fahye: ([n&s] learning the ways)
Fahye ([personal profile] fahye) wrote2009-02-17 03:05 pm
Entry tags:

ask the author

Last seen at [livejournal.com profile] schiarire's:

I want to do a creative/meta meme but there is nothing going around, and it's not like I have that much fic to be asked about*. But ask me writing questions anyway?

*I had to remove that part, it is a dirty dirty lie where I am concerned.

'Writing questions' can mean pretty much anything you want it to mean, my sweets. I have a lot of work to do tonight and I'm going to need something to do in my breaks.

[identity profile] lilith-lessfair.livejournal.com 2009-02-17 05:42 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you. I'm pulling this out from some of the other questions; when you start to write a fic, do you find that you are driven more by a theme relating to the 'verse in which you are writing or that you are driving more by the need to explore a particular character(s) and/or their relationships. I suppose, however, that those aren't mutually exclusive by any means.
ext_21673: ([mer] no apprehended gloom)

[identity profile] fahye.livejournal.com 2009-02-17 05:55 am (UTC)(link)
That always depends on the individual fic. I always have a single REASON for writing a fic, and it's usually some idea that the canon has sparked off in me. Meteorology was my need to tease out Arthur's motivations for behaving like a prat (because I love that he does, even though he's a very noble and good-hearted character, and I wanted to sort out in my own head how the inconsistencies in his behaviour made sense). Other stories arise from my desire to comment on a theme or a dropped plot point or the treatment of a character, or a what-if that fell into my head. There's always one thing.

What happens then is that a lot of my opinions about the canon find their way into the fic; these can be extra themes, extra views on relationships, anything. This happens especially in one-off fics for any fandom (like when I wrote for Pirates of the Caribbean and Prince Caspian) because I know that I don't really intend to play in that universe again, and so I use the one fic as a way to express everything I want to.

[identity profile] lilith-lessfair.livejournal.com 2009-02-17 06:02 am (UTC)(link)
Again, so very interesting. I tend to work both ways as well, but I never think in terms of plot, a huge downfall of mine.
Also, I appreciate hearing about the motivations for those three fics. I loved all of them, especially lovely, pratty Arthur whom you understand very well.
ext_21673: ([narnia] oh who would ever want)

[identity profile] fahye.livejournal.com 2009-02-17 06:05 am (UTC)(link)
I don't think in terms of plot either, usually. Quickening Days is probably the ONLY fic of mine where the idea that kickstarted it was 'I want to try a Groundhog Day fic'. So the plot was obviously the first thing that needed to be hammered out. The only other long plotty thing I've ever written developed its plot by accident, and I made it up entirely as I went along. It was fun! But terrifying.

Seriously, 'So Great & Beautiful' just needs a sticker saying Here Are Fahye's Opinions About Narnia.

And thanks :) I love it when characters come along and you identify so strongly with one aspect of them that writing them becomes easy and joyful.

[identity profile] lilith-lessfair.livejournal.com 2009-02-17 06:15 am (UTC)(link)
And who doesn't have opinions about Narnia? Good or bad or otherwise? I always found myself disconcerted by stories in which the characters fall into the rabbit hole and then return, having learned their lesson and become the better for it. And then they pretend that they hadn't been gone but the lesson is there to see in their behavior. I thought you hit the nail on the head that the Pevensies age (but don't fall in love or have sex) and then are made young again with their memories intact. How very, very odd that was.