I have no audience to worry about.
Please yourself then.
An ironic time to peek into natter.
It's not ironic! It's coincidental!
Wash ,'Bushwhacked'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I have no audience to worry about.
Please yourself then.
An ironic time to peek into natter.
It's not ironic! It's coincidental!
And the part about how having a fan rewrite your novel is the height of flattery just made me want to grind my teeth. Fan-fiction is one thing-- groovy, rock on, I just don't need to see it, for a variety of reasons, some of which are legal. But rewriting? NSM with the flattery.
When they say rewriting, do they mean a fan rewrote it the way they thought it should be? Because I don't see the flattery there. That sounds like, "Nice try, but here is what you should have done."
It's not ironic! It's coincidental!
True.
When they say rewriting, do they mean a fan rewrote it the way they thought it should be? Because I don't see the flattery there. That sounds like, "Nice try, but here is what you should have done."
That is...pretty much what happened if it's the case I'm thinking of.
Not sure if this is the same after all. Here they're demanding that the author do the rewrite: [link]
You write to satisfy your own standard first and foremost or else you're fucked. You write to please your idea of what a good book should be.
That's true if you know what a good book is. There are a lot of writers out there who don't.
And I think it's an admirable ideal, but not always practical if you want to *sell* your book. You might write a really great romance, let's say, where the hero dies tragically. And it might rock hard. But not many people *who like romance* will want to read it, because it's not what they expect. Which means most editors won't buy it in the first place. There is a reason for expectations, especially in genre fiction.
If you're talking about writing the next Ulysses, on the other hand, well, more power to you!
Here they're demanding that the author do the rewrite: [link]
Ooh! Can I demand that directors redo movies I didn't like?
There is a reason for expectations, especially in genre fiction.
I could be wrong but it's my impression that romance is especially restrictive in this sense. Science fiction, mystery, horror or thrillers have more latitude in plot outcome than Romance. I think you can hit all the beats in those other genres and have a variety of outcomes, but Romance has to end happily so the narrative suspense is somewhat muted.
But...I've never really read a Romance (unless Precious Bane counts) so I'm just going on general impressions and speculation.
From the outside, it does seem like a lot of rules. Some people object if they bump uglies too early, for instance.
Science fiction, mystery, horror or thrillers have more latitude in plot outcome than Romance. I think you can hit all the beats in those other genres and have a variety of outcomes
But expectations don't cover *only* the outcome. Other genres do allow for more than one kind of ending, but each genre demands certain elements ... or a book doesn't fall within the genre anymore.
From the outside, it does seem like a lot of rules. Some people object if they bump uglies too early, for instance.
Some people get upset if they call it "bumping uglies" too.