New Blog Post
Feb. 4th, 2013 09:32 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
This week on the blog, I talk about the various ways people communicate in fiction (and how it differs from genre to genre).
Looking Out The Window
(And also I make jokes about the Elves. Because that's how we roll in the Shire.)
Looking Out The Window
(And also I make jokes about the Elves. Because that's how we roll in the Shire.)
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Date: 2013-02-04 02:51 pm (UTC)Hee!
Interesting thoughts, and actually relevant for me at the moment. Because I've actually been seriously considering a dive back into my Journey series. A part of me still longs to finish it, despite the fact several years have lapsed since the last installment. But as I find myself thinking about upcoming stories, I too noted I now have this huge disconnect in considering how I would have those characters communicate NOW, and how they probably would have communicated in their particular time-line.
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Date: 2013-02-04 02:56 pm (UTC)(Wow, that got away from me...)
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Date: 2013-02-04 02:57 pm (UTC)And this totally makes me think there needs to be copies of The Hobbit and LOTR book set, which has been personally annotated by you.
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Date: 2013-02-04 02:59 pm (UTC)*adds to list of things to do if I am ever UBER-famous*
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Date: 2013-02-04 09:08 pm (UTC)It's also made it a bit easier to write scifi settings with ubiquitous communications now that we have our own! Back in the early '90s, I wrote a lot in a scifi setting (of my own creation) where everyone had little communication devices implanted in their heads, and I used to really struggle with this, at times, because it was so hard to isolate the characters, or inflict plot-related misunderstandings on them when they could just call each other. Now that constant, instant communication is a Thing We Have, I don't find it difficult at all to write it in an SF context like, say, SGA; it's just a slightly more advanced version of the way the world already works.
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Date: 2013-02-05 08:22 pm (UTC)