you'll see the sun come shining through
May. 23rd, 2013 11:59 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
meme from, like, everybody:
I currently have 75 works at AO3. Pick a number between 1 and 75 and I'll tell you three things I currently like about that story.
eta: so that this entry contains more than a meme - the more I hear about the Amazon Kindle Worlds mess, the more it reminds me of what I've read about the early days of the Pocket Books Star Trek tie-in novels, which I gather fans were initially excited about as a way to professionalize/monetize but later pretty much abandoned once the level of creative bankruptcy necessary for participation became clear. Plus ca change, neh?
I currently have 75 works at AO3. Pick a number between 1 and 75 and I'll tell you three things I currently like about that story.
eta: so that this entry contains more than a meme - the more I hear about the Amazon Kindle Worlds mess, the more it reminds me of what I've read about the early days of the Pocket Books Star Trek tie-in novels, which I gather fans were initially excited about as a way to professionalize/monetize but later pretty much abandoned once the level of creative bankruptcy necessary for participation became clear. Plus ca change, neh?
no subject
Date: 2013-05-23 06:24 pm (UTC)To the other stuff:
I'm going to make a donation to AO3/OTW out of the next paycheck because that's my first reasoned response to the Kindle thing--that we need to support the fan sites.
And I imagine that's true--I heard some great presentations on the Trek media tie in stuff in the 90s at Pop Culture--including how Paramount slammed down hard after the inadvertent release of Della Van Hise's novel that had some pretty clear slashy elements (and that there were some fan writers doing some tie-in with fanfiction elements). It's hard to know how much of that is unsubstantiated/overinflated rumors, though.
no subject
Date: 2013-05-23 09:27 pm (UTC)Three things I currently like about We murmur first moonwords:
-I feel like it does a good job of accomplishing my primary goal: to work through the violence and conflict present in both movies. The story originally came out of my frustration, as a Viking-descended pagan, with the pro-Christian aspects of The Secret of Kells. Even though it does to some degree address Christian suppression of pagan cultures through Aisling, and the monks' unfounded fear of the woods, the Vikings stay silent cutout killers throughout, and I'll admit that in the historical struggle of Vikings v. Christians part of me is always going to be kind of cheering for the Vikings because I think they were kickass. There's something fascinating about a culture that operates on a religious myth of their own eventual defeat and destruction, you know? That's something I feel like HTTYD always kind of got - the mixture of violence and gentleness that seems to me very characteristic of northern mythology.
-I really like the tonal balance of the story. I tried to stick to Hiccup's very postmodern teenager style in his dialogue, but it was fun to be able to contextualize that dialogue through the more stylized fairy-tale mode of The Secret of Kells. It puts HTTYD back into the realm of the magical/epic, which is very fun.
-I like the parallelism of the scenes of both boys watching each other work: Hiccup fascinated by the Book of Kells, Brendan enthralled by Hiccup's smithing. They're both such adorably enthusiastic geek characters; I think it works really well to show the connections and encounters that are prevented by cross-cultural violence.