uandishi Club
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posted by harold
The mwandishi considered. Then the mwandishi wrote:

Two opposites sat on a park bench

The mwandishi deleted

eating their curds and whey

as soon as it was typed, and replaced it with

and one wanted the other to leave.

The critic noted "That's really not very specific, is it? Two 'opposites'? Come on, you're going to have to be zaidi specific than that."

The mwandishi considered. Then the mwandishi wrote:

The Republican sat down inayofuata to the Democrat on the park bench

and nodded, satisfied. The critic clucked his tongue. "Welll...it's not exactly original, is it? And how different are they, really? Honestly, wewe couldn't have had a Peace and Freedomer in there instead? And what's this with focussing on US politics? Isn't that going to alienate most of your readers, who don't live in the US and wouldn't be able to tell why they're supposed to be 'opposites'?"

The mwandishi sighed and the two idealogues slunk away. The mwandishi considered, and finally wrote:

A man and a woman sat on a park bench

and looked at the critic. "Yeeeess...that is better," the critic admitted, "It could lead to a nice contrast, at that. But when it comes down to it, they're not really opposites, are they?" The author's eyebrows rose. "I mean, yeah, they're two different genders and all. But wewe haven't gone into any detail about who they are. Their upbringings could be very similar, and their life situations. For all we know, it could be Meg Ryan and Tom Hanks sitting there, and no one's suggesting that their life experiences have been all that different. Sure, if wewe want to have a couple of well-to-do white urbanites sitting there, kvetching on and on about how different they are, and boo-hoo, how they're never gonna understand each other, go right ahead. But we've seen it a million times - why not choose something a little zaidi extreme?"

The would-be lovers fled as the author's teeth ground together, but, after some further consideration, the mwandishi wrote:

The sleek, tall African warlord stepped up onto the bench and surveyed the surrounding park before slinging his assault bunduki and plopping down inayofuata to the plump, elderly Ukrainian nurse who was fussing over the crippled Asian baby in the isolette inayofuata to her. Their eyes locked and widened in surprise. "You!" they cried in their respective languages.

The author, arms crossed, looked a challenge at the critic. The critic merely snorted. "Feh...they're both human, right?"

The nurse returned her charge to the hospital, and the warlord returned on a subsonic jet to his homeland with a story his tribesmen would never believe. The mwandishi hammered at the keyboard, writing:

George W. kichaka and Buzz Lightyear arrived at the bench simultaneously

"Now you're just being silly," the critic complained, "Besides, both of these guys mangle English and spout nonsense. Opposites? Ha!"

"To infinity and beyond!" Buzz Lightyear declaimed, blasting off into the air. "My point exactly!" the critic smirked as Dubya was hustled back into the bulletproof sedan kwa an apologetic secret service agent.

The mwandishi fumed. Whack. Whack. Whack.

Salt sat inayofuata to pepper on the bench

The critic threw hands into the air in disgust. "THEY'RE BOTH SEASONINGS!"

The shakers exploded and the wind carried the granules to far-off lands.

Steam rose from the author's ears. BAM. BAM. BAM.

Aphrodite and Hades sat on a bench, the air brittle with the tension between them

"Oh, come ON! They're both from the Greek pantheon!"

Aphrodite was borne off kwa a husky chorus of scantily-clad bodybuilders. Hades sniffed in disdain, snapped his fingers and the bench slurped down into the depths of the earth.

The author's fingers, stiff with resentment, had to try three times before successfully typing:

Flames licked at the block of ice as the corner of the frozen bench caught fire

The critic fixed the mwandishi with a pitying stare. "Really? Fire and ice? Are wewe serious? Those are just different temperature states of matter. They're not necessarily a different material, and certainly not opposites at all."

The mwandishi wept, head in hands. After a while, the author, brow beaded with sweat, tentatively typed out:

Good sat primly inayofuata to Evil on a parkbench

and looked sideways at the critic, barely suppressing a whimper.

The critic sighed heavily. "Look," the critic began, "I don't mean to be harsh, but is that really the best wewe can do? Good vs. Evil? Those are both rather subjective, aren't they? As such, they're both products of a aliyopewa belief system. The best wewe could say is that Good is doing what you're supposed to do in a aliyopewa system, and Evil is not doing good. So they're not opposites - one is just the absence of the other!"

The mwandishi brightened and nodded.

Something sat on a bench inayofuata to Nothing...and was satisfied.
posted by dbzfan5
CHAPTER 1* the deepest abyss* in the ocean in the deepest abyss were no sign of light could be found little particles started to come together forming a strange creature that had the head of a human but as pail as the skin on a grate Wight, a papa fin on its back, gills on the outer skin were its lungs are, arms of a praying mantis, six gel like tentacles on its back, with the body and legs of a human! Two of them were made one boy one girl they quickly swam to pwani *CHAPTER 2 there’s zaidi of us* we got up to pwani and found a little island and swam to it finding zaidi like us! Peek the...
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added by darkwave
posted by Cinders
It has been alisema that those with no words often have the most to say.


New York City, circa 1992.

He was quiet, a secret sort of troubled, his hands buried deep into his pockets as he wandered the slums of a black city, a heavy shadow cast over the sky that was too dark for the stars to penetrate.

She was a bloodnut and she watched him from the shadows, her dead moyo rattling inside of her empty chest. She launched herself at him and latched onto his arm like a leech, beginning to beg, offering services in exchange for the substance she craved so much. Just a taste, she said, she promised that...
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added by smartcockker
added by goood
This is just an excerpt, so it might be kinda confusing, but still, let me know please!

"    She was surrounded, there was no way to go, no where to turn. Circling around, trying to formulate a plan, a stab of pain coursed through her veins, bringing her to her knees. Another shot brought her a face-full of colorful carpet. Someone from behind tied her hands together in some unknown bindings and pinned her thrashing body to the ground with the help of a few others.
    “Check her.”
    That voice… where Have I heard it before?
    One...
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added by zanhar1
added by shaarabi
added by Andressa_Weld
posted by inexplicable
The last time

The siku was gray and it was raining outside. There were hardly any people seen on the streets, but I ran, soaked kwa the rain, down the street. I walked toward a house, but went unnoticed on the opposite side of the street. I looked up to the building and reminded me again at that time, to events to which I recalled many years later. It is in this house he lived not too long ago. Whether we were just friends, au maybe even zaidi than that, I still do not know. I called me back the memory of an evening that was not even long ago. We were in his room and he played me on the kinanda before...
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added by darga
added by ZekiYuro
posted by Theatre_Freak
Once upon a time there was a little place called the 13 colonies. In one of these colonies lived little old m,e Angelina, but there was something different. In my colony, everyone was the same; we all had wanyama grew crops and so on, but I was special. Originally, I lived in Paris, France with my mother and father. After my father died when I was just a baby, my mother noticed that I had a gift that only few had in our family. I was a Witch.
My mother feared for my safety and made a deal with her sister. Her sister was a specialist in the dark arts of magic. Mother didn't trust her, but she...
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added by ZekiYuro
posted by Anudie
Once upon a time, in a perfect world there stood a perfect pink ngome guarded kwa a perfect number of perfect fluffy farasi and surrounded kwa a perfect ukuta of perfect pink flowers.
In the perfect ngome there lived a perfect, perfect girl with a perfect life. Her perfect name was perfect: Serenity Lianna Honeyblossom Sweetytreat Sparkle cupcake Beauty Mary Sue.
She was always paid kwa authors to nyota in their vitabu and act like the perfect dream girl; aka a Mary Sue. She lived in Storyland, where all the ideal characters lived until they were picked for a story and then dropped back in after....
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posted by cute20k
Hi! I was uandishi a novel a while back, but I got distracted. I have only written the first chapter. I feel as if I need better names for the characters. I believe I'm going to hariri the first chapter a lot and bring in some other characters. For the main 2 characters I was thinking I would name them something foreign that has a meaning to do with love, to be a little cutesy. Also, title suggestions would help! If wewe choose to follow the link below the female character's description, let me know if wewe have any names for the 2 cheerleaders mentioned.

Edit: For 'Jo'/female I was looking up names...
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 Courtesy of the cartoonist, Clangnuts
Courtesy of the cartoonist, Clangnuts
Ah, the dreaded cliché! The worst feedback a writer can get is, "Well, it sounds sort of cliché, doesn't it?"

All authors want to be original. If someone even mentions that a writer's work reminds them of someone else's, the writer tenses up. "No, no, no, I'm nothing like him," he says swiftly. "I've never even read him."

"Yeah, but it's kinda like him," the reader persists, believing she is giving a compliment rather than an insult. "He's incredible, wewe should read him!"

The thing is-- it should be a compliment when a reader compares your work to...
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posted by EmzLovesCheryl
Life.


Life is what wewe make it, a recipe that could either end in disaster, au turn out great.

Some people get an advantage, they start off with better ingredients. But at the end of the day, the person that worked the hardest, gets the best result, no matter how they started.

Never think that wewe can't beat that person who has every ingredient ready-made, because they happen to have that start in life. If wewe are dedicated to what wewe do, then there's nothing to stop wewe getting to that same stage. au above that stage. wewe just have to be determined, talented at what it is wewe want to do, and...
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posted by kayleebabee
As the Bentley pulled into the huge karakana jane smiled to herself gently. I felt Edward stiffen inayofuata to me.
"What is it?" I mouthed I felt my eyebrows pul together in mystification, as he shook his head it must have been bad then what she was thinking.
"Move it I don't have all siku and neither do your family." She cackled like a witch on halloween.
I fought back a snarl- that was out of line and Jane seemed the type who would use your family against wewe in a fight.
"She was thinking about the tortures they had put Esme and Carlisle through. They let them get- wewe remember how thirsty wewe were before...
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