An Exaltation of Muse Ch. 02
N.B. This may not make much sense to you, but if you haven't read Ch. 01 it will make no sense whatsoever.
Thalia is mentor to the frustrated muses assigned to writers who don't publish stories but comment freely—and frequently harshly—on other writers' stories. She has dubbed this unlucky lot
Muses to the Overt Commentariat (MOCs)
; they meet each Wednesday in their local,
The Fleeting Muse
. A week ago she told them that she would try to help them inspire their writers to write and publish stories of their own, hence her return visit. She is doing this, she claims, as atonement for her bitchy behaviour last week, particularly her nasty putdown of the muse named Clio.
It would be churlish of me to neglect giving heartfelt thanks to my beta readers. You know who you are, but I'll keep your names in the silence of my heart to shield you against the slings and arrows of outrageous myrmidons.
--§§§--
Previously, on An
Exaltation of Muse
:
Thalia shook the last drops of Navy Strength from her glass, set it down on the table, and tapped it with her gold Cross pen. "Social time is over, it's time to start upping our game." She put her briefcase on the table, snapped open the clamshell top, and took out several stapled packets of paper. "Take one and pass the rest around, it's show-and-tell time."
--§--
"YOU PROBABLY HAVEN'T read the commentary of many writers other than your own, so I've taken the liberty of gathering some of the pithier examples..." Thalia smirked. "Yeth, pithier." She waited a beat for giggles that never materialized, then grimaced. Looking down at her script, she made to read but only squinted. With a muttered oath, she dug out a pair of reading glasses, then slashed through a line and continued in a less boardroom-like manner.
"Clio, I don't mean to pick on you—"
"But you're going to anyway, right, Thalia?" Clio softened her interruption with a smile.
"Well, I did turn up a few interesting titbits about your hirsute commentator. It seems that he trusts his ear more than his grammar lessons, because he pretty consistently confuses
of
with
have
, as in
would of, could of, should of
, and the like. He should have learnt better in primary school.
"And he really takes the ribbon for nasty comments. It's hard to beat 'This particular author is a fucking idiot', or a comment that begins with 'jesus folks does this story look like another god dam train wreck or what?' and closes with 'jesus h christ what a train wreck.'
Sometimes he gets so angry that you can almost see him sputtering, spitting on the keyboard, and making typos: 'REVLOTING CRAP, AUTHOR. FUCK YOU TOO and i hope you get cancer and die!' Other times this leads him into ethnic slurs, such as 'gotta wonder if this sort of mindless stupidity and gullibility must be a British thing' or 'Please... for the Love of GOD can someone in the UK Please act like man???'
"And his notion of a compliment leaves a lot to be desired—'eh...doesnt suck.' I'll give him this, though: if he likes a story he doesn't shilly-shally about it. You don't have to guess how he feels when his comment begins 'Top 5 best LW story EVER.' and ends with "Goddam fucking fabulous story." Thalia shook her head ruefully.
"He doesn't limit his outbursts to authors or their characters, either, he blasts other commentators, too. 'Folks, have you ever read comments from anyone with a more fucked up grasp of reality??' That's just the beginning of a 523-word diatribe. Sometimes insulting just one commentator doesn't satisfy him: 'What fucking planet are you idiots living on?'
"That invites payback, of course, and sometimes he gets it, in spades. Take this person's response: 'If you weren't so bloody rude all the time, then I might take some notice of what you say. Some of it does make sense, but you get so excited that it tends to come out as gobbledygook. Calm down a bit.'
"So you've got your work cut out for you, Clio, if you ever hope he'll clean up his act. He has a good vocabulary, writes well—except for that
of-have
confusion—and actually has offered some fair suggestions about how a story could be improved. I think he's a frustrated writer who's afraid to submit something under his own name because of all the rubbish he's talked, so I repeat the suggestion I made last week: he should create an alternate persona—a
nom de plume de plume
, if you will—and publish a story."
She started to look down at her script again, then turned back at Clio and spoke more softly. "Try, Clio; you're actually quite a good muse." She shifted back to boardroom mode.
"But before we get into dreary lessons—"
She was interrupted by an imperious brunette sitting next to Clio. "Just who are you to be giving us lessons? We're
all
muses, we're
all
daughters of Zeus. Some of us may have different mothers, but we're at least half-sisters. I don't remember us ever electing you."
Thalia heaved a sigh so deep it threatened to deflate her not-inconsiderable breastworks. "O Philomela, never ask a question whose answer you won't like. Before I put paid to some of the rubbish that's out there, though, I assure you that I'm sympathetic to your challenge. Like Clio, you're trying to inspire a prolific, prolix commentator who writes no stories of his own. Yours, though, isn't so rude as he is arrogant; he fancies himself a brilliant critic who just knows that everyone eagerly awaits his learned discourses.