BINGO: row
Jan. 2nd, 2014 09:51 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
I'm posting a fill for my 10-6-13 card. I've been using fests as a way of generating extra prompts for my Poetry Fishbowl and other crowdfunding projects, so the sponsored ones and some free perks have been posted while other stuff is still available for sponsorship. Want to see something that isn't posted yet? Many of my fills belong to series, so their prices will be listed under the relevant series on my Serial Poetry page. For stand-alone pieces you can ask in a comment.
Row 2 Prompts (five poems): flirting, face to face, domestic/tradesman kink, failure, innocent
The following poem belongs to my series Fledgling Grace. This is spiritual fantasy about what happens when humans start sprouting the wings and tails of (mostly) birds. It has themes of transformation, faith, good and evil, identity, family of choice, and avian symbolism.
Title: "City of Angels"
Series: Fledgling Grace
Prompt: flirting
Rating: G
Warnings: None
Notes: Early in the Fledging, Los Angeles becomes a gathering spot, especially for different kinds of doves.
The following poem belongs to the series Frankenstein's Family, which you can find via my Serial Poetry page. This is gothic science fiction about an unconventional family. Victor is transgender. Igor has a hunched back. They're in a queerplatonic relationship together, and they've used science to create a son, Adam. Themes include family ties, nonsexual touch, gender issues, knowledge vs. ignorance, disability, and science.
Title: "What We Reap"
Series: Frankenstein's Family
Prompt: face to face
Rating: PG
Warnings: None
Notes: Victor and Igor celebrate the harvest time together.
Title: "For Your Own Protection"
Series: Stand-alone
Prompt: domestic / tradesman kink
Rating: R
Warnings: Unwanted advances, ownership of a sentient being.
Notes: Asimov's Laws can have unexpected interpretations.
The following poem belongs to my series Polychrome Heroics. This is a superhero setting with a variety of focal characters. The primary one is a plural person collectively called Damask, with different powers depending on who's in control at the time. Themes include diversity of sexuality, gender, ethnicity, and ableness; intrapersonal, interpersonal, and social dynamics; and different types of heroism.
Title: "The Hardest Part"
Series: Polychrome Heroics
Prompt: failure
Rating: PG-13
Warnings: This is a warning that is also a spoiler. Highlight to read. The following poem contains accidental violence, messy medical details, character death (not a main character), depression, and emotional whump. If these are sensitive topics for you, please think carefully before deciding whether to read onward.
Notes: Damask learns that even a superhero can't do everything.
The following poem belongs to my series Diminished Expectations. This is dystopic science fiction dealing with the aftermath of chemical warfare, disability, freedom and oppression, artificial intelligence, and families of choice. A majority of the writing runs very dark.
Title: "The Family You've Got"
Series: Diminished Expectations
Prompt: innocent
Rating: PG-13
Warnings: This is a warning that is also a spoiler. Highlight to read. The following poem contains discrimination, disability, exploitation of children, child death (not the main characters), and unfulfilled plans to escape a wretched situation. If these are sensitive topics for you, please think carefully before deciding whether to read onward.
Notes: Credence, Silence, Reverence, and Innocence form a family of choice growing up in the orphanage.
Row 2 Prompts (five poems): flirting, face to face, domestic/tradesman kink, failure, innocent
The following poem belongs to my series Fledgling Grace. This is spiritual fantasy about what happens when humans start sprouting the wings and tails of (mostly) birds. It has themes of transformation, faith, good and evil, identity, family of choice, and avian symbolism.
Title: "City of Angels"
Series: Fledgling Grace
Prompt: flirting
Rating: G
Warnings: None
Notes: Early in the Fledging, Los Angeles becomes a gathering spot, especially for different kinds of doves.
The following poem belongs to the series Frankenstein's Family, which you can find via my Serial Poetry page. This is gothic science fiction about an unconventional family. Victor is transgender. Igor has a hunched back. They're in a queerplatonic relationship together, and they've used science to create a son, Adam. Themes include family ties, nonsexual touch, gender issues, knowledge vs. ignorance, disability, and science.
Title: "What We Reap"
Series: Frankenstein's Family
Prompt: face to face
Rating: PG
Warnings: None
Notes: Victor and Igor celebrate the harvest time together.
Title: "For Your Own Protection"
Series: Stand-alone
Prompt: domestic / tradesman kink
Rating: R
Warnings: Unwanted advances, ownership of a sentient being.
Notes: Asimov's Laws can have unexpected interpretations.
The following poem belongs to my series Polychrome Heroics. This is a superhero setting with a variety of focal characters. The primary one is a plural person collectively called Damask, with different powers depending on who's in control at the time. Themes include diversity of sexuality, gender, ethnicity, and ableness; intrapersonal, interpersonal, and social dynamics; and different types of heroism.
Title: "The Hardest Part"
Series: Polychrome Heroics
Prompt: failure
Rating: PG-13
Warnings: This is a warning that is also a spoiler. Highlight to read. The following poem contains accidental violence, messy medical details, character death (not a main character), depression, and emotional whump. If these are sensitive topics for you, please think carefully before deciding whether to read onward.
Notes: Damask learns that even a superhero can't do everything.
The following poem belongs to my series Diminished Expectations. This is dystopic science fiction dealing with the aftermath of chemical warfare, disability, freedom and oppression, artificial intelligence, and families of choice. A majority of the writing runs very dark.
Title: "The Family You've Got"
Series: Diminished Expectations
Prompt: innocent
Rating: PG-13
Warnings: This is a warning that is also a spoiler. Highlight to read. The following poem contains discrimination, disability, exploitation of children, child death (not the main characters), and unfulfilled plans to escape a wretched situation. If these are sensitive topics for you, please think carefully before deciding whether to read onward.
Notes: Credence, Silence, Reverence, and Innocence form a family of choice growing up in the orphanage.