Amethyst Wind said:
Like every self-righteous guy who's spent enough time looking at different media to notice the character trends, I've thought that, were I to write a story, my characters would be more interesting/believable/likeable than those we see over and over again.
I've honestly never thought of it that way.
I strive me make organic, interesting characters; likable when they should be, detestable when they should be. I've never really set out to make them "better," just to make them as good as I can. I've never held the illusion that I'm writing something truly deep or the next American novel. Hell, I call my manuscripts dime novels. And that's fine. I want them to be entertaining, and of course I'm trying to get published, but those in and of themselves are cool with me in and of themselves. I'm not trying to "beat" anyone or top them, just to create.
On the other hand, I do see bad characters and bad novels. I also see bad art, and I can't draw or paint worth a lick. I've heard terrible flute performances, and I can't play flute. Their merit is notwithstanding of my own. I don't really seem to cross the two.
But I can see why someone would want to be original, to outdo everything and everyone. I just don't want it, and don't think in terms of "I'm better than ______."
Then again, I have self esteem problems.
HT_Black said:
I wrote a book once. Everyone I showed it to loved it and wanted it published. A week later, I decided I hated it with a passion; so I burned the original draft and started again. I have now done that twice, and am currently working on a third re-write. So I guess I surprised me with how shitty I was (two different times, no less).
I'm pretty satisfied with most of my character work, though. I think I handle that better than I do anything else.
I used to do that. Minus the burning part. I started writing when I was 13, and spent a decade trying to perfect a story that I finally decided really wasn't all that good. I must have done dozens of drafts. You might want to ask yourself why you're doing it, though.
At some point, I had to let it go, and I moved on. My current projects started more for fun, then to amuse some friends, and only later did publishing really come to mind. As it is, you might be right to scrap the older versions, but my inner anal-retentive-perfectionist-***** makes me want to do the same thing. I've got a series of 2.5 novels and I've already scrapped one because I'm "sure" it's not good.