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A couple of days ago I asked: If you write fic, do you read it as well? Not as strange a question as it sounds, but you'll have to go to the post to see why.

[livejournal.com profile] pjordha had an interesting response, and has graciously allowed me to use it for this post. Her comment:

I'll add to that question: If you write fic, do you read it as well...and send feedback after reading it?

So many times I've seen people talking about reading so much fic, and yet so many writers get so *little* feedback, so the math does not add up. If there's so much reading and enjoying going on, where's the feedback?

When I read something I like, I send feedback, even if it's only a "great story!", even if it's not entirely true. If I hate something, then I wouldn't send feedback, but nowadays I wouldn't bother finishing something I hated.

Sometimes I think writers (at least in popslash) are the worst for sending feedback. Either that or they only read the "popular" stuff. Readers-only or writers just starting out are much better at sending feedback in my experience.

Look at it this way: When a writer sees comments like "I read everything in XYZ fandom...save the really bad stuff," and that writer has written fic in XYZ fandom and never gotten any kind of feedback from those commenters, then they must only conclude that their fanfic is "the really bad stuff." Which is probably kind of demoralizing, I think.


The short answer: I'll be the first to admit that I don't send nearly enough feedback, but I'm making an effort now to let authors know that I love and/or like what they've done.

And just to play devil's advocate here, I've known writers who aren't enthusiastic about "great story!" responses. Since I don't know if that means they'd rather have had no feedback at all, I won't elaborate. Just tossing that out there as the flipside of the coin. ;-)

Thoughts?

By the way, pjordha's original comment is screened to encourage responses here. :-)

Date: 2007-10-12 03:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] stungunbilly.livejournal.com
It's funny, because I love any comments on my own stuff, even 2-word squees or suggestions or whatever, but I like to leave a little more on other people's journals. In my head, good writers have high expectations for social interactions. (Though published writers often do things to wreck my fantasy world, alas.)

Nothing is a higher compliment than a rec, though, besides maybe a nomination or (in a creepy way), plagiarism. Oh, unless it's a "this story mostly sucks but it has good sex bits" kind of rec. Heh.

Date: 2007-10-13 02:54 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] foxmonkey.livejournal.com
Nothing is a higher compliment than a rec

Yep, that's what I said above. I'm sure there are writers who'd prefer a rec to a paragraph of squee!

Date: 2007-10-13 05:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] stungunbilly.livejournal.com
But the yummiest of all is a paragraph of squee *in* a rec.*g*

Date: 2007-10-13 05:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] foxmonkey.livejournal.com
But the yummiest of all is a paragraph of squee *in* a rec.*g*

LOL! I started to write something along those same lines. :-)

Date: 2007-10-13 03:53 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] quiet000001.livejournal.com
I rarely read published stuff anymore because good fanfic has totally skewed my standards.

I never give recs like that. I don't have a rec list or anything that might make me feel like I needed to collect recs, so if I rec something, it's because I really think it's worth people paying attention to, for whatever reason. :)

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