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a great idea for times of pandemic...
But how do you hold a virtual after party?
And what happens after?
One word for you - teledildonics.
I can't really understand why everyone is rushing to embrace the pandemic concept as a story idea. After it's over, nobody will want to read it, to be reminded of it.
...

I can't really understand why everyone is rushing to embrace the pandemic concept as a story idea. After it's over, nobody will want to read it, to be reminded of it.
I can't really understand why everyone is rushing to embrace the pandemic concept as a story idea. After it's over, nobody will want to read it, to be reminded of it.
-snip-.
This is our Spanish Flu, our Great Depression, our Black Death, and while it ain’t pleasant it’s gonna be one part of what drives world culture for a generation or three IMO. Recognizing that & forecasting where it’ll take us? That’s storytelling, again IMO.
a great idea for times of pandemic...
But how do you hold a virtual after party?
And what happens after?
I can't really understand why everyone is rushing to embrace the pandemic concept as a story idea. After it's over, nobody will want to read it, to be reminded of it.
It’s a situation to be explored, that’s all, something necessitating (or permitting) novel behaviour. That’s nothing new to literature.
Consider Boccaccioks classic book of short stories, The Decameron. Set in the time of the Black Death, it’s still read 500 years later. There are as well any number of superb stories set in wartime - War and Peace, Catch 22, Slaughterhouse Five and For Whom the Bell Tolls, just for starters. Yeah, those are all novels vice short stories, but the principle holds and there are good shorts written in wartime settings.
Nobody is going to remember sickness and misery and killing with any fondness, but I think the periods offer powerful frames on which to hang stories.
The one that occurred to me was A Tale of Two Cities- written about 150 years after the French Revolution, still read another 150+ years later. Not to mention Les Miz... because that's such a cheerful setting.
a great idea for times of pandemic...
But how do you hold a virtual after party?
And what happens after?