Day 15 – Fiction I’ve written

Today was suppossed to be fanfic, but I don’t do that.  Instead here some general, non-fanatical fiction.

As anyone who has ever participated in NaNoWriMo will tell you it’s not the quality of writing that counts, it’s the quantity.  They may also mention something about plot ninjas.  Therefore the only logical thing to happen in a reasonably historically accurate Young Adult tale set in divided Berlin is as follows:

The black clad figure stalked silently across the barren wasteland. He knew this was where he was needed, his years of ninja skills told him so. There in the dark only he and Chuck Norris knew where he was, which was exactly how it should be. Very few people know that Chuck Norris is the patron saint of ninjas. There are many reasons this is such a well kept secret, least of all because if the rest of the Vatican City found out that the last Pope’s dying act was to canonise a still living action hero, there would have been all sorts of paperwork to fill in. Even fewer people than know about St Chuck know about the sheer volume of paperwork which needs to be carried out for each and every canonisation. It is still the main reason there are so few modern day saints, the Pope just doesn’t have time to fill all the forms in in triplicate. The last Pope did suggest to the Papal Council that they move to a computerised canonisation programme, but they ever since his suggestion they have come up with nothing but ideas to block the move to the 21st century: iCanonisation is a Mac program it doesn’t run on Windows, the program doesn’t have language support for Latin, they don’t have the manpower to spare to data input all the past saints, so what would be the point of moving to a new system if it wasn’t going to be a complete system? Everyone knows working from two systems is worse than working from one shoddy system.

The papal lunacy didn’t affect this particular ninja. As a secular ninja he didn’t observe the major Chuck Norris holidays, which is why he got this particular job. He didn’t mind ninjas who did observe their days of faith, but his main problem was when a festival fell on a day when ninjaing was needed. Those ninjas who didn’t call in sick on festivals were usually part of a Ninja Trade Union, they fought for tougher powers and stronger rights. They wanted health and safety checklists to be completed before each and every action, they wanted danger pay, they wanted time in lieu for night time ninja acts, they wanted a limit put on the number of temp ninjas which were brought in every year. This ninja wanted to take out every single trade union in a carpet bombing of throwing stars. It was this dream which kept him going. Every single mission he accepted bought him a few more throwing stars for his arsenal. And one day, one day he would have enough and his dream would become a reality.

He continued his silent pacing across the wasteland, ahead of him he could see the chain link fence. Behind that was another stretch of barren land, this time patrolled by aggressive dogs, laced with trip wires and supervised from on high by numerous control towers. Then there was a land mined stretch of land, another fence topped with barbed wire and then finally a concrete wall. He wished it was more of a challenge.

This was laughably easy for a ninja, even a blind, trainee ninja with a gammy leg and beer belly could manage this one on one of his off days. The ninja briefly considered shackling his legs together to put a bit of the challenge back into the endeavour, but shook that idea out of his head. What was the point? It would not be a disgrace to his honour to complete such a simple mission, after all he was a ninja, a ninja has no honour. The only thing a ninja has any respect for is himself.

He reached the chain link fence and hoisted himself over it, he landed in the gravel beneath silently. He paused for a mere split second to bask in his own greatness, jumping twelve feet onto gravel without so much as a sound, that is why he was the ninja that every other ninja would want to be – if they knew he existed.

That is the main problem with a ninja’s life, it is a lonely life. He never met any other ninjas. The same ninja superpower which gave him his ninja intuition, his ninja super strength and his ninja reflexes was the same superpower that prevented him from drifting into another ninja’s territory. No one had even tried to have two or more ninjas in the same place at the same time – not even Chuck Norris – no one knew exactly what would happen but they all knew it would be bad. If it is something that not even Chuck Norris will do, then it should not be done and no questions should be asked. Although he was a secular ninja, he still respected Chuck Norris. As gaijins went Chuck Norris was a good one, there was no doubting that.

The gravel underfoot gave way to a very fine soft sand, the kind that foot prints would be left in by anything heavier than a starling. This did not faze this particular ninja, he centred himself and with a single standing leap he took off twisting and turning, looping and swirling before landing firmly, without so much as a wobble on the other side of the sand.

Although he had been in their enclosure for a good seventeen seconds or so by this point the guard dogs had still failed to spot him, they didn’t even appear to have picked up the slightest whiff of his scent, despite his deliberate standing up wind of them. While this was a bonus for the ninja – because if the dogs did manage to take a bite out of his black trousers he didn’t have a spare pair to change into – it did make it all a little easier for him. He whistled a high pitched whistle, at a pitch only dogs can hear and only ninjas can produce. It did as it should and caught the dogs’ attention. A pair of Alsatians rose to their feet and without pausing to neither shed hair all over the sofa, sniff someone’s crotch nor to take a dump in their neighbour’s garden, they took off after the ninja.

This was more like it. The adrenaline was pumping now, as it coursed through his veins he reached the edge of the trip wire zone. The dogs were getting nearer and nearer. He closed his eyes he raised his hands above his head and he back flipped across the trip wires, feet over head over feet over head over feet over head over feet over head. As he landed, having touched not a single wire he cast a glance behind him: one of the two Alsatians had got himself tangled in a wire causing searchlights to circle him and a hail of bullets to be blasted from the control tower towards the dog’s position. That poor dog wouldn’t live to sniff another butt. The other dog had, miraculously made it into the middle of the trip wired zone, but now with the lights and noise he had simply stopped. The ninja stared at him, just one brief stare, just shy of a second in length but it was long enough, the dog lay down where it was and started to whimper.

The standard hunted-hunter line is well understood: mice are hunted by cats, cats are, in turn, hunted by dogs, but what hunts dogs? Few people know that the natural enemy of the dog is the ninja. Many assume that man’s best friend would play nicely with every type of man, but a ninja is no man. He is more than a man and dogs – unlike many humans – are smart enough to know this and they stay well clear.

There only remained a barbed wire topped fence and a concrete wall between the ninja and the end of his challenge, he scaled both of these in the time the average man takes to blink. The ninja’s secret when it comes to walls is not to climb up, it is to leap and not to climb down but fall with grace.

The ninja landed on the pavement on the other side of the wall, in freedom, again with neither a wibble nor a wobble. He walked off down the street, passed a group of teenagers, his sword glinting silver under the street light.

“That,” Astrid said, indicating in the direction the black clad figure had headed in – but had since disappeared from – “is what we should be doing.”

Day 13 — A Fictional Book

Fiction is a wonderful thing; letters form words form sentences form paragraphs form chapters form worlds.  Pick up a book and if it’s good it will suck you in; if it’s first person you become the protagonist; third person you’re the voyeur watching their world, hearing their thoughts and no matter how hard you try you can’t get them to listen to you and do as you wish.

Fiction gives us fully formed worlds, and it gives each reader his or her own fully formed world.  No matter how specific the writer has been each and every one of us sees something slightly differently, gives the characters slightly different accents, makes them taller, shorter, fatter, thinner, sparklier than the writer imagined, than the person next to you read.

A fictional book isn’t just something to while away the time on the morning commute for me, it’s something more.  It’s an experience from beginning to end.

It starts in the bricks-and-mortar bookshop browsing through the shelves – trying desperately to not to judge the tomes by the pattern of their binding – and failing.  Something needs to be the first thing to draw you to a book.  You may have gone into the shop with unbiased intentions, but they won’t last.  You find yourself drawn either to the realm of your favourite author/genre or the big display in the middle of the store where each employee has picked out their own favourite book and their recommending it in their tiny, scrawly handwriting.

How can you pick out a book without a little prejudice?  Are you going to pick up every single novel from every single shelf and read the blurb on the back?  No, you’re going to be drawn to the covers of books you recognise and associate with; be they black and sparkly with a hit of otherworldliness about them, or be they pastel-hued with shoes, lipsticks  and loopy fonts.

Next the title, does it sound like something you’d read?  Does it make you want to read more?  Does it tell you everything you need to know?  There are those book titles which are too vague to hold any interest, but they are far preferential (for me at least) to the overly elaborate.  The way I see it, if your book title need punctuation it’s not a title.

You’ve found a something aesthetically pleasing, but what of its cerebral effects?  To the back page!  The blurb should capture your interest and make you want to read the book, it shoudl tell your enough, but not too much…just enough to make me want to read the first page.

Once I’ve cracked open the first page, you’re a almost guaranteed to have me hook line and sinker.  The only way to lose me now is for everything that’s happened so far – the cover, the title, the blurb – to have diddly-squat to do with the first page.  To be honest, I don’t have any recollection of that ever happening, but it’s a good caveat to have in place – just in case.

We’ll take the exchange of cash / library card / asking to borrow as read and now!  I have a book to read.  If we’re being factually accurate about this, now  it would go to the bottom of my To Read pile and be rediscovered in a few calendar turns, but lets skip over my lackadaisical book turnover times and we’re now at the point where I’m reading the fictional book.  So shhh!  Can’t you see I’m reading?  Amuse yourself and come back when I’ve reached the end of the chapter.

Day 12 — Whatever tickles my fancy: Amanda Palmer

Saturday night, the Boyf and I had just gathered all the props for a poached ginger plums cook-up to have noms while watching Dr Who when there, on our twitter streams was 140 characters from @amandapalmer offering another 150 tickets to the previously-sold-out Evelyn Evelyn gig.  Dr Who and spiced plums were put on hold until Sunday [where they worked perfectly with each other] and we got on a bus all the way across the city to see if we could get ourselves a pair of these new tickets.

It would a terrible story if it ended there, if we didn’t get the tickets and we took another bus back to where we come from.  There is, however, no volcano-disrupted-transport-links between my flat and Oran Mor so we made it and got a pair of tickets.  [Extra tickets #3 and #4, if I'm not mistaken].

We also got some beautiful wooden flowers from this beautiful creature:

via: http://www.flickr.com/photos/chrisdonia/

While we made it across the city, 50% of Evelyn Evelyn and two of the three support acts were still stuck on the other side of the big cloud of volcano ash; that wasn’t going to stop Amanda Palmer though.  With the power of twitter to aid her, AFP got a pair of support acts [Bitter Ruin and Edward and the Itch],the instruments and props needed for the full Evelyn Evelyn show and although she admitted it may be a glorious mess, she did it.

There is no denying that the gig was anything but a traditional gig; her crew were stranded overseas so she roped in the audience to help [apparently I looked responsible enough for her to ask me to help with the webcasting. [Responsible? Me?  It's the geeky spectacles, they lure everyone in - even rockstars.]  I didn’t actually do any webcasting because some be-hatted boy completely bogarted the Mac].

The show itself was supposed to be Evelyn Evelyn  – a darkly humorous musical theatre piece focussing on a pair of stage-shy conjoined twins and their evil showbiz manager.  There was also to be three “support acts”, Amanda Palmer, Jason Webley and Sxip Shirey.  [The "support act" inverted commas as the conjoined twins are played by Palmer and Webley with Shirey as a their manager.]

We did get the Evelyn Evelyn show – there is no denying that.  AFP performed the whole show more-or-less by herself, playing all the roles, singing and playing the instruments.

She did have a little help from a time-delayed Jason Webley skype-ing from her apartment…

via: http://www.flickr.com/photos/satanpolaroid/

…some back-up from Bitter Ruin…

via: http://www.flickr.com/photos/satanpolaroid/

via: http://www.flickr.com/photos/satanpolaroid/

… and an audience-genrated puppet-show.

via: http://www.flickr.com/photos/satanpolaroid

The internet, being the kind of place that it is, has homed a number of people who did not enjoy the show [a minority, but a vocal minority].  Their main complaint seems to be that Amanda Palmer didn’t do an Amanda Palmer show, she did the Evelyn Evelyn show.  I don’t understand how this can be a complaint.  We bought tickets for Evelyn Evelyn, to hear Evelyn Evelyn songs and to see the Evelyn Evelyn show. That is technically what we got; it may not have been as accomplished or polished as it would have been had the whole band been there along with all their extensive stage set – but there is no denying we got the show that we advertised.

Had Amanda Palmer turned up and done an Amanda Palmer gig playing Amanda Palmer songs, people may not have outright complained because they still got a show, but they didn’t get what they we going for.  I think you would be in more of a place to complain if she had done an off-the-cuff Amanda Palmer show.

Sure, it was glorious mess and a part of me would still like to have seen a full all-action Evelyn Evelyn show; but instead I saw something that will never be repeated. I still got the show, I still got the songs, I got and saw more  audience-interaction than in every other gig I’ve ever been to before – combined – and I loved every single moment of it.

…and this time nobody got frenched by a puppet.

Day 03 — My favourite television programme

She’s sixteen, blonde and spunky.  She’s the new girl at school trying to fit in, she wants to be a cheerleader, to go on dates, to do homework like every other teenage girl – but those pesky vampires keep turning up and making a mess of things.

A tv show about an all-American girl, and English librarian and a ragtag bunch of assorted high school misfits fighting vampires shouldn’t have become the mainstream hit that it did.  If history is anything to go by it should have débuted on a sci-fi channel just after everyone had switched off, ran for two seasons then got canned much to the dismay of an ardent bunch of fangirls/boys.    Buffy The Vampire Slayer, however, bucked this trend.  It made fantasy programming mainstream, it made it intellectual while keeping one fang firmly stuck deep in the pop-culture pie.

Buffy bridged the gap between the fantastical and the everyday; not just by introducing fantasy to prime time programming, but within the programme itself.  When Buffy tells her mother that if she doesn’t go out it will be the end of the world, we all know the feeling.  Your parents won’t let you go to the party that all your friends are going to, but in Buffy’s case, not going to that party will result in the literal end of the world.  Sucks to be the Chosen One.

    Buffy has become one of those quotable tv shows, and it’s hardly surprisingly given the quality of Whedon et.al.’s writing.  It sounds simultaneously like a genuine teenager and an exceedingly hip thirty year old; it seamlessly blends high and low brow culture.  In one episode Buffy refers to Cletus the Slack-jawed Yokel then moments later refers to “going all Willie Loman”.  Where else would you get a Simpsons reference side-by-side with Arthur Miller riffs?

    The blonde teenage girl with the glib throwaway lines, however, has become quite the talking point for gender studies academics.  Pretty, blonde, petite and the strength of a small army, surely she just kung-fu kicks those monsters into submission then goes back to filing her nails and chewing her gum?  This whole thing is really just about subverting the audience’s expectations, isn’t it?  We expect the woman to be weak, and if the woman is going to be strong, she’ll look rather more Eastern European shot-putter than Californian beach blonde.  Buffy, however, has the strength, the looks and the brains to put it all together.  Yes, it’s Giles and Willow that do the academic research but it’s Buffy that takes their facts and turns them into a plan.

    As the show progressed, the Scooby Gang grew up, went to college, and we went with them.  While the shark circled and the water-skis were lined up on the beach, they never got used.  The show didn’t date as easily as it might have because we weren’t expected to believe that they were in high school forever.  [Remember Zach Morris? He seemed to be in high school forever, before he finally made it to college by which time he must've been about thirty.]  The Scooby Gang graduated high school, some went to college and the storylines and characters developed accordingly and – despite the fact that the frat house was built on top of a über-secret military monster-research facility and next door to the Armageddon-spewing Hellmouth – it didn’t seem ridiculously unrealistic because of the grounding that the non-vampire-staking storylines gave us.  And, really, when you’re sixteen who doesn’t feel like that high school is a portal to hell?

    For me, Buffy has everything I want in a tv programme: an hour of escapism; sarcastic, witty teenagers; fighting, monsters and kung-fu kicks; nerd jokes; dramas and traumas;  and – most importantly – vampires that don’t sparkle.