Two-Eyed Charlie



Two-Eyed Charlie is a fanfic writer. As a Canadian, he is legally required to present this page to you in French as well.

Two-Eyed Charlie est un anglais malodorant qui essaie de passer pour un écrivain.

(I'll stop)

Beyond a crippling inability to sepll properly, other neurosis that infect Two-Eyed Charlie every day are an insistence on talking politics (his avatar on the PPMB is Theodor Adorno; you were warned) and a liking of seasons 4 and 5 more than the previous three, something he blames on having seen those episodes first as well as the insidious influence of Michel Foucault (see what I mean about politics?). He also only recently was reminded of the potential usage of a semi-colon--after being thrown into grad school--and has never met a short story that he can't bloat until it becomes unwieldy.

The littered remains of attempted stories lie everywhere, including one where Daria is Hunter S. Thompson and a cross-over with John Carpenter's "The Thing" (which became a Justice League fanfic that he also didn't finish).

But other than that, he's happy to be here. Only time'll tell if others feel the same way.

Stories

 * "Children's Author Banned From Every Library in America" (won two 2017 Daria Fanworks Awards, Best Comedy and Best Pre-Canon Or Post-Canon)
 * "Old Friends/Bookends
 * "Down by the Bay"
 * "The More Things Change", a novel-length story set in the Catching Up With The Daria Gang setting
 * "Saved by the Bell, or the Unexpected Virtue of Sarcasm"
 * "The Sirens of Conformity", based on Kurt Vonnegut's short story "Harrison Bergeron"
 * "Fear and Trembling", a Freudian excuse in the form of a short story trying to explain why Mr. O'Neill is the way he is, despite telling Daria he saw a lot of himself in her (god that sentence sounds creepy)
 * "You’ve got the Fizz...You’ve got the POWAH!"
 * "Five Minutes"
 * "Lawndale Lions fell to Oakwood Taproots; Claim 1st Place in Division"
 * "Godzilla: The Cowardly Cat"
 * "Fate for Breakfast"
 * "Lawndale Splendor", a comic-script story where an older Daria must balance the social expectation of writers to dispense wisdom with her own doubts about the same.