happilyshanghaied:

striving-artist:

fun fact about fic writers. every time they post anything at all, they slide into one of the circles of hell while they await a response and their brain turns into a endlessly echoing refrain that this time people have seen through the facade, and now know that your writing is pure garbage. 

this happens every. freaking. time. 

👆🏼👆🏼

To critique or not to critique (of the unsolicited kind)

tarysande:

Spoiler alert: I firmly belong to the not camp.

A post just crossed my dash that put the worst taste in my mouth. I don’t want to reblog it, but I do want to address the contents because I think the subject is super important.

The post basically boiled down to: fanfic writers are thin-skinned babies “these days” because no one can take constructive criticism. In “my day” we all sent page-long critiques like the dedicated heroes we were! It made us better writers! Moreover, if I didn’t like something, I told the writer all about it! It was my job!

Hold up, what?

I’ve been posting fanfic online since 1998. Twenty years. Pre-archives. And “in my day” we had betas if we wanted/needed/asked for them (whose critiques didn’t have an audience). We said “concrit welcome” if we actually wanted constructive criticism. We did not show up unannounced to point out a work’s flaws because that is rude. Look, I am an editor. People pay me real money to edit things for them. I would rather cut off my own fingers than burst into someone’s comments and start “critiquing” their work without being asked first.

Here’s something that needs to be addressed: fanfiction is real writing, yes, but it is, by its nature as something that isn’t monetized, a hobby. As in, a thing people do for fun. A thing that hopefully brings both authors and readers joy! The story an author posts a is a gift; how dare anyone rip a gift apart in front of the gift-giver and all the other party attendees? How entitled and ungrateful can you be? Fandom is not a frigging battleground where authors learn to harden themselves for war. It’s a hobby. Done out of love and enthusiasm. 

Yes, some fanfiction writers (certainly not all!!) aspire to be original fiction writers. They may use fanfiction as a training ground. They may want or benefit from constructive criticism. Still, they have to ask. They have to start the conversation. I know (think?) it’s harder to find betas these days, but it’s always worth asking around if real critique is what you want. Put “concrit welcome and even begged for” in the author’s notes and hope someone takes you up on it. 

Some fanfiction writers with original fiction aspirations still don’t want criticism about their fic. Fic may be their fun-writing outlet. It may be about instant gratification (and there’s nothing wrong with that; we’re not in the business of denying ourselves pleasure out of some moral superiority here. It’s fandom). It may be the place where they post to get around their fears of showing things to others. It may be the place they take risks they wouldn’t in their original work because the stakes are lower. When you work on your original writing all day, every day—often putting that work through far more vigorous and exhausting paces than fanfic sees—the last thing you want is someone showing up during your time off to point out a frigging comma splice or shift in POV.

The point is unless someone asks for critique, you don’t know what’s going on with them. Maybe fic is the only fun thing they have in their lives. Maybe they’re writing in a different language. Maybe they are 14. Or 82. Maybe they’ve never written fiction of any kind before and this is their baby step forward. Maybe fic is just escapism. Maybe they are depressed or anxious as hell and criticism is going to push them over an edge. Fandom belongs to everyone. Not just people deemed “good” or “perfect” or “permitted” or “thick-skinned.” People don’t need to be saved from grammar mistakes or poor turns of phrase or even plotholes so wide a semi could drive through them. Authors sure as hell don’t need to be told when a reader just doesn’t like something. There is no fandom police force in charge of perfection. If critique is so important to you, advertise your willingness to beta. If you do not like a story or think it’s “bad” hit the freaking back button. 

Unsolicited criticism is not helpful. Maybe you just catch someone off-guard and startle them. At worst, you may totally shatter someone’s self-esteem while they are partaking in a hobby they 100% do for fun—and not in pursuit of some unattainable perfection.

Don’t ruin a stranger’s day or week or hobby because you “know better” and somehow think you need to prove it. You don’t.

sweet spot

I realised today that my sweet spot for fics is 20-40k.

Like, you can read them in a single sitting. They have enough story that you’re deeply invested, but don’t have to have a deeper plotline, or rather, multiple plotlines.

Simon says “JUST WRITE OMG” and worry about these things later. But IDK, it DOES change things for me.

Also. This is what I like to call PROCRASTINATING ON MY 9 OR SO WORKS

musings on big and little fandoms

So. On one hand, being a part of Big Fandoms like Teen Wolf and Captain America/MCU is awesome. SOOOO much fanart. More fanfiction than I can possibly get through (I’ve had to put a limit on myself finding more because all three of my devices have about 30 tabs of new fics on them…). It’s AMAZING. Fics for every mood!

But it’s also hard to find a place in it. Like… it’s SO huge. How does anyone find you? And like… All the ideas I’ve had have been done. I wanted to write a Marvel x Martian crossover… But it’s been done. And sure, the ideas are different, but like… There are just so many cool people who have done it all. And I feel small and tiny.

I used to be primarily involved in smaller fandoms. And that was amazing. Everyone knew each other. But despite our best efforts, there wasn’t ever a huge amount of fan work. So you’d like… NEVER HAVE ENOUGH.

And I mean. I don’t CHOOSE my fandoms. I just fall into them (deeeeeeeep – I fall into them deeeeeep). But it’s just an interesting thing… I love and hate them both for different reasons.

I just wanna write fic and not feel like a dumbass basically.

writingmyselfintoanearlygrave:

bookcaseninja:

beauty-grace-outer-space:

pollydoodles:

fulcrumisthebomb:

one of my favourite things about fanfiction is I can almost always find some way to contact the author, the actual human being who sat down and wrote this collection of words that I love so much and scream at them

and usually they scream back and it’s a wonderful exchange of happy

you just can’t do that with published authors. You can scream, but you’re screaming into a Lovecraftian void and they almost never have the chance to scream back

I love fanfic authors so much. thanks for letting me scream at you about things we mutually love

I like being screamed at. And I’ll always scream right back.

I, too, enjoy being screamed at. 

It makes me happy when someone screams at me.

When people scream at my it makes my fuckin’ day

On comments

So. A few years back, I used to post on Ao3 a bit. And I still get comments on my stuff to this day.

And like. It never occurred to me to reply. Like, it felt like going over and over again “thank you”. And years later, I realise… Dude, you’re an idiot. These people took the time to comment and you didn’t even reply thank you? And some had questions, and you could have answered them!!! 

And basically I feel like a giant piece of shit. I guess… It didn’t make sense to me then.

And even though some of those comments were 4 or 5 years ago, I wanna reply to them… Because I did appreciate them.

And like, sure, there are excuses for not replying then… Like I was doing my thesis, moving states, breaking up with my long term partner, extremely sick… But that was then. Why not months later? And I was still churning out fics, so I SHOULD have replied.

And yeah. This is really bothering me. On the pro side, I am now going to a lot of effort to comment on all the fics I enjoyed, no matter how old they are, because it still makes my heart sing when I get new comments on my fics, no matter how old… 

I’d always just left Kudos. And I realise I need to support FF writers more. So. That’s what I’m doing.

Anyway. This has been a post. 

uncle-knobheads:

Fic authors deserve more credit.

Story time: I started a book about 23 hours ago and just finished it. Also in that time I slept for 10 hours, spent time with family, was at work, etc. Anyway, I enjoyed the book (Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda). But it felt like it flew by, so after I finished I looked up the word count because what are pages? Pages are meaningless. I only function in word counts anymore.

The estimate I found was 58,580. My immediate reaction was “oh, that’s why. That’s nothing!” But what a shitty response. Because no. That’s not nothing. That’s a whole. Damn. Book. An entire novel! And Fic authors regularly bust out 30k, 50k, 100k, 150k words. AND THEY DO IT FOR FREE. WHILE WORKING AND LIVING THEIR LIVES.

So anyway, thank your favorite fic author today because they deserve it. Because they’re amazing. They’re the MVPs.