PLEASE tell me that you have written a Thomas the Tank Engine fanfic?Gordon_4 said:Eh, there are worse ways to kill time. Besides, I much prefer exploring possibilities within my favorite shows/games/cartoons than trying to make sense of someone else's grand attempt being the next J.R.R. Tolkien or Stephen King.
No but for what it's worth, one thing I always imagined as a kid was that the Isle of Sodor was the preferred chill out area of Astrotrain (a Decepticon from G1 Transformers), when either he'd had a plan fail on him or the other Decepticons were being dicks to a higher than usual degree.San Martin said:PLEASE tell me that you have written a Thomas the Tank Engine fanfic?Gordon_4 said:Eh, there are worse ways to kill time. Besides, I much prefer exploring possibilities within my favorite shows/games/cartoons than trying to make sense of someone else's grand attempt being the next J.R.R. Tolkien or Stephen King.
Not sure how many started out origianlly with fanfic, but here's a list:Dirty Hipsters said:Show me a writer who started as a fanfiction writer and then transitioned to legitimate literature and had a decent original book published.
50 Shades of Gray doesn't count.
An yes, you're right, most writers don't just sit down and write a book. They tend to write down hundreds of ideas for characters, settings, etc, and then out of those creations they sometimes pick some that they think would go well together, and begin weaving a narrative. You know why fanfiction doesn't facilitate this kind of writing? Because the largest half of the work, characters and settings, have already been written for them, and if they keep writing nothing but fanfiction they'll never be able to progress to any kind of real writing because they won't know how to construct a believable character or an interesting setting of their own.
I wish to whatever unholy god people worship I could write stories much better than I do now. I can create the world in which a story could exist fine, but developing the characters and the storyline is just something I struggle with.frizzlebyte said:I'd say that's because most people who think they can write honestly can't. Most writers create horrid, soul-depleting schlock that should simply remain un-written, and when you have a fandom demographic that probably also includes a fair number of young people, the amount of schlock just increases exponentially.Kolby Jack said:Most fanfiction sucks. You'd be hard-pressed to find anyone who would dispute that.
I don't see why it should be. Some people aren't looking to write some big novel in the future, they just write fanfiction for fun, to "scratch that itch." I've come across a great many excellent fanfics from people who aren't looking to become writers as a career and only do it as a hobby. If something is good, then it's good, whether or not it's a completely original setting.Kaulen Fuhs said:I'm totally cool with that, but if it's all someone can write, surely you can see why my faith in their writing might be diminished?TakerFoxx said:There's one guy I used to know that put it best: sometimes you just have a creative itch to scratch, and sometimes that itch involves someone else's characters. If the creator has no problem with it (and a great many don't), then by all means, go for it.
I have almost the exact opposite problem, actually, with a little mix, I suppose. I find inspiration for a story, and can draft one out in my head, but when it comes time to make believable characters to fit said storyline and a world for them to inhabit, I just freeze. This is especially true for my long-form stories, like novels or novellas.MorphingDragon said:I wish to whatever unholy god people worship I could write stories much better than I do now. I can create the world in which a story could exist fine, but developing the characters and the storyline is just something I struggle with.frizzlebyte said:I'd say that's because most people who think they can write honestly can't. Most writers create horrid, soul-depleting schlock that should simply remain un-written, and when you have a fandom demographic that probably also includes a fair number of young people, the amount of schlock just increases exponentially.Kolby Jack said:Most fanfiction sucks. You'd be hard-pressed to find anyone who would dispute that.
I would attest that benefits my point, however. Insisting on a certain level of quality then saying yuo have to troll through it, admittedly because of the high level of crap (and then no standards) kind of demonstrates a serious flaw with the genre.Mangod said:Yes, but the difference is that shitty books don't tend to get published quite as often as shitty fanfiction.
frizzlebyte said:I have almost the exact opposite problem, actually, with a little mix, I suppose. I find inspiration for a story, and can draft one out in my head, but when it comes time to make believable characters to fit said storyline and a world for them to inhabit, I just freeze. This is especially true for my long-form stories, like novels or novellas.MorphingDragon said:I wish to whatever unholy god people worship I could write stories much better than I do now. I can create the world in which a story could exist fine, but developing the characters and the storyline is just something I struggle with.frizzlebyte said:I'd say that's because most people who think they can write honestly can't. Most writers create horrid, soul-depleting schlock that should simply remain un-written, and when you have a fandom demographic that probably also includes a fair number of young people, the amount of schlock just increases exponentially.Kolby Jack said:Most fanfiction sucks. You'd be hard-pressed to find anyone who would dispute that.
However, I can tell you this much: if you keep at it, and you enjoy it enough to care, you WILL get better. As discouraging as I find it to have a great story in my head and struggle to get it on paper, I HAVE to; it's not really optional for me. So, I keep going back and back until I find a way to make it work.
One of the best ways I've found to write well is to be conservative, and let details flow naturally from the storyline. Unless there is a need to dump all the detail about someone in one paragraph on the first and second pages, just let those details drip out a little at a time. And use dialogue often, rather than exposition, to let those details out. Doing that forces you to keep the conversation natural, while also letting slip some pertinent details, and the overall effect is a more natural and intriguing scene, that makes the reader want to find out more.
EDIT: And read like your life depended on it. And watch movies and TV shows. The more stories yo see and read, the better you will understand what makes a particular story successful or unsuccessful. I tend to think visually, so watching TV shows and how the characters interact with each other tend s to give me a better understanding of how to make it work in a book.
One of my hallmarks, apparently, is to use long strings of dialogue to build a scene, which seems to have come from watching TV and movies, or at least thinking in terms of the characters instead of the overall scene. I've had more than one person tell me that reading my stories is like watching a movie, because a ton of the world-building happens during the dialogue.
The thing is, good fanfiction writers are not really quite underground, especially not compared to bad fanfiction.Zachary Amaranth said:I would attest that benefits my point, however. Insisting on a certain level of quality then saying yuo have to troll through it, admittedly because of the high level of crap (and then no standards) kind of demonstrates a serious flaw with the genre.Mangod said:Yes, but the difference is that shitty books don't tend to get published quite as often as shitty fanfiction.
I know there's good rap out there, for example, but I'm not enamoured enough in the genre to go dig for the true awesome underground guys.
Tell that to Alan Moore (The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen), Tom Stoppard (Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead), Margaret Atwood (Penelopeiad), Jean Rhys (The Wide Sargasso Sea), or Joss Whedon ('Most comics and movies he did).Guitarmasterx7 said:I'd be more charitable towards it, but honestly, if you aspire to be a writer legitimately, create your own characters and setting.
Well, note that I did say to "read like your life depended on it," so...yeah.Generalsexbad said:SNIP
I've got a few original novels finished that you can buy from Amazon Kindle and another few on the way. I've also got a couple of hundred thousand words of fan-fiction you can peruse if you want. Oh and like a million words of stories I haven't finished editing yet. (Yes, I counted. I have over 1.5 million words including fanfiction, about 1.3 million without)Dirty Hipsters said:Then maybe you should stop writing fanfiction and work on your unique work.Angelblaze said:I write fanfiction and I'm actually working on my unique work.Dirty Hipsters said:People who write fanfiction do so because they aren't creative enough to come up with their own characters and universe, so they have to piggy back on someone else's work. That's why I don't want to read fanfiction, because if those writers actually had any talent they would be able to come up with their own shit, and possibly attempt to actually publish it.
thanks for the over-generalization I guess?
I've actually known quite a few people who say that they write fanfiction to practice for when they write their own novels. Out of the few who actually started writing I have yet to meet one who finished their book, or even got more than half way done.
So...good luck I guess.