I still think this could use improvement, but here it is anyway.
Title: Sestina: John
Fandom: Stargate: Atlantis
Characters: John/team/gen
Rating: PG
Word Count: 500
Summary: John finds a home.
Spoilers: "Rising."
Disclaimer: Neither the canon nor the fanon that inspired this are mine.
A/N: I'm glad to have this finished, finally. Big thanks to
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Comments 23
Now, I'm not entirely up on all the Sheppard backstory, but this seems pretty darn accurate. I remember that episode where they pretend went back to earth, and John looked about as comfy as a jellyfish on a porcupine.
I'm not exactly sure how a sestina works, but the form works really well and flows naturally. I want to hug this (or possibly John), but I'm making do with hugging my laptop. He does look kindof like a little lost boy at times.
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John looked about as comfy as a jellyfish on a porcupine.
:D What a great description.
p.s. There's a good description of the sestina form here. Basically, it's six verses with the same six end-words repeated in a certain order, and then a three-line envoi containing all six words. It's fun to work with. I did one for McKay, too, which was a blast, although you may not want to read it until you've seen "The Hive" in season two.
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I'm working my way through season 2 right now, though it's going to be suspended by my pending trip to Italy.
Quite a lot is hinted about Sheppard's past, which is cool because then you can make of it what you will, and still provide evidence :D
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Have a great trip!
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The third stanza absolutely works now, giving plot and character equally, and the structure really pulls us through. I love the sense of dislocation on earth - the sestina structure really drives that home, where it's the same words but an utterly different atmosphere. The whole thing blends plot and character, and I love the different meaning you give to "alien" and "wakes" in the last two stanzas - I love it when you play with the structure like that.
For some reason, I particlarly love the phrase "oasis on the sea"...can't figure out why, it just feels right, somehow.
Gorgeous, as ever. Brava!
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I'm very glad you think the third stanza works now; I had your voice in the back of my head during revisions, saying the transition was too jarring and the emphasis too heavy on plot we already knew, and hoped the insertion/threading of the song would help.
roga was the one who suggested "wake" in the funereal sense, so all credit to her. :)
I particlarly love the phrase "oasis on the sea"...can't figure out why, it just feels right, somehow. Neat. I put that in because I was trying to get "sea" and "city" in each stanza (and managed it, except for "city" in the next-to-last stanza; but that's okay, see, because they're not on Atlantis, and John misses the city... or something *g*), and the city as an island came to mind, and "oasis" felt right when John had just compared everyone on it to misfits seeking a haven. Looking at it now, I like that it also ties back to the desert in the previous stanza. It's really very different from anything John's had in his life before ( ... )
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But I feel bad talking about what I don't like when people are saying it's good, because then it sounds like I don't think they have good taste or something. So -- thanks for reading, and it does help that you found the themes coherent and that it reads well.
p.s. I've got Chaos now; just need to sit down and actually start reading it.
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And I don't know how much you know about chaos theory already, but hopefully you'll enjoy it!
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*g* Yeah, well. If you're not hard on yourself, who will be?
Everything I know about chaos theory I learned from Michael Crichton's The Lost World. And maybe a Scientific American article or two. So I've got some sketchy basics but expect to learn lots more, enjoyably.
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