BlackShanglan
Silver-Tongued Papist
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2004
- Posts
- 16,888
A pleasure to see you as well, Box. I've always liked the simple and joyful purity of purpose in your smut.
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Somebody find this nutbar a soapbox and a street corner. Maybe he'll bother some other people.
Granted I'm new to getting published (only two stories published thus far) and I still have LOTS to learn but does it bother anyone else when someone gives you feedback who has never had anything published? I'm not trying to be a snob, I just found it interesting although the feedback the person left was pretty good.
Granted I'm new to getting published (only two stories published thus far) and I still have LOTS to learn but does it bother anyone else when someone gives you feedback who has never had anything published? I'm not trying to be a snob, I just found it interesting although the feedback the person left was pretty good.
I don't like it when somebody who has never written a dirty story is trying to tell me how to write a dirty story.
I don't think that one needs to have written a great deal of any specific genre, or indeed of anything at all, to offer some useful feedback. Even the most uninformed reader can tell you what is and isn't coming through well to him or her, and then you can always weigh that with other feedback to decide which end of the reader-writer partnership seems to bear the greater responsibility for the difficulties.
I see no profit in dismissing anyone's critique out of hand; to my mind, it's a dangerously common error to blame one's reader rather than one's writing. I would rather ask msyelf what else I could have done to bring my thoughts forward more strongly, and to save dismissing the reader as uninformed as an absolute last resort.
I wasn't born gullible and I have a high regard for the welfare of what I spend time and effort writing.
I don't think that one needs to have written a great deal of any specific genre, or indeed of anything at all, to offer some useful feedback. Even the most uninformed reader can tell you what is and isn't coming through well to him or her, and then you can always weigh that with other feedback to decide which end of the reader-writer partnership seems to bear the greater responsibility for the difficulties.
I see no profit in dismissing anyone's critique out of hand; to my mind, it's a dangerously common error to blame one's reader rather than one's writing. I would rather ask myself what else I could have done to bring my thoughts forward more strongly, and to save dismissing the reader as uninformed as an absolute last resort.
Ah, I think this is where we differ. You regard your work highly and thus wish to defend it; I regard mine highly and thus wish to improve it.
To me, it depends on how a criticism is phrased... Someone who says my writing is crap because there is something wrong with my writing has to be able to provide evidence that they know about writing. In contrast someone who says my writing is crap because when they read it it doesn't work for them only has to know about reading (and whether it makes them jerk off to a climax).Not really. I learned fairly early on not to go to the hospital orderly to perform my heart surgery. While it's true that the hospital orderly can stumble on an insight of brilliance or two, chances are when he swings the scalpel, I'm gonna die, because heart surgery--like good writing--just ain't that simple. And I improve my work by bouncing if off writers who are more skilled than I am, rather than the good old Internet discussion room custom of taking each and every comment/commenter as of equal value and validity. (Their opinion can certainly be of equal value in terms of their own enjoyment--but not of equal value in terms of my writing development.)
Not really. I learned fairly early on not to go to the hospital orderly to perform my heart surgery. While it's true that the hospital orderly can stumble on an insight of brilliance or two, chances are when he swings the scalpel, I'm gonna die, because heart surgery--like good writing--just ain't that simple. And I improve my work by bouncing if off writers who are more skilled than I am, rather than the good old Internet discussion room custom of taking each and every comment/commenter as of equal value and validity. (Their opinion can certainly be of equal value in terms of their own enjoyment--but not of equal value in terms of my writing development.)
Not really. I learned fairly early on not to go to the hospital orderly to perform my heart surgery. While it's true that the hospital orderly can stumble on an insight of brilliance or two, chances are when he swings the scalpel, I'm gonna die, because heart surgery--like good writing--just ain't that simple. And I improve my work by bouncing if off writers who are more skilled than I am, rather than the good old Internet discussion room custom of taking each and every comment/commenter as of equal value and validity. (Their opinion can certainly be of equal value in terms of their own enjoyment--but not of equal value in terms of my writing development.)
You see yourself as the patient in this example.
Granted I'm new to getting published (only two stories published thus far) and I still have LOTS to learn but does it bother anyone else when someone gives you feedback who has never had anything published? I'm not trying to be a snob, I just found it interesting although the feedback the person left was pretty good.
My wife and I had a swivel rocker that we used many times for our lovemaking. We nearly wore that old chair out. Several times my wife wanted to throw it out, but then we'd make love in it again--and she decided to keep it. Loved your story--it brought back many great memories.
I prefer it. I don't write for other writers. I'd never be good enough. I like writing for people who just enjoy a story. While a good evaluation from a good writer is valuable for me as a writer, it doesn't compare to the joy I get from someone getting something from the story. I got this feedback the other day:
You've combined two different things here, haven't you? Comments on the content of the story and what you did with it as opposed to folks who tell you how you should have written it. Two things. Not the same things.
Yes I did. But I felt the person I was responding to was talking about feedback comments, not reviews. Even Box's OP was about a reader feedback to his story. When getting feedback you get two types: folks giving you a reaction to your story, and folks critiquing your story. However, I would say that in a roundabout way even content feedback is giving you information about your story, right? While it isn't telling you specifically how to improve it, or how specifically it's working, it's letting you know it does work for at least some of your readers, and well enough (or not!) that they even take time to respond.
Having said that and having now read the rest of the thread, I agree with both you and Shan even though you are disagreeing somewhat. In the same stoker that got me the feedback I posted, if you were to give me constructive feedback, I'd take that very seriously and look hard at my piece. When a random reader said I needed to "learn grammer", I didn't give him much weight.
If he misspells "Grammar" he shouldn't get any.
learn grammer
02/26/09 by Anonymous
The author needs lessons in and to learn grammer. Such junk as "Honey ..., hon ..., oh, god, ... I'm ... ah... mm .." is nothing but a waste of space and bandwidth and voids rules of decent grammer even a grade school student wouldn't.
However, I would say that in a roundabout way even content feedback is giving you information about your story, right?