Uh, what the hell just happened?

Jan 14, 2009 22:51

'Uh, what the hell just happened?' otherwise known as 'Annerb's written another weird and vague fic that makes my brain hurt.'

I've been thinking a lot about styles of writing, specifically in relation to how much the writer needs to explain and how much they can leave up to the reader to connect in their own. Mostly this stems from the disparate reactions to my latest fic, Roanoke.  This fic was written as a ghost story, specifically from the point of view of a character that would never know exactly what happened, but have to extrapolate from her experiences and the snippets that are shared with her in the process of the tale, much like the reader themselves. In fact, for that story the cast of characters themselves were rather secondary, the background for other things.  The main star of the story was actually the setting, Atlantis, her moods, her motivations, her secrets. Some people seem fine with this, but there are also people who at the end of the story feel a bit cheated, I imagine, because everything wasn't made clear in the end.  I waffle back and forth between just seeing it as a difference of taste, and seeing it as a failing on my end.  It's probably a little bit of both.

It's a tough balance, I think, trying to find the sweet spot between over narration/excess explanation, and vagueness to the point of confusion and disruption of the reading process.  I like writing a fic where someone might feel the need to read it again once they finish, a la The Sixth Sense, or my Cassie apocafic Revelations.  When you get the big reveal at the end, you feel the need to read/watch again from the beginning to see if any strings are showing. I'm fine with that.  But I don't want my reader to have to re-read a section five times just to figure out what the heck is happening.

On the other hand, one of the major things that can stall out my writing (and my reading) is when I get too engrossed in narrating and explaining.  The whole story just grinds to a halt and it usually takes me a while to figure out why.  This actually happened in an earlier draft of Roanoke, where I sat down and realized I had four straight pages of the main character thinking things out, rather than talking to someone or reacting to things around her. 'Actions and Conversations!' I had to remind myself. Solid narration is difficult to write and damn boring to read.  It's important for me as the author to be aware of the entire plot and everything that is going on, but it isn't important for me to include all of that, in fact, as the author, it is my job to cull all non-essentials, to keep the story flowing and readable. (Though I swear sometimes I feel like I need to write Commentary for fic or something, like an annotated author's edition.  So many of my stories had other things going on in the background that the narrating POV character isn't necessarily aware of, things that weren't vital to the process of the story that I'd love to share. Man, like Beneath The Stains of Time, particularly.)

So I think these days I tend to err on the side of leaving things out rather than including too much, but really, it depends on the type of story I'm writing.  And I think I will always have a soft spot for vague and dreamy stories. I just want you all to know that I am not torturing you out of maliciousness, or at least not without feeling bad about it. ;)

I will say though, that if some of you are out there still scratching your heads over Beneath The Stains of Time or Acceleration, I apologize! Lol.

In other news: MALOMARS. YUM.

writing_ramble, thinking_out_loud

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