suciul
Read interesting books
- Joined
- Dec 24, 2005
- Messages
- 3,740
Sorry, but if I want to read good literature . . . rather clearly implies that most sf is not good literature, but you want to read it anyway.
Part of the problem here, I suspect, is the unstated but implied proposition that "literature" or "literary" has some special meaning other than "well-conceived and well-crafted fiction"; it doesn't. That is a silly concept that academia has foisted off on the unsuspecting, who don't know The Emperor's New Clothes when they don't see them.
The "well-conceived and well-crafted fiction" sounds to me like making a chair or following the latest 10 rules for writing good fiction that everyone is fond of posting these days; I strongly disagree in the sense that books have magic or do not have magic, they come alive or not - of course the experience of such is deeply personal and strongly depends on one's background, life experiences..., so books that will have magic for me, may be a big meh for you and vice-versa and I am absolutely fine with that...
"Literary" means something different, harder to articulate, but for me is essentially the ability to make me read and love a text irrespective of content, just by the arrangement of words - somewhat more nuanced than that but you get the idea; sf is in many ways opposite in the sense that as long as the prose is ok'ish and has enough flow, the content is king and I want the content to have sense of wonder, world building and such
I see a lot of emphasis on "characters" in discussion of "good fiction", but to me what is baffling is why "characters" need to be human, alive or sentient; why cannot language be a "character", or a world, or an universe?? If you hold to the idea that "fiction is about human experience" (implicitly of today since it's truly hard to understand another age) than you limit yourself needlessly...
Anyway enough rambling and back on topic, while nobody will accuse ACC of writing "literary" prose, i still hold firm that he will be remembered, read and will exert influence as long as genre-sf is around, while I strongly doubt R. Silverberg will be more than a footnote in 50 years from now


