In This One, the Marches Meet Mulder and Scully…
Teresa Nielsen Hayden, an editor at Tor Books, sticks up for fan fiction:
In a purely literary sense, fanfic doesn't exist. There is only fiction. Fanfic is a legal category created by the modern system of trademarks and copyrights. Putting that label on a work of fiction says nothing about its quality, its creativity, or the intent of the writer who created it.
The Pulitzer Prize for Fiction this year went to March, a novel by Geraldine Brooks, published by Viking. It's a re-imagining of the life of the father of the four March girls in Louisa May Alcott's Little Women. Can you see a particle of difference between that and a work of declared fanfiction? I can't. I can only see two differences: first, Louisa May Alcott is out of copyright; and second, Louisa May Alcott, Geraldine Brooks, and Viking are dreadfully respectable.
For Reason's reports on the fan-fiction world, go here, here, here, and (just a cameo, but it's a juicy one) here. To see a Reason writer producing fanfic of her own, go here. And of course, I can't mention fan fiction without linking to the Roy Orbison In Clingfilm site, without which the universe would be a much drearier place.
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Scully, damnit, Scully!
Oops. Fixed.
mmm. Clingwrap.
those are excellent! thanks, Jesse!
cheers,
VM
Question for Cathy. (Or other fanfic writers.)
I invent my own characters. I provide a perfectly good plot for them to follow. And they just won't listen. So I'm left scrambling to write their version before they get bored telling it to me.
If you use someone else's characters are they more cooperative?
The Roy Orbison stuff is awesome ... I hope you all read it aloud in a Mike Myers/Sprockets voice.
But it kind of pushes the definition of "fanfic," doesn't it? This is the first time I've heard of fanfic about real people & not fictional characters.
Legally, wouldn't you call a bizarre fantasy about torturing a public figure "journalism"?
Roy Orbison in...what?
Running Scared, indeed. Whatta whacko.
Ken: According to Wikipedia, it's a subgenre of fanfic called "real person fiction":
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real_person_fiction
Me, I want to write some Wikipedia fan fiction.
"How Wikipedia Got Her Groove Back"
Would Uncyclopedia (http://uncyclopedia.org/wiki/Main_Page) then be fictional fan-nonfiction?