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|    rec.arts.sf.composition    |    The writing and publishing of speculativ    |    144,800 messages    |
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|    Message 143,788 of 144,800    |
|    William Vetter to J.Pascal    |
|    Re: weather    |
|    25 Oct 14 20:16:03    |
      From: mdhangton@gmail.com              On Sunday, October 5, 2014 8:53:55 PM UTC-4, J.Pascal wrote:       > On Sunday, October 5, 2014 5:45:42 PM UTC-6, William Vetter wrote:       > > On Sunday, October 5, 2014 3:18:46 PM UTC-4, J.Pascal wrote:       > >        > (...)       > >        > > > Saying "You can't use weather to indicate mood" is like saying "no more       using short words and sentences to heighten a sense of urgency."       > >        > > >        > >        > > There is another one they say universally...the character can't look in a       mirror and describe herself.       > >        > > The other day I was thinking about that, that there used to be a TV show       named "Quantum Leap" involving Scott Bakula, where he looked in the mirror at       the beginning of every episode.       >        >        > Of course that worked really well in "Quantum Leap" where Bakula ran around       looking just like Bakula but for the story was actually in other people's       bodies so we got to see in a reflection what he looked like to everyone else.        Sort of like if there        are vampires there's at least one instance of non-reflection required. :)       >        > But anyhow, the mirror description thing....       >        > Honest, I think that was a solution to a non-existent problem. Someone or       other decided that a "good" writer in a single POV 3rd person narrative or 1st       person never let anything on the page that their POV character wouldn't       actually think. So since        I already know that I have blond hair and blue eyes and am 5 feet tall I would       never think about my blond hair and blue eyes. I might think about my height       if the author asked me to get a bowl from a high shelf but in order to think       about my *hair* I        need to be looking in a mirror fixing it.              I dunno. Women say, "I hate my hair" all the time. It's pretty much       universal. And black women have an even bigger thing about the hair relaxer.       >        > Other solutions could be to have someone else say something like... "Julie,       I sure do envy your beautiful blond hair... it flows like sunshine..." *Gak*        And besides, this has to happen at the beginning of the story, and giving me a       love-sick stalker        just to describe my looks is even sillier than having me walk past a mirror.              A stalker needs to appear frequently in the manuscript, be almost inescapable,       or the stalker is not a stalker, just an annoyance.       >        > And I imagine that people started to notice that "the mirror trick" seemed       forced, too, and frequently applied...       >        > ...to a wholly made-up problem. Just describe your POV character and get it       over with. If a mirror is *appropriate* then use a mirror. If a love-lorn       stalker is *appropriate* use a love-lorn stalker. If it doesn't really matter       what your POV        character looks like, or what specie they are, or sex... then leave it out.               I think you really need to let reader know if the POV character is an alien       quickly. And probably the gender. If they think the author is playing games       with them, like intentionally hiding that the POV character is a female       physician or a male nurse to        prove the reader is a sexist, they'll feel their intelligence is being       insulted.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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