So here's my completely mindless and spontaneous pop culture fandom war poll. The questions pertain to wars that I've seen on fan boards and live journal posts since 2002. I could only post 15 questions. So that left out a few cool ones. All the questions - I've seen heated discussions about online, believe it or not, that's why they came to mind. I mean a couple of people really hate or love some of these choices with a PASSION, almost as if their very lives depended on it. Also, you have to make a choice, no, indecisive wish-washy - oh I love everyone. Because what's the fun in that? You can skip questions of course. Outside of that? No real rules.
And since I posted it, I'll take it too. Although, you probably can already guess most of my answers. ;-) (ETA: on the last question - I wavered. I like both, and I read one more than the one I picked, at least recently, but that's mostly because the other requires too much brain-power, and I'm mentally drained at the moment.)
[Poll #1164928]
And since I posted it, I'll take it too. Although, you probably can already guess most of my answers. ;-) (ETA: on the last question - I wavered. I like both, and I read one more than the one I picked, at least recently, but that's mostly because the other requires too much brain-power, and I'm mentally drained at the moment.)
[Poll #1164928]
no subject
Date: 2008-04-03 10:20 pm (UTC)They are hard to do well. Unlike a film - where you can tell alot in the space of a second or two, a short story can often take four pages to get the same thought across.
There are a couple masters - but they invariably depress the heck out of me - Updike, Cheever, Lorrie Moore, Issac Asimov, Harlan Ellison, Philip K.Dick, and more.
I think my main problem with them is I'm also left wanting more, left unsatisfied. For me reading a short story is akin to well eating a cream puff. Tasty. But not satisfying.
The other problem with short stories is there is no real market - a complaint that Stephen King made recently. It is very hard to get short stories published. It is oddly easier to get a novel published - believe it or not.
no subject
Date: 2008-04-03 11:12 pm (UTC)I'm satisfied if the author really manages to tell his whole story: in addition to Oscar Wilde, I absolutely adored William Sayronian's short stories (I thought they were way better than his novels, almost as good as his plays). It seems like a wonderful complete gem to me.... Often w/novels I feel that the author is rambling on and telling me stuff that isn't part of the story. I guess I'm just saying that the written piece should be just as long as it needs to be, and I often feel that some novels are flabby.
Jane Austen is a good example of a novelist I love because she is such an elegant writer: using language and imagery that says exactly what she means to say, and doesn't drone on and on.
But of course I realize it is all a matter of taste, and it isn't like I don't read a lot of novels! Have you gotten Jim Butcher's latest yet? I've ordered it but I won't get it for a while....