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  <title>Rose-Owls and Pumpkin Girls</title>
  <subtitle>The Journal of Seanan McGuire</subtitle>
  <author>
    <name>Seanan McGuire</name>
  </author>
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  <updated>2010-02-25T16:39:36Z</updated>
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    <id>urn:lj:livejournal.com:atom1:seanan_mcguire:208678</id>
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    <title>seanan_mcguire @ 2010-02-25T08:39:00</title>
    <published>2010-02-25T16:39:36Z</published>
    <updated>2010-02-25T16:39:36Z</updated>
    <lj:music>Pink, "Funhouse."</lj:music>
    <content type="html">I'm a writer.  I've been a writer for as long as I've had a grasp of written language, although my earliest works were, admittedly, not all that complex.  I get asked "when did you start writing?" pretty commonly in interviews, and my response is always something along the lines of "I have no idea, in the womb, maybe, I don't know."  Because really, I don't.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;So as we continue our countdown (five days!  Sweet pumpkin pie, five days!), here's today's list:&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;b&gt;5 Reasons I Love Writing.&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;5. Stephen King put it best when he said that writing is like a form of telepathy.  I make things up, I write them down, and then you can see them, in your mind.  You "hear" dialog that I wrote.  You "meet" people that I invented.  When I write, I am Emma Frost, and that is &lt;i&gt;awesome&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;4. Writing continually surprises me.  No matter how long I do it, no matter how much time I spend working to improve, I still find myself staring at things on the page and going "whoa, where did &lt;i&gt;that&lt;/i&gt; come from?"&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;3. Writing comes with a very concrete and visible reward for hard work.  If I write 2,000 words, I have 2,000 words that I didn't have before.  If I write a book, dude, there is now a &lt;i&gt;book&lt;/i&gt; in the world that &lt;i&gt;didn't exist&lt;/i&gt; before I started typing.  Me!  I made that!  It's incredibly fulfilling.  Very few things in life are this immediately fulfilling.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;2. I have to work to write.  It's my hobby and what I do to relax and it makes me happy, but it's also &lt;i&gt;work&lt;/i&gt;.  If I don't revise, edit, check my spelling, check my continuity, and basically do hard labor, I don't get good books.  I feel like I've done something when a story is finished, and that's amazing.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;1. When I'm writing, I make all the rules.  I don't think there's anything better than that.</content>
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