Over the years, it’s become a tradition that I write a line or two to the “Irish Drinking Song” game they used to play on Whose Line is it Anyway? Especially for my sister’s birthday, which is today!
This is a true story: how The Rose of Shanhasson came to be.
O, hidey-hidey hidey-hidey hidey-hidey ho, it’s down the road we go!
Five years and more it’s been,
Since Sis called with a grin.
“I have a secret now to tell,
I’m so excited I could yell!”
Her first book was complete,
Beginning to end replete.
I begged and begged a chance to read,
But crafty Sis had a case to plead.
O, hidey-hidey hidey-hidey hidey-hidey ho, it’s down the road we go!
“I know you’re writing too, dear Sis,
Exchange for mine with no desist.”
Agog, I choked and hummed and hawed,
Afraid and honestly, a bit in awe.
I wrote, sometimes, when the mood arose,
But never finished any prose.
“Fair is fair!” Trumped my dear Sis.
“All you’ve got; I insist!”
O, hidey-hidey hidey-hidey hidey-hidey ho, it’s down the road we go!
With trembling hands, I sent the file
First story, I’d been dreaming a while,
Trying to finish but not quite sure,
Whether or not I would endure.
Then Sis replied, “You have to finish!
Your love for this story nothing diminish!
You have to get Shannari free,
And back to Rhaekhar, so I decree!”
O, hidey-hidey hidey-hidey hidey-hidey ho, it’s down the road we go!
And so, dear friends, that’s how I came,
My first story, finished, to Sis the blame.
In all these years, she still is there,
Cheering, hugging, sending her care.
Without her love I would be lost,
Adrift on the sea and wildly tossed.
So lift your mug and raise your voice,
“ Best Sister Friend, there’s no other choice!”
O, hidey-hidey hidey-hidey hidey-hidey ho, it’s down the road we go!
Before Christmas, she mailed me the coolest goodies. Inside, I found signed Larissa Ione books (fan girl squee!), shells, and RT swag, including dozens of postcards, bookmarks, and a big comfy red blanket.
Of course, I didn’t get to keep the blanket for long.
Someone was always stealing my blanket!
Then some wonderful news came. I danced and yelled down the hall and the monsters came running. When they heard the news, they grabbed the red blanket and raced around the house shouting and waving it like a banner.
You see, Conn and Rae of Letters to an English Professor have found a home at:
Conn’s story will be getting a new title too. So if any of you have read snippets or my blabbering about the story and have a title suggestion, shout it out!
Thanks to everyone who has read Letters in its various incarnations and provided feedback; who gave me the courage to send out such a spicy story; who talked me off the cliff once or dozens of times; and a huge thank you to Angela James and Samhain for giving Dr. Connagher a chance for more pop quizzes and smoldering poetry lessons!
In honor of Valentine’s Day, I’m going to host a “101 Ways to Love Your Characters” clinic here on the blog, beginning Friday, 2/13 thru Sunday, 2/15. This invitation is open to anyone on the planet who has anything at all to say about characters.
If you’re a reader, I want to know about your all-time favorite characters and why you love them.
If you’re a writer, I want to know about all your tricks and techniques that help you create memorable characters. My friend Jenna is going to blog about using tarot; my friend Soleil is going to use astrology; and I’m going to talk about a variety of things, like static traits and possibly what I’ve learned using I Ching.
The clinics will be informal, chatty, and above all, fun!
I’ll post daily Clinic entries here, linking to everyone who’s participating to share the link love. Simply e-mail me (see the About tab) or comment on any post and leave me your link to be included. I’ll be giving away two prizes: one to the posters; one to the commenters (on any participating blog entry, not just mine). Posters may comment to gain more chances to win.
Since Ann and Bethanie can attest to how much I suck at getting packages in the mail *mutters at self and eyes the box on the corner of my desk that I should have mailed last freaking year!!*, the rules are very simple. Up for grabs: two $20 prizes, winner’s choice
Amazon order (that qualifies for Amazon Prime or includes shipping) up to $20
any online book retailer $20 gift certificate (Amazon, B&N, Fictionwise, Drollerie Press bookshop, etc.)
So make a note on your calendar and I hope to see you next weekend!
Dark and Early this morning, I accomplished the following:
went back and revised the last scene involving Tara and cut out the stuff that happened too early. Rewrote the scene to fit with the day sheet. NSR total word count down 266 words.
wrote next new section in Tara’s POV, 1199 words, the official “meet” of her thread with Quinn’s. From now on, they’ll be working in conjunction.
Next scenes are the first sex scene of the first draft, and they’re pretty bad. They’re going to need a ton of work. Once I get past it, though, the next few scenes should fly.
Snippet:
[Ruin] muttered words [Jaid] didn’t understand and drew the blade across his left palm.
Fisting his hand, he dripped blood on the altar and then flung his hand hard, slinging blood out onto the waters below.
Breathlessly, she scanned the lake, waiting. When her father had performed the ritual, he’d released an inland hurricane. She glanced at Ruin as he put the knife away and then back at the lake. “That’s it?”
His mouth quirked. “When done correctly, yes.” Stones clacked together. He whipped his head around, staring down into the darkness of the plaza. “They’re close. We need to go.”
“Go where?” Bewildered, she searched the still waters, the three volcanoes perfectly reflected. Something tinged on the altar and chips of stone flew up, stinging her arm.
Ruin shoved her up the ramped stone, using his body to cover her. “They’ve seen us. Go!”
On the rock slab that hung out over the water, she felt her stomach pitch and her head whirled like a merry-go-round. Shimmering waters beckoned, but it was quite a drop. This lake was so deep that it’d never been sounded. She remembered how her father had disappeared beneath the surface. He hadn’t flailed or tried to swim; he’d sunk like a boulder.
Shivering with fear, she reached back and clutched Ruin’s hand. He wrapped his other arm around her, and together, they jumped.
Revision Xibalba has been going well the last few weeks. Which is good. Great! Until I ran out of “Block” today.
NSR contains the most complex plot I’ve ever woven before. Although the first draft is finished–so I know where the main story arc goes and ends–I’ve added two new POVs, each with its own sub-plot. Those two sub-plots meet at the same time the main story arc reaches its climax. Revision “Hell” has been appropriate, because I’ve got several concurrent threads to handle, in different parts of the world, but they have to MEET at the right time. Some sections are finished in first draft. Others I haven’t started. Now as I work through the second major draft, some scenes have been edited and smoothed. Others haven’t.
It’s been insane, challenging, and even though I may bitch about it, I’m loving every minute of it.
I’ve used section “blocks” (like the one I created for 7 Crows last night) many times before, but this time, I needed more detail than ever. I ended up using the “Day Sheet” idea talked about in Karen Wiesner’s First Draft in 30 Days (which oddly, I’ve never used for first draft, but for major revisions!) and manipulating it into something useful for this project.
Today over lunch, my great achievement was going through the old first draft, my stack of notecards, my jotted notes, and finishing the Day Sheet, at least a first draft which can be used to complete the rest of the revision. (Note: I’m not a rigid writer. This spreadsheet WILL change. It gives me a guide to go by, but if in writing the section, I feel a break is needed or a different scene will flow better, I’ll do so, and then make the corresponding change to the table.)
At a glance, this is how much work I have left to finish. Notes follow the table.
Day
Scene
POV
Total POVs for Character
Status
Location
Chapter
Count
Scene Title
3 PM
039
Tara
6
FD
Dallas
Haunted
3 PM
040
Ruin
8
SD
Lake Atitlan
My Last Sacrifice
3 PM
041
Jaid
22
SD
Lake Atitlan
Everything has a Cost
3 PM
042
Quinn
6
FD
Dallas
Bad Things, Amigo
3 PM
043
Ruin
9
SD
Chi’Ch’ul
Price of Sacrifice
3 PM
044
Jaid
23
SD
Chi’Ch’ul
Jaguar Kiss
3 PM
045
Jaid
24
SD
Chi’Ch’ul
Through the Navel
3 PM
046
Tara
7
IP
Venus Star
Nightmares Come Alive
3 PM
047
Ruin
10
FD
Chich’en Itza
Low Reserves
3 PM
048
Jaid
25
FD
Chich’en Itza
Everyone Dies
3 PM
029
Quinn
7
NS
Dallas
Team Update
4 AM
050
Ruin
11
FD
Chich’en Itza
Cost of Magic
4 AM
051
Jaid
26
FD
Chich’en Itza
Hidden Dagger
4 AM
052
Ruin
12
FD
Chich’en Itza
Blood Keyed
4 AM
053
Jaid
27
FD
Chich’en Itza
Drowning in Blood
4 AM
054
Tara
8
NS
Venus Star
Save a Life
4 PM
055
Jaid
28
FD
Iximche
Doomed
4 PM
056
Jaid
29
FD
Iximche
Translation Under Duress
4 PM
057
Ruin
13
FD
Iximche
Heart’s Duty
4 PM
058
Quinn
8
NS
Dallas
Hospital Visit
4 PM
059
Jaid
30
FD
Iximche
Iximche Key
4 PM
060
Jaid
31
FD
Iximche
Desperate Bargain
4 PM
061
Jaid
32
FD
Iximche
To Xibalba
4 PM
062
Tara
9
NS
Venus Star
Venus Star Showdown
4 PM
063
Ruin
14
FD
Iximche
Butterfly’s Devastation
4 PM
064
Jaid
33
FD
Iximche
The Caged Heart
4 PM
065
Ruin
15
FD
Iximche
My Heart is Yours
4 PM
066
Quinn
9
NS
Venus Star
The Dallas Gate
4 PM
067
Jaid
34
FD
Iximche
The Final Death
4 PM
068
Jaid
35
FD
Iximche
Broken
4 PM
069
Ruin
16
FD
Iximche
Home
4 PM
070
Jaid
36
FD
Iximche
Closed and Locked
4 PM
071
T/Q
10
NS
Venus Star
Tie Up
4 PM
072
Jaid
37
FD
Iximche
Tie Up
Notes:
Color coding is important for me. I can see at a glance if the POVs make a pleasing tapestry of Story. Usually the color means something specific to a character, or invokes a “feeling” in me about the character.
I ended up not using the chapter and word count columns after I got knee-deep in revision. I’ll leave them off next time.
The day column isn’t specific. e.g. 3 PM means the 3rd day, sometime after noon and before midnight. When I finish this draft, I intend to go back through and read for time incongruences only. e.g. I can’t have Tara do something in the morning, and then switch the scene and it’s night in Guatemala, and then go back to Dallas and it’s noon. This isn’t science fiction!
I pick section titles that should immediately invoke the details of the section, but the day sheet alone isn’t enough of an “outline” for me, if very much time elaspes. E.g. I have notecards for each section with details and thoughts jotted down, and every time I *don’t* write something down because I think I’ll remember it, I end up kicking myself.
Status = FD (first draft complete), SD (second draft with editing/smoothing complete), IP (in progress), NS (not started).
I backtracked to the scene in red at the top because it needs a rather major revision after I finished the rest of the block today. I have something happening too early there and it needs to be removed.
Have you ever done or needed something this complex before? Or am I simply making it too hard on myself?
By word count alone, I ended up negative today in NSR. I wrote the next new section in Quinn’s POV — braving Melville to do so — and then axed the only section in Dr. Charles Merritt’s POV in the second major draft, which was longer. I also did some shuffling around of character placement. A character needed to die a bit earlier than I planned. Good work, even if the word count doesn’t reflect it.
Then tonight my Amazon order arrived containing The Complete I Ching. I’d bought this book as research for my hero in 7Crows, and whoa, it’s so interesting! I’ve been trying to plot it out, but couldn’t seem to get the pieces to fall into the right order in my mind. So I decided to play out a toss of the coins and see if I could get a plot. I got so many good ideas, it was freaky. I ended up plotting the whole thing tonight.
For example: Tian’s, the hero’s, static trait is that he always consults the coins. The first scene shows him doing this. So naturally, in his darkest moment of betrayal, he checks the coins, and rightfully gets the hexagram 36 – Ming Yi – Brilliance Injured or Darkening of the Light. I was getting ready to move on to the Masquerade, when one line from the description caught my eye: “Hunting in the south, captured the great chief.”
Hmmm. Interesting, I thought. I ended up adding a scene where they do just that — capture the Queen’s right hand man.
This static trait comes back in the first climax, where he distracts someone who knows him well by doing the casting again before “making a decision” when he’s really just buying time. There, he casts 18 – Gu – Worm or Decay. I just love the whole idea of it.
I’m sure I’ll need to do more tweaking, but the outline of plot is here. I still need to think of one crucial item that ties Morghan’s father to the theme, and I need to spend a bit more time making sure her dark moment is appropriately hopeless. Anyway, here is the first draft of the block outline for 7Crows.
Section
Title
POV
001
Tea with the Stars
Morghan
002
Dragon Hid in the Deep
Tian
003
At the Captain’s Table
Morghan
004
Sage Advice
Morghan
005
Promenade
Tian
006
Winged Dance
Morghan
007
Scaled Mask
Tian
008
Fallen Crow
Morghan
009
Lost
Morghan
010
The Crow Queen
Tian
011
Flying in Darkness
Morghan
012
Trap is Sprung
Morghan
013
Dragon Flying Low
Tian
014
Black Feathers
Morghan
015
Bedraggled Crow
Tian
016
Wing to Wing
Morghan
017
Suspicion on the Wing
Morghan
018
Darkening Light
Tian
019
The Queen’s Right Hand
Morghan
020
Masquerade
Tian
021
Tower of Crow
Morghan
022
Consult the Oracle
Tian
023
As the Crow Flies
Morghan
024
Seven Crows
Morghan
My typical section averages around 1K, so this will be right in line for the size requirements. Assuming it doesn’t grow too much in draft…
My number one goal for this month is to continue Revision Xibalba. I looked at the first draft, and I have about 28K remaining. Less if I decide I don’t need to keep Dr. Charles Merritt’s POV (which would be 5 POVs–I tend to think that’s too many, although I love the perspective he gives of Xibalba). I will also add 5-10K for the other subplots that I’ve added, specifically the corresponding Dallas threads.
If this was all I were working on, I’m sure I could finish it this month. However, I’d like to not only write but also polish a new novella this month (7 Crows) for a deadline. I have what I think is a really cool world with characters ready to go. It could be the start of a brand new series. I guess I’ll see how it goes. It’s only 20K or so.
My primary priority will continue to be Revision Xibalba. The project is too close to completion to be derailed by a new project, no matter how bright and shiny. Balance. I need balance this month. If you’ve read long, you know that’s not exactly my strongest trait.
I tend to get just a little obsessed.
For now, I’m going to try to go to bed earlier, get up earlier, and see if Dark & Early can help me hit both goals. To make this even more exciting, I might have some editor revisions this month — which will take immediate top priority.
Also, come back around Valentine’s Day for a Characterization Clinic. I’ll post details this week.
February is shaping up to be a wild and crazy month!
I hope to have some news I can share in the next few days. Stay tuned.
With the Superbowl tonight and basketball yesterday, I wasn’t sure if I’d even come close to my goals.
Last week’s goals:
Character interview at Ginger Simpson’s blog for “Bring a Character to Blog Week” starting today. My post (the interview with Ruin, The Rock) is set to post Tuesday morning. DONE.
Write up some kind of intriguing post for the first Drollerie Press blog tour on 1/31/2009. DONE.
Grow NSR by 13K to make up for shortfall last week. So close: 12,758! I’ll take it.
Plot 7Crows to position myself for a novella month in February. FAIL. I’ve got tons of good characterization done, but haven’t worked any more on the plot.
Goals for this week:
Take a look at my NSR day sheet and decide if I’m going to keep Dr. Charles Merritt’s POV or not. I can’t remember how many scenes of his I kept in the previous 200 pages or so. I also have a timing problem with another character. I planned to have him in Dallas for the final showdown, but events are spinning out faster than I anticipated in revision. He might not make it out of Guatemala, and maybe that’s okay. Dark & Early this morning, I reviewed my day sheet and looked at the revision draft. I’ve only included one section in Charlie’s POV so far. Easy to axe. So for now, I won’t add any more in his POV. If I get to a scene that is missing something because of that, I can always go back and add him later. I may offer those Xibalba scenes later as “DVD extras” or something. Now to figure out Rafe’s timing. I have a feeling he’ll stay put in Guatemala and the story won’t care one way or the other.
NSR: at least another 10K in revision.
Plot 7Crows.
Begin first draft of 7Crows.
I’ll post February goals shortly.
Snippet: Tonight, I edited the midpoint reversal. In fact, my protagonist dies. Sort of. Almost.
Warmth gushed down Jaid’s chest. It took her a moment to realize it was blood. Her blood. There was no pain, just this fountain of red splashing against the black glassy rock. She fought the weariness suffusing her limbs. The knife came down again and she braced for pain, but with a tug, the leather strap of her carryall fell down.
Her notes. He was taking her research, her life’s work.
She struggled to chase him, but she couldn’t control her limbs. Her arms and legs refused to move, as though the puppet strings had been sliced. Madelyn fell to her knees beside her, but Jaid couldn’t make sense of her words. She didn’t hear anything over the roaring in her ears.
Gone. Her research was gone. Too much blood. Dad was trapped. Demons were free because of her research, which was now in the hands of a deranged man willing to do anything to end his torment. Darkness closed in. She fought to keep her eyes open, her mind working, her heart beating. She couldn’t go. Not yet. She still had too much to do.
Hands rolled her over. She blinked hard, forcing her eyes to focus. Ruin leaned over her, his eyes blazing. His lips moved, but she couldn’t hear him. She remembered his mouth, the taste of him, the solid press of his body against hers. He would have rocked her world. Devastated her resolve. Ruined her careful attempts to protect her heart.
Welcome, gentle reader, to the first round of the Drollerie Press Blog Tour, and thank you, Joely Sue, for making me welcome on your beautifully-titled blog. It’s been a while since I dreamed in rhyme, but I did have a serious case of iambic pentameter some years ago. Since escaping from academia, I dream mostly in character.
My second book, Atlantis Cranks Need Not Apply, is about to be released in mid-February. Our editor Deena Fisher, She Who Wears Many Hats, has done a gorgeous job of designing the PDF version. While I was looking it over one more time, rounding up the last of the questionable commas, I was struck by how polished, how real the advance review copy looked. You’d never guess, seeing it now, what the creative process was like for that book. It’s tempting to say I’m about to tell you a tale about the glorious e-publishing revolution, but really, if there’s a moral of the story, it’s one William Blake told us a long time ago: If the fool will persist in his folly, he will become wise.
Not for the first time in my writing life, I began by doing everything wrong.
Some magazine I’d never heard of, which specialized in a genre I don’t read, posted a call for submissions for a kind of story I don’t write. Psychological horror? Not my thing. Usually my eye just passes over a call like that. I’m a partisan for fantasy–epic, urban, sword and sorcery, whatever, as long as fantasy is in there somewhere, but I don’t like being fed fear for fear’s sake.
But the call for submissions asked for “tales of the life interrupted.” The editor didn’t care whether the protagonist’s daily life was normal by anyone else’s standards, they just wanted the protagonist’s ordinary experience to be turned abruptly upside down by something that he or she would find especially horrifying.
What would a modern-day Neo-Pagan, a practicing witch, find more horrifying than anything else, my brain asked itself. And before I could stop it, my brain answered itself by cooking up a character. Why, for any right-thinking, skeptical Wiccan who hates being mistaken for a New Age fluff-bunny white-lighter, there would be nothing more awful than finding out that Atlantis actually existed.
Oh, no you don’t, I said to my brain, we’re in the middle of a rollicking sword and sorcery manuscript. We are not going to wander off and write an urban fantasy with a comic twist.
But it won’t be urban, said my brain. See? We’ll set it on the Jersey Shore. Here’s a snarky divorced accountant who needs to pull her life back together. Now she’s on the beach watching a hurricane blow in. Just you try to resist her!
There was no resisting Jane.
I began by writing pages and pages of dialogue between Jane and her roommate Sophie, who’s also her coven sister, her landlady, her gadfly, an aspiring hippie chick born a generation too late for peace and love. Three days of writing Jane and Sophie convinced me I had to write the story. In another week, they’d introduced me to the rest of Rugosa Coven, and I knew I wouldn’t be getting back to that sword and sorcery novel any time soon.
Jane’s Atlantis story wasn’t going to fit most of the guidelines that inspired it. It wasn’t going to be a horror story, it wasn’t going to suit the temperament of the editor whose call for submissions called it into being. It certainly wouldn’t fit the tiny word count the horror magazine wanted. That’s what I mean when I say I started by doing everything wrong. But the story was going to kick ass.
That’s what I kept telling myself–It’s going to kick ass, Sarah–while I watched the mounting word count.
I always seem to write to the wrong length for market conditions. My first-ever novel, my first trunk manuscript, was an epic fantasy family saga about a democratizing revolution, and it was about the length of the entire Lord of the Rings series. I love that book, but there’s nowhere for a first novel of that length to go. So I got to experience my own bit of psychological horror as Atlantis Cranks Need Not Apply grew past the length that’s (sort of) easy to sell to magazines, then past the length that’s extremely hard to sell to magazines, and then solidly into novella range. Magazines are getting out of the novella business. Big publishing houses have been almost entirely out of the novella business for a long time. I have a sneaking suspicion that the only reason any new science fiction and fantasy novellas still get into print at all is that the Hugo and Nebula Awards have novella categories. Just when I began to hope Atlantis Cranks would grow past the novella stage and expand into a full-fledged novel, the story…how can I describe this?…it took a breath and lived. It was itself, it was no other story but itself, and tripling or halving its length for marketability’s sake would have done it a violence it would not have survived.
Oh, well, I told my brain. Another trunk manuscript. I guess now we pick ourselves up and go back to that sword and sorcery project. Can we make it a nice, round 100,000 words? Everybody loves to see a number like that in the query letter.
My brain promptly responded by cooking up a second Rugosa Coven story, equally irresistible, that weighed in at an even more market-awkward length than the first one. As I had for Atlantis Cranks, I buffed Closing Arguments to a fine polish, even though I was certain I would never find it a home. When I’d dutifully collected rejection slips from every market in the genre that considers novellas, I decided I’d record both pieces as serial podcasts and give them away for free.
Before I made it to the end of the manual for my shiny new podcasting microphone, my wonderful critique partner David Sklar told me about this new small press he’d discovered, one that would consider novellas. David had been wrestled to the ground by a gorgeous novella that refused to get any longer, so he knew what I’d been up against with the Rugosa Coven stories. We ended up getting our acceptances for Closing Arguments and The Shadow of the Antlered Bird from Drollerie Press on the same day.
It’s been an adventure since then, trying to figure out how the new world of e-publishing works when nobody else, not even the big players in the business, not even Amazon, seems to know for sure what rules to play by. It’s been a struggle to work on the third novella in the series, the one that will complete the three-novella print volume that Drollerie Press will release in late 2009, while learning how to be a mother for the first time. It’s been, in the best Blakean sense, folly. I’m persisting. I like to think I’ll be wise sometime soon.
I started waking up at 2:30 a.m. Was wide awake by 3:30 a.m. Finally gave up and decided to be productive. Yeah, I’ve got a few things weighing heavily on my mind, but I had some incredible breakthroughs.
One thing that’s always bothered me about Mama Connagher in Letters to an English Professor: I didn’t have a clear picture of her in my mind. I’ve mentioned doing casting calls before, and if you’ve been reading here long, you know that Conn was always inspired by Clive Owen. In fact, my writing laptop’s desktop is still an image of him from Shoot ‘Em Up. It’s totally the badass Conn, the one revealed when his careful professor veneer peels back, the one that Rae fears–and desires.
Miss Belle and Colonel Healy were always played by Maureen O’Hara and John Wayne in my mind.
Victor, Conn’s older brother, would be perfectly cast as Adrian Paul.
Vicky, I’m not sure yet, but I’ve got a little time to figure her out.
Who, though, was Mama Connagher?
I didn’t know. I also wasn’t sure about her husband. While he’s been dead quite some time, I needed to be able to SEE them together in my mind. I needed to build a history for them beyond the hints that MIss Belle dropped in Letters, and I couldn’t, because I couldn’t see them. WHO was she?
For Mr. Connagher (and you know what, I don’t think I ever decided on his name–I need to fix that), I’d been leaning toward Sean Connery. Or maybe Sam Elliott, because it was his movie Conagher that inspired the family name. I could totally see him as a hard-bitten Texan rancher who could sire the kind of men that Conn and Victor turned out to be (although, to be honest, their mother’s steely core of strength played just as big a role).
Mama remained blurred and indistinct. I need her. I believe she’ll be on page in Victor’s story, and I’d like to weave the family threads together tightly across all three books that I know about. To do it, I need to KNOW her.
Lying awake around 4 a.m., I finally saw her. I can’t find the exact image online (without searching longer than I care to right now) but I don’t need it. It’s etched in my mind. Remember in Gone with the Wind, near the beginning, when Scarlett is dressing for the picnic at Twelve Oaks? She refuses to eat and marches toward the door. Mammy makes a comment about Ashley Wilkes and how a lady can’t go eating like a pig. Certainly Melanie would never do that, right?
Scarlett turns her head and gives THE LOOK to Mammy.
That, my friends, is Virginia Connagher to a T…or rather a “V”.