Author has written 6 stories for Star Wars, and Digimon. Oh, you must have stumbled here looking for the bathroom: it's over there, two doors down on your left-Uh, what? You came here to see my biography? Well then, you must either be very bored or a masochist. But hey, if this is getting me readers then I'd better scrape something half decent together. Here goes: "I spent my childhood growing up in a sleepy part of the country, at Bag End with my dear old uncle Bilbo. That is, until the day that a mysterious and dangerous ring-" Erm, sorry about that, nasty parallel personality taking over again. Let's try again. Okay. "My life was pretty normal, right up until summer camp when I was eleven. A strange device fell into my possession and transported me to a stange world filled with all manner of creatures, all of whose names were suffixed with the rather ridiculous-sounding -mon." Oh, dear me, I really am getting sidetracked... But isn't it fun? ^_^ Ahem. Alright. I'm a pretty much average person, finishing my senior year and off to law school. Writing is my hobby and reading my escapism. I can speak five languages (none of which is Japanese, which I'd love to learn). My forte in terms of writing is either angst or comedy, and coming up with the most bizarre scenarios and alternate universes for my favourite tried-and-tested characters. Fandom-wise, I adore anime of all shapes and sizes (hence my desire to learn Japanese), but 'Digimon' is my favourite, most probably because of its active following and it's availability. Then there's also 'LotR', X-men and anything dragonic. The things I do when I'm not writing, studying or sleeping (which means practically never!) are horse riding, volleyball, just general strangeness and interior decorating, as well as reading up on ancient cultures. Fun fun. As for fanfiction, I do have a teensy little rant, and it's on grammar. Grammar, people, it's there for a reason, so use it! Things like not putting an apostrophe between contracted words, forgetting - or using too many - commas and using netspeak really makes an otherwise good story unreadable. Of course, I understand that English isn't everyone's native language, but most of the writing is just filled with sloppy, basic mistakes. Oh, and 'their', 'there' and 'they're' are not interchangeable. |