Recommendation: What I Like to Read
Aug. 16th, 2006 10:40 amSlightly edited response to a meme-query here, but I spent so much time tracking down examples I thought I'd also post it in my own LJ for anyone who's interested in a few 'fic recs.
So
snakecharmerfox asked:
What elements would you say that your favorite fanfics (that you've read, not written) have in common?
They're well-written, first off: graceful prose catches my eye; bland, rough, cliched or bletcherous writing usually has me skipping to the next possibility unless the story's characterization is engaging and/or its plotting inventive (I haven't seen anything yet that's managed to do either while sounding bletcherous, but you never know). I like stories with energy -- which doesn't necessarily mean action-adventure: there's energy in good characterization, in atmosphere, in an imaginative plot concept. Cleverness is another hook for me; I enjoy a tale that shows the author's mastery of working in the interstices or that ends with an unexpected twist. The adept use of circumstantial detail to build up character or setting is always a plus. I don't mind reading something that's already been done before, as long as it's done well -- but I love reading something that hasn't been done (particularly when it has the same ruthlessly logical development from premises to conclusions that the original story shows. Lovely!).
What kinds of stories/fic content would you like to see more of in the FMA fandom?
More plot-based gen-fic. Heck, more gen-fic, period, from drabbles to novels. I don't mind romance -- in fact, I'm a sucker for character-based het and old-school courtship-fic, a la Georgette Heyer. But erotica qua erotica makes me uncomfortable (TMI) and PWP I find distasteful. Besides, there's a lot of het/yaoi/yuri out there already, some of it quite repetitive. How about striking out into less well-charted waters?
What would you say were the most important contributing factors (aside from reader comments) in the development of your writing style?
Hmm. Commenting on other people's work, I guess: that makes me more conscious of what I think good writing looks like, so that when I sit down to produce my own stuff, I try to play by my own rules. (Which is only fair. :-)
So
What elements would you say that your favorite fanfics (that you've read, not written) have in common?
They're well-written, first off: graceful prose catches my eye; bland, rough, cliched or bletcherous writing usually has me skipping to the next possibility unless the story's characterization is engaging and/or its plotting inventive (I haven't seen anything yet that's managed to do either while sounding bletcherous, but you never know). I like stories with energy -- which doesn't necessarily mean action-adventure: there's energy in good characterization, in atmosphere, in an imaginative plot concept. Cleverness is another hook for me; I enjoy a tale that shows the author's mastery of working in the interstices or that ends with an unexpected twist. The adept use of circumstantial detail to build up character or setting is always a plus. I don't mind reading something that's already been done before, as long as it's done well -- but I love reading something that hasn't been done (particularly when it has the same ruthlessly logical development from premises to conclusions that the original story shows. Lovely!).
What kinds of stories/fic content would you like to see more of in the FMA fandom?
More plot-based gen-fic. Heck, more gen-fic, period, from drabbles to novels. I don't mind romance -- in fact, I'm a sucker for character-based het and old-school courtship-fic, a la Georgette Heyer. But erotica qua erotica makes me uncomfortable (TMI) and PWP I find distasteful. Besides, there's a lot of het/yaoi/yuri out there already, some of it quite repetitive. How about striking out into less well-charted waters?
What would you say were the most important contributing factors (aside from reader comments) in the development of your writing style?
Hmm. Commenting on other people's work, I guess: that makes me more conscious of what I think good writing looks like, so that when I sit down to produce my own stuff, I try to play by my own rules. (Which is only fair. :-)
no subject
Date: 2006-08-18 12:43 pm (UTC)Speaking of bad grammar, oops. X__x