Starting now, the Poetry Fishbowl is open! Today's theme is "low fantasy." I will be checking this page periodically throughout the day. When people make suggestions, I'll pick some and weave them together into a poem ... and then another ... and so on. I'm hoping to get a lot of ideas and a lot of poems.
What is "low fantasy" anyway? It's usually contrasted with high fantasy, and can mean: small-scale rather than large-scale events, minor rather than major heroes, less rather than more magic, also sometimes stories set in a close analog of our world rather than an obviously different fantasy world, ambiguous rather than polarized morality, and/or a tone more gritty than glowing. Low fantasy is about saving a village rather than a country or a world, about getting one or two people's lives to work halfway decently, about solving problems with the gear on your back rather than an army's worth, and dealing with problems that don't really have good solutions. In the rain. So for instance, the Fiorenza series mainly concerns life in a quiet little village, with occasional preternatural problems that get solved more by wit than magic.
What Is a Poetry Fishbowl?
Writing is usually considered a solitary pursuit. One exception to this is a fascinating exercise called a "fishbowl." This has various forms, but all of them basically involve some kind of writing in public, usually with interaction between author and audience. A famous example is Harlan Ellison's series of "stories under glass" in which he sits in a bookstore window and writes a new story based on an idea that someone gives him. Writing classes sometimes include a version where students watch each other write, often with students calling out suggestions which are chalked up on the blackboard for those writing to use as inspiration.
In this online version of a Poetry Fishbowl, I begin by setting a theme; today's theme is "low fantasy." I invite people to suggest characters, settings, and other things relating to that theme. Then I use those prompts as inspiration for writing poems.
Cyberfunded Creativity
I'm practicing cyberfunded creativity. If you enjoy what I'm doing and want to see more of it, please feed the Bard. The following options are currently available:
1) Sponsor the Fishbowl -- Here is a PayPal button for donations. There is no specific requirement, but $1 is the minimum recommended size for PayPal transactions since they take a cut from every one. You can also donate via check or money order sent by postal mail. If you make a donation and tell me about it, I promise to use one of your prompts. Anonymous donations are perfectly welcome, just won't get that perk. General donations will be tallied, and at the end of the fishbowl I’ll post a list of eligible poems based on the total funding; then the audience can vote on which they want to see posted.
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July 5 2011, 17:34:42 UTC 10 years ago
A version of the story where Babydoll really is a badass, saves herself and all four girls and the wicked finally get punished. Somehow.
Because the little blond girl is not a victim, damn it.
O_O
July 6 2011, 07:17:16 UTC 9 years ago
Re: O_O
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July 5 2011, 17:38:24 UTC 10 years ago
Sanitation - not glamorous, but so necessary!
July 5 2011, 17:40:14 UTC 10 years ago
Fixed!
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Poem
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July 5 2011, 17:40:08 UTC 10 years ago
22 lines, Buy It Now = $10
July 5 2011, 17:47:14 UTC 10 years ago
Grey knights, grey hats, grey witches, and grey nights.
Kitchen heroes.
The aftermath after the heroes ride through (There's a great line in one of the Black Cauldron series to the idea that, to a peasant, a great war of knights is mostly about ruined fields and ruined crops).
(related but off-topic: I always wanted to know what happened the day after movies like Independence Day).
Urban Fantasy: Truckers and truckstops.
July 5 2011, 17:48:10 UTC 10 years ago
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July 5 2011, 18:10:16 UTC 10 years ago
Poem
July 5 2011, 19:01:25 UTC 10 years ago
87 lines, Buy It Now = $43.50
July 5 2011, 18:38:41 UTC 10 years ago
Most amusing was poor Terence (afflicted with numerous flaws in real life and perhaps one of the most sub-average people I've known), whom we calculated as having an astronomically negative point total (I think was something like negative 120 or so). He objected to this, but one of us convinced him that the point totals were a valid estimate... and then, after seeing Terence's resigned nod of agreement, quietly added another -5 points for the Gullibility flaw.
July 5 2011, 18:49:14 UTC 10 years ago
Self-games are an interesting exercise, though ours sometimes got recursive ("we go visit the gaming club...")
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Yes...
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July 5 2011, 18:54:38 UTC 10 years ago
Poem
July 5 2011, 19:17:17 UTC 10 years ago
28 lines, Buy It Now = $15
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July 5 2011, 19:42:17 UTC 10 years ago Edited: July 5 2011, 19:45:59 UTC
Or how about modern practical princesses, complete with combat boots, sensible clothes and a black-belt in ass kicking. [Gods help the dragon]
July 5 2011, 19:52:15 UTC 10 years ago
Honestly I think that the knight in shining armor (aka paladin) is most often played (or written) horribly, like being 'good' took no effort at all, prayers were answered immediately, miracles and wonders were ready at the drop of a hat, faith was a given with no moments of doubt, temptation didn't exist and one hadn't to struggle with moral dilemmas and personal shortcomings.
Could we see what 'normal life' is like for a novice paladin in a low-magic world, with training, and lessons, and community life? or maybe could we have a glimpse of the thoughts of a world-weary paladin veteran, in the same low-magic world?
July 5 2011, 20:40:21 UTC 10 years ago
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July 5 2011, 19:58:19 UTC 10 years ago
Do they mourn their lost ones and go on with their lives? Do they strike out in search of them? Do they curse the lords and rulers who started the war in the first place?
Poem
July 6 2011, 00:48:55 UTC 9 years ago
24 lines, Buy It Now = $10
July 5 2011, 20:01:08 UTC 10 years ago
A fairy with one torn and shredded wing, a cat with balance problems, a Brownie who is frightened of his own shadow. Things like that.
Poem
July 6 2011, 01:37:47 UTC 9 years ago
42 lines, Buy It Now = $20
July 5 2011, 20:44:02 UTC 10 years ago
...and the thing that stood out most to me was that even in the meanest hovels, there was a broom, magically sweeping dirt from the floor. That said a lot more to me about the level of magical involvement these people had than any spiraling tower, no matter how whimsical its construction.
I want to hear about the people who do nothing but research and write out new spells... that do things like clean floors, listen for babies to be done with their naps, chase away pests from gardens, shine shoes, shovel snow, etc. I want to see the magic that affects the bottom of a society, its drudgeries, its most basic tasks. Because honestly, without magic handling those things, somehow I doubt magic would ever make an enormous palace, or support an idle class of wizards and scholars.
Poem
July 5 2011, 21:25:42 UTC 9 years ago
44 lines, Buy It Now = $20
July 5 2011, 21:02:09 UTC 10 years ago Edited: July 5 2011, 21:02:34 UTC
July 5 2011, 21:29:07 UTC 9 years ago
Those were my favorite re-read for humor when I needed cheering up for, oh, a couple of decades.
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July 5 2011, 23:48:14 UTC 9 years ago
Not all minions join The Cause of Evil(tm) because they want to do it. Some join because they must: the villain is ransoming something or someone they love, they once truly believed the villain would deliver them from oppression, poverty, etc. So what happens when the hero arrives too late, only to discover that the henchmen have found a way to save themselves?
Poem
July 6 2011, 03:15:29 UTC 9 years ago
123 lines, Buy It Now = $61.50
July 5 2011, 23:53:28 UTC 9 years ago
Because I had a fabulous pie this weekend - what is the baker like? Not only does the poor baker have to get up early to make the bread for the village, he or she must surely suffer through making batch after batch of waybread for travelers and magic pies (possibly involving blackbirds...).
I am aslo curious about the seamstress or tailor who must deal with gossamer and spiderwebs and cloth of moonglow...
Poem
July 6 2011, 03:44:38 UTC 9 years ago
24 lines, Buy It Now = $10
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