Y'know what? Sometimes you just gotta stop waiting.
It's no secret around here that I love fanfic, although it's one of the three Big Truths that I feel the need to reveal for the first time every six months or so, as new people wander in and are totally shocked to discover that...
1. I have OCD.
2. I am Mira Grant.
3. I love fanfic.
These things are sometimes equal in their shocking nature. "Wait, you can be a best-selling author without being neurotypical?" Yes! "Wait, Mira Grant isn't a real person?" She's real, she's just, you know, me. "Authors can love fanfic?!" Yes.
Yes we can.
If I had the power, I would ask all the authors in the world to do Yuletide or something like it every year. Sign up for a fic exchange and write some porn for a stranger; tailor your stories to an audience of one, let go of the long-form plots and the careful wide-spectrum appeal, embrace the joy of spending a hundred words on Carlos's perfect hair or Buffy's perfect shoes or Jo's perfect knives. Remember the joy of waiting for one person to open a story and see what it contains.
Because fanfic is joy. Fanfic is fixing the things you see as broken, and patching the seams between what's written and what is not, and giving characters who got cheated out of their happy endings another chance. There was a time, not that long ago as we measure things, where all fiction was what we would now call "fan fiction." Shakespeare didn't come up with most of his own plots. He wrote plays about the stories people already loved. We didn't get a thousand versions of "Snow White" accidentally: people changed that story to suit themselves, and no one said they weren't storytellers, or looked down on them for loving that core of red and black and white, of apples and glass and snow.
Originality wasn't the god of fiction until the last few centuries, and even then, we didn't fixate on it until we reached the era of modern copyright. Mickey looks a lot like Oswald, if you know what I mean. Wanting to work with characters you already know and love is not a new urge. Hell, all television and non-creator-owned comics can be viewed as fanfic, if you squint and cock your head, because much of it is being written about characters and situations created by other people. It's just fanfic with contracts behind it.
I recently accomplished the fanfic writer's dream: I was paid to write a story about a character created by Charlaine Harris, Amelia Broadway, which was published in the anthology Dead But Not Forgotten. I admit, I kissed that check, because it was the fulfillment of a life-long dream. I didn't make canon, necessarily, but I made fanfic for the world.
I encourage and celebrate fanfic of my work, even if I can't read it right now. Because fanfic is amazing, and it's important. It allows us to interface with the things we love in a way that is otherwise virtually impossible.
That's amazing.
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June 15 2014, 05:41:39 UTC 3 years ago Edited: June 15 2014, 05:42:32 UTC
Also, if all the authors in the world did Yuletide, I think their collective fandoms would explode with delight.
June 15 2014, 06:15:56 UTC 3 years ago
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Possible Korra 2nd Season Spoilers: BE WARNED
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June 15 2014, 05:48:28 UTC 3 years ago Edited: June 15 2014, 05:48:51 UTC
June 15 2014, 07:57:58 UTC 3 years ago
Reference: http://fanlore.org/wiki/Marion_Zimmer_B
This has been twisted into several different versions over the years, and because this was really pre-internet as we know it today, communication was limited. Most people didn't hear anything other than MZB's side. Even today, if a well-respected author claimed that a fan threatened a lawsuit, and the fan said otherwise, even with proof of e-mails, who would most people believe?
Ever since, this has been the "why authors cannot read fanfiction" case for 20+ years, even though there has not been a precedent-setting case in court.
I think that in the Internet era, unless the author commented on the fic, it would be awfully hard to prove that said author read the fic in the first place. Even if the author did comment, ideas are not legally copyrightable. I have read at least one published author who outright admitted in her dedication that she was writing mash-up fiction of two authors/settings she loved. She published something like 5 or 6 books, and was never sued.
In the wake of 50 Shades, there have been further novels contracted (I don't know if they have been published yet) that are fanfiction of Twilight and other popular YA novels. I have an IP attorney friend who has said that in her professional opinion, the reason there have been no lawsuits by the original authors is that they would be incredibly difficult to win.
Now, something I see as more of a concern for authors would be reading a fic and absorbing the idea and the language. I've seen in my own crit circles someone come up with a particularly witty turn of phrase, and months later, another critiquer wrote almost the exact wording. It's not uncommon, and one line is not going to be enough to sue, but if it happened repeatedly (and I have seen authors accidentally do this), there might be enough for a case. However, this is just as much a concern when reading... anything, really; it just seems to me it might be slightly more likely when reading fanfic that is based on your work and world.
This is really, honestly, not to denigrate authors who have chosen not to read fanfic. Nobody wants to be the test case, because lawsuits are expensive and stressful and take time away from the writing the author could be doing. Again, I say this not to judge authors, but to provide more info on the legal issues and why this is commonly repeated and many authors (especially those who were around when the MZB case happened) have chosen not to risk it. I can't speak for Seanan, but that's the general background.
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Best selling author on fanfic
June 15 2014, 05:56:37 UTC 3 years ago
June 15 2014, 06:21:38 UTC 3 years ago
it's also a great way to hone your craft, to experiment with different styles and tenses and moods, and to find your true writing voice. It is my absolute wish that, when/if my novel is published, it will be worthy of fanfiction, even, as you say, I'm unable to read it at the time. I wish you all the best success in the world.
June 24 2014, 15:03:36 UTC 3 years ago
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June 15 2014, 06:27:30 UTC 3 years ago
congrats on making the dream, making fanfic for the world. :)
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June 15 2014, 07:31:15 UTC 3 years ago
I like to tell my students that pretty much the entire canon of western literature iwas basically fanfic until yesterday (or say the 19th century, which is basically yesterday).
It's not 100% true, but I tell my students many beautiful untruths, so why not this one.
June 24 2014, 15:04:54 UTC 3 years ago
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June 15 2014, 08:16:51 UTC 3 years ago
I have been very annoyed that for so many years, fanfiction has been derided by authors. I understand the legal concerns, especially with the limited information that was available until relatively recently (and really, most people are not going to doubt the author), but I really have been bothered by some of the negative attitudes. The first writer's group I was part of called it a waste of time and that anybody who wrote it obviously didn't care about their career, because they were spending time on writing something that could never be sold. To them, if it wasn't publishable, it wasn't worthy of being written. Granted, it wasn't just fanfiction; there were people that felt the same way about poetry, because poetry didn't sell. But fanfiction got the most derision, nasty comments, and in some cases passive aggressive personal attacks.
Which always struck me as WTF because why not write something for fun? Why does it all have to be work? Why is something less worthy if it can only be shared with others for free? Hell, what's wrong with sharing your work for free? I mean, hell, posting a book for free as a loss leader is a valid business tactic for self-publishers. I've read fanfic that has made me think, made me cry, made me smile, made me laugh. I've read fanfic that was every bit as good as original fiction. I've read some brilliant fanfics that captured the voice and tone of the author, and explored a different avenue very deeply, addressing the sociopolitical consequences of the characters' actions in the fic. Stuff that just blew me away because it was so good.
But to this day, I feel guilty when I decide to take a break and write fanfiction, like I'm doing something wrong. It didn't help that wasn't the only group that had that attitude, although it was the most extreme. I find it sad that it's something I've internalized, even though I deeply disagree with it.
June 15 2014, 11:24:15 UTC 3 years ago
Now, maybe a writing group wants to say 'we want to focus on workshopping writing for publication' which excludes a lot of (but not all) fanfiction, and folks who do want to make money on writing have to write things they can sell*, but hobbies are never a waste of time if you are getting non-monetary things for them.
* But again, they are not robots. Sometimes you just need to take a break. Few can sustain a profession for every waking hour.
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June 15 2014, 09:16:47 UTC 3 years ago
So 's OK. Seanan does it, too... So ICYMI... It's on the Redridge Chronicles. (No speculation inside, safe for Seanan).
Management Summary: Yes, Fanfic is great for training your writing skills. Fanfic gives you the freedom to write whatever you want and never care whether anyone likes it. Whether you write for money, pleasure or art influences your writing. Fanfic is an expression of love for the source material. And we have copyright trolls to thank for the fact that no sane author reads fanfic.
* One of these, or this footnote, is a lie.
June 24 2014, 15:29:18 UTC 3 years ago
June 15 2014, 11:24:06 UTC 3 years ago
(I wrote a post about how fandom is a perpetual-motion joy machine a while back. )
♥
June 24 2014, 15:39:24 UTC 3 years ago
June 15 2014, 11:41:33 UTC 3 years ago Edited: June 15 2014, 11:44:52 UTC
Edit: in a positive way, that is.
June 24 2014, 15:39:39 UTC 3 years ago
♥ ♥ ♥
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June 15 2014, 13:24:23 UTC 3 years ago
Writing, in any form-- is an amazing thing and how you choose to express yourself shouldn't be limited to your own world and ideas. My (yet-unpublished) novel is well-received by peers, but y'know what-- it was inspired by a fanfic challenge.
Fanfic is a form of flattery, I think-- you have created a world that is so amazing that people want to play in it and add their own love to it as well.
June 24 2014, 15:41:25 UTC 3 years ago
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June 16 2014, 13:54:36 UTC 3 years ago
I don't blame you at all for not wanting to read something that's unfinished. I know more than one person who won't pick up Game of Thrones because they don't trust that it'll get finished before Martin passes away.
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June 15 2014, 14:49:12 UTC 3 years ago
And the fact that the stories are almost always romances does frustrate me because, for instance, when I'm reading a Criminal Minds fan fiction story, I don't want a romance,, especially if it's between two characters who don't love each other on the show. I want a new 'episode.' But most fans don't know how to write such a thing because it requires very specialized knowledge.
So, even though I might enjoy something about Reid and Hotchner in a romance as part of the story, I'm at the same time rolling my eyes at it and am not feeling very satisfied because 1. I don't believe it, and 2. It's not giving me what I really want.
June 15 2014, 15:02:50 UTC 3 years ago
I don't think it's selfish for authors to feel possessive about their characters - especially given that the process of writing involves putting facets of yourself into even the most disagreeable people. Seeing them made into the puppets of some over-enthusiastic reader can't be fun.
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June 15 2014, 15:23:36 UTC 3 years ago
Alas, nobody in that office understood. But that was okay. I was very, very happy (and very, very lucky; Bellisario didn't even know books had been licensed, so there was absolutely NO interference from the suits. Or from my editor, either. Of course, the contracts sucked, but that was my own fault.
June 24 2014, 15:45:19 UTC 3 years ago
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June 15 2014, 16:06:10 UTC 3 years ago
I know authors who say "the story is yours. The one you create in your head when you read my books isn't going to be the one I imagined when I wrote it and won't be the one someone else will create when they read it" so I find the idea of an author saying "you'll get the story wrong" a bit...pompous? For want of a better word.
June 24 2014, 15:46:24 UTC 3 years ago
June 15 2014, 16:08:11 UTC 3 years ago
I really have nothing more coherent to say. :D Other than love this post.
June 24 2014, 15:46:34 UTC 3 years ago
Let's talk about fanfic.
June 15 2014, 16:09:42 UTC 3 years ago
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