AchtungNight
Lech Master
- Joined
- May 19, 2006
- Posts
- 4,698
I hope the readers will value what I put out by giving me kind words and not criticism. Unless they’re being constructive, but that is a very hard thing to find.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I hope the readers will value what I put out by giving me kind words and not criticism. Unless they’re being constructive, but that is a very hard thing to find.
Fine, then ultimately I don’t want to pay that price. I will take silence over meanness any day. And kindness over both. Why is kindness not a priority product too?Criticism does not come in kind words. See literary criticism, movie criticism (check rottentomatoes for samples of movie criticism -- does it strike you as kind?) Critics are likely to take your piece apart and destroy it and mock everything about. You may hurt, but that's the only way you learn.
One may also reflect why criticism is more likely to be mean than kind. Ultimately, the reason doesn't matter, you just have to take it as it comes. But generally it's mean because it makes more sense for the critic to give it that way. Sometimes, the criticism is a "product" itself -- it's read by others. The audience generally prefers mean/harsh criticism. Putting up with the not so kind words is the price to pay for getting criticism.
Fine, then ultimately I don’t want to pay that price. I will take silence over meanness any day. And kindness over both. Why is kindness not a priority product too?
I don't know. Ask the critics. But would movie criticism sell (newspapers, magazines, sites, etc) if it were delivered in kind words? I don't think so. I think the audience expects mean.
Criticism does not come in kind words. See literary criticism, movie criticism (check rottentomatoes for samples of movie criticism -- does it strike you as kind?) Critics are likely to take your piece apart and destroy it and mock everything about. You may hurt, but that's the only way you learn.
It's been a while since I studied contract law, but I'm pretty sure that stepping on the bus counts as acceptance of the bus company's offer. That means a contract, because you know, or should be aware, that you have to pay a fare for travelling by bus. If you don't pay, that's a breach, which is why you'll be fined. You can't just say, "But I was still negotiating terms with the bus company!"But what really is a contract? When two people agree to exchange. That is a contract. You need an exchange and you need an agreement on that exchange. If I read and understand the sign, and for whatever reason I do not agree to the terms, I can step on without paying and take my chances with the driver/fare police. But there is no contract since I and the bus company did not agree to the terms.
It's been a while since I studied contract law, but I'm pretty sure that stepping on the bus counts as acceptance of the bus company's offer. That means a contract, because you know, or should be aware, that you have to pay a fare for travelling by bus. If you don't pay, that's a breach, which is why you'll be fined. You can't just say, "But I was still negotiating terms with the bus company!"
Not sure how that changes the rest of your argument, or the question of what writers owe readers and readers owe writers, but still.
It’s much easier to be perceived as smart and insightful when you notice and dissect flaws in something, as opposed to praising it or even just noticing the good parts. This is the ultimate motivation behind delivering any kind of criticism that will also be read by someone else who’s not the author.I don't know. Ask the critics. But would movie criticism sell (newspapers, magazines, sites, etc) if it were delivered in kind words? I don't think so. I think the audience expects mean.
Those people don't do those things until after they've already read something from me that they got something out of.do you agree that there are things that you, as an author, owe those readers who take the time to enjoy your stories, maybe even follow you, interact with you, or give you votes?
I agree with this, if it's a loose story, or the first in a series. If it's a new chapter or instalment in a series, I think there's more of a burden on the author to meet the expectations of their regular readers. If I write seven chapters of Romance, and then an eighth were it turns out "it was all just a dream!", then I'd understand if my readers were annoyed. But that's just internal consistency.There are three things I feel like I owe to readers, and they're completely different from your five good things. Those are a good title, a good description, and good tags - I owe it to them to help them develop an idea of whether they'll care to have a look at all, and then (this is all one thing, not two separate things) to not subvert their expectations too badly if they do.
Or at least sexually linked...We owe the reader our best effort, nothing more, but nothing less.
We owe ourselves the joy (and agony) of creating something that is yours and yours alone. If your not emotionally linked with your work, why bother?
The readers aside, doesn't an author owe it to themselves to at least aspire to produce a work worthy of sharing?I read an interesting article today about what authors owe readers and it made me think of lit.
The author puts forward that, in general, in exchange for the readers time, authors "owe" the readers five things:
1. A good "Character" that the readers can follow, interesting, distinct and developed.
2. A good "Voice" for the narrator of the story, that supports the tale and is consistent fpr the reader.
3. A good "World" for the story, again, consistent and interesting for the reader.
4. A good "Problem" for the character to resolve. The more interesting the better for the reader.
5. A good "Event" for the character to participate in and the reader to come along through.
So, here's my question. I know that here, in the AH, opinions vary widely on what we, as authors, owe readers - from "not a damn thing" to "everything".
At the macro-level though, outside of a specific story, do you agree that there are things that you, as an author, owe those readers who take the time to enjoy your stories, maybe even follow you, interact with you, or give you votes?
It’s much easier to be perceived as smart and insightful when you notice and dissect flaws in something, as opposed to praising it or even just noticing the good parts. This is the ultimate motivation behind delivering any kind of criticism that will also be read by someone else who’s not the author.
You can see it when you compare the feedback you get in comments versus that in the private messages. The latter had been universally positive for me, whereas the former is much more of a mixed bag.
Criticism does not come in kind words. See literary criticism, movie criticism (check rottentomatoes for samples of movie criticism -- does it strike you as kind?)
Critics are likely to take your piece apart and destroy it and mock everything about. You may hurt, but that's the only way you learn.
I agree with many of the other respondents that "owe" isn't the exact right word.I read an interesting article today about what authors owe readers and it made me think of lit.
The author puts forward that, in general, in exchange for the readers time, authors "owe" the readers five things:
I think this is the most relevant point for readers and authors here.Most literary and movie criticism is intended for the benefit of the book-reading/movie-going public, not for the authors and directors. Indeed, many authors and directors avoid reading reviews of their own work because they understand they're not the target audience and it's not likely to be helpful. So what flies there is not very relevant here.
I think this is the most relevant point for readers and authors here.
Comments posted on stories, even if they're intended to be a legitimate critique of the perceived merits and flaws of the work, are a form of direct engagement with the author. It's fundamentally different than a professional reviewer publishing the exact same words to their own audience in a blog, journal, magazine, etc. Choices of tone in the context of a review don't preclude being extremely harsh; some people even seem to find that entertaining, given how much work people like Gordon Ramsey have gotten. But choosing to speak or write the same way in a relatively direct form of communication is just being an ass to someone, without even the thin excuse of doing it performatively.
But choosing to speak or write the same way in a relatively direct form of communication is just being an ass to someone, without even the thin excuse of doing it performatively.
I agree, except that I see it as a three-part transaction. The publisher rightfully also has a slice of the transaction, including both consideration and responsibility.I don't think of myself as "owing" the readers anything, as though it's the equivalent of a moral or legal obligation. But I think of the publication of a story as a two-part transaction, with me as the author and the reader on the other side, and I feel a desire to make it a worthwhile transaction for both of us. I write primarily for my own purposes and my own pleasure, but I'd be lying if I said I was indifferent to the reader's satisfaction. Of course, I care about that. I think that's human. It gives me pleasure to know I've given readers pleasure.
I never think of the reader when writing a story. I record something that occurred in my mind. After it's published I'm happy to find like-minded people, just for the reason that human beings like finding like-minded people. But I don't expect to find mny.But I think of the publication of a story as a two-part transaction, with me as the author and the reader on the other side, and I feel a desire to make it a worthwhile transaction for both of us.