Can a text be badly written with poor descriptions and characterization yet still develop interesting and entertaining sf ideas? Maybe. Any examples? In any case, a writer of any kind of fiction should still know how to write fiction. The point of this blog is that Poul Anderson's texts are well written with good descriptions and characterization and also present original and entertaining sf ideas and I cannot help thinking that there is a connection between good writing and good ideas. Wells and Anderson do not just tell us that a character has travelled to another time, past or future. They describe that other time with the same wealth of detail as in a historical novel.
In any case, other criteria apart, Dinosaur Beach makes a text book hash of presenting time travel paradoxes. It is a pleasure to turn back to Anderson's "Star of the Sea" where locations are described in multisensory detail and paradoxicality is nothing if not subtle:
4 comments:
A genre has to separate before it can develop. Then it develops. "Literary" fiction is just another genre.
Kaor, Paul!
There are people who love the works of Jane Austen, that they are skillfully crafted, with shrewd depictions of character, etc. But I gave up on her books when I simply couldn't get thru EMMA. Not all well written books are going to please everybody.
Ad astra! Sean
Sean,
Try PRIDE AND PREJUDICE. Miles ahead of the others.
Not all well written books are going to please everybody: obvious.
Paul.
Kaor, Paul!
Noted, what you said about PRIDE AND PREJUDICE
Sometimes the obvious needs to be stated. E.g., many readers simply can't get thru Herman Melville's MOBY DICK, but I loved it and read it twice.
Ad asrtra! Sean
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