Excuse me...
5 January 2004 01:41 am...while I rant a bit.
I'm a copy editor for a living. I've had to say critical things about people's writing because it's my job. I've been doing it a long time, and I pull no punches. That said, I read a comment made in an MFU forum that, while by no means uncommon of late, seems to have been the last straw breaking the back of my silence. Humps to follow.
I sometimes don't like stories. Sometimes I think they suck. But you will never see me posting that view on a public list. "This story/writer sucks." Why? Because it is mean-spirited and -- worse and far more importantly -- useless. I've seen a little too much "So-and-so's stuff sucks. I want XYZ kinds of stories" floating around the MFU fandom and I'm irked. It's fine to say "It sucked" to yourself or your chums privately; that's venting, it's human, but in the long run it's just noise. It's OK to make noise in your own home. In a public forum, you're in a sense an invited guest. Try to bring something to the table. Don't just make noise. Make conversation. If your opinion is so harsh it cannot be offered up civilly and even constructively, perhaps it should be left at home -- unless being needlessly unpleasant in front of other people is a thrill for you. It's perfectly possible to say "I didn't care for this story because it was too action-oriented/relationship oriented/romantic/espionage-heavy/OOC in my view; I am looking for stories that are more romantic/action-oriented/hurt-comfort/fetish-oriented/whatever" -- specific criticism is useful to the writer and to the other readers on the list who might share your views, and negative comments do not have to be insulting. Mind you, a poster is not obligated to give lengthy critique (and some writers don't want it), but in that case, surely a courteous "I didn't care for it" reflects better on you than "Boy, that sucked."
A little thought, a little consideration, a little restraint. Courtesy does not have to stifle criticism. In fact it benefits it, because a clear and well-delivered criticism is invariably better received and made use of by a writer than such comments as "this sucked," "I don't like this scene," etc. -- those are reactions, not criticism.
And reactions are fine, but, really, if someone said to you "Your story sucked," but had nothing else to say about it, nothing else to offer ... wouldn't you prefer they'd kept it to themselves?
I'm a copy editor for a living. I've had to say critical things about people's writing because it's my job. I've been doing it a long time, and I pull no punches. That said, I read a comment made in an MFU forum that, while by no means uncommon of late, seems to have been the last straw breaking the back of my silence. Humps to follow.
I sometimes don't like stories. Sometimes I think they suck. But you will never see me posting that view on a public list. "This story/writer sucks." Why? Because it is mean-spirited and -- worse and far more importantly -- useless. I've seen a little too much "So-and-so's stuff sucks. I want XYZ kinds of stories" floating around the MFU fandom and I'm irked. It's fine to say "It sucked" to yourself or your chums privately; that's venting, it's human, but in the long run it's just noise. It's OK to make noise in your own home. In a public forum, you're in a sense an invited guest. Try to bring something to the table. Don't just make noise. Make conversation. If your opinion is so harsh it cannot be offered up civilly and even constructively, perhaps it should be left at home -- unless being needlessly unpleasant in front of other people is a thrill for you. It's perfectly possible to say "I didn't care for this story because it was too action-oriented/relationship oriented/romantic/espionage-heavy/OOC in my view; I am looking for stories that are more romantic/action-oriented/hurt-comfort/fetish-oriented/whatever" -- specific criticism is useful to the writer and to the other readers on the list who might share your views, and negative comments do not have to be insulting. Mind you, a poster is not obligated to give lengthy critique (and some writers don't want it), but in that case, surely a courteous "I didn't care for it" reflects better on you than "Boy, that sucked."
A little thought, a little consideration, a little restraint. Courtesy does not have to stifle criticism. In fact it benefits it, because a clear and well-delivered criticism is invariably better received and made use of by a writer than such comments as "this sucked," "I don't like this scene," etc. -- those are reactions, not criticism.
And reactions are fine, but, really, if someone said to you "Your story sucked," but had nothing else to say about it, nothing else to offer ... wouldn't you prefer they'd kept it to themselves?