In the Toronto Star, Peter Howell profiled Robert Pattinson, who said, of reading the Twilight novels as pro-abstinence, "I think it's hilarious that everyone, especially parents, are saying it's about abstinence and they're really pleased their kids are reading it. And yet so many people who are reading the books are thinking, `I want them to have sex! I want them to make me want to have sex!' And if you read any fan fiction, all of it is about Edward and Bella having sex in the same scenarios instead of stopping. It's quite amusing."
In the south-of-here Patriot Ledger, Dana Barbuto wrote, of the new movie Gentlemen Broncos, when it’s not paying homage to low-budget sci-fi films and geeky fan fiction, “Gentlemen Broncos” shows the type of unabashed heart that made the Hesses’ earlier film a cult hit.
Concordian College's The Concordian's Sean Volk went home sick, watched too much TV, and discovered fanfic, the poor dear: I could write my own fan fiction to create a sense of resolution for myself. If I did that, I would steer clear of the creepy but surprisingly popular sub-genre of erotic fan fiction. Think “Legolas’s long bow quivered with desire,” or “Buffy sure knew how to work a stake.” The more I think about it, this route seems phallic, very creepy, and less satisfying then I originally thought. I’m not into that sort of thing, but whatever floats your boat. Also in The Concordian, Julia Steincross wrote The horror stories from when we were children have been warped, and the youth of today will not grow up fearing such creatures. We have Stephenie Meyer to thank for this, because she has written the glorified fanfiction that is the “Twilight” series. Oh, the humanity! And, in the Louisiana State University Tiger Weekly, Brian Fontenot advised people doing NaNoWriMo, Write something new. It's about the climb, not the summit, even if the summit is awful, lacks coherency, is filled with laughable dialog, and happens to be a Twilight/Supernatural crossover fanfic.
Finally, Mark Morford, for the San Francisco Chronicle's website, dissed both my religion and my favorite hobby in one swell foop. No cookie for him.
In the south-of-here Patriot Ledger, Dana Barbuto wrote, of the new movie Gentlemen Broncos, when it’s not paying homage to low-budget sci-fi films and geeky fan fiction, “Gentlemen Broncos” shows the type of unabashed heart that made the Hesses’ earlier film a cult hit.
Concordian College's The Concordian's Sean Volk went home sick, watched too much TV, and discovered fanfic, the poor dear: I could write my own fan fiction to create a sense of resolution for myself. If I did that, I would steer clear of the creepy but surprisingly popular sub-genre of erotic fan fiction. Think “Legolas’s long bow quivered with desire,” or “Buffy sure knew how to work a stake.” The more I think about it, this route seems phallic, very creepy, and less satisfying then I originally thought. I’m not into that sort of thing, but whatever floats your boat. Also in The Concordian, Julia Steincross wrote The horror stories from when we were children have been warped, and the youth of today will not grow up fearing such creatures. We have Stephenie Meyer to thank for this, because she has written the glorified fanfiction that is the “Twilight” series. Oh, the humanity! And, in the Louisiana State University Tiger Weekly, Brian Fontenot advised people doing NaNoWriMo, Write something new. It's about the climb, not the summit, even if the summit is awful, lacks coherency, is filled with laughable dialog, and happens to be a Twilight/Supernatural crossover fanfic.
Finally, Mark Morford, for the San Francisco Chronicle's website, dissed both my religion and my favorite hobby in one swell foop. No cookie for him.