I stole this from
sugar_fey and filled it out because I was curious and I wanted to see if there were any patterns. I discovered one, which is a little perturbing and leads me to believe that Dean Wesley Scott knows what he's talking about when he says writing fast is where it's at*.
Account created: 2011-12-12
Total stories: 56
Total wordcount: 1,144,063
Average wordcount: with Fates-20,430. Without-12,809.
Longest story: What Fates Impose at 439,564. Yes, I feel like crying, too.
Shortest story: He'll Someday Call Her Bunny at 207 words.
Total kudos: 2394
Kudos per story: About 43.
Story with most kudos: Probably Not on Purpose which is a total testament to "Amount of Time Put Into story ≠ amount of kudos." In fact, it seems to be inverse, given that my top five are Probably Not On Purpose (15 minutes), The Woman in the Crosshairs (30 hours), Nobody Puts Dummy in the Corner (18 hours), The Bechdel Test (20 minutes), and The Egg Thief (1 hour).
Total comments: 246
Comments per story: 4
Story with most comments: Counterfeit and Counterpart is big on the comments. I think it's because we don't see this type of story much and it was a long, drawn-out work, so people wanted to respond to that, maybe?
Total author subscriptions: 76
Total story subscriptions: 57
Story with most subscriptions: Guide Us Home has 22. Those poor people.
Total bookmarks: 432
Story with most bookmarks: The Woman in the Crosshairs at 105
Stories with no comments or kudos: None, actually, which surprises me.
*The longest amount of time I took to write an Avenger story was Counterfeit and Counterpart, which seems, besides Woman in the Crosshairs, to have garnered the most positive response with comments in addition to kudos. So while my most heavily kudosed stories are ones I wrote quickly, it's too soon to tell how C&C will do, as it hasn't hit rec blogs yet, which seemed to aid all five of the stories listed in the kudos category.