes had no anchor. Young Sam Vimes had nothing left to turn to but the bottom of a bottle and the smelliest part of an Ankh-Morpork gutter.
Sam Vimes, as of the events of Night Watch, is back there. Not only physically temporally displaced. He has nothing. There is no reason for him to stand up, to take on the role of John Keel, to take responsibility for the barricade, to try to bring Carcer back to justice. To fight the doomed fight. There is nothing between him and finding a quiet seat at the Broken Drum, ordering himself a pint, and giving up. There is nothing between him and despair.
But he gets up anyway. He intervenes anyway. He tries to help anyway, even when he can’t believe it will make any difference. And it doesn’t, in the end.
Except that people lived who, save for the actions of John Keel, would have died. Except it quite literally meant the world to them.
And that’s where the hope is hiding, in this hopeless, bleak, despair of a book. There is no glory. There is no revolution. There is no good thing that cannot be corrupted. There is no point. Except.
The Disc turns on the ‘except’. Always has. Always will.
The hope across the whole arc of Discworld is that things can, if good people try very, very hard, go from extremely awful to only very awful, and that’s worth it.
Overall, the Discworld series is very hopeful about the grand scheme of things and the effect people, no matter how small, can have on it. But Night Watch is not about that. Night Watch is about what happens when ‘things’ don’t get better. When the grand scheme of things isn’t impacted at all, either way, by the actions of individual people. Night Watch is about what happens when the hope runs out. When the ‘worth it’ runs out. When all that’s left to do is save what little you can, because you can.
That’s why there are no monuments to the Glorious Heroes of Treacle Mine Road. In the grand scheme of things, nothing they did mattered. But they are remembered, because they need to be remembered. Because sometimes what we do does not matter.
And when that happens, all that matters is what we do.
Every year he forgot
New short up, in which a young man falls in love with a painting or two and takes a chance to change his future. Read the beginning at leilaammartin.com/shorts, and subscribe to the blog (it's free!) to read the whole thing.
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April's short, in which a young woman solves a series of clues to find her lost father and learn the extent of his sacrifice. Read the beginning at leilaammartin.com/shorts, and subscribe to the blog (it's free!) to read the whole thing.
On finding the writing pace of a first draft, and why past performance doesn't necessarily indicate future results.
New short, in which a young woman of dubious ancestry fights darkness in an unexpected form. PLEASE check the content warnings. Read the beginning at leilaammartin.com/shorts, and subscribe to the blog (it's free!) to read the whole thing. Hate to wait? Slice of Write subscribers get early access!
Dip a toe in the world of fantasy mapmaking. With a big ol' wave hello to Cody @dungeonmastersdiary ;)
New short story, in which a rising starlet learns exactly what she gave away in exchange for her success. Read the beginning at leilaammartin.com/shorts, and subscribe to the blog (it's free!) to read the whole thing. Hate to wait? Subscribe to my email newsletter for early access.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
What If? Using Speculative Questions to Unlock Story Ideas
Did you ever eavesdrop on a conversation between other people? What did you do with what you heard? Did you passively listen? Judge it? Or did you play with it? What if? It’s possible that “what if?” is one of the most magical phrases there is—especially for storytellers. For anyone, in fact, who wants to imagine. To ask questions, and seek answers. Let’s say I was standing in line at the…
In which a lonely teen makes an unexpected friend. Short story writing reading stories free content warnings
A tour through what I read in 2025, including my top faves & biggest letdown, plus my so-far TBR
Tweaking my 2026 content plan—here's what to know
New short story, in which a runaway bride shares an abandoned cottage...or is it...with an owl that's unusually useful. This is the last short of 2025, and the final in my weekly series. I'll be releasing shorts monthly in 2026. Read them mid-month here, or get them earlier in my email newsletter!

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
New short story, in which a bereft sorceress has to get clever about avenging her twin sister's death. Read the beginning at leilaammartin.com/shorts, and subscribe to the blog (it's free!) to read the whole thing.
New short, in which a university student far from home meets the ghost of her dreams. Fun for fans of THE EVERLASTING and/or A STUDY IN DROWNING.