Geoviki

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Fan
Name: Geoviki
Alias(es): Duinn Fionn
Type: writer
Fandoms: Harry Potter, Manga, Mary Renault, Maurice, Miyamoto Kano, Star Trek
Communities:
Other:
URL: Fiction @ Skyehawke; AO3; Geoviki's LJ
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Geoviki got into fandom through Star Trek. Her first story was a Star Trek het novel, Half Moon Rising Tide. Then she didn't write anything else for twenty years.

After reading the first four books of Harry Potter, she wrote a Snape gen story, Chaining, in August 2003 which eventually became part of A Thousand Beautiful Things, a Harry/Draco epic. Most of her writing in this fandom is in the H/D pairing.

She states: I like to write plotty stories, and everything I come up with seems to be much longer than I expect.[1]

Geoviki maintains the offical HP Masterlist of A. J. Hall.

Review

Painless_j on her HP writing:

...IMO she's one of the best writers out there.

Viki's writing is intelligent, mature, and kind. Her characters are as complex as real people. I do imagine them as real people! Her dialogs are brilliant, but not like those so well-crafted literary dialogs that look like nothing from real life.

In my opinion, what Viki writes is more than fanfic. It's literature. But not like an oh-so-clever modern stuff where the author can't say a plain word. No, when I read Viki's fics, I regain my belief in literature, the literature that spoke of what we are and wasn't afraid of being plain in times, or of being sentimental.

Viki's fics have plot, and wit, and fabulous magic. And the most important thing, everything is bound tight, there are no loose ends, and everything in her fiction works as it should. Viki does often stir in more fluff than what I usually like, but her fluff is also of the highest quality. (painless_j)[2]

Example Fanworks

Harry Potter

Other Fandoms

  • Somewhere to Begin. Popular Maurice futurefic. Miss Morland writes: Longer than your average Maurice fanfic and more satisfying than most ... The deft use of original characters and the vivid writing make this story a pleasure to read.[5]

References