Jul. 25th, 2012

anthimeria: Astro City superheroine Flying Fox (Flying Fox)
My job, y'all.  ARGH.

Writing lack-of-news )
In anecdotal news, I've recently had reason to think about a sort of strange, genre-fan reaction I have, and I'm wondering if anyone else does, too.

We all know how many stories in speculative fiction (and mystery, adventure, and thriller, come to think of it) start with an unassuming, innocent protagonist who gets embroiled in something beyond their ken.  They invesitgate the strange noise.  They look out the window when someone screams.  They notice the cardboard box that crosses the road against the prevailing wind.

My natural inclination in all of those situations is to leave it alone.  I'm not inclined to see what's making that oddly hollow banging noise unless it's obviously threatening.  But then I remember all those stories that start with the person who looked, who discovered, who noticed, and I think, well.  It's probably nothing.  It might be something terrifying.

It might be something wonderous.

Could I live with myself if I missed my chance to see Narnia, or take a ride through time and space in a blue box, just because I didn't get up and go see?

Of course, I'd never know if I missed the Doctor, or a ghost, or a fey without their glamour.  So sometimes I dismiss it and go back to whatever I was doing.

But sometimes I get up and go see.

It's irrational and silly, sure.  But so is buying a lottery ticket, if you run the odds, and I somehow feel--hopeful--every time I do it.  Even if the oddly hollow banging noise turns out to be a loose shutter instead of a spaceship backfiring.

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anthimeria: unicorn rampant, first line of Kipling's "The Thousandth Man" (Default)
Lauren K. Moody

Positive Obsession

There is hope in error, but none at all in perfection.
--Ursula K. Le Guin

The universe is made up of stories, not atoms.
--Muriel Rukeyser

Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.
--Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr

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