shadowkat: (chesire cat)
[personal profile] shadowkat
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]

Date: 2008-04-03 10:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
Can't say I share you love of short stories - having written and read quite few. English Lit majors read and write a lot of short stories.

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.

Date: 2008-04-03 11:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] embers-log.livejournal.com
It is too bad that there isn't a market for short stories, it used to be that newspapers carried some fiction, and there were a lot of magazines w/good fiction... Actually I would be happy if there was more market for serials (like the way Dickens was originally published back in his day).

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....

Profile

shadowkat: (Default)
shadowkat

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Dec. 31st, 2025 09:11 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios