This post was probably intended for the Lyst:
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From: Ashton7(a)aol.com
Date: Tue, 13 Feb 2001 11:37:18 EST
Subject: Re: [B7L] liking 'character'
To: tucev(a)tesla.rcub.bg.ac.yu
>In a message dated 2/13/01 7:40:56 AM Eastern Standard Time,
>tucev(a)tesla.rcub.bg.ac.yu writes:
>
><< This is actually the author trying to explain to us the psychological
> motivation of characters in her story, and she is doing it in a very clumsy
> way. She also shows great disrespect for us as the readers, because she
> thinks that we wouldn't be able to figure out by some more subtle signs how
> Blake feels about Avon or how Vila feels about Blake or whatever. >>
>
>Yes, but this is the way written fiction has to work. In a play or a tv show
>or a movie, so much more can be said with an *expression* or body language
>that *cannot* be conveyed in any other way than with words in written
>fiction. Ask any professional writer who has written both forms. A writer on
>the Highlander tv series wrote a novel about the show and she mentioned in
>her afterword that she couldn't *believe* how unbelievably different and
>difficult it was to write the novel as opposed to a script. She pointed out
>the fact that she had to be so much more wordy and that she couldn't rely on
>the actor's being able to get the feeling and the meaning of the words
>across. She had to *explain* everything.
>
>If an author, be they pro or fannish, doesn't include enough description,
>explanation, dialogue, etc., you end up with a very sterile story that might
>as well be a script with little to no stage direction. I've seen many fan
>stories like that and, believe me, once read they are usually quickly
>forgotten. There's nothing there to involve the reader in what's happening.
>As a professor of literature once told me in college: "Character is
>everything." A movie/tv show can focus on action/adventure to the exclusive
>of character (I, personally, might not enjoy that all that much, but it can
>work), but if a book does that, it's just boring.
>
>Annie
>
>