Torn World Muse Fusion 4-13-10 Followup Report

Apr 14, 2010 21:00

Yesterday's Muse Fusion was all right.  You can read the original "go" post if you want to see the prompts over on torn_world.  An official followup post should appear there eventually.  It looks like we had 7 contributors, 8 prompters, and 54 comments; somewhat slower than previously  In my Muse Fusion post from yesterday, I explain how I approach these activities; it includes a list of what I wrote, with descriptions.

I managed to stay more focused on writing yesterday, so I clocked 9 hours and 45 minutes.  I was writing slower on most stories, though:
"Daughter of the Empire" -- 1 hr 30 min, 1,469 words
"The Empire Trusts You" -- 1 hr 30 min, 1,146 words
"The Rats!" -- 3 hr 15 min, 2,652 words
"The Hammer That Remembered Hands" -- 15 min, 731 words
"Spunkey Shines" 45 min, 875 words

Of those, "Daughter of the Empire" has been ruled out by my first-reader, for reasons of implausibility. Two others have been submitted to Torn World already, and two more are waiting to be read. I also wrote a nonfiction piece, "Poetry of the Empire," and two poems, "A License to Travel" and "A Strange Shade of Blue."

So far nothing has been sponsored, alas, so you may not get to see any more of this stuff than the freebie poem ("A License to Travel") unless you are a Torn World supporter. If you're interested in sponsoring something, these items are available:

"The Empire Trusts You" -- $10 OR 10 Torn World Credits
"The Rats!" -- $20 OR 20 Torn World Credits
"The Hammer That Remembered Hands" -- $10 OR 10 Torn World Credits
"Spunkey Shines" -- $10 OR 10 Torn World Credits
"A Strange Shade of Blue" -- $6 OR 6 Torn World Credits OR 20 Torn World Karma

Sponsored items will be submitted to Torn World for approval, and should eventually become visible to the public.  Unsponsored items will be reserved for Torn World supporters only.

Thank you all for your time and attention.  I hope you enjoy watching me create stuff.

torn world, fantasy, fiction, reading, writing, poetry, cyberfunded creativity, science fiction

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