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Ouch. Dont rub it in!How are you doing with Ulysses?!![]()
Sometimes it's just that the author is less bothered about such things being important. I'm bisexual, will happily read about both male and female protagonists getting it on with whatever sexes, and really don't care much.What about when the first dozen paragraphs, written in first person, don't effectively convey the gender identity of the narrator.
Then halfway or more down the page, you find out they're not what you thought they were.
Of course, this is enough of a peeve that I often will quit even before discovering the bait-and-switch.
It's bad writing, and usually not the only manifestation.
Have you read the Murderbot series? It features an asexual robot as the main character.It's one reason I liked writing a story about a genderless immortal hellbeing.
Well, that's a good reason.Sometimes, the narrator cannot be pushed in boxes. For one story (N and N), I deliberately kept it vague in the beginning, name included, because they didn't consider it to be something that determined them.
It's not that I even care, I'm bisexual too.Sometimes it's just that the author is less bothered about such things being important. I'm bisexual, will happily read about both male and female protagonists getting it on with whatever sexes, and really don't care much.
But my first beta readers pointed out that 99% of readers will care a lot. A lot of the time I'm trying to lure readers out of their comfort zones, so I'm happy to humour them in this respect and provide info about the protagonist in the first few paragraphs.
It's one reason I liked writing a story about a genderless immortal hellbeing.
Can you explain this notion that somehow writers set out to "lure people out of their comfort zones"?If someone's going to lure people out of their comfort zones, which I am not against:
I think Britva was verbatim quoting Kumquat:Can you explain this notion that somehow writers set out to "lure people out of their comfort zones"?
You're not the first to suggest that writers somehow "trick" people to go down a path they don't want to go down, read content they don't want to read; as if it's the writer's fault they don't know what your squicks are.
At least you say you're not against it, but to me it seems such a crazy notion. I'm not "tricking" anyone when I write what I want to write. If folk don't like it, they can back out, but to tell me it's my fault? That's just odd.
But my first beta readers pointed out that 99% of readers will care a lot. A lot of the time I'm trying to lure readers out of their comfort zones, so I'm happy to humour them in this respect and provide info about the protagonist in the first few paragraphs.
Ask the person I responded to.Can you explain this notion that somehow writers set out to "lure people out of their comfort zones"?
I didn't say anything about what readers want. This entire thing was predicated on what the writer wants to do.You're not the first to suggest that writers somehow "trick" people to go down a path they don't want to go down, read content they don't want to read; as if it's the writer's fault they don't know what your squicks are.
What's your fault, now?At least you say you're not against it, but to me it seems such a crazy notion. I'm not "tricking" anyone when I write what I want to write. If folk don't like it, they can back out, but to tell me it's my fault? That's just odd.
At least you say you're not against it, but to me it seems such a crazy notion. I'm not "tricking" anyone when I write what I want to write. If folk don't like it, they can back out, but to tell me it's my fault? That's just odd.
What's your fault, now?
I'm not following.
You're right, they're not your words - I didn't go back far enough, so apologies. Obviously you can't explain a notion that wasn't expressed by youAsk the person I responded to.
They're the one who proposed it.
All I can say is, I understood what they meant, butObviously you can't explain a notion that wasn't expressed by you.
Have you read the Murderbot series? It features an asexual robot as the main character.
No, i mentioned early stories of mine where I didn't mention sex of certain characters merely because I didn't think it important. Not as a dramatic element. I didn't mention their looks in detail, either.But I do not like it when an author takes so little care that I have to guess, and then it turns out I guessed wrong, and this is not a dramatic element.
You're not talking about doing it because you couldn't take the care. You're talking about stories you wrote where it was the story.
As the person who said it: I think there's two different things. One is simply for clarity: I write in British English, with the exception of a couple American characters. If I want to avoid that putting American readers off (others seem to cope), I need to make my story as clear as possible so they can figure unfamiliar phrases out from context. Same with cities or organisational structures or recent past time periods that readers may not be familiar with.Can you explain this notion that somehow writers set out to "lure people out of their comfort zones"?
You're not the first to suggest that writers somehow "trick" people to go down a path they don't want to go down, read content they don't want to read; as if it's the writer's fault they don't know what your squicks are.
At least you say you're not against it, but to me it seems such a crazy notion. I'm not "tricking" anyone when I write what I want to write. If folk don't like it, they can back out, but to tell me it's my fault? That's just odd.
I'm going agree with ogg - a scenario or fetish that I just don't like. That and just bad writing. The kind of writing that makes you wonder if they graduated middle school. Grammar, punctuation, spelling, I'll continue if the central idea is good, but there comes a point where the story becomes unreadable to me, and I'm not a grammar purist by any means, I know my work makes plenty of people cringe, but, dude! there's resources available! Click the editor button!It is a very personal thing. Yes 'I felt' too often can jar, but sometimes it is the scenario. If you cannot retain belief in the story, for example if it explores a fetish that desn't appeal, you will back click.
If you strongly feel that in your particular story the gender of the protagonist is not important, write your story that way.why do you feel the need to go beyond what a story tells you?
Good thing the other author is the one it was intended for.So, if I read you correctly: "If gender is unimportant, it is important to signal that the gender, being unimportant, is important for you."
Nah; too deep for me.