Round 1: The Dolphins of Despair
Jun. 1st, 2011 01:54 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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It's time for the first round of Government Controlled Cats!
The Prompts:
The Format: An excerpt from selected prompt's novel.
The Format's Length: 1-500 words of original fiction. Please note that entries are not required to use the words from their prompt's title and summary.
A Quick Reminder of How to Enter and Entry Rules: Five comments, containing one prompt each, will be added to this prompt post. In order to submit an entry, REPLY with a comment to your selected prompt comment. Each entry must be in the specified format and be submitted as a REPLY comment to the prompt comment. Do not comment with your entry as a reply to other entries; only comment with your entry as a reply to the original prompt comment.
Participants can submit up to three entries per round to the prompt(s) of their choice. If participants are not signed into Dreamwidth, Livejournal or openID, please include a preferred name/handle at the top of the entry comment, otherwise the entry will be considered to be written by 'anonymous.'
Submissions are due by 11:59PM United States East Coast Time on June 8th, 2011. If you're not on United States East Coast Time, you may find the World Clock to be handy. Refer to 'New York' for current United States East Coast Time.
Have fun!
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The Prompts:
Griefing: Gatherings of more than six unrelated people have been banned and the government controls houseplants.
Spin: Keychains have been banned and the government controls bowling.
Survive: Crock pots have been banned and the government controls words of more than two syllables.
Swell: Glitter has been banned and the government controls platform shoes.
Snow: Brainstorms have been banned and the government controls con badges.
The Format: An excerpt from selected prompt's novel.
The Format's Length: 1-500 words of original fiction. Please note that entries are not required to use the words from their prompt's title and summary.
A Quick Reminder of How to Enter and Entry Rules: Five comments, containing one prompt each, will be added to this prompt post. In order to submit an entry, REPLY with a comment to your selected prompt comment. Each entry must be in the specified format and be submitted as a REPLY comment to the prompt comment. Do not comment with your entry as a reply to other entries; only comment with your entry as a reply to the original prompt comment.
Participants can submit up to three entries per round to the prompt(s) of their choice. If participants are not signed into Dreamwidth, Livejournal or openID, please include a preferred name/handle at the top of the entry comment, otherwise the entry will be considered to be written by 'anonymous.'
Submissions are due by 11:59PM United States East Coast Time on June 8th, 2011. If you're not on United States East Coast Time, you may find the World Clock to be handy. Refer to 'New York' for current United States East Coast Time.
Have fun!
Re: Prompt 3
Date: 2011-06-09 02:35 am (UTC)Three hundred and sixty five pages seem like eternity, printed in tiny letters, eight points high, until you realize how many feelings are lost from the pages. Is there a word for the loneliness you feel after a thunderstorm, when the lightning no longer flashes across the sky, and the terror has retreated? Was there ever such a word? I hope that I will know when I finish learning the words in school; one at a time, until I can fill my heart with every word there ever was.
Our language teacher, Mrs. Macready, walks with clipped steps, and checks our grammar twice. Any word over two syllables long is crossed out in red pen. Clipped, efficient style, that’s the thing, Mrs. Macready says. We will be journalists and writers one day, churning out leaflets of propaganda and how-to manuals, and we must make sure that we are understood. There is no room for a susurrus when a whisper will do. Everyone must understand what we say.
And so, we practice in the school room, for hours on end, typing out bland reports of the weather, our family’s activities, our classmates’ conversations, dutifully turning them in, to be marked and graded, until we are masters of our art.
Every Tuesday, the routine is interrupted for a history lesson, so that we understand the mistakes of the past and do not repeat them. Mrs. Gilbert, the history teacher, has a haggard look about her face, and tells of unimaginable luxury – families who wasted six hours of electricity to indulge in hot meat, people who kept animals in their house, but never ate or milked them, children who kept secrets and told lies.
Our way is better.
Re: Prompt 3
Date: 2011-06-09 03:14 am (UTC)That phrase sums it all :|