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#61 |
Snoozing in the sun
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I thought Wide Sargasso Sea was a brilliant book, beautifully done. Indeed, I very much enjoy works that look at a story from a different angle. Tom Stoppard did it wonderfully with Rosencrantz and Guildernstern are Dead which I saw performed a very great many years ago when I was in England.
Obviously, anything like that has to be done very well indeed. I think Jean Rhys and Tom Stoppard both did so, because each work complemented and enhanced the original classic. The fact that Rhys's book and Stoppard's play have each become modern classics in their own right attests to how good they were. |
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#62 | |
o saeclum infacetum
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It's not, of course. I spoke badly. I should have said something along the lines of, "non-commercial." However,
<SNIP> Quote:
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#63 | |
o saeclum infacetum
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Bringing it back around to Jane Eyre, I think the various revisionist takes on the story, including WSS, The Madwoman in the Attic and even the comic strip I linked to above help keep a work new. I also personally like anything that raises awareness about the undercurrents in a story, in light of advanced mores. Viewing Rochester (Heathcliff, Rhett Butler and so on) as a romantic hero can be dangerous, especially to a young girl. Ideally, the reader can hold both thoughts and see it for the romance it was intended and how it fails under scrutiny according to modern sensibilities. And, as BookCat said, it's all for fun. |
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#64 | |
Guru
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If I called a commercial work such as West Side Story a fanfic I would simply mean 'This is clearly a derivative work and you can perceive the author's appreciation of the original work.' not intending to be dismissive. |
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#65 |
o saeclum infacetum
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Fair enough, although I infer from Deskisamess's comment on the term fan-fiction that she meant to change it but forgot, that she thought there were negative connotations, also.
I still think that even when the term isn't judgmental in regard to quality, there is still an element that suggests the work in question hasn't been published. For me, there's a disconnect between "fan-fiction" and "winner of major literary prize." |
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#66 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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I'm writing this because I've seen too many characters in historical novels criticized for not having the 21st century values and sensibilities. I've never understood that. If you want modern values, why read a historical novel? Read a contemporary one. |
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#67 | |
o saeclum infacetum
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I would say, though, that Rochester is a fail even by Victorian standards. Bigamy didn't pass muster even then. |
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#68 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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![]() It's a well-known fact that flawed characters make far more interesting novels. Mary Sues and Gary Stus might make perfect neighbors and in-laws in real life, but in fiction they're exceedingly boring. |
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#69 | |
o saeclum infacetum
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#70 |
Snoozing in the sun
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I get the distinct impression that actors far prefer to play the villain than the hero/ine. As long as the character isn’t just a cardboard cut-out villain of course.
To revert to the original question of the thread: if I get bogged down in a book, I am more likely these days to abandon it than I used to do. There are so many books waiting to be read. It is rare for me to feel unable to get reading, but I can get caught up with other things that eat into my reading time - photography, visitors, working in the garden, and so on. At times like those, I tend to read short stories rather than something more substantial which requires more time to be dedicated to it. |
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#71 | |
cacoethes scribendi
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![]() At various times I've used all those terms in both descriptive and dismissive senses ... sometimes, I suspect, in the same paragraph, if not the same sentence. And yet I have greatly enjoyed books from all these categories. I agree that Deskisamess seemed to be using "fan-fiction" in at least a mildly dismissive sense, but the phrasing didn't strike me as implying the level of revulsion that you would have meant if you had used that term. I've seen people say "I don't read romance", or perhaps more aptly, "I don't read indie" with about the same level of casually dismissive generalisation. |
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#72 |
Grand Sorcerer
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I think I've even heard the term "genre fiction" used derisively too. But whatever.
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#73 | |
Lucifer's Bat
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![]() She likes to state often and loudly she doesn't read fiction and how it is wasted time to do so. And she is implying those who do are somewhat less intelligent than she is. Every time she does this I think to myself that she lacks imagination, which makes it necessary for her to stick to non-fiction. And the intelligence to see how much can be learned by reading novels. Just think about how much one learns when reading historical fiction, for example. It always strikes me as one of the stupidest things to say whilst she is trying to appear smart by saying so. ![]() |
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#74 |
Lucifer's Bat
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As for the reader block, ,I know and I dread it. The longer the book I am reading and the better I like it, the harder is it to find my next read. The moment I realise I love the book I'm reading, I start worrying about the next book.
I will switch genre most often or read a series after a stand alone. |
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#75 |
Readaholic
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After finishing Neptune's Inferno I found I was having trouble trying to decide what to read next. I decided that rereading an old favorite was just the thing and have just started Agent of Change by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller. The first in the Liaden Universe Series first published in 1988. Voila no more readers block.
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