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Y’all little writers go on and have fun now
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“Though my soul may set in darkness, it will rise in perfect light; I have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night.”
A little doodle for one the most beautiful lines from any poem, The Old Astronomer.
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Looking for a random cause of death for a character? Click here.
Looking for a random city? Click here.
Looking for a random city that people have actually heard of? Click here.
Need a random surname for a character? Click here. (They also give prevalence by race, which is very helpful.)
Helpful writing tips for my friends.
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psa. if we’re mutuals, we’re automatically friends. u don’t need to say things like “sorry to bother” or “sorry im annoying” bc ur not. ur my friend. u can come to me for anything. u need help? im here. wanna chat? hmu. just wanna gush abt your muse? go for it. we’re friends. ily.
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So your Fictional Universe has Horses in it
Alternatively: People Ride Horses in Your Fic, and you’re Not Sure What to Do About It
horse rider/owner and baby writer here, throwing you an infodump that will maybe help with the whole ‘There’s a Horse in the Background here but I Don’t Know What to Do With it’ thing I sometimes see in writing!
Inside this infodump: Horse riding, horse care, horse tack (equipment), falling off a horse (and what usually gets injured), horse lingo, and behaviour.
Keep reading
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25 African Sci-fi & Fantasy Books
I had so much fun last year putting together my list of 25 Asian-inspired fantasy books for the launch of The Sword of Kaigen that I’ve been looking for an excuse to post a similar list of African sci-fi and fantasy ever since. While I don’t have a new African-inspired book coming out (yet), I did just start releasing my new West African-inspired serial, Rage and Whisper for free and figured that was a good enough excuse to go ahead with this list!
Below, you’ll find new releases and classics, adult fiction and YA, Afrofuturism and sword and sorcery. From Angola to Morocco, there should be an African SFF story here for everyone!
1. The Rage of Dragons by Evan Winter
In a South African-inspired fantasy world where gifted women have the power to call down dragons and gifted men can transform into fighting machines, a swordsman with no magical gifts seeks revenge on the people who betrayed him.
2. Daughters of Nri by Reni K. Amayo
This YA fantasy follows a pair of identical twin girls, separated at birth, both unwittingly bearing the power of lost gods.
3. The Kishi by Antoine Bandele
A monk in search of redemption is the only one who can save a village beset by a demon in this dark fantasy inspired by Angolan mythology.
4. Kingdom of Souls by Rena Barron
This dark fantasy follows a young witch doctor trying to come into her power in a West African-inspired world where magic comes at a price and ambition can wake demons.
5. Acacia by David Anthony Durham
Compared to George R. R. Martin’s work, this high fantasy follows the four children of a king on a quest to avenge their father’s death and restore their lost empire.
6. A Taste of Honey by Kai Ashante Wilson
A menagerie owner’s son falls in love with a soldier from across the sea in this romantic fantasy novella, which takes influence from the Yoruba of West Africa and the North African Roman Empire. (See also: Kai Ashante Wilson’s Sorcerer of the Wildeeps)
7. David Mogo Godhunter by Suyi Davies Okungbowa
Described as Nigerian God-punk, this urban fantasy follows a freelance godhunter on adventures through the streets of a futuristic Lagos.
8. War Girls by Tochi Onyebuchi
This dystopian sci-fi adventure follows a pair of sisters through a war-torn Nigeria full of flying mecha and cyborgs. (See also: Tochi Onyebuchi’s Beasts Made of Night and Crown of Thunder)
9. Children of Blood and Bone by Tomi Adeyemi
A young heroine embarks on a quest to restore magic to a world inspired by the Yoruba mythology of Nigeria. YA fantasy. (See also: Tomi Adeyemi’s Children of Virtue and Vengeance)
10. Imaro by Charles R. Saunders
This heroic fantasy chronicles the adventures of a larger-than-life warrior struggling to overcome adversity and find acceptance in a sprawling world based on pre-colonial Africa.
11. The Queen of Zazzau by J. S. Emuakpor
The heir to a crumbling kingdom seeks the help of a god of war in this historical fantasy, based on the true story of the Hausa warrior queen, Amina of Zazzau.
12. Black Leopard, Red Wolf by Marlon James
Marlon James’ dark fantasy follows a mercenary hired to find a mysterious missing child.
13. A River of Royal Blood by Amanda Joy
A pair of sisters vie for the throne of a kingdom of fey and magic in this North African-inspired YA fantasy.
14. Zoo City by Lauren Beukes
Beukes’ wild urban fantasy follows a young heroine through the seedy underbelly of a city teeming with crime and magical animals.
15. Everfair by Nisi Shawl
This Afrofuturistic steampunk story explores an alternate history in which the Congo developed steam technology ahead of Europe.
16. The Gilded Ones by Namina Forna
A girl with supernatural powers finds new purpose as a warrior after being cast out by her community in this West African-inspired YA fantasy (slated for release May 2020).
17. The Ear, The Eye, and The Arm by Nancy Farmer
Set in 2194 Zimbabwe, this YA adventure follows three kidnapped children trying to find their way home and the three magical detectives hired to find them. (See also: Nancy Farmer’s A Girl Named Disaster)
18. Temper by Nicky Drayden
This Afrofuturistic fantasy tells a tale of demons, temptation, and the relationship between brothers. (See also: Nicky Drayden’s The Prey of Gods and Escaping Exodus).
19. The Dreamblood Duology by N. K. Jemisin
Jemisin’s Egyptian-inspired epic fantasy includes The Killing Moon and The Shadowed Sun.
20. Kintu by Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi
Set in a reimagined Uganda, this historical fantasy tells the story of several generations of a single family trying to break an old curse.
21. Lost Gods by Micah Yongo
A teenage assassin finds himself hunted by fellow assassins he once considered family in this epic fantasy inspired by Africa and the Middle East.
22. Mirage by Somaiya Daud
A young poet is kidnapped into a world of danger and court intrigue this Moroccan-inspired space fantasy.
23. Rosewater by Tade Thompson
The first book in Thompson’s Wormwood Trilogy, this science fiction thriller follows a rogue government agent through a Nigeria under threat of alien invasion.
24. The Wolf Queen by Cerece Rennie Murphy
A young heroine sets out to reclaim her past and restore an ancient magic in this romantic action fantasy.
25. Binti by Nnedi Okorafor
The first ever Himba student at an interstellar university has to strike a balance between her new life among the stars and the traditions of her people in the midst of a war with an alien race. Science fiction novella. (See also: Nnedi Okorafor’s Akata Witch, Who Fears Death, and Zahara the Windseeker)
26. Lion’s Blood by Steven Barnes
I really didn’t mean for this list to exceed 25 books, but I belatedly realized that I wanted to include Lion’s Blood because it’s the only African-inspired speculative fiction work that asks the same question as my own books: what if historical Africa had not only avoided colonization but was itself a colonial power? The similarities pretty much end there, as Lion’s Blood and its sequel, Zulu Heart, take place in 1863 rather than modern-day, and explore their African-dominated alternate history through the eyes of a Celtic slave.
As I mentioned above, I’ve started releasing an African-inspired serial called Rage and Whisper. This standalone sci-fi/fantasy follows five teenage prodigies through a school-wide fighting tournament in the West African dominated world of Duna. If you want to read that free, you can start here. The first book of my Theonite Series is also available for free through my newsletter.
If you’re a super nerd and want to know all about my West African world-building, you can check out my source bibliography here (and if you pick up any of the listed sources, please, please get in touch so we can talk about them! You have no idea how happy that would make me).
My Books / Website / Twitter / Instagram / Goodreads
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Tales From Blackwood Apartments
format: collection of short stories
genre: slice of life
summary: a block of flats in a nondescript town somewhere in england houses a number of queer people, undefined by their identities
characters (an ever updating list):
evan sullivan- 21, transgender man, bisexual. coffee lover and cat owner, english
simon (surname tbc)- aroromantic, asexual. plant lover and cook, second generation (tbc) immigrant
#tales from blackwood apartments#tfba#wip introduction#to be edited and updated as more becomes concrete#queer writing#queer writer#writerblr#mushroomwrites
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Writing Rambles
hello! and welcome to: writing rambles, a rambly segment where i discuss the difficulties im currently facing with my writing, and attempt to work through it or maybe even get some help from the community!
chapter 1: difficulties in representation
quick bit of context- i havent officially introduced any of my wips yet but one of them is tales from blackwood apartments, a series of short stories following the lives of queer people, without the focus being on their queerness.
i’m attempting to include a wide variety of identities, backgrounds and ethnicities however as a cis white woman my personal experiences and knowledge is fairly limited, so i’m obviously doing my own research on how to do these characters justice, and not fall into any stereotypes or perpetuate harmful thinking.
which is where the problem of today begins
i read a really powerful piece by a trans person basically saying that cis artists should not try and define or write about the trans experience- and i wouldnt write a story about the struggles of trans people because that isnt my story to tell- but more and more i feel i just shouldnt be writing the stories i want to write. on the one hand im finding advice saying cis people can never write a trans character well, and on the other hand im finding advice begging people to write more trans characters and include better representation. being queer is so important to me, and writing good, varied queer representation is therefore also really important to me, but im a white cis woman and i dont just want to write stories about my own personal experiences, i want to write about so much more because my experience encompasses such a narrow view of queerness and offers such little representation. i dont want to back out of writing other lgbt characters because its too hard, but i dont want to tell a story that isnt mine to tell
some of my plans for short stories include black characters, latinx characters, disabled characters- and while their stories won’t centre around that facet of their identity (one of them, for example, being a romance between a blind nonbinary person and a black lesbian artist, where the focus will be the romance and art) it is important that i don’t leave the only way you can tell theyre a POC or trans or queer in any way is because i, the author, tells you so.
i have trans and nonbinary friends, who are excited about this project and have asked if they can help, but unfortunately i come from a middle class, predominantly white area and i just don’t have friends that are POC, nor do i want to put the burden of helping me on any POC in the current climate. however im also a student, and i can’t afford to financially compensate anyone i might find for their time.
maybe i should look for trans and POC writers? maybe i should abandon the project.
i applaud anyone that got to the end of that and if you have any thoughts, reblog or shoot me a message, please. thank you!
#queer writing#representation#writerblr#poc representation#queer representation#writing rambles#mushroomwrites#also thank you to the lovely people who reblogged my first post#that was so nice and such a warm welcome to the community
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just a quick little psa:my profile picture does not belong to me! it was made by the amazing fairydropart on twitter (go check her out, i Adore her art)
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hi! welcome
my name is mushroom, sometimes jenn, and i am a writer. i have several WIPs at the moment, and this blog will be for introducing those projects, exploring the characters, posting snippets and maybe if there’s interest posting longer sections of these pieces as theyre written and edited!
(a little more about me under the cut!)
i’m 18
my pronouns are she/her
i live in the UK, and study creative writing with english at university
i read a variety of books but mostly fantasy
i identify as queer!
my favourite colour is sometimes burgandy and sometimes a particular shade of yellow
i’ve written some fanfics, one of which gained some traction here on tumblr!
my biggest inspiration for writing is the night circus by erin morgenstern
if anyone has any questions feel free to shoot me a message or an ask!
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