Day Three

Nov. 3rd, 2010 11:57 pm
rhian_crockett: A painting of a castle; there is a red flag flying. (Default)
[personal profile] rhian_crockett
Today, I procrastinated a lot, did a lot of laundry (how do I wear so much?!), and eventually eked out the required word count... most of which will be cut in editing. I'm still feeling my way into the story, so I'm not unduly worried, and all of this is useful for that.

I've learnt a lot about Cai and Bedwyr, over the last few days. So far, it's been the minor characters that interest me most, which is interesting, given that Gawain is normally my main focus. It's probably a good sign that I love my subplots this much, in any case, and it's all relevant going forward into the potential other books (if I write the whole series, there will be five of them).

I always find myself wondering how much to tell people. Like the ultimate gossip, I know who all my characters are dating, but my POV character doesn't. If I don't tell you, you might figure it out for yourself, and that's awfully fun. On the other hand, you might not, and then you wouldn't know that there's an epic love affair going on behind the scenes. It reminds me of Rowling's pronouncement that Dumbledore was gay -- I didn't hallucinate that, right? -- I know who my characters are doing, but is it fair to give word of God on something that isn't actually included in the text?

For example, since I've mentioned it already, in a way: I'm pretty sure Gaheris is asexual. He just is, and he won't say so at any point in the text. I don't think he's even aware of the concept, he just knows he doesn't want a wife or any kind of lover. He's got more important things to do. As a reader myself, though, I don't really want the author stepping in and saying things are this way or that way: I have my own understanding of the characters. If I were reading it, maybe I'd desperately want to see Gaheris kidnap his brother's wife and marry her, or something. Or maybe I'd be pissed about the lack of the traditional wife and quest for him -- Enide, and his quest to prove himself a valuable knight even as a married man -- and want to write her in myself. In any case, I'd have my own ideas.

I think I've answered my own question, haven't I?

(But as a writer, I want to tell you!)

(no subject)

Date: 2010-11-04 02:29 am (UTC)
hopeoubliette: A sunrise broken up into smaller pictures (beautiful nature)
From: [personal profile] hopeoubliette
Perhaps because I'm a great fan of telling and of having the freedom for fanfiction, I think my own answer to your dilemma would be to perhaps write a companion piece that goes into the behind-the-scenes information that you know. It'd be canon, it'd be there, but it wouldn't be right there in the text as Word of God to keep the fanfiction freedom from happening.

Does that even make sense? My brain may be a bit fried from my own Nano push today.

Thoughts

Date: 2010-11-04 03:32 am (UTC)
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
From: [personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
I usually enjoy it when authors reveal extra information like that. Reason being, I don't want to clutter up a story with information that is valid but doesn't belong there. I mean, sheesh, what student thinks about their school staff as sexual beings? So of course Dumbledore's sexuality didn't come up in the story, but it's cool that Rowling knows what it is.

There are things about my characters that I know, but don't necessarily reveal in fiction or poetry. If people ask, though, I may answer -- and sometimes the discussion leads to another bit of canonical writing. That's especially prone to happen in my poetic series.

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rhian_crockett: A painting of a castle; there is a red flag flying. (Default)
Rhian Crockett

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