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Our feature
author, Aloysia Virgata, is a relative newcomer to the writing side
of X-Files fan fiction, but she's made her mark with memorable stories
with often memorable titles. She's given us beautifully written
vignettes, novellas, 155's, long-form and short-form humour and
drama, all of it infused with keen observations and subtle but telling
character development. Find her XF stories here
or at the Gossamer
Archive.
When did you start writing XF fanfic? How
did you start?
I started writing in February of 2008. I'd been a fan
back in the day and used to read a bit of fic, but the last two
seasons killed it for me and I bailed. I didn't even know
there was a second movie coming out, actually, and stumbled upon
that information when I found a vid while searching for music on
YouTube. I ended up getting sucked into one of those Google spirals
and found myself at the Haven. I don't know what made me write.
I've never written beyond some assignments in school, but
something just made me want to do it. Then I got hooked. It was
great to have an intellectually stimulating hobby as a break from
parenting two very small children.
What else do you write?
I wrote a few BSG fics, but nothing else other than Facebook
status updates.
What other fandoms are you involved in?
None. I seem to monogamously mate with a fandom for life.
Do you have a writing process?
No, not
really. Usually I'll get an idea for a particular scene in
my head, write it, and then see what happens next. Or prior, as
sometimes happens. I'm not really a linear writer and things
often get shuffled around. I often discover the story as I go.
Which
of your stories is your favorite and why? I feel
arrogant when I say that's a hard choice, but it's because writing
is such an intimate activity in many ways that I feel a connection
to almost everything I have written. But for an all-around favorite,
it's probably a toss-up between This Her Fever and Love's
Austere and Lonely Offices. I got to do a lot of character study
in those two while also fitting them into canon. Missing scenes
are my favorite and I tend to write a lot of them.
There
has been much discussion in the XF fandom regarding LiveJournal
vs. Ephemeral/Gossamer. Many newer authors, such as yourself,
post their work exclusively on LJ. In your opinion, what is it
about LJ that has made it such a popular venue for posting fic?
Do you think you'll ever post your work elsewhere, be it Ephemeral/Gossamer
or not?
I started
out posting exclusively on Ephemeral/Gossamer before Dasha lured
me over to LiveJournal. I think it's amazing to have an
archive of that sort for one's work and am so grateful to
have them available, both as a reader and a writer. What appeals
to me about LJ are the immediacy and the intimacy. It encourages
a good rapport between author and audience, and I think that fosters
really terrific exchanges of ideas. Readers on LJ have alerted
me to typos and factual errors that would likely have gone unnoticed
otherwise. The story feels more like a living thing on LJ. The
comments also create a very easy exchange of feedback, which I
believe is gratifying to all parties.
Do
you have any upcoming stories or projects to look out for?
There
are bits and pieces of things all over my hard drive, but I have
no plans for them at present.
Anything else you'd like to tell the readers?
For a long time I bought into the idea that every story had to
be the best story it could be. I was too hard on myself, too hard
on other writers, and too hard on the people for whom I did beta
reading. The thing I realize now is that you will never write
the best story you can. It's just not possible. Writing
should be fun, and I encourage anyone who is considering it to
let go of anxiety about being ridiculed for posting a piece. Almost
everyone I have encountered in this fandom has been extraordinarily
kind with their feedback and constructive criticism. Go past your
comfort zone. Try new things. Be bold. To borrow from Florence
Foster Jenkins, people may say you can't sing, but no one
can say you didn't sing.
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