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uhh, hi- random Khan sketch
bro is NOT impressed- š /silly
AUDHUASHWYWHSUQYQ TYSMMMM AAAUHHHGGG- ššššššššššššššššššā¼ļøā¼ļøā¼ļøā¼ļøā¼ļøā¼ļøš„š„š„š„š„š„
Iām not kidding while I was drawing the first panel and started to draw the facial features, I was like- āwait- what if I draw the eyes like this-?ā and yeah I ended up really liking it so I kept it lol-
ALSO TYSM AGAIN AGDISHSAH-
mostly messy- š /lh sketches of Khan having a rough time. + Khori and some comfort.
The first two images are a comic sequence.
( Putting a cut here bc the post is getting kinda long. )
Saying it once again bc I do not want to get accused of being an incest shipper or some shit;
THESE TWO IMAGES BELOW ARE KHAN AND NORI. NOT UZI.
Thatās all I got for now lol- š /lh
Random asf, but like- HEAR ME OUT FOR LIKE TWO SECONDS-
No idea why but this song gives me slight Khori vibes lol. /gen
tadc isn't being 'replaced' by the gaslight district lmao it's just not being heavily promoted right now bc ep 5 is still in production stage and also...
yknow... they're working on two other shows?? and want to promote the pilot that literally *just* came out??
it's fine if you just don't care about those other shows or whatever but please. be patient. tadc isn't going anywhere lol
Nori frame of a wip (probably very cringey) Khori angst comic that Iām probably not gonna share.
Woahhh random style improvement compared to my last Murder Drones drawings. ššš
It is currently 3am where I am rn. I need to go to sleep. š
Bye lol.
A small snippet of a comic I posted on patreon a while backš you can find the full 15 pages on there. Itās not technically anything nsfw (theyāre robots lol thereās nothing there) but itās a little freaky. I just canāt stop drawing these two, I mainly make these things just for the dialogue bc they drive me insane and Iām genuinely in love with them
he must be studied. Like in a lab.
before cleanup & refs:
happy christmas fanart? WRONG! I WANNA DRAW KHORI ANGST
Visual media has taken on the world by storm. Itās the next big thing in the evolution of humanity, maybe. Itās quite certainly changed the way we entertain ourselves. And with the recent spread of short-form content, visual media has also become cheap, disposable, and easily accessible to the massesāperfect recipe to make a product famous.
Alright, Iāve been a little too dramatic, lol. But for real, Iām one of those whoās severely addicted to Instagram Reels. Whenever Iām done scrolling, I feel like Iāve completely wasted my timeāI could have read a novel, watched a movie, or caught up with my favorite mangas. But instead of all those ways to relaxāand believe me (pwlease) that I only open Insta to relax, when Iām freeāI just waste my time.
I love my novels and manga, mind ya, so when I catch myself wasting precious time that I could have instead used to consume them, I cuss myself. And then I go scroll some more Insta, because Iām an absolute idiot.
Anyway, back to the topic. Visual media has absolutely taken over our lives. I wonāt go into the debate of whether this is a good thing or not, but we all can agree that itās an undeniable fact. Video is everywhere.
Becauseāand lemme repeat myselfāitās cheap, disposable, and easily accessible today.
And because of such exposure to video storytelling, beginning authors forget that novels are not a visual medium. Yep, here goes my rant.
***
#01 - The Problem
The problem is simpleāthese kids have too much access to their smartphones. And these smartphones are filled with videos, like a dustbin with its lid hanging on because of all that garbage overfilling it. (Damn, I sound like a boomer.)
And therefore, when these new authors begin writing, they canāt help but imagine a sort of movie or a TV show as their story. And thatās where the problem isānovels are not supposed to be movies.
Movies are a visual media. That means theyāre composed of pictures. Images. But guess what novels are composed of?
Text. Words.
It seems pretty basic. I mean, everybody knows this distinction. But what they don't know, however, are the implications of this distinction.
Personally, I began writing with film-novels too. And those novels are bad. Genuinely. I cringe at the fact that I could even mail editors and believe theyād accept them. Good thing they never did.
Whatās a film-novel, though? Well, the idea is pretty clearāitās a novel, but imagined in the form of a film. So, itās like a film, but in text.
Itās like youāve written the film as a novel, instead of writing it as a screenplay or something, maybe.
But youād ask meāwhy? Why is it even a mistake? Everybody has a different writing style. And to that, Iād tell you one thingāthe audience. The audience is different. The media is different. You canāt expect a cinephile to read your book. And since itās not like a professional novel, a (Googles the correct term) bibliophile certainly won't.
So, whoās gonna read your story?
No oneābecause itās neither a film, nor a novel. Itās a film-novel, an illogical mix of the two.
Everyone drinks water, and everyone likes ice-cream. But you can't⦠No, Iām not even completing that sentence. Ew.
Anyway, you get the idea, lol.
***
#02 - Identify
So, what does a film-novel even look like?
And for that, ladies and gentlemen, I present to you,
The lean figure was standing on the other side of the railing three floors up on the ground of the school building where children below were shouting and kicking football upon each other, wearing white football jerseys. The figures, as they ran all over the ground, seemed very small as I looked at them. The goalkeeper of the right side, who was just beneath my white shoe, kicked the ball so hard that it flew in air and went directly to the other foot of mine. The other players shouted āWhoaaa!ā as they saw the ball flying. But suddenly, two of them looked upwards and saw me. One of them pointed towards me and then shouted, āHey, whoās he?!ā All the other players started walking towards that boy who was in the middle of the field with their heads tilted up above on me. Another one shouted, āHey! Whatācha doinā, eh?!ā My narrow eyes, which had dark spots beneath them, looked at the boys from behind my spectacles. I then moved my head a little up and saw my shiny gakuran jacket fluttered by my shiny yellow colored buttons as the wind started blowing from my left side. I was able to feel the wind dancing upon my soft skin as I closed my eyes and turned my head upwards. I took a deep breath, and then exhaled it out with my mouth. I then again took a breath. This time, when I exhaled it out with my mouth, I was able to feel the saliva of my mouth upon my lips. I tilted my head and turned towards my arm, which was trembling a little. Both of my hands were still holding the railing of the schoolās rooftop. I then turned left and then looked on my other arm. āHey! Get down!ā One of the persons from beneath shouted. I turned my narrowed eyes towards the ground, the teachers, a large gang of footballers and students, and some even workers had gathered in a circle. I turned my head towards the front. I looked at a couple of brown colored and blue-green colored houses in front of me, which stood high and mighty. Beneath them was the clear blue sky.
A wall of text!
Warning: you donāt really need to read all of it. But you probably did, lol.
Anyway, itās the opening scene from one of my first novels. And, as much as I hate to say thisāitās pretty sh*t. It has a lot of problemsāno paragraph divisions, for example, as well as a lot of grammatical mistakes too. But the biggest problem with the text is that itās just images.
Reading this text, I dare you to highlight one single sentence that might tell you anything about the narrator.
The narrator is narrating the motions, not the emotions.
(Damn, that was a dope line to say, man.)
The narrator is only telling you about the images and actions and dialogues and thoughts. Even though itās in first-person POV, you feel distant from the narrator. And, even in third-person POV, authors are supposed to make sure the distance between the narrator and the reader remains at a minimum.
Thatās how you get a film-novelāthatās filled with scene-descriptions, actions, and dialogues. Thereās no narrations in it. The readers donāt know the thoughts of these characters.
***
#03 - Is it really a problem, though?
Well, you might ask meāis it really such a big problem?
Heck yeah.
The reason is pretty simple, actuallyāno one wants to read a film-novel. These novels are filled with only descriptions and actionsāthatās too much of mental effort. these novels make their readers keep on imagining stuff, and no reader wants to do that.
Because itās easier to look at pictures than to imagine them based on text. And thatās why your film-novels wonāt work.
See, you need to understand thisānovels are different than film. Sure, novels are a form of storytelling too, and they do include visual effort, such as descriptions, action, and all that. But, all that is not the main selling point of a novel.
The main selling point of a novel is the emotions. Emotions captured in words, in situationsācaught in context like a butterfly in a childās hand. Films can display emotions, but novels put those emotions into words.
Narration is what forms the greatest part of a novel. Narration is where a novel actually shines. Narration is what the readers come to read.
And, as you could guess, films donāt narrate. Consider this,
And rain made him feel like crying. He gulped down, trying to keep the lump of his throat in check. He couldnāt cry in the middle of so many other kids. Theyāll ask questions, and what will he say to them, huh?
He was sorry.
For what?
For everything he did. And for everything he didnāt.
The day had just begun. Itād be long before it ends, yāknow. He just couldn't wait for it to end. There was no lifting up his mood. Not until tomorrow.
How do you display this in a film? The answerāyou can't. However hard you try, you can't.
Such narrations are where the art of novels shine. Such narrations are what differentiates a novel from a visual media.
***
#04 - Is it really a problem, though? (pt.ii)
All this talk constantly reminds me of Cormac McCarthyās The Road. Itās a literary achievement and really experimental in a lot of stuff that it does. For example, the novel has no dashes or apostrophesāand itās not like these punctuation marks were not needed, theyāre just not used. So, youād find a lot of grammatical mistakes throughout the text.
And also, one thing that McCarthy ignoredāand thatās relevant to the discussion weāre havingāis that thereās literally zero narration. Zero.
McCarthy adopts a style thatās similar to a third-person POV, and is kinda like how I used to write when I was littleājust with paragraphs and better scene-descriptions and action-descriptions. A lot better, as you can observe if you read his work.
Anyway, he didnāt have any narrative elements in his text. So the readers donāt really know what these characters are thinking or planning to do. They just know that these characters are somehow surviving.
I donāt wanna give away most of the plot of the novel, but the basic premise of the novel is that thereās a father-son duo whoās been caught in this apocalypse-type situation, and are traveling down the road to the south part of the country to escape the harsh winters that the north experiences. The novel doesnāt reveal a lotāthe readers donāt know the names of these characters, the thoughts of the characters are hidden most of the time, and you donāt know what actually happened that most of humanity is dead and society is completely gone.
Now, McCarthy did it for a reason. A scarcity of punctuation marks reflects a form of scarcity in the scenery around them. Because most of it is, well, gone. Humanity is gone, and stuff is decaying. You donāt find fresh food anymore. Scavenge all you wantāone day, all the canned food will expire, and there will be nothing to eat. Except fruits and veggies, that need to be grown somewhere. And nobody likes the latter, honestly.
And the scene-descriptions are so tough to read. Theyāre an actual pain. I have had a really hard time deciphering most of it, because the vocab is too high, and probably the sentences do not flow into each other easily. I canāt say anything about the sentences if I donāt understand them, yāknow.
But, man, maybe thatās how itās supposed to be. Maybe thatās why McCarthy wrote the descriptions in this wayāto symbolize the mental stress that the characters go through as they experience this world, this form of reality that they were not meant to be in.
And maybe the novel is so lacking in narrations because the charactersā minds have gone numb. Theyāre forgetting language. With almost zero human interaction most of the time, they are forgetting how to think and interact in words. You lose the skills you donāt really use anymore, yāknow. And these guys are so obviously depressed, so they donāt think about the world. They are used to the sad reality they live in. No point in complaining how bad the food is if thatās all youāre gonna eat all your life.
So, a scarcity of narrations tell you a lot about the story and its characters. It reflects something, it symbolizes something. The Road is a masterfully crafted piece of prose, please donāt get inspired to write in this style just because. This style wonāt work on most of the stories.
Yeah, just because he wrote like this means you can too. Let me tell you, dear reader, that all of what we call rules are meant to be broken. Nothing is absolute. But hereās the catchāyou canāt break the rules just because you donāt know how to apply them.
Authors need to learn these rules, because thatās what constitutes most of the written prose. Thatās what forms the basics of the craft. So, learn them, understand them, and know how to use them. And then make a conscious decision not to use them.
See, these rules are like tools or weapons in your arsenal. And you need to keep your arsenal ready for everything. And then, you can decide which weapon to use, when to use it, and how to use it. Because you donāt know what sort of idea hits your head next and youād suddenly need some of them.
***
#04 - Solution
So, how to make sure your novel actually comes off as a novel and not a film-novel? Unfortunately, the answer to that question⦠is that I don't know.
I know this sounds so absurd, but it is what it is. As someone whoās so recently started studying prose, I know this problem exists, but I still donāt know how to fix it. You could say I know my novels are film-novels, and Iām trying to fix it. But I, personally, am having a lot of trouble with it.
However, one way I can recommend is to write from your characterās POV, not your POV. You probably imagined your story as a film, but thatās now how youāre supposed to write it. Get into your charactersā head, see what theyāre seeing, and write that.
But itās tough. For me, at least. I always find myself going back to my old ways, and I think I need to re-write almost all of my scene-descriptions and actions because of it.
Lol, how ironic.
***
Conclusion
Yeah, and thatās it. I hope you liked this blog. Sorry I hadnāt posted in along while, I was going through a writersā block. Stuff is happening these days, yāknow.
Anyway, Iāll see you again in a couple of days, with something new. Bye-byee!