oxfordlunch:

fleurdelis221b:

iwlyanmw:

fleurdelis221b:

canibecandid:

I wish that there wasn’t this feeling of “Haha, I suck.” Among fan fiction writers.

Don’t apologize for not being able to update regularly.

Don’t apologize for what happens in your life.

Enjoy taking your time with things. Update when you want. Consume other works when (and while) you’re stuck.

You’re not a word generating machine. You’re a person, and I am grateful that you’ve chosen to share your stories with us.

Thank you.

Ahhh this is nice…

Thank you, my Beautiful, Intelligent, Brilliant, Imaginative, Loving fanfic writers!!

theartofforensics oxfordlunch holmesianpose jamlockk ewebie hudders-and-hiddles watsonshoneybee writingblossom cleverwholigan conversationswithbenedict elizabeth-twist

<3!!

It’s Just Fan Fic…

dsudis:

batik96:

hedwig-dordt:

cleverwholigan:

itsnotgonnareaditselfpeople:

itsnotgonnareaditselfpeople:

I got an email from a reader earlier.  The sender was a lovely young woman who had just re-read my first published fic and wanted to tell me how much she enjoyed it—how it made her feel, how it made her smile, how it made her cry, how it made her excited to get home each night and curl up in bed with it, how it helped ease the pain of a difficult patch in her life, and how much she misses it now that it’s over.  It was a beautiful letter, and my reaction to it must have been visible enough to make my saner half take notice from across the room.  He shot me a questioning look, and I turned the laptop around and gestured to the screen.

I followed his eyes as they scanned each line, saw his lips tip up in a smile that grew broader as he read, then braced myself for the good natured snark I’ve come to expect when my little literary hobby comes up in conversation.

“Wow.” He said. “That was kind of amazing.  How does it feel to be someone’s favorite author?”

“Don’t be a dick,” I said, slapping him on the shoulder.

“I’m serious,” he replied, gesturing to the screen.  "That’s what she said—right there: You’re my favorite author.”

“I think she means favorite fic author.  Not real author.”

“Is there a difference?” He asked.

Yes,” I said, rolling my eyes.  ”Of course there is.”

“Why?”

“Because, as someone in this room who isn’t ME is fond of pointing out, self published gay mystery romance novels aren’t exactly eligible for the pulitzer.” I said, turning the computer back around.

“So what?” he shrugged, “Something you wrote inspired a stranger to sit down write what it meant to them and send it to you.  A lot of total strangers, as a matter of fact.  You write, people read it and react.  That makes you an author.”

“Huh.” I said, very eloquently, then got up and went into the kitchen to start dinner.

Hours later, sitting down to reply to the letter in question I find myself writing this post instead.  Because here’s the thing: That wonderfully crazy man who lives in my house is right.  (But please don’t tell him I said that)

From the moment I realized that letters made up words and words made up sentences and sentences made up worlds that were mine to explore any time I wanted to I’ve been a reader.  I have fallen in love with perfect phrases and epic stories and countless characters pressed between the pages of the thousands of books I’ve read in my life so far—and sitting down to string together those same 26 letters into tens of thousands of words of stories I felt needed telling?  That makes me an author.

I have adored the work of countless authors in numerous genres, and the world of fan fic is no exception.  I have admired and cherished and savored the words of talented writers whose work is no less legitimate for the fact that their names include random keyboard characters and their words don’t live on bound paper on a shelf.  

It’s not JUST fan fic.  It’s literature.  It’s published.  It’s read.  It’s loved.

It matters.

Thanks to all of my favorite authors for every word on every page on every screen that I’ve ever loved. 

Reblog for the sweet anon who asked me if I thought fanfic was as important as “real” fiction. Hope this answers your question. 🙂

Thanks for reading my work, so happy you’re enjoying In The Library!

Read this. Take it to heart. REMEMBER IT.

Comments are the best

They really are. Anything that manages to touch another person, make their life – their day, a particular minute – better is invaluable.

“Let us not desert one another; we are an injured body.  Although our
productions have afforded more extensive and unaffected pleasure than
any other literary corporation in this world, no species of composition
has been so much decried. … There seems almost a general wish of
decrying the capacity and under-valuing the labour of the novelist, and
of slighting the performances which have only genius, wit, and taste to
recommend them.“

–Jane Austen, defending that most reviled of genres: the novel.

As Joanna Russ says in How to Suppress Women’s Writing, “Jane Austen … worked (as some critics tend to forget) in a genre that had been dominated by women for a century and one that was looked down upon as trash, a position that may have given her considerable artistic freedom.”

This is us, now. This is fanfic.

Russ also writes that “women always write in the vernacular.  Not
strictly true, and yet it explains a lot.  It certainly explains letters
and diaries. … It explains why so many wrote ghost stories in the
nineteenth century and still write them.”

As I’ve said before, what is more vernacular in the 21st century than ephemeral, fannish internet porn? This is us. We are part of the long tradition of women writing and being told their writing is not real and does not matter, that the things we love and value are worthless and foolish, for so long that we even begin to believe it.

Our work is real work. Our writing is real writing. Our stories matter. Our community matters. We are here, together, doing this thing. This is real life. This counts. If you write something on the internet, you write it in real life.

Fanfic matters. Fanfic is literature. Fanfic is literature that breaks the bounds printing technology and capitalism once imposed on the wide distribution of the written word. Copyright law, royalties, the logistics of producing and selling paperback books, none of those can touch the heart of what a story is. None of those make your story any less a real story that can really touch another person.

If anyone tries to tell you different, you can tell them Jane Austen begs to differ.

Since you’re the only male writer of fanfic I know well enough to talk to… When you read smutty stories, what does not work for you because you go all ‘Wait, my body does not work like that!’? I’m really curious, because I’m sure most female writers like me commit some those things, that actually don’t work or seem strange to a man. Don’t care if you answer in public or private, but I’d really like to know (and I’m not talking about the obvious ‘no lube’ stuff and such)

copperbadge:

Nah, I’ve never really had a problem with it, though it took me a while to work out why. I was reading this essay on the amount of shaming that sometimes goes on for people writing “unrealistic” sex, and the person who was writing it hit the nail on the head so to speak – it’s a fantasy. This isn’t journalism. 

Literary erotica isn’t about describing a sex act, that’s not its purpose. In broad terms, literary erotica is usually about creating a fantasy. People write about sex for lots of different reasons, and they create those fantasies with different endgames in mind (titillation, creating a sense of emotional intimacy, because they’re horny, because they have this specific fantasy and want to live it out on the page, because they want to explore a kink in a safely fictional world) but the upshot is that the sex is about something other than the mechanics of the sexual act.

I don’t care about realism when I read or write porn because realism isn’t why the porn is there. Realistically speaking, people often don’t smell that great and kissing tastes mostly like mouth and almost everyone looks ridiculous during sex. People don’t come at the same time and hairs get in places hairs shouldn’t be and sometimes there are amusing noises. 

But we know all that, and we can get it in real life, so we don’t need it in fiction. Fiction is a place where the writer controls everything and the writer says what’s real and what’s not, and if the writer wants to write “unrealistic” sex, that’s in service of a purpose that I find laudable, the expression of fantasy linked to sexual desire. Whether the audience buys into the unrealism or not is dependent somewhat on the writer, but I think the high level of buy-in we see in fandom says that as a culture we’ve decided fantasy is an acceptable part of the sexual act in fanfic. I’m not saying everyone has to, but I certainly have, which is why unrealistic sex doesn’t especially bother me as long as it’s well-written or I can see where it’s going. 🙂