swan_tower: (Default)
swan_tower ([personal profile] swan_tower) wrote2013-10-09 04:12 pm

Yuletide signups are open!

One last post before I leave on my trip. (Okay, that might be a lie. I have no idea if something else will prod me into posting in the next twenty hours or so. But this is the last one I intend to make.)

Yuletide signups are open. If you already know and love Yuletide, go forth and have fun!

If you're wondering what the heck I'm talking about, keep reading.


Yuletide is a fanfiction gift exchange for "rare fandoms" -- meaning not your Harry Potters and so on, but things that don't normally get a lot of fannish activity. This means stories for obscure '80s movies, book series you loved when you were nine (whenever that was for you), indie comics, songs, paintings, historical personages, bizarre TV commercials, Appalachian murder ballads, London museums, and Plato's Dialogues, along with many, many other things.

Participating means that you sign up with requests and offers: things you would like somebody else to write for you, and things you'd be willing to write for somebody else. Offers get matched to requests, everybody gets an assignment, and you go off to write a complete story of at least one thousand words, featuring the characters your recipient asked for. Come Christmas morning (ish, depending on your time zone), you get to read the story your assigned writer wrote for you. And much fun is had.

I wasn't making up that list, either: this is the list of fandoms and characters nominated for Yuletide this year. You can find all the things I described in there somewhere. If there are things on the list that make you go "squee!" or "oh god I would love a story about X," consider signing up. This post tells you how, plus there's a FAQ here, and I'm happy to answer any questions. Or, if the idea sort of appeals but you don't know what you would ask for/you'd prefer not to have the pressure of a deadline, you can participate unofficially, either by writing "treats" (extra stories for the heck of it), or by pinch-hitting -- stepping in when a participant has to default on their assignment. If you're interested in either of those, let me know, and I'll give you the rundown on how it works.

It really is a lot of fun. Yuletide is full of people going "oh my god, I'm not the only person who loves this!" (In fact, that's kind of the point.) This is my fourth year participating, and it's become sort of my annual treat to myself, writing some stuff just because it's entertaining to do so, not because it's my job. Plus it's a lot more communal and social than writing generally is. If that sounds like your cup of tea, give it a shot!

[identity profile] samedietc.livejournal.com 2013-10-13 04:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Thanks for the info--and for bringing this whole yuletide fiction exchange to my attention. It looks like a lot of fun. I went ahead and got an AO3 account and signed up for the pinch-hitter Yahoo group.

Two other questions: about how many pieces do you write for this? (I'm probably just going to write one or two.) And do other people write out what they want from their fiction requests in the way you did in your "Dear Yuletide Writer" post? I browsed through the link you put up to the letters and it doesn't seem like many people talk about what they want beyond fandom/character.

[identity profile] swan-tower.livejournal.com 2013-10-13 09:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Answer #1 -- is the "you" here me specifically, or people generally? Me, I wrote four stories my first year, six my second, and then twelve my third, because I had lots of free time and wanted to prevent myself from trying to increase the number of stories I wrote every year by writing a ridiculous number I would never top. :-P People generally, on the other hand: your average Yuletider writes one, maybe two. You can write as many or as few as you like. Just remember that if you get assigned a pinch hit, you do have to finish, so think before you volunteer for it! (But think fast. There's sort of a competition on the pinch hit list to see who can snag 'em the fastest.)

As for the letters, they vary wildly. Some people write one sentence. Others write small novels. If you keep browsing, you'll find some wordier ones, I promise. :-)