Mal: Does she understand that? River: She understands. She doesn't comprehend.

'Objects In Space'


Fan Fiction II: Great story! Where's the sequel?

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


sumi - Jun 23, 2006 6:48:01 am PDT #2325 of 10434
Art Crawl!!!

It was fascinating -- well, as much of it as I read. (I read the first two chapters and some of the comments - but the third chapter was in a funky font and kind of illegible to me so I stopped there.)

I can't imagine spending the energy and imagination to create a bunch of different personae just to make yourself "famous" in fandom.


Consuela - Jun 23, 2006 6:52:17 am PDT #2326 of 10434
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

I don't know if anyone here used to read XF MSR, but Brandon Ray, who was one of the Big Names in MSR back in the day, died in his sleep the other night. He leaves behind a wife and son.

Somewhat sobering.


P.M. Marc - Jun 23, 2006 6:58:44 am PDT #2327 of 10434
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

Suela, I'd heard about that from his SiL. His poor family.


Consuela - Jun 23, 2006 7:45:45 am PDT #2328 of 10434
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

Yeah, it's very sad. Do we know how old he was?


Dana - Jun 23, 2006 8:47:14 am PDT #2329 of 10434
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

And what I'm getting out of it is that fandom is like High School.

Snacky's Law.


Topic!Cindy - Jun 23, 2006 8:57:18 am PDT #2330 of 10434
What is even happening?

Well, the thing is that, despite having written a big-ass HP novel about a popular HP pairing, I haven't stored it in any of the popular archives, or posted it to any of the mailing lists (I assume they exist) or, you know, engaged with HP fandom at all. Um. Because I am odd. But I haven't read much HP fic, actually, and I'm squicked by a lot of the HP stuff because - dude. They're kids.
...I do realise that this sounds foamingly insane.
It doesn't sound insane to me. It's a squick issue for me, too.

HP fic with a sexual aspect (even with the kids all grown, and that's just a note on my tastes, not a moral judgement) is just never going to be for me. I also didn't love the books enough (I liked them) to chase extra-canonical stories, so HP gen doesn't draw me, either. Plus, there are still volumes of canon I've yet to read.


Fay - Jun 23, 2006 10:38:20 am PDT #2331 of 10434
"Fuck Western ideologically-motivated gender identification!" Sulu gasped, and came.

Oh, is that Snacky's Law? Huh. 'Kay.

Oooh, you really should get up to speed with The Half-Blood Prince, if you're at all inclined. I was really pleased with a lot of what she did in that. And it's cleverly constructed - there are at least two completely different and canonically-grounded interpretations of What Actually Happens, and we'll only find out which interpretation is correct with the final book. I spent the last 3 chapters sobbing, on the basis that my own interpretation was big with the tragedy. YMMV.

For me, JKR's 'verse is sufficiently familiar as a composite of countless fairy tales and children's books (fantastical and non) that the gen stuff can tickle my fancy; I particularly enjoy the wordplay and the wee details that round out her 'verse. As to Sex in the HP 'verse - well, the stories I've happily read (& written) deal plausibly with people of Buffyish age or considerably older. And I'm good with that. But I still wince at the prospect of trawling for fic, because I feel perfectly certain that the vast bulk of the stuff out there is stuff I'd really NOT be good with.

(And, man, if you think SGA has a lot of crack, HP is way freakier and infinitely more worrying.)


Topic!Cindy - Jun 23, 2006 11:27:54 am PDT #2332 of 10434
What is even happening?

Oooh, you really should get up to speed with The Half-Blood Prince, if you're at all inclined. I was really pleased with a lot of what she did in that. And it's cleverly constructed - there are at least two completely different and canonically-grounded interpretations of What Actually Happens, and we'll only find out which interpretation is correct with the final book.
I'm inclined, just lazily. I liked the books I read (the first three, I think) but after a while, it felt too much like the same story to me, which I knew meant I had to lay off them for a while. That happens to me whenever I read too much of one author's work, too closely together.

I believe I was spoiled on the HPB development you're referencing above. That it's open to interpretation makes it more intriguing to me.

As to Sex in the HP 'verse - well, the stories I've happily read (& written) deal plausibly with people of Buffyish age or considerably older. And I'm good with that.
I'm good from a that's-okay-to-do stance, but it's just a [something] for me.


Nutty - Jun 23, 2006 12:32:50 pm PDT #2333 of 10434
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

I'm sorry to hear that, about Brandon. Was there an announcement somewhere?

(I never particularly was friends with him, but we were reasonably friendy.)


Gris - Jun 23, 2006 12:59:46 pm PDT #2334 of 10434
Hey. New board.

I'm good from a that's-okay-to-do stance, but it's just a [something] for me.

It squicks me often, too. I think we are not alone, even amongst big fandom fans - I imagine that's part of why a good portion of fandom writes fic about the generation before: Sirius, Remus, James, Snape, Peter, Lily, Narcissa, et cetera. Even when the fic about the older people takes place when they were 17 or so, they feel older than the Main Kids because 1) canon doesn't focus on them in school and 2) our visual representations of them from the movies is older.

A friend of mine was really into Snape/Hermione for many years, and that squicks me big. I've only read one that I could handle, and it was written by Yahtzee, who does NOT suck, and set so far in the future that it bypassed the "eww."

If you haven't made it past The Prisoner of Azkaban, then it is my humble opinion that you definitely should. I can see what you mean about the stories all being the same, but they take on new tones starting in the third book and develop into something almost entirely new, though related, starting in the fourth. The fandom really became enormous after the publication of the Goblet of Fire, I believe - partly beacuse that's about when the first movie came out, but I definitely think the changed nature of the book had a lot to do with it as well.