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LJ Idol, Wheel of Chaos 1: “Quality”
He’s not wrong. To our credit, he has had over fifteen short stories published within that timeframe.
Copy editing is something I was born to do. Like it or not, I’m the sort that tends to notice every stinkin’ typo in every email I receive. I’m nice enough not to point them out, of course, but they do make me cringe a little. Don’t get me wrong, I’m sure I often type too fast and make errors of my own, but I do try to at least read what I’ve typed before hitting send, so I will catch most of my typos a majority of the time.
In addition to checking stories for the obvious spelling errors, typos, and grammar, I will also notice correctly spelled words that are, in point of fact, incorrect. One of the most memorable that I caught was for an anthology with a coffee theme. The author of the story meant to write that the character steepled his fingers. What he actually typed was that he steeped his fingers. Ouch!!
Another error that I found more recently in one of the novels was with a youthful spaceship captain who was speaking with one of his passengers. She inquired what sort of dangers he had to face in interstellar space. The author wrote something to the gist of “it was barely above zero out there.” Uh, no. Buzzz! What he should have said, and what I edited in, was that “it was barely above absolute zero out there.” That’s a HUGE difference, since absolute zero is -459.67 degrees Fahrenheit!
A good copy editor cares—or at least, should care—as much about correct spelling and proper punctuation as they do about making sure the author’s voice and story are clear. Mistakes affect the clarity of the work, as well as being a distraction to the reader, and that impacts the overall quality.
Don’t get me wrong—all the stories and novels that I’ve worked on have been quality works to start with, or they wouldn’t have been selected for publication. My job is to ensure that nothing distracts the reader from enjoying the highest quality possible. I hope I’ve succeeded.
Thanks for reading!
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The Wheelhouse - Week 1 - Day 5
Sign Up: therealljidol.dreamwidth.org/1182845.html
Week 1 Prompt: therealljidol.dreamwidth.org/1184469.html
***
How is everyone doing with the first prompt? I haven't heard too much crying, but that could just be because I've long since learned to tune out your suffering! ;)
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Mereth Aderthad RSVP for Meals Needed No Later Than June 22!
Admin Post:Please use this form to RSVP no later than Sunday, June 22 if you would like to join us!
- Dinner: Saturday, July 19, 6:00 PM at the Farmhouse Tap & Grill in Williston
- Breakfast: Sunday, July 20, 9:00 AM at The Pour House (scroll down to Sunday Brunch Menu)
You are responsible for the cost of your own food and drinks at these gatherings.
We will have additional gatherings that do not require reservations and where virtual attendees can join. The schedule will be posted within the week!
Visit Mereth Aderthad 2025 for more information and to register for the event.
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Mereth Aderthad Interview: Interview with fish by Shadow

Fish is creating the art for Stella Getreuer-Kostrouch's presentation "Cherished antagonist, despised protagonist - a defence of Elu Thingol" for Mereth Aderthad 2025. Shadow spoke with fish about his creative process, the importance of both tragedy and eucatastrophe to Tolkien's works (and to keeping his fans forever in the fandom), and the appeal of "greyness" in Silmarillion characters like Elu Thingol.
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A walk into the forest
Things are now very green indeed although this is always a green landscape:
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The Shrieking Season
OTOH, I do love seeing fuzzy babies out and about this time of year. I have yet to see ducklings on the parkway, but I've already seen turklets, baby quail the approximate size of chicken eggs, and some adolescent Canadian geese. The geese were too far along to be cute, but the other chicks were fun.
The rest of life has been work-work-work and despairing of how many boxes still aren't unpacked. The whole thing exhausts me. I got my office filing cabinet assembled (god, EVERYTHING is DIY these days), and put the returned files away after sorting through them and discarding a ton of stuff. But framed pictures? There are two hanging up in the entire house, plus 1 mirror. Other wall decorations? Ahahahahaha! On the plus side, I used the Neighborhood app to advertise free moving boxes, so I have now gotten rid of anything that would be useful for other people (apart from the tons of packing paper). That means we can have someone come and cart all the remaining stuff off to the recycling center. That will free up room in the garage for one of the cars, and also allow us to try to sell the furniture we decided not to put back in the house.
Bookwise, I finished This Is How You Lose The Time War (lovely, and reminiscent of Catherynne M. Valente), A Drink Before The War (currently reading the sequel), and The Staircase In The Woods. I'm reading much slower than before we moved back home, though. I used to get through a book in about 6-7 days, and now it takes me twice that long. :(
In viewing, we have seen The Accountant 2 and The Ballerina in the theater. That last movie is everything I could have hoped for in a John Wick-adjacent universe, and it also has flame-throwers. Whoo! On TV, I finished The Hidden (good series overall), Agatha Raisin, and My Life is Murder, all on Acorn. I sprang for Apple-TV short-term so I could watch Severance S2. That was good, though I think it wallowed a little too much in minor character backstory in the middle episodes. We also watched Slow Horses, which we've really enjoyed. And similarly, I'm paying for BritBox for a few months, so we've watched The City And The City, we're watching Thorne, and we're rewatching Shetland with our son. I will also watch The Pembrokeshire Murders, some other version of S1 of The Hidden, and Criminal Record, before we cancel the service.
Our son is staying here while he studies for the California Bar, which is great for us! I would like to plan a family vacation for after he takes the Bar and before he starts his new job. But first, I have to figure out what our options are for our ridiculously high-maintenance scarf-and-barf cat. \o?
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The Wheelhouse - Week 1 - Day 2
Anything fun?
I started (and finished) season 3 of The Traitors US. With Rob Cesternino (Survivor) and Kristen Kish (Top Chef) being in Scotland filming season 4 right now, I thought it was a good time to catch up!
I also finished the new season of Top Chef. Which may have had me crying a bit at the finale. Maybe. Or maybe you were the one who was crying. Yes, that seems more likely! ;)
***
Speaking of crying - the first prompt is up: therealljidol.dreamwidth.org/1184469.html
The Sign Up Sheet is still open as well: therealljidol.dreamwidth.org/1182845.html
***
I'm going to warn you ahead of time that the poll for Week 1 is going to not come out right away. Not only does the first poll usually take more time to set up, I also have an unexpected funeral to attend that day. One of my coworkers from my previous job passed away. I'm just glad that I received multiple messages from people who wanted to make sure that I knew. That was very kind of them to reach out.
***
and yes, "The Wheelhouse" is the "special event" version of the Green Room, for those more use to that name. A lot of special events have their own specific gathering place names, and I just liked this one.
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At least the Stones soundalike band kicked ass but I wasn't expecting otherwise.
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Footsteps, Vanishing, by Himring
Title: Footsteps, Vanishing
Characters: Luthien, Daeron
Pairing: Daeron/Luthien (unrequited)
Text type / Format: ficlet
Source / Fandom: Silmarillion
Rating: G
Warnings: n/a
Word Count: 113
Summary: Luthien's dancing. Reflections on transience.
Author notes: For the June challenge (alliteration). Also for Tolkien Ekphrasis prompts and a prompt by Elleth.
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Week 1: Quality
Yesterday, while so many people I know were out there protesting, (which I think is awesome and something I would have liked to have done), I was getting dressed for and attending a three-hour celebration of life for a neighbor. (Technically the 37-year old daughter of a neighbor, but a “kid” who lived near us until her college time.) My daughter, MermaidFan, was a friend of her sister’s, and all these girls began their early years in the same day care center before advancing on to K-12 school together. In other words, we all go way back.
The gathering was amazing. The afternoon was filled with beauty, magic, warm hugs, a few laughs, music and excellent eulogy-type speeches. A quartet of singers, opened the celebration with a lovely rendition of Sting’s “Fields of Gold”, (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KLVq0IAzh1A), and eight presenters, including the deceased’s mom, dad, sister, aunt and three friends spoke. One friend shared memories from their childhoods. One reflected on their college years and the third basically gave tribute to the whole family and their overall kindness without judgement toward anyone who needed something.
What impressed me most of all was the fact that once you became a friend of this family, and especially the deceased sister, you became a forever friend. You became a 100%, all-the-time, important person in her eyes and that would never change. Even though I personally didn’t know “M” as well as I knew the younger sister and their mom, I lament the fact that this family is no longer complete. It happened too soon. It’s one of those, “I can’t even” things. After losing one of my own sisters in April, this hits harder than I expected.
“M” was only 37, but she’d led a full life of learning, reading, diverse friendships, fine food, fandoms, travel, career success and love. Her time was too short, but she lived her life well.
You can’t do better than that.
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June Challenge: Gates of Summer
Summer is a season of flourishing, when life is at its peak. It is a time of plenty, when the light lingers long and celebrations dot the calendar. As we prepare for our big Mereth Aderthad celebration in just a month's time—an event that celebrates the vibrant life of our group and all of the creators and members who have shaped its history—we turn to the topic of summer. Like summer, we hope the SWG and the creativity and fellowship between its members will be a light that endures for many years to come!
This month, challenge participants will select their own prompts from a collection of prompts related to summer. The collection includes quotes from the texts, canon events, events in Tolkien's life, and quotes from Tolkien's letters. As always, you can mix and match prompts if you want, and we encourage creative interpretations of prompts.
In honor of Pride Month, there is a special stamp available for fanworks that focus on LGBTQIA+ characters.
Thank you to anerea for this month's banner and stamps!
In order to receive a stamp for your fanwork, your response must be posted to the archive on or before 15 July 2025. For complete challenge guidelines, see the Challenges page on our website.
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LJ Idol: First Prompt: Quality
It is said that confession is good for the soul. Sometimes I believe wise sayings, sometimes I don't, but here, in this diary, I guess I'm going to give it a try.
My parents always found me to be rather useless, or at least not quite good enough, or fast enough, or careful enough ... you get the idea. I could add plenty of other adjectives, but some of my parents' words aren't the kind I want to write down. We only write what we want to keep, or at least this is my plan.
I think it is.
Or maybe I'll burn this diary. I don't know. Either way, the desire to tell my secrets seems to get stronger the older I get.
I've thought about telling a person, but, again, the older I get, the more I know how wrong that could go.
It all started, well, looking back, I think I was about six years old.
Mom and Dad trading angry insults again. I could hear them downstairs, through my floor. Or maybe the sound was drifting through the heating vents. It's always hard to tell where sounds truly come from.
They were furious, as often happened. And I was tired, tired of listening. Tired of feeling I needed to somehow make it better. I figured it was probably about me again, but honestly the fighting was pretty constant, and it rarely had to be about anything important. The only constant was rage.
I was trying to sleep, hoping they would get over it. But between their noise and my nagging, worrying thoughts, I wasn't able to sleep. I rolled over again.
I turned my little bedside lamp on. I loved that lamp. The base was a cartoonish looking shepherdess who always looked happy. We needed something happy in that house.
Suddenly I wondered if my parents might notice my lamp was on. I snapped it off. What could I do? I rolled over again and accidently kicked a blanket off the foot of my bed. Of course!
I quietly rolled up the blanket and tiptoed very, very slowly to my door. I laid the rolled up blanket across the bottom of the door and moved slowly, slowly back to my bed. Perfect! Now I could have my lamp on!
I clicked the lamp back on. Somehow the angry voices of my parents didn't scare me as much if it wasn't completely dark.
I stared at my wall. I loved the painting there. It wasn't perfect, but it was a little nature scene, with mountains and a pond. It was probably only 8x10, but I loved looking at it and imagining I was there. Sometimes I imagined a picnic there, with my parents. Surely in such a pretty place they would be happy.
But sometimes, sometimes I imagined it was just a place for me. Quiet, safe. Maybe I could wade in that pond. I always loved the feel of water on my skin. My parents weren't the hugging type ("You're not a baby, Emma, come on"), but water, water always hugs you, all over. It never asks if you are worthy or leans away when you are dirty. Water ... just accepts.
This story is all over the place, but it's my diary, so I guess it doesn't matter. I just want to remember how and why my life has turned out this way.
The painting, as I said, wasn't high quality. I wasn't sure who painted it. I know it came from my grandma's house, but when I remarked on it, she said, "You like it? You can have it. I have too much stuff in this old house anyways."
I wanted to ask more about it, but, honestly, I was worried she might reconsider giving it to me so I just said, "Thanks, Grandma" and tucked it into my little back pack.
I never even told my parents about it that day. I just took a push pin out of the little bulletin board in the kitchen, and hung the painting by my bed.
My parents must have seen it, but never mentioned it. It's like it wasn't special to anyone but me. I don't know why only I could feel how wonderful it was. I couldn't define any quality that made it special, other than, I felt peaceful looking at it.
That night, as my parents' voice continued in their endless argument, I started to think how magical my painting was. What if, what if I could paint like that one day? I looked over at my little watercolor set by my lamp. It had 8 colors and a red handled paint brush.
What if, what if one day I could make magical little creations like whoever did the picture on my wall?
I loved the idea. I could make people happy. That's all I ever wanted, a way to make people smile. I'd already had enough unhappiness for the rest of my life! Maybe the key to joy was in paint?
I grabbed my brush. It was dry, but hey, this was make believe.
I gentle touched my painting with my little brush, and....what? I didn't feel the brush hitting a stretchy canvas, it was more like I had plunged my brush into a glass of water, an endless glass of water in that matter. It's like it was going straight through?!
I held on tight and pulled it back. I turned my brush around and around.
Still a brush. Still the "strings" at the top, that you rub into the paint.
What was going on?
I thought about just turning off my light, trying to sleep again. Maybe I was imagining things because I was tired.
But... I was curious.
I looked at my painting. I didn't see a hole or a blemish.
I looked back at the brush in my hand. I had to know. Would it happen again?
I gently aimed the brush at the canvas again. It slipped in again, slow and steady. And honestly, I didn't care. This time I pushed and still no resistance. Now, a bit of my hand was slipping it. It didn't hurt or anything. If anything it felt like water.
I continued. And suddenly, I was leaning in, it was like... like a bubble might feel, best way I could describe it, and all of me was in there, in that scene.
I was standing by that pond. Me. As I was. With my bed-mussed hair wearing my Strawberry Shortcake night gown.
I don't understand how it happened, but I could feel the soft clover under my feet. Clover? I bent down to look and yes, it was clover. I couldn't tell before, when looking at my painting, the ground just looked green.
I didn't understand where I was. But it was nice and I finally couldn't hear my parents' voices at all.
I looked and there were three grey rocks, all grouped together on the ground next to my feet. I thought about picking one up, but decided I'd rather go to the pond.
The edges of the pond were a bit muddy, but I didn't care. I'd wanted to wade in it for so long.
I ran up and stuck a toe in. It was cold, but not terribly. More like a refreshing puddle after a summer rain.
I waded around. Thankfully, there were no little fish in the water, to nibble at my toes like they did at the lake.
It was fun, but suddenly I realized, if I was in the painting, how would I know when morning came?
And even more important, could I go back?
What was going on? Why did this work?
I reluctantly got out of the water and tried to retrace my steps. Finally I saw the red handle of my paintbrush, next to the three grey rocks I noticed before. So I must be back where I started. Now what?
I picked up my paintbrush. There weren't any paintings here. I was outside. No other people either.
Finally, I crouched down and began to run my brush over one of the rocks. It...again, it didn't seem to "hit" the rock. I felt that "give" I had felt before. I took a breath and kept pushing and suddenly it was like I had fallen into my soft bed. I threw my hands out, worried I was going to roll off and land on the floor.
Somehow I caught myself.
My little lamp was still on.
And this next part sounds really odd, but I just rolled over, clicked off my lamp, and settled under the covers.
The next thing I remember was waking up the next morning.
I think the experience was so overwhelming or maybe it was the water and the fresh air, I don't know why I just went to sleep without question.
It's an odd memory. But the reasons I'm writing about it here is that well, it was only the beginning.
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In for some Wheel of Chaos at LJ Idol!
If anyone else wants to join the crazy, you have till 12p Eastern time next Saturday (June 21): Sign up here!
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Mereth Aderthad Interview: Interview with Varda delle Stelle by Shadow

Cloudyhymn's presentation The Design of Dragons and the Doom of the Dwarves posits dragons as a corruption of Dwarves, both sharing a connection to the earth but on opposing sides, similar to the relationship Tolkien sometimes described between Elves and Orcs. Varda delle Stelle, the SWG's assistant art editor, will be creating two paintings as the featured artist for cloudyhymn's presentation at Mereth Aderthad 2025. Shadow spoke with Varda about her own connections to the earth and concepts in cloudyhymn's presentation, her creative process, and her hopes for her Mereth Aderthad paintings.
You can read Shadow's interview with Varda delle Stelle here.