Paisley
I'll Lock Up
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Doran said:My wife and I have been working on (in our heads only) a parody of "the New Yorker short story."
Please write this. I'd love to read it.
Doran said:My wife and I have been working on (in our heads only) a parody of "the New Yorker short story."
Paisley said:Please write this. I'd love to read it.
Diamondback said:I'd say the reclusive, disturbed loner with a past is toward the top of the "overdone cliche" list, and should be avoided.
Doran said:Very typically the stories concern these overeducated overprivileged well-off Manhattanite professionals in their 40s who are so incredibly au courant on everything it makes you sick; they have a circle of friends, all incredibly educated, they are terribly cynical and name drop cool bands while being also quite yuppish; in the typical story there is a party, a guy sees a girl who meant something once to him, then she tells him something and the story ends and you-the-reader are supposed to take something from that but you are not sure what.
There are actually odd names out there. Someone named Dirk Large worked on a film I was in.PastimeSteve said:Thanks all, good stuff.
Sunny -- I was wondering when you'd jump in... Thanks for your insight.
A couple of additional questions...
Do you all think authors go overboard with character names these days? Dirk Pitt comes to mind...sounds like an adult film actor.
Do you think fog is an overused metaphor for fear and uncertainty in books?
Steve
Doran said:I'm afraid its audience would be limited to people who have read New Yorker short stories for a decade or so ... no one else would "get" the joke.
If you do, so do I! Except I'd add mystery to that list, and take out fantasy/horror. And either I've probably got lower tastes or am pickier about authors, but I've read few, if any, terrible books in genre fiction. Of course I read little written past 1960, and most of those are either Agatha Christie or Alistair MacLean. :eusa_clap (I have read some Cussler and endure the terrible bits for the sake of stuff that HAPPENS and the MacLean references.)Viola said:I think New Yorker Syndrome would go a long way towards explaining why 95% of what I read is genre fiction. Even in terrible sci-fi/fantasy/horror/westerns (and for every good one, six are terrible) something HAPPENS.
Or I just have low tastes. lol
-Viola
Story, that sounds like a fine way to enliven the proceedings. :eusa_clap lolStory said:You could throw a Stephen King curve ball into it, and have the scary-monster-that-reflects-their-sins-and-shortcomings (TM) eat them up like those cute little Hors d’œuvre platters.
Sunny said:That reminds me of something. One of Agatha Christie's Poirot books was supposed to be a manuscript, with a prologue by another character. In that prologue, the point was made that the writer of the narrative sometimes called Poirot "Poirot," and other times "M. Poirot," and speculated on what that meant to the narrator. I read so fast that I almost never notice this type of variation, but since then I've been making more of an effort. The one I've noticed is in Dorothy Sayers' mysteries. Sometimes it's "Lord Peter," sometimes "Wimsey." Sometimes "Mr Parker," sometimes just "Parker." I haven't analyzed it, but no scheme or plan is apparent. Do you think there is a subtle plan there (as with Christie in that example, since she called attention to it), or do you think that Sayers' characters are so real that the variation is natural?
I know I use adverbs too much. I just love words and the color and exact meaning they provide. Makes for flowery writing, but it's not always easier to follow.
Sunny said:(3) Steve, how'd you know I'd get involved? I thought I was more anonymous than that. lol
Paisley said:Oh, I think the zietgiest is hip and ironic enough that people would appreciate a spoof of it. And pretentious people always make a good target for comedy. Funny how that which was counterculture is now mainstream and in need of a sendup.
So, how do we subvert a paradigm of subversion? Ever notice that the folks who said "Question Authority" when they've become the "Authority" that is being questioned?Doran said:This fact irks me to no end. There is a dumb bumper sticker that reads "subvert the dominant paradigm." But the dominant paradigm HAS been subversion since 1969. And by 2007, subversion for subversion's sake has become really, really boring.
Diamondback said:So, how do we subvert a paradigm of subversion? Ever notice that the folks who said "Question Authority" when they've become the "Authority" that is being questioned?
Sorry, just struck me as funny.