And there was this fabulous (and sadly unfinished) Jaime/Brienne fic that was set in Regency Era England that I spent all night up reading a few months ago...
t perks up
Vonnie, do we share a ship? I love sharing a ship with people. And, if I ever get hard up for reading material, I may go seek that one out (I am currently re-reading canon, so that's...not gonna be soon (As Ned Stark can't be Too Stupid To Live for too much longer, and those tend to be the chapters I put off reading)
I love AUs, myself. As long as it's well-written and the characters are still IN character, I have no problem seeing them in a new context. I've written modern day AU's for Star Trek characters, fusions with other fandoms (Firefly and Buffy, no surprise there), magical realism, it's all fair game to me.
See, the difference, for me, in moving a future to a present is that our imagined futures are inherently reflections of our presents. Whereas taking pasts (or fantasy that is strongly influenced by history) and dropping it into the present removes a huge amount of cultural context that profoundly shapes characters. Once you start removing some of those limits, then they stop being them in the same way. Removing cultural limitations from characters seems perhaps gratifying to the Id, but not as narratively interesting as adding cultural limitations (which is more likely in future to present AUs)
I will absolutely grant that there can be excellently-executed, well-thought-out Modern AUs for historical/historical fantasy canons. But, yeah, not worth wading through the 90% crap, for me. And there is sooooo muuuuuch craaaap
Contrariwise, legionseagle/A.J.Hall has an excellent, EXCELLENT Sherlock AU that is set in the Bronte juvenilia universe of Gondal, sometime in the 17th-ish century. I cannot say enough good things loudly enough.
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I've gotten good reviews on my Italian Renaissance version of Spike and Xander.
Mmm, Betsy that looks delightful.
Weirdly, for the two shows I am most rabidly fannish about (Hannibal and Penny Dreadful), I have not looked for fic. I am a little terrified to look for fic, because what if the fic writers mean well and don't get it?!
(Also, in the case of Hannibal, while I totally get the overlapping of boundaries and folie aux deux in Will and Hannibal's story, and while I joke about Murder Husbands and how the finale of S2 was the worst break-up ever, I don't want to read slash about them.)
One of my favorite AU fics is a slightly modernized (40-50 years worth) fusion of X-Men in the White Collar universe. It's Limited Release. [link]
The Gondal Sherlock fic sounds interesting--I'll check it out.
Nora Bombay's A/B/O primer is everything my day needed and I didn't even know.
EXCELLENT Sherlock AU that is set in the Bronte juvenilia universe of Gondal
I tried, I really tried to read this series, because I am a huge Sherlock fan, but I just couldn't. I don't know if it was the thought of wading through all those fics (bit of a hypocrite if you read my next paragraph) or if it was that they paired Sherlock off with an OFC, but I just revolt at that, I'm too much a Johnlock shipper.
If you like fics that are set in real historical times, I can recommend a couple of series. One is very long, twenty some odd parts, but I don't think any of them are more than about 5k words, so they're relatively easy reads, and takes place during WWII. Sherlock works at Bletchly Park and John gets invalided back from Africa. Lots of period typical hiding their sexuality and all. Long Ago and Far Away by lotherington. I haven't finished the series yet because it's so easy to stop and then pick it right back up again.
I love historical stories even if they aren't a completely AU setting of the original. I found a War Horse fic where Jim Nicholls didn't die on the field and he rescues Jamie from a prison camp. Very angst-worthy and lots of h/c. Roses of Picardy by splix. I actually found it because she writes Sherlock fic, but this piqued my interest. It's probably the only War Horse fic I will ever read, because it's become seminal for me. Again, lots of period typical homophobia, plus class barriers.
Oh, I love Limited Release. Such fun.
Those look good. Long, but good. I am a fast reader, though, so sometimes I need long.