Everything looks good from here... Yes. Yes, this is a fertile land, and we will thrive. We will rule over all this land, and we will call it... 'This Land.' I think we should call it 'your grave!' Ah, curse your sudden but inevitable betrayal! Ha ha HA! Mine is an evil laugh! Now die! Oh, no, God! Oh, dear God in heaven!

Wash ,'Serenity'


Fan Fiction: Writers, Readers, and Enablers  

This thread is for fanfic recs, links, and discussion, but not for actual posting of fanfic.


Am-Chau Yarkona - Jan 30, 2003 8:56:55 am PST #3201 of 10000
I bop to Wittgenstein. -- Nutty

It occurs to me, in a very tangenty way, that part of the problem may be the same as original poetry has. Most people- even very well-read, literate people- feel that prose is much more accessible, and when they buy from a bookshop it's prose and not poetry they buy.

Add that to the problems that fanfic has already- inaccessible if you don't know the show, looked down on slight as not 'real' writing- and fan poetry is under two kinds of stigma. People who aren't fans won't read it, and people who don't read poetry are unlikely to.

And fans-who-are-poets is a small group. Worth contacting, because we clearly have some and we need to get in touch with each other, but never going to be as large as general fanfic.


esse - Jan 30, 2003 9:23:36 am PST #3202 of 10000
S to the A -- using they/them pronouns!

Nope, she wrote one for Sentinel, too.


askye - Jan 30, 2003 10:07:01 am PST #3203 of 10000
Thrive to spite them

I've seen fan poetry for Due South by (I think) Kellie Matthews and collen.

Currently I'm working on a poem based on Warren's last moments alive, I'm kind of stuck on certain phrasing, trying to find the words I want.


Connie Neil - Jan 30, 2003 11:22:08 am PST #3204 of 10000
brillig

I'd read it, but I know my poetry-crafting skills are not what I would like.


Michele T. - Jan 30, 2003 3:49:23 pm PST #3205 of 10000
with a gleam in my eye, and an almost airtight alibi

This is a really good essay, and captures my own discomfort with the overuse of the term "Mary-Sue" far better than I've been able to.


Connie Neil - Jan 30, 2003 4:01:05 pm PST #3206 of 10000
brillig

Michele, that's perfect. That's a definition of Mary Sue that I can get behind. I love it so much I"ve bookmarked your post so I can find that again.


§ ita § - Jan 30, 2003 5:12:26 pm PST #3207 of 10000
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Dude, I love that.


Consuela - Jan 30, 2003 5:12:50 pm PST #3208 of 10000
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

Yeah, that's really good. I like Alara, she's quite thoughtful.


Rebecca Lizard - Jan 30, 2003 5:35:18 pm PST #3209 of 10000
You sip / say it's your crazy / straw say it's you're crazy / as you bicycle your soul / with beauty in your basket

Hm. I think I disagree with it in a few different ways; but then again, my personal definition of Mary Sue pretty much is "is it an unrealistic, or boring, over-sympathetic character? stamp her ass." I find MS in original intendedly-literary fiction all the time.


P.M. Marc - Jan 30, 2003 5:36:46 pm PST #3210 of 10000
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

Hm. I think I disagree with it in a few different ways; but then again, my personal definition of Mary Sue pretty much is "is it an unrealistic, or boring, over-sympathetic character? stamp her ass." I find MS in original intendedly-literary fiction all the time.

Rebecca Lizard Speaks For Me.