The whole green land belongs to Alyria (Askanian is only shown as independant cause they still have their king as a respentive figure & some different laws than the rest of the empire)
Note: I made this map before I established that Iudin is north of Alyria - so on this map north is to the right and south to the left.
Summarize your story. Don’t be vague or coy. No hiding the pickle. There are so many fics and so little time. More people will skip over your fic if they don’t know what it’s about than will be turned away because it’s not about something they’re interested in. Tell the reader what happens!
A snippet is not a summary. People like to use lines of dialogue or excerpts to grab the reader’s attention. Very rarely do these snippets provide enough information to summarize the story. If you want to showcase a clever line of dialogue or the tone of the fic, include a line, but after the actual summary.
Make sure the summary is clear and written well. If it is messy and full of errors, people will assume the same of the fic.
Focus the summary on the characters and what happens to them or how they feel about each other. Fanfic readers come to see the characters they love do things they didn’t get to see in the source material. Let the audience know what the characters are doing and feeling.
Don’t forget to tell the reader what makes your story unique. Lots of fics are successful almost entirely because they follow a much-loved trope, so talk about that too (definitely in the tags at the very least), but when staring at the hundredth fic about one character pining for the other and deciding whether its worth it to read another, the reader is going to look for extra details that spike their interest.
Hint at the tone of your fic in the summary. If it’s light, give the summary a chatty tone. If it’s angst, make it hurt. If it’s plot-driven, go matter-of-fact. If it’s a character piece, meditative and dreamy.
Don’t contradict yourself. Don’t write a summary and then immediately undercut your description by trying to soften the blow. Just get the summary right from the get-go rather than mischaracterizing the work and then backpedaling with “trust me, not as angsty as it sounds” or “this is actually total fluff. And if it really is as angsty/dark as it sounds, let it be angsty with confidence. There are readers out there who will love your fic for what it is and will be turned off by a waffling summary.
Don’t reference yourself. The fic is the star of the summary, not your ego. Don’t explain why you wrote it (unless you’re listing a short prompt). And definitely don’t make any self-referential jokes, give your opinions on the characters, use the summary for foreshadowing, or compare it to other fics.
The summary is not the place for self deprecating humor, false modesty or insecurity. Don’t say it’s your first fic. Don’t apologize. Don’t say that English isn’t your first language. If you must, do this in the author’s notes, but better to not do it at all. The worst you might get if you don’t warn for these things is the suggestion you get a beta or some concrit. Most people will just skip your work entirely.
One paragraph only! Readers are skimming a list of summaries. They probably won’t stop to read all of yours. See points 10-13 for more on this.
Don’t use the summary for warnings. Warnings are for tags and author’s notes. Make sure you warn for all possible triggers, but these are reasons for people not to read the fic, not reasons to read it (if they are reasons to read it, then phrase them as part of the summary not as warnings). Warnings can easily overwhelm a summary to the point that it becomes about why the reader should probably just not read it rather than an enticement to read.
Remember the reader can also see your tags and that tags help the reader find the right fics. Put any tropes that might be selling points in the tags and leave the summary for information that is unique to the fic/gets at the backbone of the fic.
Remember you have the author’s notes. This is great place to tell us why you wrote the story, give a long prompt word-for-word, thank your betas, give more detailed warnings, reference inspirations, and gab on about yourself.
The summary is not the place for worldbuilding. Don’t explain the intricacies of your AU in the summary. If it’s a very strange world, you get one sentence max to describe that world. Spend the rest of the summary on the substantive character arcs. If the reader can’t understand your AU from the text of the fic itself, you’re doing it wrong.
It doesn’t hurt to sell yourself. Phrase things in a pithy, clever way, let the readers know you’re going to deliver on their favorite trope, and keep the tone confident. This is the inside flap of your hardback. This is the summary on amazon. Think about what would make you buy.
Do not write “I suck at writing summaries” in your summary. If you can’t trust yourself to write a summary, why should the reader trust you to write a good story?
that post that’s like, fandom’s obsession with viewing characters as only relatable or shippable or defendable has ruined media literacy in being able to view characters through the lens of themes or narrative theory. character analysis one of my favourite forms of analysis but not at the detriment of being able to understand when a character represents something larger thematically in a story than what they would be if they were just a guy from your high school
I feel guilty wanting people to comment.I feel like if my work was good enough, they would :(
This is definitely a common feeling amongst authors, and I think part of it stems from our cultural view of artists/creators.
We often hear writers say things like “I just had to write this” or “the characters were screaming at me” and that gives off the impression that writing is going to happen no matter what. Writers have to write. Artists have to draw. If creative people can’t let their creativity out, they go a bit nuts.
The dissonant part of this is that, while creative people do have an innate drive for creation, they don’t have an innate drive to share that creativity. Needing to make something and needing to share it are two different things, serving two different purposes. Creating the work satisfies a part of you that has a story to tell or a vision to make real. Sharing that work is done in the hopes of satisfying a need for making a connection with people about that work.
Wanting people to comment is a natural part of sharing your work with them, and nothing for you to feel guilty about.
What readers don’t understand is that desire for a connection to them. For them, the connection is made by reading your work. From their perspective, you have made a connection. The problem is, from your perspective nothing has happened. You’ve posted your work and received nothing in response. It’s like walking up to someone with a big smile on your face and saying, “Hi! How’s it going?” and having them just stand there with no change in facial expression or body language, saying absolutely nothing. The connection only went one way.
There are lots of reasons why people don’t comment on artistic works, and only 1 of them is not liking the work itself.
You aren’t being needy, you’re being human.
editing is so fun. I'm learning what the story I wrote is about
The inherent homoeroticism of killing your enemy and immediately regretting it
you ever accidentally create a recurring theme in your writing. you start putting together an outline for something you’ve never written before and get partway through planning, rearrange the pieces, and go “GODDAMMIT THIS IS ABOUT GRIEF AGAIN”? because let me tell you,
I present y'all some analogical fluff in these trying times with wolf shifter virgil & unaware human Logan
https://archiveofourown.org/works/47343466/chapters/119295535
Aaaaaahhhhh!!!! Ahhhh?? AAAAAAHHH!!!
More coherent thoughts under the cut cause DAMN
I already told you but you will hear it again: your art looks excatly like a high fantasy trilogy feels like. It got those adventure where you find friendship along the way vibes and I'm digging them so so hard.
This is so much amazing art and you even colored some pieces like ??? How did i deserve you. You captured the feel lf the story and the personality of the characters perfectly like look at that variety. Virgil ks big and strong but still looks so huggable, no idea how you managed it. Remus has the perfect amount of mishief and Janus is small and angry and just !!!! I'll cherish them forever. Thank you so so much
Also side note: that is one sexy tree and i'm not growing tired of repeating and you drew the best round chicken and for that alone you can have a kidney if you ever need one
Thanks to @the-princey-pie for sharing this beautiful story that I got to create art for. It’s been amazing fun.
You can read Summer Wine In Verdant Winters right here! Please go check it out!
(More art under here, but be warned some pieces might show spoilers.)
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Call me Atlas | 26 | They/Them | All fictional content welcome
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