Yay! I shall hug it, and love it, and call it . . . well, probably not George. But whatever. I won a book! :)
*waves* Hiya, Esri!
No personal ad today because durrrrr, Candy was a retard and forgot to upload new Smart Bitch aristocratic titles. So instead, we have chapter 1! Of my post-as-I-type-it-out serial novel!
Boring caveat-ish stuff:
1. These here words copyright 2005 by Candy Tan. I’ll probably go for some kind of creative commons thing later once I’ve done more reading on it, but for right now, let’s just go with the full copyright, hmmm? Feel free to excerpt, since fair use covers that, but as a courtesy, please link back to the story, or at least the site.
OK, did some reading on Creative Commons while Autodesk Inventor 10 crashed and burned around me. So! This seems to be the license that best fits what I want for this story:

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 License.
Wow. I feel all warm and fuzzy and copyleft and shit.
2. Really, really minimal research has been done on this story. How minimal? Let’s say I looked up “Egypt” in Wikipedia, confirmed that its official language is Arabic, and that’s been about it. Please don’t come crying to me about how inaccurate my version of Cairo is. I KNOW. That’s kind of the point of this story--I’m trying to emulate the pulpy, over-the-top serials published in old magazines.
3. There’s a nifty little notes section at the end of this chapter, since I used a couple of foreign words. The annotator in me, it refuses to die.
4. This includes the partial chapter I posted a few days ago, with minor edits (exclusively word-choice issues). If you want to skip it, I’ve linked to section 2. Click on it. Bitch.
And now, without further ado: The actual friggin’ story! *trumpet fanfare*
Faboolas!
X
Dayam, girl! I liked it so much I linked to it in my blog entry for today. Fab-O! Can’t wait for the next bit!
Great chapter! And yup, “uncle” and “aunt” are terms of address used in other cultures too, for example Russian, and I think some Middle Eastern, so this works out well.
Excellent cliffhanger, btw! :-)
ROFLOL
Artificial boobs and Elder Gods, what a combination. And the dangerous book existed already during the first crusade? Now I’m tempted to write a story, too.
Oh, and if you’re going to bring the Elder Gods in, here’s a little mascot for you. -:)
It’s a fun read, and I’m curious.
How much fun are you having in the writing?
How much do you have planned in your head?
Do you worry about being able to get to the end?
Joyce
Hot stuff Candy - you obviously weren’t wasting your time while you were down in the 6th Circle of Hell.
Strange, eldritch shapes that dissipated before one’s eyes could focus on them.
I’ve always wanted to use “eldritch” in my writing, but I never managed to come up with anything, um, eldritch enough to get away with it.
I know - I’ll call my elephant “Eldritch"…
Thanks, everyone, for the kind comments!
(And even for any not-so-kind comments. None so far, but c’mon, you know you wanna....)
Gabriele: Thanks for the mascot. I just about peed my pants. The Cthulhu! It is so cute and fluffy! So not-big-as-a-freakin’-city!
And JEA’s questions:
How much fun are you having in the writing?
Loads. You have no idea. I come up with ludicrous things for Jennifer and Kahiro to do, and I just about cackle with glee.
How much do you have planned in your head?
Not very much. I have certain fight scenes planned, and a certain direction I want the story to go in. Other than that: I have no idea what I’m going to do, or how the story ends.
To give you an idea of how little I’ve planned ahead: I only figured out that the hero was going to be half-Japanese on Wednesday. And I beheaded Ramzi last night, only because I wanted to avoid a long expository passage on what Kahiro needed to seek out to defeat the book. I mean, I have NO IDEA how to defeat the book at this point. But once I beheaded Ramzi, I alla sudden discovered that:
a) Kahiro’s going to have to work harder to piece things together, plus it’s a good excuse for him to hunt down Jennifer and talk to her, woo!
b) DEMON BATTLE! Woowoo!
c) Built-in cliffhanger!
Do you worry about being able to get to the end?
A little, but not much to speak of. Right now, I’m more worried about trying to extract poor Kahiro from this demon encounter with most of his bits intact.
This story’s probably going to end up kind of schizoid and disjointed and picaresque. I prefer to think of those as good things for right now, heh heh.
And Stephen: isn’t eldritch such a fun word? Somewhat onomatopoeic, and so satisfying to say. Eldritch. Eldritch.
OK, now I’ve thought about this more I don’t like it. Because it means I have to wait a week (a whole freakin’ week!) to find out what’s going to happen next.
::Flops down on floor and kicks arms and legs about wildly and whines about wanting more and wanting it now::
Candy, you can buy the cutie here. If shipping from the US didn’t redouble the prize, I’d be tempted to get one.
BTW I linked your story to my blog; I think some of the SciFi and Crime bunch who now and then come looking might like it.
Entertaining AND educational. I learned a new word today: “eldritch” as in weird or eerie according to Webster. Kick-ass vocab’, Candy! Woo-hoo!
I love it! Sex toys, demons, blood and flying body parts. What’s not to like?
And the half-Japanese demon hunter. Fabulous. Simply fabulous.
Love it!!!!!!!!!!
Er...but now I want it as a book, dammit.
Excellent start! Keep it comin’ girl! I have to second Nicole though- I would buy this. Seriously.
Fun stuff. Though I liked the second part better ‘cause the paranormal didn’t really scream out at me in Jennifer’s portion. It’s cute, it’s fun, it’s fluffy.
So where’s the romance? Will Jennifer and Kahiro hook up? I was hoping for some good Ingleezi-whore-on-dwarf action, me being a big Sex Dwarf fan (isn’t it nice?) but unless Jennifer’s into necrophilia, I guess that’s not to be.
Loved it, Candy. I’m definitely giving this one a shout.
(Gabriele: don’t you dare start ANOTHER project. Wicked girl.)
So where’s the romance? Will Jennifer and Kahiro hook up?
Yes. Yes, they will. What better match for a son of a whore than a woman who occasionally dresses up like a whore?
I was hoping for some good Ingleezi-whore-on-dwarf action, me being a big Sex Dwarf fan (isn’t it nice?) but unless Jennifer’s into necrophilia, I guess that’s not to be.
Ramzi’s dead, true, but imps are pretty diminutive. Keep hope alive, Doug.
Keep hope alive.
Awesome, Candy! Thanks for the Asian hero.
Dating myself here, but I had a crush on Robert Ito from Quincy for years. Not to mention “older man” James Shigeta. Or younger man Russell Wong. Or Chow Yun Fat. Somebody give me some good Asian stud links! (But not Jet Li. He just doesn’t do it for me.)
Gabriele: don’t you dare start ANOTHER project. Wicked girl.
Doug, don’t worry. I would succomb to the research demon. I know myself: looking up a name would lead to reading the entire chapter in Runciman’s book, then trying to cross check and look for more books in the library. I’d start writing an outline and character sheets, and that would be the end of the FUN part.
Nay, I stick to revising Kings and Rebels and working on the Roman Empire books. You’ll have to wait for a major romance with HEA (right now it’s only romance subplots, and most with a bittersweet ending) until I’ll get my hands on the Pirates on the Baltic Sea thingie. -;)
Finally, an author who understands camels.
In South Asia (well, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh for sure) EVERYONE is uncle or auntie. I think the reason is because in subcontinental languages you never address someone higher than you (in age or status) without some kind of honorific attached to their name. So it can be sister/brother for peers once you’re an adult, but older people will be uncle or auntie. It’s a way of showing respect and has nothing to do with kinship; if it’s a kin you use one of the many highly specific terms (mother’s brother’s wife, as opposed to mother’s sister’s husband, e.g.).
See? I told you I was the Purveyor of Boring and Unwanted Data.
give me some good Asian stud links!
I’ve mentioned him many, many times before, but Andy Lau Tak Wah makes my motor run.
And Takeshi Kaneshiro is beyooootiful. That is, if you like pretty boys. (I like pretty boys.)
In South Asia (well, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh for sure) EVERYONE is uncle or auntie. I think the reason is because in subcontinental languages you never address someone higher than you (in age or status) without some kind of honorific attached to their name.
True of Chinese cultures as well. I’m still not allowed to call my sister or brothers (except for the youngest of my older brothers) only by name; it’s their name + honorific (in Hokkien, “chi” for sister, or “koh” for brother), or honorific alone ("chi chi” or “koh koh").
if it’s a kin you use one of the many highly specific terms (mother’s brother’s wife, as opposed to mother’s sister’s husband, e.g.).
Oh God, Indians have to suffer through this as well?
We differentiate based on whether the sibiling is older or younger, too. Mother’s younger brother is different from mother’s older brother is different from father’s older brother is different from father’s younger brother and once you take sisters and wives and husbands into account it’s like aaaaaagh.
To this day, I still can’t remember how to address some of my uncles and aunts. My mom has to tell me.
You may be writing this stuff for fun, just off the top of your head, Candy, but I have to tell you that it held my interest far better than any of the stuff from major NYC houses I’ve been reading lately. I’ve been having a hard time sticking with even a few pages of them. I was beginning to wonder if I’d developed ADD or something, but I guess I must’ve just bought a lot of boring books. Either that or your writing is a cure for ADD. :-)
Heh heh. Thanks for the nice words, Celeste. Maybe the books you were reading just weren’t saying “fuck” often enough in their stories?
Or maybe you were craving stories that featured the supernatural beheadings of short, shady Egyptian men?
Ooooh, another good tagline for this site. Smart Bitches: Correcting the Shortage of Gruesome Beheadings in Romance since 2005!
I’m lovin’ it! Seeing as how you all read American novels I guess you know that Uncle here is a term of affection. I would never call anyone Uncle who wasn’t related to me or who was not a close family friend. Family friends since I was born are still Mr and Mrs to me. Those are the terms of respect. I have a friend who won’t let my godson address her by name, only by her last name.
All that and a book that feels evil!
CindyS
Candy: Oh yeah, I forgot that whole older brother/sister thing. I still use honorifics with my older cousins (or as we call them in Indian English, cousin-sisters). Now that we’re all, um, not young, they’ve told me to stop, but I can’t! And my father never addressed his older brothers or sister without the honorific; it took him years in the States even to refer to them in conversation without it. I am pleased to say, however, that Indian culture is simpler than yours in the older/younger department; they’re all the same. And did I say I loved the chapter, not just the camels? Should have.
CindyS: I was brought up the same way for American friends of my parents. My in-laws FORCED me to address them by their first names, but it took me two years to be able to do it systematically. Of course, when I came to the States in the 70s I still called teachers, etc. Sir and Ma’am. They thought I was mocking them. Sigh.
Rweorr! My motor’s running, Candy! Thanks!
Sunita, in the south you’ll get slapped if you refer to an elder (15-20 years older than yourself,) teacher, Sunday school teacher, etc. by their first name unless specifically asked to do so. And these days it’s considered polite if you at least use Mr. or Ms. with the first name. So basically, anyone 21 or younger would refer to me as MS. Robyn.
Damn I wish I was 21 or younger.
I use Ms. often with my dear friends.. ‘and what has Ms. Dee been up to?’… ergo it seems to familiar to use it on comparitive strangers.
X
The wee man lost his head. Ah, well, happens to the best of us, yes?
Candy, I can’t decide if I’m bemused, intrigued or insanely jealous. What the hell - I’ll go for all 3.
How long did you say you’ve been writing fiction? Don’t say a month, or something like that, or I’ll have to dislike you intensely. Because if this is some of your ‘start-up’ work, well, you’re going places.
I’m looking forward to the next installment!
Stef
How long did you say you’ve been writing fiction?
The answer’s sort of complicated.
As a kid: All the time. I wrote about my spectacles being possessed by aline spores, a partial installment of what I had intended to be a long-running series that was an unholy combination of Beverley Hills 90210 and Sweet Valley High, part of a fantasy series, and Lord knows what else.
The problem was, I’d go back and re-read these stories and realize they were shit.
Then I took a short story writing class in sophomore year of college. More shittery.
Despaired of ever developing a fictional voice that didn’t make me want to stab my own eyes out. Firmly confined all the stories I came up with in my head.
A couple of months ago, attempted to write fiction again. Found it fun, and fictional voice only semi-shitful. Also found lots of excuses to not work on them after getting chapter 1 done on a couple of stories.
This serial novel is my first serious attempt to write an actual story from start to finish.
The problem was, I’d go back and re-read these stories and realize they were shit.
Baby, it’s all shit when it comes out of the fingers, through the keyboard and onto the moniter. It’s only when you get up to your knees in the shit of rewrite does it ever shine.
I think it’s great that you are willing to discuss your creative process, and take the risk of inviting all of us to be your first readers.
Brilliant, Candy! A lovely treat to come home to. If you’re a fan of the Elder Gods, you’d like my favorite Elder God shirt: “Campus Crusade for Cthulu. It found me.”
Baby, it’s all shit when it comes out of the fingers, through the keyboard and onto the moniter. It’s only when you get up to your knees in the shit of rewrite does it ever shine.
You don’t understand.
When I say I wrote shit, I mean irredeemably BAD shit.
I mean shit that made me want to not only stab my own eyes out, but stab out the eyes of everyone in the world to pre-emptively save them the agony of accidentally reading any of my work. You can’t re-write if you can’t stand to re-read what you’ve written, and trust me, re-reading my original stuff back then was pretty painful.
When I started writing again a couple months ago, I still wasn’t thrilled with my voice, but I didn’t loathe it as much any more.
I don’t know if it’s because I’m finally getting certain things I didn’t have the knowledge or patience to work out, or if I’m suffering from some sort of premature dementia, or if I’ve finally mellowed out a little and am not nearly as hard on myself as I used to be.
I’m suspecting a judicious mix of all three.
It’s all about voice, baby.
And your voice is divine. I mean, I come here all the damn time, even when I should be doing something else - like tax returns, or writing, or, you know, like making a living - just to read what you have to say.
I ‘hear’ that voice in this story. That’s why it’s good.
Stef
p.s. - I hope that didn’t sound like I just dissed Sarah. I love to hear what she has to say too.
Did y’all get the memo? This site/blog/whateveryoucallit isn’t so popular because of your reviews. Well, I guess it is in part, because you guys do give some honkin’ great reviews - but I think people keep coming over because of the writing. You’re funny and clever and witty, without resorting to being tacky and nasty - and most importantly, personal. That’s a fine line to walk, and you both do it quite well.
I mean shit that made me want to not only stab my own eyes out, but stab out the eyes of everyone in the world to pre-emptively save them the agony of accidentally reading any of my work. You can’t re-write if you can’t stand to re-read what you’ve written, and trust me, re-reading my original stuff back then was pretty painful.
Okay, this post made me revisit my Stories In The Drawer file—stuff that I wrote about 10 years ago and never sold.
I stand corrected. Thost stories were total shit, and there’s no way I could rewrite it to make it stink less. But there are ideas I can steal and rework...so thanks for that.
The difference between the stories I sent out in the early 90s and the one I sent to SciFiction today...it’s huge. And I wouldn’t be able to describe why, either. What did we learn between then and now?
I love discussing creative process! And hot gay sex. Woo hoo!
I’ll confirm the Auntie/Uncle thing for Iran, Turkey, Afghanistan, and Saudi. I had 4 “Uncle” Mohammed’s as a kid. :)
08.12.05 at 09:57 AM |