No, this isn't a post about people who work on cars. :P
I'm sure most people know that the word mechanics when used in relation to writing refers to syntax, grammar, punctuation and spelling. Now, some people find these subjects of great boredom, irritation, or outright dread. I am an oddity. I actively like grammar, and in fact spent a very pleasurable evening once teaching myself how to diagram sentences out of a grammar book I had picked up at garage sale. (What that tells you about my personal life is sad and pathetic, I know.) We used to spend a quarter each year on grammar in high school, and I looked forward to worksheets about subordinate clauses and misplaced modifiers with glee.
Yes, we have already established that I'm weird.
Now, I have had the goal of becoming a published writer in mind all of my life -- or at least since I was 12. I had fantasies at 13 of being published by the time I was 16. The age pushed off all through my growing up, and I never reached my goal. That has not removed the ambition, however. I would like to publish one day, but in the meantime, I am enjoying what I'm doing.
However, as I wish one day to publish, I view my fanfiction writing as a sort of training ground. I refuse to treat it with one jot less effort and attention than I do my original fiction. I feel very strongly that if I write lazily in my fanfiction, the bad habit will travel along into all of my writing. Bad habits are harder to break than to make, after all.
Now, I know that not all people feel this way. Some people write fan fiction merely for the fun of putting their ideas on paper, passing it on to others and enjoying the attention they get. They have no desire of ever writing original fiction, do not want to be published, and so feel that the effort they put into it needn't be great. It's a game and a lark, and to make it too much work would defeat the purpose. That's fine. It takes all kinds, after all. I probably won't read their stories, unless they're gifted with a natural ability to write clearly and have a basic understanding of grammar and spelling, not because they don't have good ideas, but because I can't get past a certain level of sloppy writing to find out if their ideas are good or not.
I guess what I'm really saying is this . . . respect your reader. Yes, there are people who will plow through sentences that are tortuously written, ignore copious spelling mistakes and disregard random shifts in verb tense, but why force them to? Why not spend a little extra time and get it right? Reread your story, make sure it flows. Spellcheck the darned thing. If you're not sure if the word suggested by the spellcheck is the right one, please, try a resource like www.dictionary.com if you don't want to go pick up a book. When you seek out a beta reader, try to find someone who knows a little more than you about writing, and listen to them.
Your readers are giving you a gift. Give them as pleasurable an experience as possible.
Saturday, July 28, 2007
Tuesday, July 17, 2007
My History with Fan Fiction
My first introduction to fan fiction came when I was about 15. My brother was active in a Doctor Who fan club and he brought home a fan fiction publication that he was sure I would love. It contained a story that was a crossover between Pern and Star Trek. I smiled sweetly at him, explained that he was mistaken and disregarded the entire subject for years. I read a few of the Star Trek novels, and contemplated writing something of the sort from time to time, but I never associated my abortive attempts with the idea of fan fiction.
I started writing original fiction when I was 12. I wrote steadily through my teen years, but had a downturn in life and emotional state which led to a 5 year dry spell in writing that ended at the beginning of 2003. My roommate discovered the 2002 version of He-Man and began to write fan fiction. I had an unfortunate distaste for the entire idea of fan fiction. She looked up at me solemnly and said, "You probably just don't have any ideas."
*blink* *blink* The gauntlet was thrown.
I haven't stopped writing since then. It was a definite sea change in my life. I do mean to get back to my original writing someday, but I really enjoy the writing of fan fiction. It gives me great pleasure.
I started writing original fiction when I was 12. I wrote steadily through my teen years, but had a downturn in life and emotional state which led to a 5 year dry spell in writing that ended at the beginning of 2003. My roommate discovered the 2002 version of He-Man and began to write fan fiction. I had an unfortunate distaste for the entire idea of fan fiction. She looked up at me solemnly and said, "You probably just don't have any ideas."
*blink* *blink* The gauntlet was thrown.
I haven't stopped writing since then. It was a definite sea change in my life. I do mean to get back to my original writing someday, but I really enjoy the writing of fan fiction. It gives me great pleasure.
Labels:
Doctor Who,
fan fiction,
He-Man,
MOTU,
Star Trek,
writing
Saturday, July 7, 2007
I write.
It's what I do.
So, before you get to me, get to my writing. Check out these fics.
http://www.fanfiction.net/u/387011/
He-Man 2002
Highest Bidder
Invisible Chains
Mistaken Identity
Revelations and Regrets
A Siege of Assassins
Johnny Quest
Corporate Policy
Mistaken Identity
Stargate: SG1
Interchangeable
Uh - No! -
Whumped
It's what I do.
So, before you get to me, get to my writing. Check out these fics.
http://www.fanfiction.net/u/387011/
He-Man 2002
Highest Bidder
Invisible Chains
Mistaken Identity
Revelations and Regrets
A Siege of Assassins
Johnny Quest
Corporate Policy
Mistaken Identity
Stargate: SG1
Interchangeable
Uh - No! -
Whumped
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