Impper posted:yes i am sitting here eating ahe Doritos wiping dust all over my keyboards, giving this scene a lot of thought, which i have also given it a lot of thought yesterday, and between posting it in this thread and talking about it and all the criticism i'm giving it probably more thought than it's worth, it being such a small part of the manuscript. anyway it's all worth it i guess, it's all >art<, anyway here are my thoughts
one of the things i disagree a lot with Fucker about is , i guess, the very basic aesthetics of literature, that is, this demand for reality and as you say crow, verisimilitude, that is i enjoy VTude as much as the next guy but it should always be sublimated to something else - so take the verisimilitude as far as it will go, but if something else needs to be said, then say it. when i sit down and read, i just don't give a damn, i don't question logic, and stupidity of characters, i.e. if i sat down reading like fucker did, the narrator of hamsun's "Hunger" is a real "Fucker," since he is not logical, he destroys himself at every opportunity, he lies like a fish breathes water and then castigages himself for it, all for no reason, and he never questions why, nor does he embrace his irrationality - now, if you sit down and question him rationally, you can never even read the book - so better to sit down and laugh as you go on this adventure. so for me at a basic level, i don't want to be questioning "irl" even if i want it to be realistic.
well, so if i dont want that, then what do i want? i don't want to claim now that i am being very successful at this, but i want there to be struggle, and clash, and dialectics, and ecstacy, and cool things, funny things to happen, and ideally for the story itself to hijack the narrative so that i, the writer, have little control over what is happening, everything will pull & struggle & fight for itself, as if it is a big ball of metal rolling downhill collecting things as it goes and trying to resolve itself internally at the same time.
i do understand what you mean Fucker about things being more "explicit," though one thing i enjoy a lot when people read my books is the vastly different interpretations and focus people put on certain aspects. somebody will begin telling me about a part that is great, and i forgot i wrote it, simply because it was part of the ball of junk that had rolled downhill, so it had to be there, and it didnt have to be explicit at all. i hope i'm not being defensive or whiny
now as to the problems with the scene - i am actually surprised anybody cared at all about milos' car, which is a big part, and intrinsic to his character, but small at the same time. this is what i'm talking about with things being not explicit, i guess there can be surprises. my thoughts while writing the scene was simply that the car itself was funny, and would serve as a backdrop for this ridiculous monologue, which milos would resist. and yeah i do keep an eye out for verisimilitude to some extent - that is that very simply, milos would be able to understand john's sentiment because he has heard the dumbass stories so many times, whereas emily would not absorb the wall of words, except to hear all of these strange things about apocalypse and siberia and ICBMs, which of course she has no context at all for, so for her it is a lot of wasted words - sort of an attack against the narrator's narcissism and bullying what he takes for granted intellectually.
i will give a lot more thought now to the car, especially at the point that milos will get more attention in the narrative. would you be satisfied if that were to come later, or do you think it is better served in this very chapter?
as far as the narrator, yes, this too is a struggle which i am still trying to resolve. he is very clearly a stand-in for myself, and i'm working very hard to Destroy him
all i want to point out here is that the irrational is not a mystified structure.. even if theories grapple with it incompletely.. well, here we apply theory indeed. what is the ball of junk but a refined theoretical clash? what gives it consistency? its shifting internal support, its gnashing metallic struggle, is a delicate spiral of gravity and economy. in place where it is too dense, the economy moves rapidly towards sparseness; shifting among city traffic necessitates long country stretches.
the ball junk is rapidly moving and logical, if not 'open' to interpretation or even reality. if you can tend the rhythm of the structure towards beautiful spirals and jagged curves that can be approximated by sine waves, then that's great, but of course this little fragment here is all we're working with... prose is symphony, you dont equalize it unless you want to play it on the radio
frankly, i'd rather listen to the most unwanted song. but, i'd even more rather listen to Sviridov
now thats a glorious ball of junk!
my other two novels have actually had focused structures; myu second in particular is very tight, very deliberate and planned out with an act structure and everything. this one, well, i began writing it on a lark, and now i am about 3 months in and it's just wild.
the next book i write is going to have a nice structure though, it won't be this out of control sort of thing... the only part that makes me feel good is that i am detecting some internal consistency & coherency inside of the narrative, and when i'm breaking from one thing, it's going by a very clear thread that is present, so maybe with a lot of editing it can turn out okay (once i'm finished writing)
Impper posted:
yes i am sitting here eating ahe Doritos wiping dust all over my keyboards, giving this scene a lot of thought, which i have also given it a lot of thought yesterday, and between posting it in this thread and talking about it and all the criticism i'm giving it probably more thought than it's worth, it being such a small part of the manuscript. anyway it's all worth it i guess, it's all >art<, anyway here are my thoughts
one of the things i disagree a lot with Fucker about is , i guess, the very basic aesthetics of literature, that is, this demand for reality and as you say crow, verisimilitude, that is i enjoy VTude as much as the next guy but it should always be sublimated to something else - so take the verisimilitude as far as it will go, but if something else needs to be said, then say it. when i sit down and read, i just don't give a damn, i don't question logic, and stupidity of characters, i.e. if i sat down reading like fucker did, the narrator of hamsun's "Hunger" is a real "Fucker," since he is not logical, he destroys himself at every opportunity, he lies like a fish breathes water and then castigages himself for it, all for no reason, and he never questions why, nor does he embrace his irrationality - now, if you sit down and question him rationally, you can never even read the book - so better to sit down and laugh as you go on this adventure. so for me at a basic level, i don't want to be questioning "irl" even if i want it to be realistic.
well, so if i dont want that, then what do i want? i don't want to claim now that i am being very successful at this, but i want there to be struggle, and clash, and dialectics, and ecstacy, and cool things, funny things to happen, and ideally for the story itself to hijack the narrative so that i, the writer, have little control over what is happening, everything will pull & struggle & fight for itself, as if it is a big ball of metal rolling downhill collecting things as it goes and trying to resolve itself internally at the same time.
i do understand what you mean Fucker about things being more "explicit," though one thing i enjoy a lot when people read my books is the vastly different interpretations and focus people put on certain aspects. somebody will begin telling me about a part that is great, and i forgot i wrote it, simply because it was part of the ball of junk that had rolled downhill, so it had to be there, and it didnt have to be explicit at all. i hope i'm not being defensive or whiny
now as to the problems with the scene - i am actually surprised anybody cared at all about milos' car, which is a big part, and intrinsic to his character, but small at the same time. this is what i'm talking about with things being not explicit, i guess there can be surprises. my thoughts while writing the scene was simply that the car itself was funny, and would serve as a backdrop for this ridiculous monologue, which milos would resist. and yeah i do keep an eye out for verisimilitude to some extent - that is that very simply, milos would be able to understand john's sentiment because he has heard the dumbass stories so many times, whereas emily would not absorb the wall of words, except to hear all of these strange things about apocalypse and siberia and ICBMs, which of course she has no context at all for, so for her it is a lot of wasted words - sort of an attack against the narrator's narcissism and bullying what he takes for granted intellectually.
i will give a lot more thought now to the car, especially at the point that milos will get more attention in the narrative. would you be satisfied if that were to come later, or do you think it is better served in this very chapter?
as far as the narrator, yes, this too is a struggle which i am still trying to resolve. he is very clearly a stand-in for myself, and i'm working very hard to Destroy him
you need fully formed characters. more than one. focusing on style at this point is superficial
Edited by babyfinland ()
dont get mad, im the one who wasted my precious time reading your thing
it doesn't matter if milos is you or not
i'm not goign to argue with you about this. you have a shitty attitude and you'll never be a competent writer if you act like this
anyway do you guys want to do a fun exercise rather than compare jizzrags? it goes like this: we pick a color and then go for a walk and narrow our attention to that color alone. you dont even have to do any writing, its just a good way to train your mind to work the way a writer's should. then u can post Trip Reports or something i guess
Impper posted:
which comments about style? you're free to say whatever you want, but you get so incredibly cryptic when you talk about writing that it is utterly ridiculous, i have to say. in any case, i'm not even sure that i agree that there needs to be more than one character for something to be "fiction"
i quoted the post.
anyway if you want to excuse yourself from basic competency and craftsmanship with pomo bullshit about Definitions Maaan then go right ahead i dont really care. im just tellign you whats up
deadken posted:
great novels are never really character-based imo, every great literary character has been a stand-in for some general idea or principle
that very well might be but the point of the novel is the interplay of characters, whatever those characters actually represent is besides the point.
i stopped reading shortly thereafter because i didnt like the subject matter but thats just a little Pro Tip
babyfinland posted:
Impper posted:
which comments about style? you're free to say whatever you want, but you get so incredibly cryptic when you talk about writing that it is utterly ridiculous, i have to say. in any case, i'm not even sure that i agree that there needs to be more than one character for something to be "fiction"
i quoted the post.
anyway if you want to excuse yourself from basic competency and craftsmanship with pomo bullshit about Definitions Maaan then go right ahead i dont really care. im just tellign you whats up
certum est quia impossibile
no you're not, you're posting nonsense that is so unspecific that i honestly can't tell which character you find problematic. i'm sorry man but it's Bullshit, and this is you acting superior instead of trying to help somebody out or whatever. your comments don't make sense in the context of the post you quoted either
Impper posted:babyfinland posted:
Impper posted:
which comments about style? you're free to say whatever you want, but you get so incredibly cryptic when you talk about writing that it is utterly ridiculous, i have to say. in any case, i'm not even sure that i agree that there needs to be more than one character for something to be "fiction"
i quoted the post.
anyway if you want to excuse yourself from basic competency and craftsmanship with pomo bullshit about Definitions Maaan then go right ahead i dont really care. im just tellign you whats up
certum est quia impossibileno you're not, you're posting nonsense that is so unspecific that i honestly can't tell which character you find problematic. i'm sorry man but it's Bullshit, and this is you acting superior instead of trying to help somebody out or whatever. your comments don't make sense in the context of the post you quoted either
fine whatever
deadken posted:
yeah u might have a point.... the big thing im working on starts w/ a dude on a flight thinking bout some things and i know ima have to lop it off in the second draft
I usually cut at least 1/3 from first to final draft. Faulkner said writing is "killing your children"