Where They Get Their Ideas

The question, “where do you get your ideas from?” has long since passed into legend in writing communities, such that it is hard to avoid giggling when some poor fan asks it at a reading. But writers do sometimes get their inspiration in interesting places. And sometimes real life has a habit of imitating art. Over at Tropic Temper, Glenda Larke talks about a news story from Argentina that is scarily like one of her recent books.

On Nordic Mysteries

This one, I think, will amuse a few of my Finnish friends. Via Mike Glyer I discover an article in the LA Times all about Nordic mystery writers.

Part of their appeal is their reverse exoticism: The unrelenting bleakness, the zero tolerance for chuckles and the ferocity of the crimes — the Swedes really go in big for decapitations, scalpings, tattooed torsos floating to the surface, disembowelments — make the books much darker and spookier than glib mafiosi capers from Bologna and Bensonhurst. And the Swedes do not write conventional whodunits; they are obsessed with understanding why people become ax murderers in the first place. Mostly, it’s because something happened to them as children, often involving axes.

Oh dear. That’s going to get me into trouble in Tampere in July.

Blogs v Forums?

Over at OF Blog of the Fallen, Larry has been stirring things up again. He has noticed a difference in attitudes towards books between people who write on blogs and people who write on fan forums. The former, he says, tend to take a more literary approach and prefer novels, while the latter prefer series. (And yes, these are simplistic generalizations – your personal experience may differ.)

This reminds me strongly of a conversation I was having at ICFA with Guy Gavriel Kay, John Clute and Liz Hand. The tentative conclusion I think we came to (their recollections may differ) is that different types of readers have different expectations from books. So Larry’s blog people generally want a book that is complete in itself, with a beginning, a middle and an end. The forum people, on the other hand, generally want more of a soap opera experience. They want an open-ended literary creation with plenty of what I call “fan space” in which they can imagine their own characters and their own stories.

As ever, neither of these approaches to reading is “right” or “wrong”, they are just different. Having written a lot of role-playing games myself, but preferring to read novels to series, I can see both sides.

What is a Novel?

If you wonder why I occasionally get irritated at mainstream literary critics, check out this post from Matt Cheney which quotes one such person as saying:

…if you find birds and beasts talking in a book you are reading you can be sure it is not a novel.

Thank goodness for Jonathan Lethem.

Genre as Ossification

Found in the blogosphere today was this piece by Vera Nazarian lamenting the current state of urban fantasy. David Moles is right to point out that Sturgeon’s Law applies. However, I suspect that there is something more going on. Gary Wolfe talked about this at ICFA a few years back. His basic thesis (as I remember it) was that as a particular type of story telling becomes more popular so the stories produced become more predictable and formulaic – more generic, in fact.

There are reasons for this. Firstly if demand for a certain type of fiction increases then that field will attract more writers of lesser talent, some of whom will be more comfortable writing to a formula. But equally for every Vera who craves fiction that is new and exciting and adventurous there will be at least one (I suspect a lot more) reader who prefers something familiar, comfortable and safe. That’s just the way the business works.

This reminds me of a long conversation I had with Kevin yesterday while we were out walking. Basically I was musing about taxonomies of fandom, and the thesis was that the real divides were not between media and and book fans, or between SF fans and fantasy fans, but rather are based on the type of experience individual fans want from their entertainment. I may write something more about this later.

Painting a Target

Given all of the fuss over “alright”, it is probably foolish to say anything about grammar, but some things do get under my skin. When you are talking about awards, it is either “the Hugo Awards” or “the Hugos”. It is not “the Hugo’s”. Possibly people think that they are indicating a contraction, but it always comes over as looking like they think apostrophes indicate plurals. The next time I see someone do it I shall set Deb Geisler on them.

OK, throw things at me.

Contractions are Alright

Matt Cheney’s response to John Scalzi’s post on the use of “alright” is sheer genius. I particularly like the bit from 1913 railing against the evil telegraph companies who refused to allow contractions such as “alright” because they could charge more for two words than for one.

Worlds of Fantasy III

I finally managed to get to see the final part of the BBC’s Worlds of Fantasy series (thanks Nadine!). The program was a bit mixed. There were a lot of good bits, including appearances by a very shaggy-looking Neil Gaiman, Michael Moorcock, and Guillermo del Toro. Much of the content focused on Terry Pratchett because he is, after all, guilty of literature. (He also has an amazing office – I wish I had a bank of screens like that.) And towards the end it actually mentions the term “New Weird”, thereby legitimizing the movement (anything that has been on the BBC being automatically “real”). Doubtless Jeff VanderMeer will be very happy.
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On Listening to Experts

Magazines like Writer’s Digest make their living off advising budding authors on how to make money. They are people who set themselves up as experts in the writing industry. Today they put out an article on “popular fiction” that purports to advise readers what is currently “hot” in genre. And they don’t just rely on their own knowledge. They talk to experts in the field. Jane Johnson, for example, certainly knows what sells. But they also talked to someone called Crawford Kilian who apparently wrote a book called Writing Science Fiction and Fantasy. Some of his advice includes the following:

Kilian notes the rise of traditional (hard) science-fiction writers like Neil Gaiman

I do hope that’s a typo. (And to be fair he did mention Rudy Rucker as well.)

Challenge Cheryl

Just before I headed off to ICFA I picked up on a writing challenge meme. It has taken me a while to get things together, but I now have the first post up. The second one is more or less done and should be online in a day or two. Now I need more questions. Fire away.

(Note for UK readers – yeah, I know, that stupid animated bulldog, but the alliteration works, and there wasn’t a feline alternative.)

An Impromptu Party

Today (it being past midnight) is Gary Wolfe’s birthday, so we’ve been having a little party. A bunch of us had dinner together in the hotel restaurant and amusing conversation flowed. Charles was curmudgeonly – something he’s very good at. Ellen Klages was hilarious – something she is very good at. Clute has become obsessed with the hotel’s habit of distorting the aspect ratio on their TVs so as to make the pictures fill up the whole wide screen surface, thereby making people look shorter and fatter than they really are. There was a running gag about the World Fantasy Award trophy as a result of which I discovered I was one of the few people at the table who did not have a big, ugly head.

The hotel kindly brought Gary a candle with his desert, and we discovered that the Big, Bad Wolfe is indeed not very good at huffing and puffing.

But Gary did come up with one of the best one-liners of the entire conference. Here it is:

“Realism is nothing but the domestication of fantasy.”

ICFA Conversations

I’ve just got back from having lunch with Guy Gavriel Kay and Scott Bakker (and also Scott’s wife and Deanna Hoak). The boys were talking about novel creation, and specifically about the tension between writing a challenging and complex book, a book that will be more accessible to a traditional genre audience, and a book that will be accessible to a much wider general audience that doesn’t have a background of genre reading to inform their understanding of the narrative. This is the sort of thing that happens at ICFA.

I also had a long conversation with Donald Morse about the hotel, which will help me draft a much better con report than might otherwise have been the case. The oddest hotel behavior can make sense once you know the background.

Who Wrote Shakespeare?

One of the papers I attended this afternoon was about the Gaiman & Vess Sandman episode based around A Midsummer Night’s Dream. The presentation was considerably enlivened by the presence of Charles Vess in the audience. Jim Casey made the point that the story is very much concerned with authenticity and authorship. The fairies in the story get to watch Bottom and his friends playing them as characters in a play. Shakespearean scholars, meanwhile, have always been exercised by the question of who actually wrote the plays, and modern theories are open to the probability that the final versions we have were honed by input from other members of the acting troupe. Gaiman, however, postulates collaboration of another kind. In the Sandman stories the two most fantastical plays in the Shakespearean canon are shown to have not been written by Shakespeare himself, but were provided to him by Morpheus as part of a Faustian bargain. Jim noted, however, that Morpheus is not a real person, but rather a character created by Neil Gaiman, and that therefore, if you follow the logic through, A Midsummer Night’s Dream and The Tempest were not written by Shakespeare, but by Neil Gaiman.

And before poor Jim gets descended upon by hordes of irate Gaiman fans I hasten to add that this idea was presented in jest and was most definitely not an accusation of arrogance. We all had a good laugh, and I’m pretty sure that Neil will find it funny too. (Neil, I suggested to Charles that the two of you claim the whole story came to you in a dream.)

Taxonomies of Fantasy

I promised mention of the other new book that has something from me in it. The book in question is Jeff and Ann VanderMeer’s anthology, The New Weird. I’m in it because the VanderMeers include some material from the Night Shade message boards where, back in 2003, M. John Harrison started a debate about what “New Weird” meant. I was a little nervous about this because I’d forgotten what I said and some of that debate was quite acrimonious. However, all I’m quoted on is a couple of paragraphs about labels such as “New Weird” being useful as marketing tools. Much relief there.
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Limits of Reality

I gather the weather is pretty bad all over the US today. In Florida it is just overcast and windy, so not much lounging by the pool will get done today, I suspect. Fortunately there is plenty going on indoors. Indeed, the papers on offer have been interesting enough to drag me out of bed to attend an 8:30am panel. This is deeply uncivilized, and I apologize to the panelists for eating my breakfast while they were holding forth.
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From the Sublime

The theme of this year’s conference is, “The Sublime in the Fantastic”. Accordingly the opening panel set out to explore just what we might mean by that. We are now all thoroughly sublimated (not to mention purified and exalted, if you happen to have a Thesaurus or John Clute to hand).

Roger Luckhurst, this year’s Guest Scholar, kicked things off by exhorting us to create a list of those genre writers who, despite the shrieking, gibbous insanity of their eldritch prose, somehow manage to forge a connection to the unnameable and unknowable.

Mr. Clute, sharp as ever, talked about the movie technique of “selling the shot” and how it is all about never showing the whole monster.

And Brian Aldiss, unwilling to trade erudition with the rest of the panel, chose instead to read a brief fragment written by someone he knew:

Overhead, without any fuss, the stars were going out.

So now, without being shown the whole monster, you should have a good idea of what we are trying to talk about.

Unexpected Memage

Normally I avoid the various memes that propagate through the blogosphere, but Andrew Wheeler (via Ben Jeapes who originated it) has come up with one that sounds quite interesting:

Everyone has things they blog about. Everyone has things they don’t blog about. Challenge me out of my comfort zone by telling me something I don’t blog about, but you’d like to hear about, and I’ll write a post about it.

That’s a proper writerly challenge, so I guess I should be up for it. I can’t promise instant satisfaction, because today is a mad panic and tomorrow I’ll be flying to Florida, but hopefully I’ll be able to do something later in the week. That gives you two days to come up with ideas.