
Alina Capella, pleasure to be meeting you all! I'm 26, female, and the author of The Tengu And The Angel! Minors DNI.
792 posts
I Don't Want AI To Do Either. I Wrote A Book, So I Can Sure As Hell Write A Summary. I Don't Want AI
I don't want AI to do either. I wrote a book, so i can sure as hell write a summary. I don't want AI screwing me over at the final hurdle.
I don't want AI to write books for me.
I want AI to summarise the books I've written
Without scraping all my hard work
Thank you very much
-
alinacapellabooks reblogged this · 1 year ago
More Posts from Alinacapellabooks
Hello!
An Ask: What acts as your writing pick-me-up? As in, is there something, maybe a technique or piece of media, that almost always helps to inspire you?
Another very interesting question! It honestly depends on what I'm writing, so, whenever I feel stuck on a WIP, I'll revisit the thing that inspired it, and listen to all of my character playlists for it (I have playlists for all of my MCs). The Tengu And The Angel was partly inspired by Nana, in that I first envisioned it as a realistic drama about adult life and relationships, so whenever I got stuck on it while writing the early stages, I re-watched the entire series. I very much envisioned the story as Nana, but with a happy ending.
Share a line you've written that's hilarious out of context! I'll start a quote from my soon-to-be debut novel, The Tengu And The Angel:
"Knowing him, that's code word for, 'please pity-fuck me'."
Hi Alina! How does your writing reflect and/or challenge the values you grew up with? These could be anything from cultural, family, and/or personal values and beliefs.
That's a very interesting question! I think my writing, especially my soon-to-be debut book, The Tengu And The Angel, is very reflective of some of the values I hold personally, those being that you don't owe endless love and patience to people who hurt you, even family, and that having a shitty childhood is not an excuse to be shitty to others. Growing up, I knew a lot of kids who were in the foster system, and I learned very early on in life that not everyone has parents who love them, and that I am fortunate to be the child of two loving parents. Nathaniel's character was very much inspired by the foster kids I was friends with as a teenager, the ones who, even though they'd had some good foster carers, felt unloved and unwanted, and that they didn't belong anywhere. Kunio's character came from my mother, who grew up with a horrifically abusive adoptive mother, and a lot of his insecurities as described in the book are inspired by the effects I've seen my mother's abusive childhood have on her. Tama and Layla, Nathaniel and Kunio's best friends, are based on my own mindset; they, like me, are the children of loving parents, and though they sympathise with Kunio and Nathaniel, and they want to help in the ways that they can, they can never truly understand what they've been through, or how deeply their childhoods affect them, even now that they've grown up.
Prompt: 155
"I love you."
"A thing like you is not capable of love."