PiP is short for Piglet in Portugal
Gotta support Homer and the gang.So good to see you here!
I saw your face on your .com profile, and I think you have some pretty awesome eyes. I remember them shining.I'm Aaron.
And I'm ugly.
NEXT!!!
I saw your face on your .com profile, and I think you have some pretty awesome eyes. I remember them shining.
Oh dear does this sound like I am leaning a way I am not actually leaning.
Oh, nice! What eras of history do you love? I adore Ancient Rome and WWII.
Republic or empire??I love all history. But by coincidence my favorite areas are... Ancient Rome, and WWII. I have big soft spots for Ancient Greece, Egypt and Sumer too.
Nearly all my writing is set in WWII.
I am currently working on a novel set in Greece during WWII, and the subsequent Greek Civil war (1941 - 1950)
I prefer Empire, just because as a kid my first ever "chapter book" was Rosemary Sutcliff's Eagle of the Ninth. I was hooked from that moment on.Republic or empire??
Gotta support Homer and the gang.![]()
I love all history. But by coincidence my favorite areas are... Ancient Rome, and WWII. I have big soft spots for Ancient Greece, Egypt and Sumer too.
Nice. My area of special interest is the Roman Republic, although I wrote a novel set in ancient Babylon too.
My current WIP is set at the opposite end of the scale ... Iceland, 1,000 AD. And it's doing my head in.
I have a parked novel set partly at the start of the second intermediate period in Egypt.
Ack! The rise and rule of the Hyksos in the north of Egypt, right?I don't know much about the second intermediate period, but I know that much.
So it seemed like a good time for a zombie (sorry, draugr) apocalypse ...
Very interesting and you are right. If I ever get the patience for it I will try to do the same.This is fun! I was a piano major for a few years in college. Counterpoint is the art of combining multiple independent melodic lines that sound harmonious when played together.
My image is of a Montblanc fountain pen nib. I write first drafts on paper with a fountain pen (often a Montblanc Classique) to avoid what I call the "tyranny of the delete key." I’ve uncovered through the evolution of my process that the path to better writing leads through deliberate inefficiency. Internalizing the idea that you can’t easily modify what you’ve written prompts deeper consideration before writing. This mental “pre-writing” results in more deliberate sentence construction and a stronger logical link between sentences. After all, clear writing only results from clear thinking.
Partly I picked that period because almost nothing is known about it. That way I can have people and events and no one can ever say convincingly "that did not happen then."
A traffic division in the town watch! That has me chuckling.Funny you should say that. That's exactly why I picked some of my time periods (e.g. 2nd-century BC Sardinia, 6th-century BC Babylon, 1st-century AD Rome etc.)
Of course we know lots about Rome in the 1st century, but I just created new characters to fit the story. (My Rome story is all about the creation of a new traffic-control division for Rome's primitive police force.There's a love story attached, as well as a whodunnit, but the traffic-control idea is the germ of the story).
Cool on the win.I won one of the monthly competitions on the old forum with a story set in WW1. Although I know WW2 quite well, I don't really write WW2 fiction, it's too overdone, IMO.