sunlit_stone: painting of a bear smelling flowers (Default)
sunlit_stone ([personal profile] sunlit_stone) wrote2019-07-02 11:48 pm
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Introduction

Hey, I'm Sun or Sunny or sunlit-stone, as you like :) Currently entirely obsessed with Jin Guangyao and Lan Xichen from MDZS.

My transformative works policy is as follows:

You have complete permission to translate, podfic, make fanart of or fanmixes for any of my fic, as long as you credit me. With the same proviso, you have permission to remix my fic, write fic of my fic, use ideas I came up with for my fic, etc. That said, I'd prefer it if you didn't write an outright sequel to one of my fic without checking with me first, just in case it clashes with something I have planned; likewise please check in with me before you take up a story it looks like I've abandoned. And of course, if you do any of this, although it's not necessary I'd love it if you linked me! :)
maplemood: (writing)

[personal profile] maplemood 2019-07-07 02:40 am (UTC)(link)
Almost all of my fic can be summed up as a variation on 'two or three people talking together.' Oh gosh, mine too! It used to bug me a lot (I'm not the best plotter), but these days I figure I might as well play to my strengths. And those types of scenes are always my favorites in books and shows, anyway.
maplemood: (Default)

[personal profile] maplemood 2019-07-08 09:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Those moments of transformation you can get, from two characters bouncing off each other or interacting with each other, that you can't really get any other way... This bit, exactly! That and the sense of connection/love/friendship/whatever that comes with the transformation--I've always found both of those things so satisfying.
maplemood: (mercer mayer)

[personal profile] maplemood 2019-07-09 03:41 pm (UTC)(link)
Let's see...off the top of my head, some books with stand out scenes like this (at least for me), are The Winter Prince by Elizabeth E. Wein, The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman, The Monstrumologist by Rick Yancey (that one's pretty horror-focused and very gory, but if you've got a strong stomach it's also surprisingly emotional and has one of my very favorite YA platonic relationships), and Circe by Madeline Miller, which I'm actually in the middle of right now--I have some issues with certain aspects of it but there's a really excellent verbal confrontation scene between her and her sister. All of these books are pretty good with complicated, not-straightforwardly-liking-each-other dynamics, too.