What do you think about fan
fiction?
Have you ever written any yourself?
PROCESS: I’ve heard the term, believe I know what it is, I know
I haven’t written any but suspect I have read some – then I decide I should
find out if my suppositions are correct. As with all authorial research, I find
Wiki- sources a useful starting point; not the only place to go, but often I
take direction from there. Always eager to learn, this is my research path:
Wikipedia says: “Fan
fiction or fanfiction (also abbreviated to fan fic, fanfic, or fic) is fiction
about characters or settings from an original work of fiction, created by fans
of that work rather than by its creator. It is a popular form of fan labor,
particularly since the advent of the Internet.”
I never trust Wiki-anything as a single source of “fact”,
so, for more insight, I dig further.
Here’s what Merriam Webster has to say about it:
Definition of fan
fiction : stories involving popular fictional
characters that are written by fans and often posted on the Internet —called
also fanfic, \-ˈfik\
Wanting more insight into the true nature of fan fiction, I
unearth an excellent piece from The Literary Review of Canada, no less. It tells
me about how the early days of Star Trek saw fans of that show creating their
own storylines for the characters within the Roddenberry universe (yes, I’m a
Star Trek fan, but not a Star Wars Fan), and – introducing me to a good deal of
terminology I’ve never encountered before it also tackles the knotty issue of
copyright – something all creators must be concerned about. http://reviewcanada.ca/magazine/2008/07/friction-over-fan-fiction/
It turns out I have read fan fiction, after all: PD James’ “Death
Comes To Pemberley” was a thoroughly enjoyable read, continuing the lives we’d seen
being lived in Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice (PS: I absolutely LOVED the movie
of “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies”; Val McDermid’s “Northhanger Abbey” is a
masterful re-telling of the original with a modern setting which I adored; Lindsay
Faye’s “Jane Steele” stands as well as it does because of previous readings of “Jane
Eyre’, though it is not, itself, a retelling of that tale.
Are you a fan fiction writer? Reader? If you were to become
one, upon which string of your life of fandom would you choose to play an air
to create fan fiction? (For me…that which I love, I wouldn’t mess with; that
which I don’t love, I wouldn’t know enough about to try it!)
Cathy
Ace writes the WISE Enquiries Agency Mysteries (book
#2 THE CASE OF THE MISSING MORRIS DANCER will be available in trade
paperback on August 31st in the UK, and in November in the US/Canada,
and the Cait Morgan Mysteries (book #7 THE CORPSE WITH THE GARNET
FACE was published in paperback in April). Find out more about Cathy and
her
work, and sign up for her newsletter at http://cathyace.com/