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Why are villains ugly?

By Rose Benjamin In books and movies, antagonists/villains are often portrayed as hideous beast-like people. Of course, there are exceptions, but writers usually tend to make their villain's appearance match their behavior. This may be to add to the reader/viewer's perception of the antagonist as a villain, having less empathy towards them. Many antagonists are already generally bad people, however, so it shouldn't be necessary to have them look weird. I think it is more likely that villains' appearance is designed to scare a reader or viewer, creating a more immersive experience. Different stories have different reasons and backstories for their villain's appearance. One book published in 2004, The Legend of Holly Claus by Brittney Ryan, tells a story about Santa Claus having a daughter, which then awakens an evil warlock deep below the Earth. This warlock has been sealed inside a prison for a very long time, so it makes sense that he would be ugly. However, the n...
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An Introduction to the SCP Wiki (Karl)

    The SCP Wiki is an expansive public creative writing project housed on  scpwiki.com . The SCP Foundation (the Foundation) is a secretive fictional organization inside the SCP universe which contains thousands of people, objects, and places that have anomalous properties. These range from a cardboard box which origami dragons fly out of to a deer god that can turn any matter into a hexagonal column. The anomalies that the Foundation contains, how they are contained, and the stories linked to them are detailed in Special Containment Procedures, which take up the majority of the content on the wiki. Currently, there are six "series" of these procedures, each with a thousand articles.     If you go into a random article on the wiki, you will probably be overwhelmed by acronyms, numbers, and unfamiliar names. There are a few articles that detail what some of these things mean. Useful links are always provided in articles whenever they're mentioned. Object classes...

Dream Journaling

It was Wednesday morning, and I was hunched over my laptop, brainstorming about what I could possibly write about for the last blog post of the year. After a lot of staring at a blank Google Doc and thinking, I decided on “A History of Writer’s Block and How to Overcome It.” It seemed dramatic and fitting enough, except then I stumbled upon an article about Graham Greene, an English writer considered to be one of the greatest novelists of the 20th century. He suffered a long period of writer’s block, until he started his dream journal. All that mental distress slowly morphed into creative productivity, in the free-flowing form of jotting down his dreams in writing. The idea of dream journaling intrigued me, particularly because I have been recalling my dreams and nightmares especially well these past few weeks, and texting my friends about it seemed to be just another form of dream journaling. I went off on a tangent of articles and when I returned to trying to write about what writer...

Fixed Fairytales

 By Ankita Bhargava Some of you may know that in the early 2010's there was a huge boom in stories that featured classic fairy tales (like Snow White, Sleeping Beauty, Rapunzel, etc.) but with a twist. For example, Cinder, a sci-fi book loosely based on Cinderella, was published in 2012. The School For Good and Evil, about children of famous fairy tales, 2013.  Land of Stories, about children who get transported to a land where fairy tale characters live through a book. Sisters Grimm, about two sisters who keep a town full of amnesiac fairy tale characters safe from the world. Heartless, a prequel to Alice in Wonderland, focusing on the Queen of Hearts, published in 2016. Of course, this trend didn't only affect books; some people might remember Disney's Descendants, about the children of Disney characters (many of whom are retellings of  classic fairy tales themselves). In 2014, the movie Into the Woods was released, also by Disney, based on the Broadway musical, which f...

Tiamat's Wrath - James S.A. Corey (Review)

Tiamat's Wrath Contains spoilers for The Expanse series By - Karl Vu Tiamat's Wrath  is the 8th book in the The Expanse series. A few years after the events of Persepolis Rising , the crew of the Rocinante  has split up once again. Holden is a prisoner of Laconia and Amos is undercover on it. Alex, Bobbie, and Naomi are running missions for the resistance. Elvi Okoye, who was a main character in Cibola Burn , is researching uninhabited systems in the rings which might house protomolecule artifacts. Winston Duarte, leader of Laconia runs a test on the ring gates to discover what is causing some ships to disappear when travelling through the gates. A bomb is detonated in one of the gates leading to an uninhabitable system. Whatever people or things that were controlling the gates have been provoked and cause a neutron star on the other side of a gate to collapse, sending a massive energy burst into ring space. Everything in ring space is destroyed, and Elvi's crew just bare...

The Aid of Illustrations to Writing

By Rose Benjamin Illustrations in books, especially novels, can either be useful visual aid or unnecessary. Sometimes, the charm of the story is how the reader can envision the characters and setting themselves. When a character's physical appearance has little do with the story or the mood of the book, vague verbal descriptions (or none at all) are enough. Other times, however, visuals can help set the mood of the story and give characters personality. When the text already provides extensive description or properties of the environment are written to be vague, illustrations break the intent of the text, providing detail that should have been imagined by the reader. Unnecessarily showing how characters look can also ruin the reader's unique experience and make it more similar to everyone else's. People may have in their heads a certain design for a character, and be set on it. An illustration of said character would ruin their perception of the character, especially if the...

Why Do Writers Use Pen Names?

By Andrea Li Pen names, also known as a pseudonym, literary double, or nom de plume, are made-up names adopted by an author that they use on their works in place of their real name.  A simple Google search reveals that a surprising amount of well-known authors use pen names, including J.K. Rowling, Stephen King, Lewis Carroll, and Dr. Seuss. Daisy Meadows, from the childhood-favorite and never-ending Rainbow Magic series, is disappointingly a collective pen name for the four different authors that wrote the books (it was too perfect to be true). Then for the opposite effect, you hear the name Rainbow Rowell and are inversely betrayed to hear that Rainbow Rowell, is in fact her real name. The next time you are wondering why famous people all have cool names, the answer is that they might not!  Pen names may seem like a surface level change and simply for aesthetic purposes, but pen names have existed for centuries and have historical significance. In earlier times, when women w...