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[personal profile] reenka
as far as everybody (it seems) getting bored with hp, the "little boys" fandom, and going for smallville and highlander and so on.... because they have "real men". with depth and character and muscles....
    i wonder how many in the hp fandom are in it because they -want- the characters to be boys, to be inexperienced dorks, ciphers to make into what you wish, not so much people as ideas. i mean, i know -i- want that. i know -i- enjoy reading young adult fantasy more than serious adult drama, most of the time. something about that whole "real men" and "serious adult [sexual] drama" makes me think of actual -fiction-, actual stuff you're supposed to find in published books, when you expect quality and maturity and meditation on existence or something.

this is the weird thing with harry potter books, because -everyone- read them (well, except me, at the time anyway). people who don't read fantasy, people who don't read YA fantasy, people who actively -dislike- fics about wizards, people who dislike harry, whether in practice or archetype, etc etc. and then there's this question of why do people write fanfic at all. i think a large enough percentage of writers in any fandom find it easier to write fanfic than original fic. and i can see where they're coming from, though i never found that to be true for myself, because i rarely understand anyone's world as well as i do my own. of course, this is actually a good thing in a way, because i tend to make more effort to figure out the characters i'm writing about, and thus end up with more fleshed out characters. but i always go for the easy thing, usually, and fanfic ain't easy.

anyway, i imagine that the people for whom fanfic is a natural writerly response to a book/show/world they like would get bored with the potterverse soon enough. it does have its limitations, and the characters are only as fascinating as you make them with your blood and sweat, so to speak. personally, i -like- the limitations, the archetypal nature of the characters, because it makes it easier for me to write. i can't seem to write about deep, complex characters-- i can barely keep these ciphers in-character, forget characters with extensive histories and quirks and the body-language of the actors playing them, and the general feel of the series, their voices, their chemistry, everything. the challenge involved would be overwhelming, and i've never loved -any- show enough to bother trying. after all, the show is already -there-, why do -i- need to add to it?

    
while, since jkr's writing is so spare (not to say bad), there's an obvious need to add to it. since her characters are children, and strongly archetypal to boot, it's fun to mold them, have them grow up in ways you want them to. i find i can't really get excited over exploring a mature character that's already coming pre-made with a history, a long series of relationships, set habits and so on.
    so basically, the truth is, if i'm not writing hp, i'm out. i'm out of all fandom. which might be a good thing, of course. but i can't see myself finding anything else after this, though i constantly get enamoured with new books and series and such. i just feel-- different. like, a different sort of fan, a different sort of fanfic writer. i've -tried- writing for other fandoms, a little. i suck really, really, really bad. so maybe there are different sort of fanfic writers. maybe there are some who find this one fandom that inspires them, and they've never written it before but they -have- to now. and then there are the majority, who seem to just get inspired by things, and find it easy and natural to play with other people's concepts until the inspiration runs dry and they turn to the next thing that drives them to create.

funny thing is, hp canon itself doesn't drive me to create at all. i'm basically writing fanfic because of other fanfic. somehow, i saw a thread binding all of them, and i fell in love with the fanon versions of the characters, and they began to live in my head. but it's not because they're -mature- or -male- or -hot-. it's just because they're like, a part of me, i can see myself in harry & draco & hermione, and that's basically why i can write them. i'm the furthest thing from a grown man. in fact, i'm not that much of a grown -woman-. i can't do realism all that well, so hogwarts suits me very well. i have no clue about how to write for action-based shows, or how to write about weathered warriors and lost chances and regret and harshness. i can write clueless!harry and angsty!draco and first love and dorky lust and boys being silly, because i can totally understand that.

i mean, i dunno, there must be different modes of writing. either that, or lots of people actually do understand methos and snape and lionel luthor and picard and spock for that matter. i know myself well enough to know that i don't. i may think they're -hot-, but they're mysteries to me. i can't just write them because they're hot and manly. i mean, it would just be horrid, horrid fiction. i can't even really understand -clark kent-, or maybe i don't want to. harry is squeaky-clean enough for me, thankyouverymuch. i'm nothing like clark kent. nothing. how can i write him?? and who the fuck CARES if he's hot? what kind of criteria is that for writing about characters??! ok, smut, maybe. but that's ridiculous, why call him clark kent, then?

i don't write about draco malfoy because he's a gorgeous stud-- in fact, i don't like blonds. and no, i don't even like his personality all that much, even though he's kinda cute and dorky and stupid and mean and that's sort of adorable. if silvia does it, anyway. and harry. i mean, he's got nothing on tim hunter, and he's not all -that- interesting, and even though dan radcliffe is hot (ahem), it doesn't really enter into why i want to write about him. they are archetypes, and i've always written about archetypes, always used fairy-tales and symbols and the Prince and the Anti-hero, in my head anyway. hot or not, it matters little. i mean, if i created character X, would i care if she/he was hot? no. why does it matter that the characters we write about are hot? i mean, i do have the draco luurve, but.... it's weird anyway. sigh.

maybe there's a difference here between what one wants to read and what one wants to -write-. naturally, it's more pleasant (in theory) to read about hot guys getting it on without all that stupid stubborn immaturity getting in the way. well... i -did- used to read obi-wan/qui-gon and kim/paris and almost anything that wasn't rps or cop-show drama or buffy (don't tread on my otp, heh) that seemed fun. personally, like i said, i read YA fantasy a lot, so that's what gives me the biggest happy. highlander is a show i enjoy, but i don't adore it, because it's mostly an action/adventure show without any particular character i either identify with or find impossibly fascinating. i love buffy, but i can't write spuffy, really, without watching a lot more of the old episodes, and i don't need to, because a) there's a lot of good fic out there if i went het; b) the show is good enough. plus the world (sunnydale) isn't really my oeuvre. i mean, suburban california? vampires? argh.

smallville... wah. i can't write in a world made of americana -and- melodrama -and- scifi -and- have the "normal" boy!alien doing it with a mostly-mature guy with all sorts of father issues. wah. a whole big foreign kettle of fish. and i don't deny it-- lex is hot. but i'd have to have something to -say-, something about smallville and clark that was a part of me, that spoke deeply to me, because that's where my fiction comes from, from my subconscious, most of the time. i can just craft a story, force it and do it because i -can-, but what's the point?
    that's my thing with say, lotr rps, too. do i know these people? no. do i want to know these people? no. do they seem cute and slashy? yes. but so what? am i so bored i want to use any example of slashy guys cuddling to jump-start me on smut? i can do smut with my own characters, then. character A would have blondish hair and greenish eyes and character B would have soft brown hair and dimples. presto! instant boylove.
    but that's not the point. it's easier to just read smut than write it anyway. it's easier to just not bother. something has to make me bother, in terms of writing. and it's great that for some people, the hotness and slashiness of some actor is reason enough to write-- i mean, any reason is a good reason. it's just not my reason, that's all.

EDIT - i have this sinking feeling that i just managed to sound even more incoherent and silly than usual. ah well. reena's brain is having a fizzy day today, methinks.

Date: 2003-01-23 12:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lasultrix.livejournal.com
Well, I think I can make a guess as to what inspired this post. hee.

Am writing this during an ad break, so will have to break off and possibly add more later. But... most of the problems with HP I addressed weren't about them being young. And some of those problems were, yes, to do with the hotness factor. Because Duncan and Methos turn me on. I practically come just watching the songvids, so the fic will probably turn me into a little flameball that burns through the floor.

Moulding is good, yes. But established characters also have their benefits, and ooh! Buffy's on again.

Date: 2003-01-23 12:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yourpoison.livejournal.com
i know what you're saying. i mean, i probably wouldn't be all that hot to write harry/draco lovin' if it didn't seem sexy ^^;
but it's not that i have something against established characters. it's just, it's more difficult to -write- about them, more difficult by far to have them be in character, and even -more- difficult to be yourself and include yourself in characters that aren't at all you. so like. methos is hot. spike is hot. can i write them??

well, no ^^

Date: 2003-01-23 12:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lasultrix.livejournal.com
*drive-by commenting because of Buffy*

When I say Methos is hot - when I say anyone is hot - it's always so very much about the personality as well as the looks. I hope this helps explaining things. Including why I think Methos is far hotter than Spike (and I do quite like Spike's personality).

Date: 2003-01-23 01:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yourpoison.livejournal.com
well, me too. i definitely find hotness to be impossible without some well... flavor. ahahah. that would be the "personality" :D
so yeah, of course.
but even if i'm attracted to a particular personality, even if i dig it and enjoy seeing it in action, so to speak, that doesn't mean i understand it on a gut level, you know?
there's a passive watching thing going on, usually. i'm an observer, but i'm not in their head, and stuff.
i used to read loads and loads of spock & kirk commercial genfic. and i did find spock hot, and attractive, and so on. and even though i read so much about him, dozens of full-length novels, and felt i understood what there was to understand, i couldn't write him.

there's just a -distance- between watching/reading and writing.
i dunno. does that make sense?
the first time i breached that distance was with harry potter, unless you count all the fairy-tale retellings i do, and i don't see it happening again, that's all.

Date: 2003-01-23 01:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lasultrix.livejournal.com
But why do you assume I don't have any 'gut connection' with the Highlander characters?

I was watching the songvids the other day with Maya (who's seen a lot of the show; I haven't seen a single snippet of a single episode) and I made a comment about Methos' character. She said "Yes, I completely agree" and then "Hang on, how the hell do you know that?" I said "I don't know - I suppose you learn a lot from expressions". I think that's fairly impressive, if I do say so myself.

Date: 2003-01-23 01:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yourpoison.livejournal.com
oh no, i wasn't saying anything about -you- at all, just about me and my um..."issues".
also my bewilderment at how much "hotness" seems to figure into people's attraction to writing for a certain fandom, whatever it is-- in general, not directed towards you ^^;
it's just -i- don't tend to be able to write about other people's worlds because it's very rare that i'm that connected with the characters. that's why my sudden "thing" with harry & draco surprised me so much.
and you know, people say, wow, you have all this to say about hp stuff and you haven't even READ all the books? because i haven't. i just have little bits and pieces.
but like you said, when the magic is there, it's just there. i just -know- ~:)
though this only happened with h/d in hp, i do know what you mean, and it's possible and i wasn't judging you but rather just ranting pointlessly as usual ><;;

Date: 2003-01-23 12:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] karabou.livejournal.com
I always thought a lot of the charm of HP fics, in terms of pairings, is that they're young and sort of new to the whole thing. :)

Date: 2003-01-23 01:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yourpoison.livejournal.com
ahahaah. my username used to be lorien, so your name is especially funny :D
erm. but. yah :D
that's a large part of the charm to -me-, too, which is why it's surprising when hp-writers get all excited about maturity and guys who know what they want and are all confident or whatever.
since that's like, so not what they were writing about with hp, and it's a contradictory sort of thing.
though i suppose hp could've been a fluke. not for me, though ^^

Date: 2003-01-23 08:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] karabou.livejournal.com
my username used to be lorien, so your name is especially funny :D

LOL!

For me, I judge everything by characters and if they "speak" to me or not. Basically, I agree with what Lasultrix said on the last post in here... sometimes I can talk about ships, but I won't read fics about them, which is mostly the case of LotR for me. But anyway, with HP it is the inexperience that I love.. and just having the characters grow and reading about that. If it were another couple, already grown, it would be for different reasons, that's all.

just two very short points

Date: 2003-01-23 01:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] olympia-m.livejournal.com
because I really am supposed to be studying (and I'm a bit tired too).

a) I've never thought of JKR's characters as being particularly archetypal. I mean, with the exception of a few characters the rest are very sketchy. You mention Draco: in my opinion, the only archetype Draco stands for is that of the snotty, spoiled brat. The rest is fanon. Snape and the adults have more depth, but for them to be elevated to archetype status? I'm not really sure. I do find them to be particularly fleshed-out characters, with quirks and tendencies particular to them, but not archetypes.

(unlike Methos and Duncan - said the Methosmuse)

b) writing characters who have histories and fully developped character is, sometimes, easier and at the same time more difficult than dealing with JKR's sketchy ones. I mean that if you have someone whose history is already known to you, you have the safety net of canon (and that is why I find the idea of IC in HP very amusing, since the characters are so incomplete that one can play with them a lot :)), and at the same time the added danger of falling into cliches and not being able to develop them further. It's a different type of writerly challenge, IMO.

And, finally, I don't really understand the idea of identifying or putting yourself into a character when you write him/her. Certainly some parts of a writer's personality slip into the fictional characters (why do you think all of my characters are obsessed with art? *grin*), but, in my opinion, a writer's job is to bring out the character, not use the character as a vehicle for whatever baggage she/he may have.

But, I really do understand what you are saying. In the end, we all have our own, personal experiences to shape our conceptions - and preconceptions of writing and fandom. One doesn't make the other less valid.

Re: just two very short points

Date: 2003-01-23 02:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yourpoison.livejournal.com
wah. thou art smarter than i. *is lowly worm*
but, will attempt to redeem self presently. but will not succeed.

1) hmm. the archetypal thing... ahahaha. for all i know, you could be right. i haven't read canon before fanon, and i can never fix that. my formative hp experience was fanon, and any canon i read after that was always bound to be fanon support and fodder for fic. i don't -like- jkr's writing, and i just... i don't -want- to take her purely on her own terms, though when i read it, i just usually enjoy it superficially, and yah, it's not like she has any sort of strong archetypal "themes" for anyone but harry & voldemort, but *shrugs*
it's fanon!draco that i fell in love with, and that's valid enough for me. and -in my head-, the vision that's become shaped of them is very much imbued with this archetypal stuff. mostly because i -want- to see it and they -lend- themselves to it, if you want them to, because they're sketchy, like you said.

but harry is definitely the boy hero sees in so many places i would lose count trying to list them. and that's all archetype is, to me anyway. a strong resemblance to past characters, especially if said past characters featured in myth or old stories~:) and harry is harry (or, harry is the boy hero) even if you put him into ancient greece, at least, to me.

2) yah i know what you mean. to me, harry & draco are already much more "already developed" than i've ever done before, and already a challenge in that respect. what i meant about even -more- developed characters, is that there is a lot less room to maneuver. since they're not -mine-, i didn't come up with them, it's really difficult to feel comfortable knowing what to do with them. i didn't mean to say i -am- my characters, because i'm not. what i meant was, i can't write about just anyone. they have to have some resonance with me, some sort of meaning.

if i tried to write about a 70-year-old fisherman on the shores of ancient egypt, i'd have to do a boatload of research (as in, years or something-- or at least months), and even -then- it'd be easier because he wouldn't be a -particular- 70-year-old fisherman with a past and a name and a personality. there are things that fit in my head and things that don't. i'm not saying that it's good to have the character be "me"-- that's ridiculous and bad writing. but i can't write anything if they don't live in me, you know?

just because they live in me doesn't mean they -are- me. but still, either they do or they don't. i can observe a show for ages-- say, i watched probably 80% of x-files. i know these characters as well as most people. but i don't have any stories to tell about them. i'd have to force myself and struggle and it would be -bad-, that's all i'm saying. i've tried, it's just that my fic about most other people's characters isn't very good. which makes it a challenge, but one i'm not too excited about.

and as far as people's different conceptions-- i was just curious and confused about how my own relate to most other people's. i was indeed wondering if i was different in some key aspect, because i don't find i can write fanfic about any show i like, just because i really like it and dig the characters. in fact, fanfic doesn't come naturally to me at all. and there must be some sort of basic difference between writers who just "pick up" on things easily like that, and ones who have to struggle to deal with all these foreign memes.

Re: just two very short points pt 2 ><

Date: 2003-01-23 02:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yourpoison.livejournal.com
because that's what they are. foreign memes. if a meme (an idea, a character, a trait, a setting) is easily writable to me, it doesn't mean it's -me- or my own life. i mean, i don't write about 24-year-old russian immigrant writers living in the city who read lots of fantasy and never talk to people besides their mother and their small circle of friends, and i'd pretty much -hate- doing that ><;;
still... i was kind of stumped by my own barrier in this. and, don't be fooled, that -was- mostly about me, me, me >< hee
like, some people seem to find it easy to write about things completely alien to them, but like, i don't. i need to find something to hold on to, something i understand, something that's a part of my worldview and scope of knowledge.

write what you know, they say. and that's what h/d slash is to me-- what i know. so that's what i can write.
even jossverse and x-files-verse definitely -isn't- what i know so i just wouldn't do very well writing it, even though i am superficially "familiar" with it and know the deal with the characters, supposedly.
it seems to be that for me, there needs to be a background layer of gut-level understanding, some background filler that a show just can't provide and has to come from inside you, to use to fill out the world. i suppose you could call it a "muse"~:)

and the thing is, i only have my own muses, and i have the darnest time trying to catch free-floating muses of the writers of these other shows like highlander, smallville, buffy and x-files and so on. they're just not -mine- in some basic way.
er. well, that's my spiel, whether or not it makes sense ><;;

Date: 2003-01-23 01:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pinkfinity.livejournal.com
As someone who watches Smallville but doesn't play in the fandom, but who does play in the HP fandom, your "rant" :) made me wonder something - can someone please explain to me why the Smallville characters are considered "grown", whereas the HP characters are ickle kids, when the characters in Smallville are, at most, 18 months older than the HP characters will be at the end of Book V.

Date: 2003-01-23 01:15 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lasultrix.livejournal.com
Because, frankly, most people in the Smallville fandom are in it for the Lex. He's 21, and a damn mature 21 at that. I would say that the two most popular SV ships among my (HP) circle are Clark/Lex (which tends to be futurefics anyway) and Lionel/Lex (which is either chanslash or them both being adults).

There's also the fact that Harry and Co. were introduced to us at the tender age of 11, and when we think of them, we think of them in the 11-14 age span. That's quite different to the younger SV crowd, whom we met when they were 15.

Date: 2003-01-23 01:28 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
this is the weird thing with harry potter books, because -everyone- read them (well, except me, at the time anyway).

What? You don't read them, but you write fics about the characters? :scratches head:

About the fanon version of the characters...They really can't beat JKR's original version. I strongly believe this, anyways. Authors mess up their characterisation royally all the time. Especially Harry. Oh lord, especially Harry. :cringes:

cheers
Raina
(sorry for anonymous posting; LJ won't let me log in)

Date: 2003-01-23 01:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yourpoison.livejournal.com
well, basically, i agree that the fanon versions are pretty different from canon versions most of the time...
but it's possible to just fall in love with the fanon and not like the canon so much-- in any fandom-- smallville, star trek, take your pick.
in fact, i have had lots of cases previously where i read fanon way before fanon.
whether canon is -better- is different in each case, but it's basically still a matter of taste~:)

Date: 2003-01-23 03:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ethrosdemon.livejournal.com
I actually think JK is one of those people who has *ideas* but is a horrible writer. That's why she writes kids books. The characters are all hollow. I agree with the person above who said that. They are two dimensional. Fanon appeals in HP because you can build off what she sketched out, and you can make them human and complex.

Even though you say you don't like to read 'deep' and 'adult', I know you for the liar. *g* I don't write shallow or kiddie, and you read what I write.

Ok, now about the 'hot' thing. There are different sorts of fans as well as different sorts of writers. Some people are fans because X is v v HOT. Some people are fans because X person is a wonderful actor or X person is intriguing. Some people who only see the shiny exterior of X can somehow translate that into a fictional world where Clark is a very deep and textured guy. Mainly, though, they write about him giving Lex blowjobs. Since there are just as many types of audience, there is room for all those types.

but i'd have to have something to -say-, something about smallville and clark that was a part of me, that spoke deeply to me, because that's where my fiction comes from, from my subconscious, most of the time

Well, that's a good thing. Why do you even care about SV anyway? What got up your ass about this? *g* I think HP is much much more fun than SV.

Date: 2003-01-23 03:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yourpoison.livejournal.com
hee! you're right! *laughs*
i always come clean when called upon. i won't deny it. i'm not really much for the um... "kiddie stuff" or whatever.
so yeay for deep and meta and philosophical and textured and insanely surreal and weird and wonderful. y'know, like you & amalin & silvia & ivy and so on.
but for some reason, while the -content- of my preferred reading material is all philosophical and "heavy", i still go for the heavy about young, naive, immature characters, mostly.
i think it's because i was always deep and philosophically-minded, growing up-- like, age 14-17, and i haven't really uh... "matured" yet to the point where i can dig a "deep-thinking" 38-year-old as much as an equivalent 16-26 year-old.
i mean, i -will read- about any age group, but my squee resides with people about 5 years younger and older than me. sigh.

like say... i'm more likely to want to read umm... due south, if they were 19. i dunno why. like, y'know, 21 jump street, eheheheheh
but yes. i was mostly feeling defensive because -i- wasn't feeling likely to ever ditch hp for smallville or highlander, and if i leave, i just leave, and not to a new, more "mature" fandom.
that's what bothers me. that a lot of people who are getting bored with hp use the maturity, complexity thing as the reason. that highlander/smallville/what have you are more mature and complex and thus more worth their time, and stuff.

i mean, so why were they in hp, if it was so immature and not hot enough?
and why is it suddenly imperative that they find the main guy in their new fandom-of-the-moment hot? suddenly, draco isn't "as hot", and that bothers me.
suuure, if they were into hp for the hotness in the first place, and then it wore off and they need new blood, that's one thing.
but to just suddenly realize lex is hotter than draco and thus the smallville fandom is more appealing, bugs me.

i mean... i hear a lot of this. "draco is just a brat, but lex/methos/whoever are -real- men with maturity and complexity".
sigh. it bugs me >

Date: 2003-01-23 05:49 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I actually think JK is one of those people who has *ideas* but is a horrible writer. That's why she writes kids books. The characters are all hollow.

I disagree - and actually, children's literature isn't inferior to adult fiction and chosen by authors lacking in the writing department; it simply uses a different formula and is extremely difficult to do it well, just in a different way. Unfortunately, it rarely gets the credit it deserves. It's important to place a work of literature in its genre or category before critiquing it, and JKR's is classified as children's or young adult's fiction. I don't find the characters hollow, but rather leaping off the page. Of course if one doesn't find a character to identify with, it is more difficult to see the complexity in the characters. I'm most impressed with her ability to convey so much with so little. She doesn't know the meaning of wordiness, which many authors tend to use overzealously. For her genre, she demonstrates a surprising aptitude for leaving things open to interpretation.

There are some fanfiction authors who write it as more adult fare, but they can't touch her as far as sheer imagination and the certain tone she depicts in the books. They can't; they're taking her ideas and running with it. Hardly a fair comparison. I would *really* suggest reading the books. There's something to them that fanfiction can't capture. Not to mention that fanfiction readily makes characters pleasing to the eye for the benefit of readers who care more for appearances rather than internal content.

Sorry, that's my lit. major talking. It's a matter of differing opinion, of course.

Lara

Date: 2003-01-23 06:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yourpoison.livejournal.com
heh. well, i dunno if you meant me or kassie as far as reading the books, but i'm pretty sure she has, whereas i have tried aka begun to, and am really, really -really- slow.
admittedly, i'm only doing it to write better fic ^^;
i would agree about the different glories of ya fic, since as i said, after all, ya fantasy is one of my 3 favorite genres, probably.
i am, however, something of a picky reader, especially since i've read so much of it.
i'm also a reader who's very conscious of -style-. VERY conscious. ok, obsessed with style.
you'll know what i mean, if you ever read patricia mckillip (or francesca lia block), when i tell you they're probably my favorite ya-type fantasy authors, closely followed by diana wynne jones.
patricia mckillip is like the -queen- of stylist fantasy, and she has plenty of really inventive worlds as well. but she's like, leagues and miles away from jkr. no 10 year old would read her in a million zillion years. unless that ten year old was me ;)

anyway. i've read a lot of this genre, so i don't feel very reverent towards the "great" jkr. or any author for that matter. well, i worship some, but they can seriously write. go ahead and tell me that theodore sturgeon and ursula leguin and mary stewart and peter beagle aren't great writers, and i will laugh -.-
ideas aren't enough. if i wanted ideas i would read greg bear and isaac asimov and arthur c clarke and ben bova and so on and so forth. that is to say, sci-fi (which i do read, but um... not as much).
what i meant was, this focus on ideas is the downfall of many a good scifi author. many, many, many scifi books have amazing ideas and reeeeeally bad execution. again, hello, arthur c clarke.
it is, of course, most definitely a matter of taste, but i wouldn't want you to think i judged anything blindly, although i -was- immediately biased when i saw -everyone- so hot for this thing. i hate fads, especially the hordes invading my cozy little backwater of fantasy fiction ;)
<-- hee. only -slightly- deranged and possessive -.-

but. i do get amused and entertained, somewhat, by her books. there's some wit in there somewhere.
harry is cute. so is draco. but um. not -that- cute ><;;

Date: 2003-01-23 03:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pink-faerie.livejournal.com
Everyone read em, eh? Even those who don't like harry. ^ ~

I'm in agreement with much of that rant/vent. I do like reading about hotties, though. They're just.. easier on the mind's eyes. Writing wise, it's just easier to make 2 charas hot if you want them to get together in a way. When at loss for chemistry go for lust.

A: I see we're both dashingly handsome/irresistable guys.
B: I too see this.
[censored]

After:
a and b: I can't stop thinking about you...

And from there it goes. Of course, I never said that it made it easier to write anything GOOD or UNSTALE.

Date: 2003-01-23 04:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yourpoison.livejournal.com
hee. i didn't mean to seem that i was into this fandom for my health, you know, ahahaha
yah, i mean, i'm one of those really -twisted- people who do find two fourteen-year-old dorky stupid boys... well... hot -.-
mmmmmm, true!angsty!boylove.


ahem :D
but yes, i wouldn't write/read so much of this stuff if i didn't well-- dig it. but if that was -all- it was, i wouldn't write it. that's what i meant.
i -think- ><;;

Date: 2003-01-23 04:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lasultrix.livejournal.com
No, you weren't incoherent. You articulated something that's been struggling to get through on my brain since HL ate my brain, and I just wish I'd had the mental coherence and/or time to properly discuss it here with you.

Suffice to say: some things speak to me, some don't. I can happily talk about Buffy ships with people, but I couldn't ever be bothered reading any myself. I think I'm just happy with Joss' canon, plus there isn't any *need* to know more about any of the characters. Smallville - I was wondering why I wasn't even motivated enough to read a CLex fic, til I realised my OTP was Clark/Whitney. (With Lex/Lionel on the side, yeah baby yeah.) I may read these now. And if I had the energy and Whitney wasn't dying, I might even write them.

HL has reached in and grabbed my brain and won't let it go, but I haven't even seen any canon yet. I know I'll read the fics - writing, probably not, partly due to time restrictions and HP obligations and partly because the fandom's heyday was long ago.

Here should lie the conclusion to that intro and paragraphs, but I'm too tired. 'Night.
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