quillori: holly (Xmas: holly)
quillori ([personal profile] quillori) wrote2017-09-28 12:49 am
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I'm also Quillori on AO3.

I had a terrible time narrowing my requests down from 7 to 6, so all fandoms are definitely equally wanted - my perennial requests have longer prompts, because I work them over every year, adding a bit here and a bit there, but that doesn't mean I'm not equally keen on the new-this-year ones.

Requested fandoms (links go directly to the relevant portion of the letter):

Le città invisibili | Invisible Cities - Italo Calvino
Táng Cháo | Tang Dynasty RPF
Kitaab 'alf layla wa-layla | One Thousand and One Nights
Omar Rayyan - Works
The Reluctant Widow - Georgette Heyer
Liáo zhâi zhì yì | Strange Tales from a Chinese Studio - Pú Sônglíng
Likes and DNWs


Le città invisibili | Invisible Cities - Italo Calvino - Berenice (Invisible Cities), Euphemia (Invisible Cities)

Tell me something about the trade in memories, or about the entwined decadence and puritanism of Berenice. Or world building about the history or culture of either city. Or the diplomatic relations between cities. (Feel free to take this as 'or' matching, and only write about one of them if you like.)

Tell me about Euphemia, where traders come four times a year, not only to trade in market goods, but to trade their own memories. How does that work? How did it come to start? Who wants to trade their memories and why? What is it like to have memories not your own? What do the townspeople make of the traders? Do they ever take part themselves?

Tell me more of Berenice: I'm fascinated by its bathhouses, spies, intrigues; likewise by its hidden community of the just, and the seed of corruption even amongst them, mirroring the yearning to justice of the unjust. Or tell my something about its politics, its history, its way of life.

Or anything at all about the food in any of the cities. We hear about the food of the just in Berenice, but what of the unjust? What is it like in other cities? How does it reflect the history of the character of each city, of the travellers who come, of the original founders?

Or what sort of interactions are there between the cities? What is it like to go as a diplomat from one to another? Which cities are allies, enemies, trading partners? Does one city have factions that disagree on what the relations should be with another city? Does one city have an embassy in another, and what is it like?

(I nominated two cities that particularly interest me, but if you're struck by one of my prompts, and think it would be interesting to write about it with one or more of the other cities instead, you are free to do so.)

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Táng Cháo | Tang Dynasty RPF - Li Ho | Li He

I'm fascinated by the imagery of Li He's poems, and what I would really love is a story where that imagery is real - where Li He's life follows much the course it did in reality, but he truly saw a world of ghosts and demons and almost unutterably strange things.

the blue raccoon weeps blood, and the cold fox dies
A Piece for Magic Strings Li Ho, trans A.C. Graham

I certainly don't mean this prompt to detract from Li He's genius and originality - I'm envisioning him recounting what he sees with the same striking poetic skill. Just. He really is seeing things others can't see. Not, I imagine, that makes his story turn out any better.

Please do not be put of writing this by thinking you aren't a scholar of the period, and can't write it with perfect accuracy! Entirely normal levels of yuletide research/canon review are perfectly fine! Anything with Li He and the wonderful imagery and metaphors of his poetry will be wonderful. And, to assist anyone who might be tempted by this prompt, I am linking [well, I will be linking shortly, when I've scanned them all done except for another few sections of Frodsham's introduction] a few helpful resources: the introduction to Li Ho's section in Graham's Poems of the Late T'ang, selections from the preface and introduction to Frodsham's Collected Poems of Li He, and some poems in translation.

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كتاب ألف ليلة وليلة | Kitaab 'alf layla wa-layla | One Thousand and One Nights - جعفر بن یحیی برمکی | Ja'far ibn Yahya al-Barmaki

Famous for his power and wealth, and the favour of his Caliph, famed too for his eloquence and liberality, but led suddenly away to death in the midst of all his prosperity by that same Caliph. What sort of man was Ja'far, and did he live always with the knowledge he might fall, or was it an unthinkable betrayal?

Before we get to the character I'm actually asking for, which is Ja'far, I want to talk for a moment about Hârûn al-Rashîd. He appears within the Nights as the exemplary figure of the supreme ruler: his curiosity and love of learning and the arts, his ready friendship and generosity, his sense of justice, the unparalleled luxury of his court ... and also his cruelty. Often he is shadowed not only by Ja'far but by his executioner also, a reminder of the dark side of absolute power. Perhaps in a sense Ja'far and and Masrûr reflect two sides of their sovereign. In another sense, Hârûn reflects Shahriyâr himself, turning with arbitrary violence on those who should be closest to him, leaving Ja'far dead as Shahriyâr leaves his nameless wives. (I've always been inclined to see an accidental real life reflection also, of Suleiman the Magnificent and Ibrahim Pasha.)

So, what is the relationship between Hârûn and Ja'far, and in particular, what sort of man is Ja'far to live with it? Is he a fatalist, who thinks if he is destined to fall, there is no escape from it, so he should make the most of his life while he has it? Does he trust Hârûn not to turn on him? Does he, famed as he is for his kindness and generosity, see Hârûn's dark side and think it his duty to temper it? Does he take pride in his place and his family, and see everything he does, from serving Hârûn to his legendary generosity, as the duties and obligations of his position, duties that don't include worrying about the future?

Which isn't to say I want you to write about Hârûn - you needn't even mention him - I just can't think of a better way to explain what particularly interests me about Ja'far's character except by reference to him. But Hârûn definitely doesn't need to appear in the story: Ja'far being introspective in a courtyard! Ja'far with some other lover, or with his family! Ja'far with some of Hârûn's other companions - the poets and the singers (this would be fascinating). Ja'far helping someone out! (Think of the stories later, where those whom he helped continue to mourn him despite the risk, e.g. Ja'far and the Bean Seller.) Ja'far going about his duties as vizier (it's easy to forget at times he wasn't just a boon companion). Backstory about Ja'far as a young man! I just want to know what sort of person you see Ja'far as being.

If you do want to include Hârûn in your story, I'm inclined to slash him with Ja'far myself, if you want to go that way, but any other close and longstanding relationship would be just as interesting, if you prefer. If you want 'Abbâsa in some sort of triangle with the two of them, that's fine,* if you'd prefer not to, that is also fine - even within the Nights, there are various different accounts of what leads to his death, and envy of his wealth and fame works perfectly well - Hârûn wouldn't be the first or the last ruler turn on his friends for just that reason.

(I do prefer competent characters, so if you want to include the whole three apples story, I'd be happier with a reading that accepts there was no practical way for him to solve the mystery, other than trusting to god, rather than focussing on him failing to do anything useful.)

* Incest isn't a kink of mine, so I'm unlikely to find it hot for its own sake, but it isn't a squick either, so if you want a proper triangle rather than a V, it's a perfectly reasonable reading, and I shan't be offended by it. Just, if you mean to make it hot rather than (or as well as) messed up, it's more likely to work for me if you include extra reasons for its hotness other than its incestuousness.

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Omar Rayyan - Works - Lady in Furs, Spanish Mackerel

A tragic young princess of an underwater kingdom, or a haunting young lady who is more than she seems... One offers worldbuilding (a beautiful and unsettling world almost, but not quite, like ours), one horror impinging on everyday life. Feel free to take this as OR matching, and only write about one.

As far as I'm concerned, this request is definitely OR matching - I'm very interested in either of these two paintings, but they don't match each other in period or mood, so unless you have a brilliant idea for combining them, just pick one.

Lady in Furs

I feel this should be the illustration to a late 19th or early 20th century realist-with-a-tinge-of-horror short story. This seems a short, bald prompt for something I really want, but what else is there to say? Tell me the story of the time your protagonist met her (or have some other narrator tell the story of the meeting). What happened and how did it end? (Not well, I imagine.)

Spanish Mackerel

The fishes made wailing cries
At the wild weather

The Dream of King Don Rodrigo Anon, trans W.S Merwin

I'm always a sucker for underwater worlds, and there is a sort of 'doomed young princess' look to the portrait that's rather appealing. World-building for an underwater world is always welcome, as is more about the princess - I suppose there's no reason to think her story ends unhappily, but somehow she looks to me as though it may. This is one where you could play with form a bit, if you wanted to - what is poetry and literature like in this underwater world? Or you could work with the alienness of the princess - she looks (almost) human, but there are those tentacles. Supposing she's as near to an octopus as she is to us? Let's face it, octopuses are downright weird. What would the world look like to something part octopus?

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The Reluctant Widow - Georgette Heyer - Francis Cheviot

More Francis Cheviot! Going to his tailor, playing cards, spying, seducing French agents … anything at all.

I was amazed and saddened when I realised there were people who didn’t like Francis. How could you not? (I mean, as a reader. I can quite see why a number of people in the book might dislike him rather a lot.) But he’s one of my favourite character types: you have the surface appearance, and you have the reality, and the two are quite different, and yet still part of a seamless whole, so that you can’t quite tell what is acting alone, and what is acting based on truth, or acting that deceives only by showing the truth at an angle.1 You have the ruthlessness; the competence; the principle (possibly)2; the sense of humour (you won’t convince me he doesn’t take a good deal of satirical pleasure in many of his interactions in the book); the cultivation of his appearance and behaviour into almost an art form, at least in part for his own private amusement.

What is his life like? Did he really get involved in recovering the stolen memorandum only out of self-interest, because he didn’t want to go down with his father, or was he merely not mentioning he has some sort of intelligence job (he does after all say he comes to hear many things he shouldn't)? Or is he involved with something else dangerous? It seems unlikely that even the most efficient and cold-blooded of men would spring quite so quickly to calmly and competently executing a close friend, with no training or experience. (Though if he did, that would be interesting to read too.) How does he normally spend his time - how much on fashion and socialising, on cards, on associating with attractive young men of good family? Who are his friends, and how much of him do they know? How does his world look, seen through his eyes?

(I see Louis de Castres was nominated too. I didn’t ask for him, because there are so many things I’d like to know just about Francis Cheviot, but if you want to write him, please do. Maybe Cheviot/de Castres back in happier times, before the whole spying for Napoleon bit, or when Francis comes to suspect him (if indeed he didn’t set out to deepen their acquaintance because he already suspected). To what extent does he kill Louis to avoid a scandal (undesirable to both himself personally and to England), and to what extent does he consider it a better death than arrest, disgrace and execution? Or even something from Louis’ point of view, both what he thinks of Francis, and what he thinks of England.)


1 If he is as high stakes a gambler as John claims, it should be obvious he can’t be the mess of nerves he presents himself as, but John takes it as further evidence of his frippery, worthless nature. Likewise, his tendency to comment on the appropriateness of his own behaviour undercuts any suggestion he really is overcome by any emotion at all, including fear or distress, but again, somehow this just makes him that much easier to dismiss - even his claims of nervous prostration aren’t to be taken seriously. Somehow things which should point up the truth about him, instead further the illusion.

2 Though what exactly it is he believes would be interesting to know - he denies patriotism, but is he telling the truth? If he is in his way a patriot, is even that partially an act - a pose he considers elegant and appropriate to live up to in his private life, as he publicly lives up to the fine points of fashion? Or is truly only self interest, as he says? Or just another form of gambling, with lives at stake?

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Liáo zhâi zhì yì | Strange Tales from a Chinese Studio - Pú Sônglíng - Any

I'm interested to see whatever you choose to make of this. Retell one of Pu Songling's stories or tell one of your own. Play around with language and allusions or concentrate on plot or on character. You could do something with the ever present fox spirits - they're viewed in such a range of ways, from meriting death through to the ambivalence of stories such as Cut Sleeve to admirable heroines (e.g. in Lotus Fragrance). Or you could do something with the relation of dreams to reality, or the extent to which stories are a type of dream. If you want to stick to a single story, you could look at Shican and Huang's relationship in Cut Sleeve - there's a lot of emotional ground at the end of that story the remains unexamined. Make your language as densely allusive or as simple as you please, your tone as light or as dramatic as you want. Gen, slash, het; light-hearted, bitingly satirical, restrained or sly or melancholy ... anything that strikes your fancy.

Liaozhai is a collection of short tales of the bizarre, the supernatural and the out-of-place; they're playful, occasionally satirical, boundlessly interested in the world and at times melancholy. It has something for everyone: canon gen, het, slash, poly, gender swap, genderqueer, platonic friendship ... well, alright, it doesn't actually have canon femslash, but there are plenty of relationships you could take in that direction. The original is a masterpiece of classical (as opposed to vernacular) Chinese, both elegant and difficult. English translations generally don't attempt to reproduce the style and are content to be simple and straightforward - which happily licenses you to write in whatever style you prefer.

You can approach many of the tales purely as ghost stories or horror stories, and several modern writers and filmmakers have done so, but that's by no means the only approach you can take. A number of the tales play with the line between dream and reality, sometimes to comment on the nature of fiction itself, other times from a religious perspective from which reality itself is a kind of dream. Some tales are about obsession (by no means always sexual), and thus by extension about what counts as valuable and whether it's worth suffering or dying for. Other tales could readily be made into fascinating character studies. The mood can be melancholy or light-hearted, serious or satirical.

I will be delighted with fic based on any tale at all, or a new story in the style of the collection, but if you’re feeling a little overwhelmed and unsure of where to start, I’ve included below a few suggestions of tales fitting different things you might want to write. These are only meant to be helpful! If you already have some other idea, that is what I want to read about. These are only meant to provide a starting place if you’d like one.

World as Illusion: There are hints of this in many of the tales, but if you want ones where it’s a particular theme, try Flowers of Illusion (aka Taoist Miracles) or The Painted Wall; also, at least by implication, Friendship Beyond the Grave and Twenty Years a Dream.

Fox Spirits: These turn up in many of the tales, sometimes as admirable figures, such as in Grace and Pine (aka Miss Chiao-No) and Lotus Fragrance, sometimes more ambiguous and dangerous, as in The Laughing Girl and Cut-Sleeve, sometimes as evil creatures to be killed with impunity, as in Bird, Fox Enchantment and The Merchant's Son|The Trader's Son (although only in the last is there no trace of sympathy at all for the foxes).

Other notes: Bird is particularly interesting for its family dynamics, both Bird's relationship with her abusive mother and sister and her subsequent treatment of her son. The son in The Merchant's Son|The Trader's Son shows something of the same cruelty, though there it's treated as resourceful and praiseworthy. The most vivid individual characters are probably in Cut-Sleeve and Lotus Fragrance.

Gen: Flowers of Illusion|Taoist Miracles and Friendship Beyond the Grave are themselves gen. The Merchant's Son|The Trader's Son, Grace and Pine|Miss Chiao-No and Bird all have important gen elements.

Het: You could try Fox Enchantment, Lotus FragranceThe Laughing Girl, The Painted Wall or Twenty Years a Dream.

Slash: Cut-Sleeve - canon slash. And definitely an opportunity here to flesh out the characters: this is, after all, a story in which the protagonist has a conversation which could be summed up as 'Dearest cousin-in-law! What fond memories I have of our affair in my past life - the one where you consumed my Yang until I fell sick and died. Which reminds me, there's this official who's bothering me - I was thinking, maybe you could go seduce and kill him. What do you mean, you don't want to?' Both Friendship Beyond the Grave and Grace and Pine|Miss Chiao-No have subtext. A good bet for femslash subtext would be Lotus Fragrance.

Poly: Lotus Fragrance again, and if you want to read the subtext that way, Grace and Pine|Miss Chiao-No.

Friendship: Try Friendship Beyond the Grave (m/m friendship), Grace and Pine|Miss Chiao-No (m/m and m/f friendship) or Lotus Fragrance (f/f friendship).

Penguin Classics has a selected translation by John Minford. A much earlier translation by Herbert Giles is available online, but keep in mind it’s from 1880 and is heavily bowdlerised. There's also the recent six volume complete translation by Sondergard. Judith T. Zeitlin translates a number of tales of particular interest in Historian of the Strange (which I very much recommend).

You may, depending where you are, be able to read a couple of pages on Google books about The Painted Wall, a small selection of stories translated by Arthur Zhu in The Painted Skin, Lotus Fragrance and Grace & Pine. Elsewhere there's a discussion of Twenty Years a Dream, and of Grace and Pine among others in an article about scholar's studios. If you belong to a library with access to Literature Online, I think you may be able to get e versions of a number of tales, possibly in the Minford translation.

(One note: where the ages of various characters are historically appropriate but distressingly young by current standards, I would have no objection at all if you, say, discreetly age up fourteen year olds, or failing that at least treat them as adults within their own cultural context, rather than dwelling on their extreme youth. Physically sixteen or above would be great, and preferably mentally older than that - after all, even young foxes may well be centuries old if they can take human form, and a ghost who died in her teens may have been hanging around being a ghost for some time. Not that you need to make a point of ageing them up, but I'd really prefer it if you didn't make an obvious point of keeping them that young.)

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In General

I really would prefer you to write the best story you can, and one you're happy with, rather than trying unsuccessfully to do something that doesn't suit you to fit what I asked for. I'm most interested in what you, dear writer, make of the source material.

Things I like (provided only as indicative of my taste, not in any way as particular requirements of your story): established relationships, clever and competent characters, witty banter, slash (incl. femslash), political intrigue, moral ambiguity, apparently simple conversations with a great deal going on under the surface, angst if done with restraint, metaphor, clever use of literary allusions, relationships where each party things the other has all the power. Fierce loyalty (the tear the world apart for you variety, not the sit here passively putting up with anything variety), complicated love/hate relationships with lots of backstory, unflappable characters, arrogance if the party concerned has the requisite ability to back it up, committed partnerships between people who see the world at the same angle (even if they aren't always on the same side) ...

IF is always welcome.

Things I’d prefer you avoided: I’m not terribly keen on stories focused on pregnancy or children, humiliation, or stories told in the 2nd person, and I do have something of an embarrassment squick. Oh all right, I also don't tend to like issuefic, but I'm not sure that's something people generally set out to write - one person's issuefic is another's searingly honest portrayal. (Having said that, however: DNW characters explicitly identifying themselves as asexual, aromantic or demisexual, or stories heavily focused on those subjects; trans* headcanons; unrequested genderswaps.)

(Where I've made some vague attempt to balance consistency, AO3's spellings, and what are the most commonly found spellings, do not feel you need to follow my example! Use whatever romanisation seems good to you.)

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