Does your writing reveal anything unexpected about yourself? What does it reveal?
12 thoughts on “Reader Friday: What Does Your Writing Reveal About You?”
I still believe good triumphs over evil.
That I would rather have lived in the 1800’s. 😎
I like that. I don’t know why it made me smile but it did.
Saying something one time is enough.
Scapegoats can lay down their burdens and live their own lives; the scapegoats can also find those who have ‘dumped’ their baggage on them, and give it all back.
I sense A dish of revenge that was best served cold there, Lita!
Waiting until all need for revenge had disappeared, made the return of their ‘unclaimed’ baggage final, complete and blessedly guilt-free, Kathryn.
That I have a deep vindictive streak my friends and family should be afraid of. (And that I have a habit of ending sentences with a preposition.)
That I can’t go anywhere without part of my mind wondering how I can use the setting in a novel.
The dreaded “Scribe’s Setting Syndrome”! ?
In my fiction the bad are punished and the good rewarded. Very satisfying.
In my fiction, everyone is at least somewhat evil, and the main character gets what he/she wants, even if he doesn’t recognize it. Very scary.
I don’t know what that says about me and I’m pretty sure I don’t want to know.
“We are all the same.” Brian McDonald in The Golden Theme.
I still believe good triumphs over evil.
That I would rather have lived in the 1800’s. 😎
I like that. I don’t know why it made me smile but it did.
Saying something one time is enough.
Scapegoats can lay down their burdens and live their own lives; the scapegoats can also find those who have ‘dumped’ their baggage on them, and give it all back.
I sense A dish of revenge that was best served cold there, Lita!
Waiting until all need for revenge had disappeared, made the return of their ‘unclaimed’ baggage final, complete and blessedly guilt-free, Kathryn.
That I have a deep vindictive streak my friends and family should be afraid of. (And that I have a habit of ending sentences with a preposition.)
That I can’t go anywhere without part of my mind wondering how I can use the setting in a novel.
The dreaded “Scribe’s Setting Syndrome”! ?
In my fiction the bad are punished and the good rewarded. Very satisfying.
In my fiction, everyone is at least somewhat evil, and the main character gets what he/she wants, even if he doesn’t recognize it. Very scary.
I don’t know what that says about me and I’m pretty sure I don’t want to know.
“We are all the same.” Brian McDonald in The Golden Theme.