(Dare someone to write me Crowley/Kit)
Fan Fiction: Writers, Readers, and Enablers
This thread is for fanfic recs, links, and discussion, but not for actual posting of fanfic.
Any good Joyce/Giles fics out there?
Signed,
Just rewatched
Band Candy
the Potterverse contains enough throwaway lines and minor characters scattered about for it to feel incomplete. It is possible that this could be read as a critique of her writing.
Yes and no. Especially in genre/future/AU fiction I like authors who can create a world that seems new and convincing at the same time. I'd say that in a lot of these, there are exactly these elements - characters whose stories are key to establishing the legitimacy and realism of the world, but who aren't central to the story the author is telling. I like seeing those looser bits in a story. Those are ripe for fanfic, IMO. I can more easily see an author taking issue with fanfic that alters or contradicts the paths of her main characters than those who play with the edges. I'm not really up on it, but my take is that Anne McCaffey's dragon stories have inspired a lot of this around the edge sort of fic.
OTOH, maybe those are the sort of thing that a writer can later claim they meant to go back to and pick up? Personally, I'd think it the highest compliment that I'd managed to create a world that seemed so true that people wanted to explore it on their own.
(Dare someone to write me Crowley/Kit)
....tempted
You know, on the litfic front, I'm finding more and more that the books I read as a child offer new places for fic. When I was younger, I always used to wonder what happened to the characters after. With fanfiction, I find that I can write those stories. It completely blindsided me, at first, when I saw Narnia fiction. But I love the notion now. Narnia, The Dark is Rising, the Murray family from Madeleine L'Engle--all those stories I loved as children I'm re-exploring as an adult, and now I realize I want to write stories about them too.
In my perspective, I think it's kind of my respect to the writer that I loved their work so much I couldn't get it out of my head.
When I was younger, I always used to wonder what happened to the characters after. With fanfiction, I find that I can write those stories. It completely blindsided me, at first, when I saw Narnia fiction. But I love the notion now. Narnia, The Dark is Rising, the Murray family from Madeleine L'Engle--all those stories I loved as children I'm re-exploring as an adult, and now I realize I want to write stories about them too.
I always did this as a kid. With TV shows, too. I didn't know it was proto-fic; just that I liked the storied so much I didn't want them to end. I just wanted to climb in through the lines of text and walk around in that world for a while.
Now I get a chance to, with fanfiction, yo. I love fandom.
Litfic is really it's own literary genre. Foe is a retelling of Robinson Crusoe from Friday's POV. Ditto Wide Sargosso Sea as a retelling of Jane Eyre from the story of the madwoman in the attic. It's gotten kind of rampant in the last several years, but it's fairly commonplace now. Updike even redid The Scarlet Letter.
I remember reading and really enjoying a retelling of Robinson Crusoe when I was young. I'm not sure if it was Foe, though. Does it end with Crusoe killing himself?
I've got a fevrent rec that's only a little biased.
Reema wrote this kind-of-Alias-fic kind-of-original-fiction story that's so gorgeous and controlled my toes curl when I read it. (She's going to do another four things that aren't, etc, for Sydney.)
Who else reads Alias here? I can't remember. Dana...? It's kind of a small fandom, isn't it.