deteriorating galaxies

A writing blog.

Also...

✄ character bios

✄ RP-based ficlets

✄ drabbles

✄ original writing/poetry

✄ fanfiction (various fandoms)

✄ headcanon

✄ writing requests

✄ etc.

Enjoy.

( also open for writing requests anytime. )

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Posted 5 days ago // 23,880 notes
tagged : #ref 
Posted 1 week ago // 16,529 notes
tagged : #ref 
Fuck Yeah Character Development!: Ideas for your character's home

One of the things I enjoy doing when writing a story is to think of the places my characters live in. The fun part is drawing them out because most of the time, there just isn’t a house that goes well with my characters. Besides, I like creating everything from the get go instead of taking a picture and saying that’s my character’s house. 

Here are the links I’ve bookmarked to get ideas for homes and such. It’s not exhaustive. I do get ideas for homes and buildings in other places but I hope the following’s helpful enough for now.

Types of houses

Places

Types of apartments

Strange houses

Obviously, not all characters have a place to live so I’ve included information on homelessness.

(Source: shackleboltrps)

Posted 3 weeks ago // 5,043 notes
tagged : #ref 

Your ignorance would be super-definite

Equivalent to a thousand dying suns

The explosion resulting from such

Igniting the planet on which we live

As well as others containing possible 

Lives that are utterly distressed

Even at the time of death

(More than a million degrees of white hot sunburst, like an

Atomic bomb superimposed over a firestorm over expressionist painting)

Woe is us that no one has brought it upon themselves

To explain to you

Why this is.

Posted 4 weeks ago // 5 notes
tagged : #poetry  #vent writing 
owlcritic:

List of Smut Writing Guides
Below is a list of guides that have been written on how to write smut. Credit goes to their original writers. This list will be updated each time I find a new smut guide. [Each link below is titled as the topic it covers]

Accurately Write Gay Sex
Advice
Bare Bones [Step by Step/Stages]
Boners
Casual Sex
Erotic Horror
For Starters
FuckYeahSexEducation [Blog]
Gay Sex
Gay Smut
Guide to Bottoming
How to RP Smut
In General [and details]
Kinks and Fetishes
Kisses
Kissing
Language in Smut
Lesbian Smut
Lesbian Smut
Making Love
Planned Sex [Girl POV]
Resources
Sex Scene
Sex Scenes
Sex Scene References
Sex that Makes People Want to Cry
Smut 101
Smut 101
Smut 101
Smut-101 [A Blog Dedicated to Smut]
Straight Smut
Terms [Vocabulary]
The Basics
The Basic Ideas
The First Time
Tips
Tips from Smut-101
What Not to Do
Words for Sex
Writing a Sex Scene
Writing from a Male’s Perspective
Writing Sex
Writing Smut
Writing Smut for the First Time
Writing Smut when You’re a Prude
Writing Tips
12-Step Program [How to Write Sex]

Yes, some of these may not relate directly to smut or cover the topic, but they can be helpful when writing smut. Some of these are labeled the same thing, but each one links to a different resource.
The updated list can always be found here. If there are any broken links, please let me know.

owlcritic:

List of Smut Writing Guides

Below is a list of guides that have been written on how to write smut. Credit goes to their original writers. This list will be updated each time I find a new smut guide. [Each link below is titled as the topic it covers]

Yes, some of these may not relate directly to smut or cover the topic, but they can be helpful when writing smut. Some of these are labeled the same thing, but each one links to a different resource.

The updated list can always be found here. If there are any broken links, please let me know.

Posted 1 month ago // 15,337 notes
tagged : #ref 

Inner piece uncovers rage

Reasons numbed as these

Read More

Posted 1 month ago // 3 notes
tagged : #poetry  #vent writing 
How To Poison Your Fictional Characters

coelasquid:

oldmanyellsatcloud:

drtanner:

therevenantwrites:

A short list of several types of poison and their effects.

Oh, excellent. I like this.

MEANWHILE, IN DORNE…

Seems in league with the stabbing one from a couple days ago.

(Source: ink-moth)

Posted 1 month ago // 23,620 notes
tagged : #writing  #reference 
Posted 2 months ago // 56,976 notes
Common Writing Mistakes

yeahwriters:

everybodyilovedies:

amandaonwriting:

Benjamin Dreyer is the VP Executive Managing Editor & Copy Chief of Random House Publishing Group. Below is his list of the common stumbling blocks for authors, from A to X. 

  • One buys antiques in an antiques store from an antiques dealer; an antique store is a very old store.
  • He stayed awhile; he stayed for a while.
  • Besides is other than; beside is next to.
  • The singular of biceps is biceps; the singular of triceps is triceps. There’s no such thing as a bicep; there’s no such thing as a tricep.
  • blond man, a blond woman; he’s a blond, she’s a blonde.
  • capital is a city (or a letter, or part of a column); a capitol is a building.
  • Something centres on something else, not around it.
  • If you’re talking about a thrilling plot point, the word is climactic; if you’re discussing the weather, the word is climatic.
  • cornet is an instrument; a coronet is a crown.
  • One emigrates from a place; one immigrates to a place.
  • The word is enmity, not emnity.
  • One goes to work every day, or nearly, but eating lunch is an everyday occurrence.
  • flair is a talent; a flare is an emergency signal.
  • flier is someone who flies planes; a flyer is a piece of paper.
  • Flower bed, not flowerbed.
  • Free rein, not free reign.
  • To garner is to accumulate, as a waiter garners tips; to garnish (in the non-parsley meaning) is to take away, as the government garnishes one’s wages; a garnishee is a person served with a garnishment; to garnishee is also to serve with a garnishment (that is, it’s a synonym for “to garnish”).
  • gel is a jelly; it’s also a transparent sheet used in stage lighting. When Jell-O sets, or when one’s master plan takes final form, it either jells or gels (though I think the former is preferable).
  • Bears are grizzly; crimes are grisly. Cheap meat, of course, is gristly.
  • Coats go on hangers; planes go in hangars.
  • One’s sweetheart is “hon,” not “hun,” unless one’s sweetheart is Attila (not, by the way, Atilla) or perhaps Winnie-the-Pooh (note hyphens).
  • One insures cars; one ensures success; one assures people.
  • Lawn mower, not lawnmower.
  • The past tense of lead is led, not lead.
  • One loathes someone else but is loath to admit one’s distaste.
  • If you’re leeching, you’re either bleeding a patient with a leech or otherwise sucking someone’s or something’s lifeblood. If you’re leaching, you’re removing one substance from another by means of a percolating liquid (I have virtually no idea what that means; I trust that you do).
  • You wear a mantle; your fireplace has a mantel.
  • Masseurs are men; masseuses are women. Many otherwise extremely well educated people don’t seem to know this; I have no idea why. (These days they’re all called massage therapists anyway.)
  • The short version of microphone is still, so far as RH is concerned, mike. Not, ick, “mic.” [2009 update: I seem to be losing this battle. Badly. 2010 update: I’ve lost. Follow the author’s lead.]
  • There’s no such word as moreso.
  • Mucus is a noun; mucous is an adjective.
  • Nerve-racking, not -wracking; racked with guilt, not wracked with guilt.
  • One buys a newspaper at a newsstand, not a newstand.
  • An ordinance is a law; ordnance is ammo.
  • Palette has to do with colour; palate has to do with taste; a pallet is, among other things, something you sleep on. Eugene Pallette was a character actor; he’s particularly good in the 1943 film Heaven Can Wait.
  • Noun wise, a premier is a diplomat; a premiere is something one attends. “Premier” is also, of course, an adjective denoting quality.
  • That which the English call paraffin (as in “paraffin stove”), we Americans call kerosene. Copy editors should keep an eye open for this in mss. by British authors and query it. The term paraffin should generally be reserved for the waxy, oily stuff we associate with candles.
  • Prophecy is a noun; prophesy is a verb.
  • Per Web 11, it’s restroom.
  • The Sibyl is a seeress; Sybil is Basil Fawlty’s wife.
  • Please don’t mix somewhat and something into one murky modifier. A thing is somewhat rare, or it’s something of a rarity.
  • tick bites; a tic is a twitch.
  • Tortuous is twisty, circuitous, or tricky; torturous is painful, or painfully slow.
  • Transsexual, not transexual.
  • Troops are military; troupes are theatrical.
  • vice is depraved; a vise squeezes.
  • Vocal cords; strikes a chord.
  • A smart aleck is a wise guy; a mobster is a wiseguy.
  • X ray is a noun; X-ray is a verb or adjective.

I usually never reblog these bc I’m way too awesome to make mistakes, but omgosh there’s some I didn’t know here!!!

Holy useful Batman!

Posted 3 months ago // 41,503 notes
Posted 3 months ago // 66,385 notes
tagged : #ref