farfromsugafanfic - FarFromSuga
FarFromSuga

Alyce | Est. 1997 | Bi šŸ’–šŸ’œšŸ’™ | Professional Writer By Day, Fanfic Writer By Night | MINORS DNI

187 posts

Pingo1387 Interview

pingo1387 Interview

ABefore we get started with the questions, would you mind introducing yourself and telling us just a little about yourself?

Sure! I write under pingo1387 online on FanFiction.net, Archive of Our Own, and Tumblr. Fanfiction was the first kind of writing I posted in a public internet space, and Iā€™ve been posting it since for about six or seven years fairly regularly.

Q1: What kind of fan fiction do you write/ have you written?

A1: All sorts of genres. Iā€™ve written long high school AUs, tragic romances, fairy tale-based stories, and plenty of adventure. Right now Iā€™m in the middle of writing mostly romances with a few friendship-themed adventures and an AU set in 20th-century America.

Q2: What made you start writing fan fiction?

A2: I started writing in 9th grade, and the main reason I wrote was because I had an idea for a crossover fanfic that I wanted to make a comic out of, but I couldnā€™t draw to save my life (I still canā€™t). Iā€™d always had a pretty good grasp on grammar and read a lot, so I decided Iā€™d write a fanfic about it instead and make a comic later (I never did).

Q3: Were you scared to begin posting it online?

A3: I sure was. Part of the fear came from Fanfiction.netā€™s comment system being called ā€œreviews,ā€ which made me think people would be posting paragraphs of criticisms and critiques, since the only kind of review I was familiar with was newspaper columns rating new films and novels. I was pleasantly surprised when this not only was not the case, but that people actually liked the story!

Q4: Has writing fan fiction taught you anything? About writing? Reading? Something else?

A4: Writing fanfic has definitely helped me improve my writing skills, simply because I wrote so frequently and reread my own stories, figuring out what worked and what didnā€™t. It also taught me to be more patient when waiting for updates from other authors, now that I knew how difficult it was to upload more than once every few weeks!

Q5: Do you ever want to be published in a professional capacity one day?

A5: Absolutely. I have some original stories in mind, and Iā€™d love to make a living off of them while seeing other people enjoy them.

Q6: How you feel about the stigma surrounding fan fiction and fan fiction writers? Or, do you not feel any stigma at all?

A6: I feel like there is some stigma regarding what fanfiction is and what its writers are likeā€”that itā€™s not real writing, that itā€™s all porn, and that itā€™s generally terrible. Fanfic and its writers get a bad rap.

Q7: Do you think that stigma is warranted? (Whether or not you have personally experience it?)

A7: Itā€™s absolutely unwarranted. I believe if you look up statistics, youā€™ll find that most fanfic isnā€™t explicitly sexual, and of course there is plenty of bad fanfic out there, but thereā€™s plenty of bad published writing, too, and a lot of fanfic writers are not professional and/or just starting out as writers. Of course thereā€™s going to be bad writing; you can say that about almost any site with writing, fanfic or not, on the internet.

As for it being ā€œreal writing,ā€ first off, what defines real writing? Does it have to be professionally published, hit a bestseller list, win a Hugo award? Does it need to have a blockbuster film based on it? Does it need to be in classical Greek, written by a scholar only two people in the world have heard of?

Guess what? Even if you say yes to any of those, thereā€™s a lot more fanfic in the world than you might realize. Paradise Lost is essentially fanfiction of the Book of Genesis from the Bible. Medieval painters in Italy often painted scenes from the Bible, making many famous paintings fanart. Danteā€™s Inferno is a self-insert, one of the most ridiculed kinds of fanfic, into the Catholic afterlife, where he meets many famous and infamous figures (not unlike a so-called ā€œMary-Sueā€ self-insert who gets to meet her favorite characters all in the span of two chapters). Pride and Prejudice and Zombies is a horror fanfic of Pride and Prejudice. I could go on, but you get the idea. There are so few truly original ideas simply because everything has been done, and fanfic just takes recycling ideas to the next step.

Q8: Ā Whatā€™s your favorite piece of fan fiction youā€™ve ever written? Why?

A8: Currently my favorite piece is a one-shot called ā€œSwallow Your Soul,ā€ a One Piece AU fanfic with the premise that a mysterious affliction is negatively affecting people with powers. My guilty pleasure favorite is a Hetalia high school fanfic, spanning three long stories and written over the course of three or four years.

Q9: Ā Whatā€™s something youā€™ve never been asked but want to be?

A9: For various stories, Iā€™d love to be asked how I came up with certain aspects, where an idea came from, or for details on a worldbuilding thing I never had the chance to fully elaborate on in the story. I love rambling about those sorts of things, and if any one of the answers is that itā€™s a reference/homage to something, then Iā€™d jump at the chance to talk about where it came from, because itā€™s probably something favorite of mine.

Q10: Do you write outside of fan fiction?

A10: A little bit, yes. At the moment, schoolwork and fanfic keep me occupied, but Iā€™m trying to put together characters and plots for original stories that I hope to sell one day. One is a collection of connected short stories, and the other is a YA fantasy-style adventure.

Q11: What site you (mainly) use to write fan fiction?

A11: Iā€™ve been on Fanfiction.net for my entire fanfic writing career. I occasionally post one-shots or drabbles on Tumblr in response to events or requests, and Iā€™m working on rewriting my favorite Fanfiction.net stories to post on AO3, as well as planning to post any new stories on both FFN and AO3.

Q12: Why do you write fan fiction?

A12: Itā€™s still the best medium for me to get my ideas out into the world. Itā€™s easier for me to use characters Iā€™m familiar with for stories, even if the settings are unfamiliar, and though Iā€™m developing my own characters, I donā€™t know them well enough to write them in anything outside the main story Iā€™m planning for them. Itā€™s very fun to play with the characters I know and put them in new situations, and writing stories several thousand words long over and over is great practice for when I finally submit something to be professionally published.

Find pingo1387 on Tumblr, FanFiction.net, and Archive of Our Own.

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4 years ago

risk it ā€” jjk | masterlist.

image

ā† Ā fic type: social media au, exes to lovers

ā† Ā main pairing: tattoo artist!jungkook x salon owner!reader

ā† Ā side ships: namjin, vmin (fwb), hoseok x makeup artist!oc

ā† Ā genre: heavy angst

ā† Ā warnings: explicit language, mature themes, smut, light pining, jealousy, alcohol usage, light violence

ā† Ā status: ongoing

SERIES SUMMARY:

āœ§ a drunken text ends with you wrapped up in the arms of your ex-boyfriend. aka the man that you dumped two years prior, after he refused to marry you. suddenly, all of the feelings that youā€™d seemingly had buried come rushing back up to the surface, and youā€™re not sure how long you can ignore them.

a/n: if youā€™d like to be added to the tag list, send me an ask!

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6 years ago

glitteringconstellations interview

Before we get started with the interview, do you mind introducing yourself (whatever name you are comfortable with) and telling us a little about yourself?

Hi everyone! Iā€™m glitteringconstellations, Glitter or GC for short. Iā€™ve been writing fanfiction for well over 15 years now, though I only started sharing it around 2005. I minored in Creative Writing in college and I love writing in pretty much any capacity! When Iā€™m not headcanoning one new story or another, though, Iā€™m either adulting (ugh, adulting) or playing video games. These days itā€™s mostly Skyrim. Iā€™m fluent in Korean and passable in Japanese and Spanish. I drink way too much pop to be healthy and I hate most fruit (though, give me any kind of melon and Iā€™ll be a happy girl). Oh, and Iā€™m a fledgling figure skater! Iā€™m just a hodgepodge of random hobbies haha!

Q1: What kind of fan fiction do you normally write? Have you ever written fan fiction for other fandoms other than your current one?

A1: I tend to gravitate toward angsty fics. Itā€™s long been my outlet of frustration, to put the character I love in harmā€™s way. The more pain, the better, haha! Though I do love the hurt/comfort aspect of it. Recently (as in, the last year lmao) Iā€™ve been writing for the Voltron fandom almost exclusively (and sometimes YURI!!! On Ice), but before that I was in the k-pop ficdom (Super Junior, for the most part) for a looooong time, nearly 10 years. I wonā€™t be opening that particular can of worms, though--I have Feelings and Opinions lmao. Before that I jumped around from anime to anime.

Q2: I see in addition to fan fiction that you do commissioned fan art! Iā€™m not an artist myself, so I find it really interesting and cool. Do you want to talk a bit about that? And, feel free to plug yourself!

A2: This is actually a common misconception--I canā€™t draw to save my life!! I took commissions for fan fiction back in late June as a last resort to pay my rent. Typically though Iā€™m horrible on a deadline so I donā€™t like to do it too often because I feel terrible making my commissioners wait. The art youā€™re referring to is the comic spread for The Parting Glass, if Iā€™m not mistaken? I actually commissioned another artist by the name of Cota (@ccooooostuff on tumblr, go check her out sheā€™s amazing at what she does and super sweet!) for that comic with the money I got for my birthday this year.

Q3: Do you write anything outside of fan fiction?

A3: I do! I journal a lot, or I try to anyway. This year Iā€™m hoping to tackle an original novel for Nanowrimo, but more than likely, that particular project will start as fanfiction and weā€™ll see if I turn it into original fiction or not. I spend more time thinking about the things I want to write thanā€¦ actuallyā€¦ writing them lolsob. My notes will be this gigantic document but when it comes to putting things together in a cohesive manner? Haaaaaaā€¦.hahaā€¦. The blinking cursor mocks me, I swear.

Q4: I see on your profile that you are 26. I think when most people think of fan fiction writers they think of someone younger, usually a teenager. Do you encounter younger writers a lot? What do you think of this assumption?

A4: I do encounter younger writers a lot! Surprisingly, though, most writers I know are either in their late 20s or late late teens (say, 15~19). Most people tend to think Iā€™m young anyway just because I look a lot younger than 26, but as far as fandom goes, it doesnā€™t really bother me if people think Iā€™m younger than I am. Usually Iā€™m pretty forward with how old I am on my profile anyway! But yeah, Iā€™ve been around the fanfiction scene a while. The k-pop fandom in particular had a way of reminding me just how long on a pretty frequent basis lol.

Q5: Why did you begin writing fan fiction? If it was for a fandom, why did that particular thing make you begin writing? And, for your current fandoms?

A5: I used to tell myself stories to get to sleep or on long car trips as far back as I can remember, and most of the time they involved characters from my favorite shows of the day. Pokemon and Digimon were two big ones for me before I hit those fun preteen years. As far as what got me started actually putting those stories to paper, it was born of frustration with shows not going the way I wanted them to, so Iā€™d write the ending I wanted to see. For Voltron in particular, itā€™s just SUCH a fun sandbox to play in, be it by utilizing the incredible world-building or the plethora of interesting characters to play around with. So many possibilities! *3*

Q6: Do you ever want to be published in a professional capacity one day?

A6: Yes and no. I flip flop on this ALL the time. Iā€™d LOVE to see my stories on shelves, but Iā€™m actually very insecure and sometimes the thought of people reading my stories makes me want to die of embarrassment and sink to the center of the earth. That said, if I win Nano this year, I may run it by some publishers, even if only to get feedback. (Although if you want to get TECHNICAL I am officially a published journalist; I was an assistant editor for one of The Big 3 kpop news sites for a while. The one that starts with S. Also another can of worms.)

Q7: Has writing fan fiction taught you anything? About writing? Reading? The fandom? Etc.

A7: Oh absolutely. I definitely would not be the writer I am today without fan fiction. I wouldnā€™t say Iā€™m super skilled, but the critique Iā€™ve received over the years has helped me more than I have words for, honestly. Not even just in the capacity of writing fiction; my academic and professional writing has improved too. Also, just like reading anything in high volume, reading fanfic has helped me learn to read like a writer, how to pick out things that authors do that I admire and try to emulate that, and conversely what doesnā€™t work for me so I can avoid those things.

As far as fandom goes, fanfiction can be quite polarizing, as Iā€™m sure youā€™re well aware. Just in my experience by and large it can be kind of toxic, to be quite honest. The particular issue Voltron faces that I experienced to some extent in other fandoms but not quite to this degree, is fandom policing. I find that certain members of the fandom (which, in my experience, tends to actually be mostly among those younger demographics, though not exclusively so) see certain topics as morally wrong and therefore anyone who writes those topics are 1) romanticizing said topic and 2) automatically a disgusting, horrible person and they have no problems telling you about all about it. The number one thing I try to put out there in my interactions is live and let live, ship and let ship. If it makes you uncomfortable, thatā€™s okay! But that doesnā€™t necessarily mean itā€™s wrong, and itā€™s definitely not okay to go around purporting hate in the name of ā€œmorality.ā€ Sorry, didnā€™t mean to go off on a tangent there haha...

Q8: What is a piece youā€™ve written that youā€™re most proud of?

A8: Just in the Voltron fandom, Iā€™d say the fic Iā€™m most proud of is The Parting Glass, by far. Funny story about that one; Iā€™d never heard the titular song before I came across a cover of it on Facebook one day around St. Patrickā€™s Day, and let me tell you something. The reaction I had was almost a spiritual experience, it was so visceral. I was in tears when I heard it, and the story came so hard and so fast that I wrote it in 2 days. It stayed with me until I got it down in writing. It was an interesting challenge for me, exploring the grief part of a character death fic while almost entirely omitting the actual dying part. Itā€™s been a very long time since Iā€™ve had such a vivid vision of exactly how a fic is going to go from start to finish and Iā€™m quite happy with the way it turned out. Which is why, when I had the money to do so, I commissioned Cota to illustrate what had to be the hardest and yet my favorite part to write. She brought the scene to life so beautifully too, Iā€™m really happy with how it turned out. Months later I still go back and stare at it!

Q9: Do you notice any stigma surrounding fan fiction or fan fiction writers?

A9: Without a doubt. People hear ā€œfanfictionā€ and they think one of two things: the pudgy neckbeard who lives in his parentsā€™ basement, or the rabid tween/teenage fangirl. Itā€™s a rather unfortunate stereotype, because some works of fanfiction are truly works of art, more masterfully crafted than some novels Iā€™ve seen published. Yet they get dismissed simply on the basis of being fanworks and not ā€œoriginalā€ (which, letā€™s be real, nothing is truly original anymore). One such example that comes to mind of a beautiful fic is those glittering instruments in the EXO fandom, which was based on the real-life destruction of the Library of Alexandria. If you can find a copy of it floating around the interwebs I HIGHLY recommend giving it a chance no matter what fandom youā€™re in!

Q10: If so, how do you feel about this stigma?

A10: Like I said, itā€™s really a shame. The thing, too, is that as young girls weā€™re often shamed for the things weā€™re passionate about, like boy bands and, well, fan fiction, while boys donā€™t get that kind of shame to such an intense degree (at least, not about the usual suspects, like sports and girls and such). Not to say that it doesnā€™t happen, but thereā€™s something terribly sad about seeing more young people afraid to talk about a hobby that makes them happy because theyā€™re afraid of being perceived as weird or gross or something like that. Hell, even to this day I have very few friends from outside the fandom sphere that know I write fanfiction, because they still talk bad and make mean jokes about fic writers. Itā€™s such a silly thing, because a lot of famous works are derivative fiction and people donā€™t even realize it! So I hope the day comes soon that we can get over this silly stigma and just enjoy what people share (for free!! Seriously!! FULL NOVEL LENGTH WORKS. For FREE.)

Q11: Is there anything youā€™ve ever wanted to talk about or be asked that no one has asked you about or given you the opportunity to talk about? (And if so, feel free to answer/talk about it).

A11: I really had to think about this one! I couldnā€™t really pick one topic that Iā€™ve really wanted to talk about that I havenā€™t already discussed, but no one has ever asked me if I was okay with having fanart of my work. Which I would answer with a resounding YES. I am more than okay with it QuQ

Oh, I guess I do have something!! Itā€™s unrelated to writing (well, I guess it could be related, depending on how you look at it) but since I have your attention, if youā€™re an American citizen GO OUT AND VOTE. The midterm elections are one week from today in the USA and itā€™s important you go vote!! I wonā€™t tell you who to vote for (a third can of worms Iā€™m not opening up. WHY DO I HAVE SO MANY WORMS) but I assure you, your vote matters, now more than ever. I believe in you!! Go vote!!!

Q12: What is your prefered site for writing/posting fan fiction?

A12: These days I prefer to use AO3. Itā€™s a work in progress, but itā€™s far and away the superior fic platform of the time. Back in ye olden days (circa 2010~2012) Livejournal was my platform of choice, and FF.net before that. A surprising number of people prefer to post their fic on tumblr, to which I say, are you out of your flipping MIND?!?! Tumblr is soooo temperamental, I canā€™t tell you the number of times Iā€™ve had to restart a post or go into the HTML editor because the rich text editor decided to be stupid. Noooooo thank you. Iā€™ll stick to AO3 thanks ahaha!

Check out Glitterā€™s Tumblr and AO3.

Interviewer Note: Glitter used her free question to encourage everyone to vote and I would just like to stress the importance of this, especially if live in the US. Young people are the demographic that votes the least, despite being the demographic that will have to live the longest with the outcome of the vote. If you are currently not registered, please register as it is important for all of our futures. And, remember the deadline for the upcoming US election is Nov. 6th, so make sure to get to those polls and/or turn/send in your ballot. If you need information on how to do any of these things, do not hesitate to reach out to my page and I will point you to trustworthy resources.Ā 


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6 years ago

Marili Cruz Interview

Hello Marili! Thank you for agreeing to be interviewed. To start off, why donā€™t you start off by telling us a bit about yourself!

Marili:Ā Hi guys, my online name is Marili Cruz, I'm 18 years old and from Texas. I like reading, drawing, and writing for past times and I'm honored to be interviewed. I currently have about 12+ books written based on fanfiction on the group called BTS. I'm Jin biased and am pleased to meet you guys. Hopefully you'll enjoy this and if you want to read some of my works please follow me or check out my works on Wattpad @Marili_Cruz. Thank you for this great honor!!

Youā€™re welcome! Now, onto the questions!

Q1: What kind of fan fiction do you write/ have you written?

A1: Well, currently I write BTS fanfictions (a k-pop group for those who might not know) but some time in the future I would like to do more groups such as ACE, Day6 , Monsta X and more. I write a lot of Drama RomCom (romance comedy) and fluff but on occasion bengure further. (Smut)

Q2: What made you start writing fan fiction?

A2: Well, I've always had a very interesting imagination and I would tell my younger sisters stories to help them sleep. I guess once I found out about BTS my imagination took hold and it began to spread. A little nudge from a ex best friend also helped me gain the confidence to write my dreams and imagination into an actual book of sorts.

Q3: Were you scared to begin posting it online?

A3: Yes of course, who isn't. Whether my work would be well received, negative and positive criticism, and even threats are the day to day life of some authors and I've come to experience some of it. Everything and anything that how's online will be judged, and I myself am very emotional so I get easily offended. But this has helped me grow as a person, be able to handle situations better, and be able to take opinions and ideas in a good way then being childish and taking things negatively, no matter how much they might hurt.

Q4: Has writing fan fiction taught you anything? About writing? Reading? Something else?

A4: Itā€™s taught me not to take things with a great assault, and to mature. It's helped me with my grammar and spelling and helped me improve with my essays that I write at school. I write college level essays and improve my writing day by day. It also helped me gain friendships and inspire other authors and readers.

Q5: Do you ever want to be published in a professional capacity one day?

A5: I don't think I have that ability just yet, but if I someday come to be able to create a good plot and characters that can dance on the page just as well as those of the author's that I enjoy, then probably I would like to attempt and make a book of my own on the professional level.

Q6: How you feel about the stigma surrounding fan fiction and fan fiction writers? Or, do you not feel any stigma at all?

A6: I've seen it. I've felt it. Judgment, being looked down upon. Disgust. I feel it, but if my intentions are not harmful, and if I put my purest of meaning behind them, then what's the problem? Only those who accept this and are able to have a blind eye to the judgment and criticism by those who don't understand what fanfiction is, we can continue on peacefully.

Q7: Do you think that stigma is warranted? (Whether or not you have personally experience it?)

A7: I mean I see why they have such stigma. Some fanfiction is simply disgusting and has some of the most ill mannered intentions behind it. Incest, glorified depression, rape, or bullying are just some of the examples that make me absolutely uncomfortable and offended. Though people have their own opinion on stuff, these are some topics that I believe give a bad rep to those of us writing fan fiction. So yes, they are somewhat justified but shouldn't be the only thing people see when talking or mentioning it.

Q8: Whatā€™s your favorite piece of fan fiction youā€™ve ever written? Why?

A8: Well, there's two I like. Broken Hearts (which was my first ever work), and Invisible Girl which is my second official work (not including the imagines books because those are mostly request and short.

These two books mean a lot to me. Broken Hearts is a slice of life drama that contains a lot of character development in the first volume, but that will have a lot of angst in the second. I want to give life to topics that in fanfiction are often glorified or misinterpreted and want to help readers gain an understanding behind people who suffer or have gone through these conditions minds. Depression for an extrovert, suicide, Ā self harm, divorce, infidelity, rape and adoption. I want to bring light and justice to these topics which are often use in fanfictions by authors who have no idea what it's like and either glorify it or stretch out the actual truths behind it. I want to speak what's actually behind this pain and clearing the name to those victim of these such hanes crimes and pains.

Q9: Whatā€™s something youā€™ve never been asked but want to be?

A9: Hmmmmā€¦.. That's hard.

I've never really thought about it to be completely honest, but if someone were to ask me somethingā€¦. I'd want them to ask mostly questions about my book Broken Hearts. Whether it be about the plot, or the characters individually, I'd love to hear people a thoughts and questions on the book and you know, hear their theories on it.

Q10: Do you write outside of fan fiction?

A10: I do a lot of school essays, but I usually draw a lot when I'm not writing. And if I do write it's either fanfiction or for school essays. Since I'm a senior in high school taking college courses, it becomes hectic when all the college classes assign an essay on the same day or want it turned in at the same time.

Q11: What site you (mainly) use to write fan fiction?

A11: Wattpad. I have two accounts: @JinKoalaOppa where I barely upload much and @Marili_Cruz which seems to be my main account. I tried Fanfiction.net but it didn't have the appeal that Wattpad had with the images and videos that can be included.

Q12: Why do you write fan fiction?

A12: I write to express myself, to see others smile and succeed. I use fan fiction to get me through my day when I sad and I write when I want to distress. Sometimes I write to inspire change, to comfort those who need to be comforted, or to bring people to tears so that they can get rid of pent up anger.

I write to cheer people on, to bring people to life and make them closer to one another. That's why I write.

Thank you Marili for taking the time to be interviewed today! Iā€™m glad to call you a friend within the fan fiction community and I wish you all the luck with your writing! To find Mariliā€™s work follow the link above or here:Ā https://www.wattpad.com/user/Marili_Cruz.Ā 

If you are interested in being interviewed, please donā€™t hesitate to reach out. :)


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6 years ago

namjoon, i would LIVE for you

6 years ago

Selenophilia || myg

Excerpt: ā€˜You only ever saw him in the moonlight, soft white rays illuminating his features as heā€™d gaze into your eyes; searching them for an answer you never seemed to provide.ā€™

Genre: fluff, angst if you squint, moon man!yoongi

Length: 1.3k

Moodboard: @petrimygĀ - this aCTUAL angel gave me three of the most amazing moodboards and although i chose this she managed to hit the motifs perfectly as alWAYS,,,

A/N:Ā so i tried out a new style to usual,, please tell me what you think !! posting weekly is killing me so any comments and asks are very very very appreciated.

image

ā€œCanā€™t you stay?ā€ you whispered into his chest, weaving your hands through hair the colour of starlight, tugging the strands gently as you tried to extract a confirmation from Yoongi, that this once he wouldnā€™t leave you.

His arms found their way to your waist, ice cold fingers tracing constellations onto your soft skin, squeezing tightly before placing a soft kiss to the tip of your nose and smiling so wide you wondered if you need sunglasses. ā€œDid I summon the sun instead of the man in the moon?ā€

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