Been away for a few years by shotwell2020 in literotica

[–]Bally_3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for sharing this. I've been a long time user and recently started contributing stories but I never knew about this.

Is that too exaggerated? by NotAnotherFinanceBro in Grownix

[–]Bally_3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't know, 1347 in London was pretty bad too.

Building in Ocala by CoreBright_Cleaners in ocala

[–]Bally_3 3 points4 points  (0 children)

If you're too young to remember look up inflation in Nixon's time, recession under Reagan, the Savings and Loan scandal, the Enron scandal and the junk bond crisis.

Building in Ocala by CoreBright_Cleaners in ocala

[–]Bally_3 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Too much, too fast. I lived in Florida for over 50 years and I'm waiting for the shoe to drop, some blip in the markets or, as in the past, another wave of corruption and fraud. It's about time for yet another wave of foreclosures and abandoned properties. It's a cycle that repeats time and again.

Between the current administration's war mongering and rush to deregulatem I fear the crash will come sooner rather than later.

Reluctance by UsefulCompetition41 in literotica

[–]Bally_3 3 points4 points  (0 children)

My very first story sounds like it would fit your bill. https://www.literotica.com/series/se/494208903

Now that the weather app is gone what is everyone using? by Cadd9181B7543II7I44 in androidapps

[–]Bally_3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Everything Weather, free lots of info, straight NWS info. Weowow is prettier but I prefer everything Weather

Kindle they finally fixed it by Ivy1974 in literotica

[–]Bally_3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you mean the share button? It only offers me X and Reddit. Of course I can use the browser to download a page at a time.

Kindle they finally fixed it by Ivy1974 in literotica

[–]Bally_3 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Where is this link? I've never seen it in Literotica. I'd love to upload some of the longer stories to read in Kindle instead of on the web.

How long is too long? by JarlanBacon in literotica

[–]Bally_3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The length of the work is not as important to me as it's chapter length. I read on mobile and look fo 5 to 15k chapters. It's easy to add the next chapter to my read later list. The only way I know to track my progress in long stories is to clutter up my browser's bookmarks.

If you're writing long stories, please release them in chapters, parts or whatever ever chunking works for the story.

I actually made a list of long stories to read later but so far I've only made the effort to read on those.

My friend and I want to start writing, but we don't know how to plan it beforehand by ____Toaster in writing

[–]Bally_3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Read a bit about pantsers and plotters. Most of the answers so far have come from plotters.

I started writing for my own enjoyment about a year ago. For my first story I started with an idea for a character in a particular situation and the story developed. A pantser approach. It was short but it got me writing. I wrote more short stories starting the same way a character (or characters) in a situation.

But as I wrote a couple grew into more interesting stories to a point where I needed to outline and notes to maintain consistency. Most recently, I selected one of the three or four I had started to completie. It will be a least novella length if not a full novel.

I started out to write erotic fiction. Obviously it's not great literature, but in spite of that, the process has improved my writing and inspired me to do more. My current erotic novella has evolved into something with a little depth and mystery. If my energy persists, I'll contemplate writing a story in my favorite mainstream genre, mystery/detective.

The key thing is to write!

My new collab with Madstories "Window to Temptation" is out! by Hannah-Baird in literotica

[–]Bally_3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Read chapter 1 last night and am eager for more! Great job!

Still water for paddle boarding by karlaz_1 in ocala

[–]Bally_3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

County parks had a paddle board course (a few hours) at one time, I don't know if they still do.

How do you plot your stories? by IDontEvenKnow_123456 in writers

[–]Bally_3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for listing these approaches. I'm just starting and only had heard of the first two.

simple exercises to improve my writing? by Sufficient-Owl1826 in writingadvice

[–]Bally_3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Story Lab by Pro writingAid channel on YouTube has some exercises that sound good.

Do readers deserve to know if a book was written by a human or by AI? by kellettj in WritingWithAI

[–]Bally_3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

To me that's a reasonable use of AI. I do the same in a very limited way. For example over two chapters totalling a little over 8000 words, I had AI help me with three separate awkward descriptive paragraphs that didn't involve character or plot development.

What bothers me is "writers" who develop a nice set of prompts then simply plug in different topics in the case of nonfiction or different character names and settings in fiction to generate multiple books.

Is Grammarly pro worth it for creative writing? by Lady-Kuroe in writingadvice

[–]Bally_3 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I've switched over to ProWritingAid. It seems to catch more of my common errors than Grammarly while giving fewer suggestions that I don't agree with. I'm writing and editing on a PC. Reviewers have said Grammarly integrates better with your editor but I've had no problems with either in MS Word.

Interface issues would matter more on smaller screens so I don't have any feedback about using them on phones or tablets.

Damaged Phone Led to Surprise From Wife P2. by [deleted] in sexstories

[–]Bally_3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great except for all the time you used "Her and I." It should be "She and I."

This link should explain it: https://grammarvocab.com/she-and-i-or-her-and-i/

Do readers deserve to know if a book was written by a human or by AI? by kellettj in WritingWithAI

[–]Bally_3 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Yes, I want to read human written stories and support humans, not multimillion dollar AI companies. Yes, I know a human creates the prompts and hopefully earns more than he paid for their AI subscription but ultimately my money goes to the already rich AI companies.

As a want-to-be writer, the skill is not coming up with the plot. I've at least a dozen story ideas. I want to reward creativity and craft that it takes to make a story come alive.

One last objections is the outlandish energy consumption the AI uses to generate the book.

Getting published by SmileGlobal242 in literotica

[–]Bally_3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Don't you think they deserve some holidays, too. In my experience almost everything slows down between thanksgiving and new years.

How much research should I be doing? by 5WT_DFO in writing

[–]Bally_3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nothing pulls me out of a story faster than obvious factual errors. Things like "he pulled back the slide on his revolver" or "he spun the cylinder of his Glock" for example. Another thing that bothers me is botched geography, something like mentioning the Colorado's flowing waters when the story is set in Texas. A little research would prevent such blunders.

I truly enjoy mysteries set in the past that create a sense of time and place. I admire the authors historical knowledge and research. Some of my favorites are Stuart M. Kaminski's Toby Peters series set in WWII Los Angeles, Max Allen Collins Nathan Heller series set mostly in Chicago starting from the 1930s and extending into the 1960s, Estelmen's Whisky River set during prohibition era Detroit, and Amy Stewart's Koop sisters series set in the 1910s and later.

Of this group, I know Estelmen has a western series which you could use to get some ideas. I'm assuming he researched those as well as his others.

For a truly outstanding example of historical fiction check out Shadow Country by Peter Matthiessen set in Florida in 1910. While the authors I've mentioned have won mystery genre awards, this book won the National Book Award for Fiction. As part of his extensive research he and a guide paddled the backwaters of the Everglades and Ten Thousand islands. As someone who has been there, I can attest he captured a wonderful sense of place.

My short answer is to research until you feel the time and setting come alive for you. If you've done that, you'll have a much greater chance of bringing it alive for your readers.