Tara: Do you have any books on robots? Giles: Oh, yes, dozens. There's a lot of research to be done in order to--no, I'm lying. Haven't got squat. I just like watching Xander squirm.

'Get It Done'


Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.

There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."


Amy - Dec 22, 2011 11:54:17 am PST #17183 of 28286
Because books.

the REALLY great writers offer the whole enchilada

Absolutely. There just aren't that many of them. And there are a whole lot of authors who write really beloved novels and rich characters without being prose innovators.

I also think a writer can be vitally important without being great.

Me, too.


Polter-Cow - Dec 22, 2011 11:56:49 am PST #17184 of 28286
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

It would be fairer to posit your Asimovetti as someone who, say, was a groundbreaker (or genius, if you prefer) in composition but derivative color and flat humans.

I just now got that there wasn't a real painter named Asimovetti who painted gryphons.

I haven't read any Asimov, but I wouldn't be surprised if I didn't really like him. I tend to like influenced work more than their influences.


Ginger - Dec 22, 2011 12:12:24 pm PST #17185 of 28286
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

I would argue that much of Asimov's short fiction is as good or better than most SF writers' since. "Nightfall" has been on every best SF short story of all time list I've ever seen. He's not Bradbury, but who is?


Polter-Cow - Dec 22, 2011 12:15:26 pm PST #17186 of 28286
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

This seems a good time to link to "Fuck Me, Ray Bradbury" in case someone hasn't seen it.


Atropa - Dec 22, 2011 12:20:04 pm PST #17187 of 28286
The artist formerly associated with cupcakes.

This is where I admit I can be completely humorless at times, because that video sets my teeth on edge. (Plei pointed out that part of my annoyance at it is that in a way, I think of Ray Bradbury in the same way I do as Clovis, so of course that song/video would make me cranky.)


Ginger - Dec 22, 2011 12:22:46 pm PST #17188 of 28286
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

My teeth are with Jilli's.


Typo Boy - Dec 22, 2011 12:23:57 pm PST #17189 of 28286
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

For what it is worth, there are pictures on the net of Bradbury watching that vid and really getting into it.


Atropa - Dec 22, 2011 12:26:11 pm PST #17190 of 28286
The artist formerly associated with cupcakes.

For what it is worth, there are pictures on the net of Bradbury watching that vid and really getting into it.

Oh, I know! And I'm very glad he was amused by it. That doesn't change the fact that it raises *my* hackles.


DavidS - Dec 22, 2011 1:31:48 pm PST #17191 of 28286
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Style over content is a bad goal for any art, probably, but writing particularly.

There is no such thing as "style over content." The style - the aesthetic choice the creator made in putting the work together - is the content.

The content of that painting is lilies. How the person painted it makes it a Monet.

The fact that you can synopsize a plot does not make that the content of the book. It is no more the book than my spleen is me. Style is not a cup that holds the hot sweet content of coffee. Style is not icing you spread around the top of the content-cake. It is the what the cake is made of.

I can give five different directors the same screenplay and the same budget and they will come back with five radically different works.

If I gave the script for Chinatown and an $80 million dollar budget to David Fincher the movie that he makes will be very different from the movie that Martin Scorsese would make. Or David Lynch. Or Woody Allen. The style - the aesthetic choices - of cinematography, score, casting, editing, costuming, set design, lighting would all be different, would all succeed or fail in different ways. Those are five completely different movies.

All of the choices that Dave Eggers makes in writing A Staggering Work...are the things that constitute that book. The self consciousness, the irony, the footnotes. That is what the book is made of.

People did not cry about Little Nell's death because she was some random child in a story that died. They cried because of the way that Dickens wrote her and built the narrative. The rhythm of his prose, his word choice, the dialogue he created. The book is only composed of the text so what you get out of it - what you are asserting is the content - is the effect of all the stylistic choices.

How it moves you is dependent on how Dickens wrote it.

If you went to an academic conference on literary theory and tried to talk about style separate from content they would look at you as if you'd gone to a medical conference and talked about balancing the humours.


Amy - Dec 22, 2011 1:49:27 pm PST #17192 of 28286
Because books.

I can give five different directors the same screenplay and the same budget and they will come back with five radically different works.

Of course that's true. I never said it wasn't. That's voice. Stephen King and Charlotte Bronte would have told/written Jane Eyre in completely different ways, even if the facts of the story remained constant. I get that.

All of the choices that Dave Eggers makes in writing A Staggering Work...are the things that constitute that book. The self consciousness, the irony, the footnotes. That is what the book is made of.

In my mind, part of that content is empty calories, then. More than a third of that book was Eggers loving himself and his own brilliance without actually adding to his narrative. Maybe your point is that he's adding to his narrative in a particular and purposeful way.

I'm maintaining that a lot of *that* content was a pointless, sucky distraction.

All discussion of literature, or any art, is subjective. I think Scrappy said it best -- a fresh and beautiful mix of style and content marks work that really stands out. But I'm always going to take a really good story, even one told plainly, over gorgeously or creatively structured language that bores me or doesn't move me.