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    Jürgen HubertJ
    #WritersCoffeeClub 31. In terms of writing, how did this month go for you?"Fair" would be a decent description. I didn't get any work done on my book manuscript, which is a bummer. However, three of the four Patreon posts for next month are ready for proofreading, and I _did_ manage to squeeze in a blog post on a fairly important topic.https://sunkencastles.com/2025/10/27/a-long-history-of-ableism-the-changeling-narrative/
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    Jürgen HubertJ
    @elfbiter <wince> I can imagine. Including overly long sentences?
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    Jürgen HubertJ
    #writersCoffeeClub 27th of October: recommend a book that had an impact on your prose.Terry #Pratchett in particular, especially his love of footnotes.(Does anyone know why he largely stopped using footnotes in his later works? I have always wondered...)
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    Jürgen HubertJ
    #WritersCoffeeClub Oct 22: What inspiration have you taken from historical figures or events?I am a mere translator. But the folk tales I translate use a lot of inspiration from history, such as historical characters:https://wiki.sunkencastles.com/wiki/Category:Historical_CharacterOr wars such as the Thirty Years War or the Crusades:https://wiki.sunkencastles.com/wiki/Category:Thirty_Years%27_Warhttps://wiki.sunkencastles.com/wiki/Category:CrusadeThe old folk storytellers were not that different from their modern counterparts in this regard.
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    Jürgen HubertJ
    @adaddinsane Yeah, so it's pretty liberating for me as a writer.
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    Jürgen HubertJ
    #WritersCoffeeClub Oct. 18: Do you tend to incorporate supernatural elements in your work?The vast majority of the German folk tales I translate have some kind of supernatural element. This not only represents the source material, but presumably it is also what my readers are most interested in.There are a few exceptions such as "The Double Marriage of the Gleichens" and "The Maid of Wildenloh", which rely on sex and violence instead to maintain the interest of their audience (i.e. the rural peasants who gathered for the storytelling evenings).https://wiki.sunkencastles.com/wiki/The_Double_Marriage_of_the_Gleichenshttps://wiki.sunkencastles.com/wiki/The_Maid_of_Wildenloh
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    Jürgen HubertJ
    #WritersCoffeeClub 12/10: Do you prefer to use real-world settings or to invent new ones?My German folk tale translations come with a pre-baked setting. It is largely that of real world Germany (plus surrounding territories) in the 19th century, although folklore provides some fantastic additions, such as Hellmouths, spirit lairs, and subterranean vaults where dwarves wage an eternal war against serpent people (no, really!).I do enjoy some #ttrpg #worldbuilding, largely for my own game mastering needs, but I don't have much in the way of publications to show for it.I sometimes fantasize of splitting the middle - i.e. publish a fantasy TTRPG setting based on German folklore and folk tale. But that's difficult to pull off with the limited time I have for hobby projects, and ultimately my translations are what is more important to me and thus what I prioritize.
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    Jürgen HubertJ
    #writerscoffeeclub 7 Oct. Have you ever gone away somewhere special expressly to write?Yes. During the hottest weeks of summer, when my rooftop apartment (which doesn't have air conditioning) gets too hot, I frequently go into the local botanical gardens to write.I even have a curious audience from time to time!
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    Jürgen HubertJ
    #WritersCoffeeClub Day 30: Were you able to accomplish your goals this month?Alas, I did not. While I was able to do my usual translations for this month, I barely made progress on the manuscript for "Old Goatfoot".
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    Jürgen HubertJ
    @amalia12 Well, I will try to do more with my BookWyrm account...
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    Jürgen HubertJ
    @JonSparks ...I don't think I could have said it better.
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    Mariam al-MasriM
    #WritersCoffeeClub How does your heritage show itself in your work?I'm Arab Christian and a lot of my FMCs come from that bg. Even my amnesiac MC in my vampire story remembers her Arabic music and religion.I rarely ever see MCs from my bg who get to just go on adventures and have things happen to them outside of political stories. If I am going to write, whether #SFF or #historicalfiction I want to write about the culture and bg I know without preaching the culture, just having it lived in
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    Jürgen HubertJ
    #WritersCoffeeClub Sep 25: How many works do you have in progress at a time?Depending on how you count, anywhere from 1 to 45.I assemble books from my translations of German folk tales, but I do not necessarily translate German folk tales "in order" for my books - quite frequently I will translate tales for my Patreon which might only show up in my books many years (or even decades...) later.I have one book manuscript ("Old Goatfoot") which is complete but not polished.I have enough tales for another book ("Magic in Theory and Malpractice"), but I have not yet started to assemble them into a manuscript.I have 59 and 53 translated tales for the next two books ("Unnatural Taxonomies" and "Ride of the Damned").And I have 41 further Trello boards with untranslated tales I have come across, each of which representing a further possible book.Will I be able to do all these books before I die? Probably not, unless perhaps I manage to turn this into a full-time job some time before I reach retirement age. But I will keep at it.
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    Jürgen HubertJ
    #WritersCoffeeClub 9/23 How self-reliant are you as a writer?No book arrives in a vacuum, and all really great books have a full supporting cast. I am no exception, and I fully acknowledge that my work is built on the work of others. These include but are not limited to:- My alpha reader - My beta readers- My editor/copywriter- My cover illustrator - All those 19th century German folklorists who wrote down and published the tales I am translating- All the people who did data input for #OpenStreetMap , Google Maps, and Arcanum Maps- All those who contributed to #Wikipedia and all other sites I used to research the regional history and culture - Michal Hoftich for maintaining the tex4html package for #TeXLaTeXand many others. I am building on their work, just as I hope that others will build on my work in return.
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    Jürgen HubertJ
    #writersCoffeeClub 22 What have you discovered about yourself through your writing?That I can actually get something done in my private projects if I focus on things instead of getting distracted by the next project idea.
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    Jürgen HubertJ
    #writerscoffeeclub 20 Sep: How might your work be seen as a criticism of the present moment?Oh boy. Let's do this.Among other things, #folklore is the study of folk narratives - how they arise and spread. Often such are harmless or even fun, but sometimes they are very harmful indeed. Consider how many German folk tales spread and reinforced #antisemitism . Or how many bad things that happened to people or animals were ascribed to witchcraft - people did not have the knowledge to explain, say, cattle diseases as a natural cause, so they came up with a narrative that blamed a harmless old woman in the village who might have suffered from dementia.People got _killed_ by many such folk narratives. And they still do.Contemplate many folk narratives of today - how they are created and how they are spread in both offline channels and on social media. The modern world is an enormously complex place that contains many frightening things - so a lot of people will listen to the first simple narrative they hear, as long it identifies a target for their fears. And then the body count rises.So I study folklore, and talk about it, but I do not assume that such studies are only relevant to the 19th century folk tales I translate. Indeed, the more I learn about this subject, the more I feel that this is vital to understanding how the modern world works - and, perhaps, how to counter some of the most vile narratives out there.Though sometimes the links between old folklore and new folklore are more obvious. For instance, there is now a widespread narrative that pregnant women using painkillers causes their children to develop autism.Now consider the following fragment from a 19th century German text:"If a mother uses a spell in order to ease her birth, then the Evil Enemy tries to lure these children in particular..."https://wiki.sunkencastles.com/wiki/Witches_and_Trudes
  • #WritersCoffeeClub 9/19.

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    Jürgen HubertJ
    #WritersCoffeeClub 9/19. Talk about how you’ve fixed a mistake in your work.For normal things like style and grammar errors I have a multi-stage process - first I proofread the texts, then I release them on my Patreon, then they are assembled into a manuscript, and then they are read a few more times by me and other people. That doesn't mean all of these simple mistakes are fixed during this process - that never happens, with books as long as mine - but I think I am getting pretty good at eliminating most of them.Then there are factual errors, such as identifying the wrong location mentioned in a tale, or citing the wrong book. Sometimes I catch them in the process of finalizing my book, but sometimes I do not. Which is why I am working on a lengthy errata file for my first two books, and I plan to publish it and incorporate them into new printings (as far as "new printings" mean anything with ebooks or print on demand).I've been in academic environments for long enough to know that:(a) Mistakes happen.(b) You should own up to them.
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    Jürgen HubertJ
    #WritersCoffeeClub Sep 18: Have you written something blasphemous? Tell us about it.German folk tales contain a surprising amount of blasphemous stuff.But my favorite example is "The Smith of Mitterbach" where the protagonist kicks Saint Peter down the Ladder to Heaven because the latter wouldn't let him in.https://wiki.sunkencastles.com/wiki/The_Smith_of_Mitterbach
  • #WritersCoffeeClub 17.

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    Jürgen HubertJ
    #WritersCoffeeClub 17. Should modern writers worry about proving their work is not generated by an #LLM ?I don't know about others, but I do not. My work is unique, and shows careful thought and research - all are things that LLM cannot do. Any LLM output resembling what I do would have to be trained on my work, and it would _still_ be bad.And frankly, if your writings cannot be distinguished from the sentences extruded by a stochastic parrot, then that's a "You" problem.
  • #WritersCoffeeClub 16 September.

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    Jürgen HubertJ
    @cstross Very true.What I have also learned is that I should proofread the text in a different "format" than the one I have written it in.For example, while I do most of my writing on my desktop PC, I proofread it on my reMarkable e-ink tablet (I used to print them out, but this way it's more convenient). Reading the text on a new device in a different context helps trick my brain into accepting the text as "new", and thus force it to pay more attention to the details.