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|    rec.arts.sf.composition    |    The writing and publishing of speculativ    |    144,800 messages    |
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|    Message 143,673 of 144,800    |
|    William Vetter to All    |
|    weather    |
|    03 Oct 14 16:07:32    |
      From: mdhangton@gmail.com              In one of those books written by somebody who has claimed to have rejected       50,000 manuscripts or something, that's supposed to list everything we're       doing wrong, I found one of them that was interesting to me. This person       claimed that it is almost        universal to use weather as a metaphor for the mood of the fiction, and       authors describe the weather progressive scenes as an obligation, and this is       sooooo cliched, and a grounds for rejection.              I don't know that this is so, but I do see this sort of thing a lot, as in       detective fiction where the weather is always dismal. Or historical fiction       where the city is always wet and stinking and beset by a miasma.              How and when do you describe weather or what do you think about it.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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