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The Blogfic Gap

September 4, 2009 By Mark 2 Comments

I’m not even sure how I landed on this BBC page, but as someone who’s been telling stories for twenty years, I can say with some confidence that I’ve never seen anything like this anywhere else:

Send us your script»

Send us your work. We read all unsolicited scripts for BBC Films,TV Drama, Children’s Drama,TV Comedy, Radio Entertainment and Radio Drama. We accept unsolicited scripts written for film, television, radio or stage.

I mean, even the scammers and con artists who are actively trying to sucker would-be writers don’t just throw the door wide open and say, “Come on in!” (They charge you for the privilege of being fleeced.)

Is this BBC invite a good thing? A bad thing? I have no idea.

But it reminds me that while I’ve been looking for good blog fiction on the web, I keep ending up on UK and European sites. I don’t know what that means, either, but it keeps happening. Is the U.S. badly lagging in blog fiction? Is there an EU government subsidy that’s giving them an edge? How do we close the blogfic gap?

— Mark Barrett

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: blog fiction

Five Years and Counting

September 4, 2009 By Mark Leave a Comment

Here are a few quotes from an excited article about blog fiction:

The weblog has justifiably been celebrated as a new publishing platform. But writers are beginning to see that it also has the potential to be a new fictional form.

Now, the blog breathlessly referenced in the article had two things going for it. First, the blog’s author was a mystery at the time, giving people something to speculate about. Second, the blog was about sex, giving people something to salivate about. Put the two together in any medium and you’ve got enough juice to get yourself on Oprah, so it’s not surprising that it caught this writer’s attention.  [ Read more ]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: blog fiction

Doubling Back

September 4, 2009 By Mark Leave a Comment

I spent a good bit of time last night by myself, holed up in a well-concealed blind just off the blog fiction trail. Despite remaining perfectly still, however, and keeping my surgically-implanted iPod’s volume at a very low level, no blog fiction passed by.

Back at camp, after treating my mosquito bites and refreshing myself with two energy drinks, I doubled back to where my search began: the Wikipedia entry for ‘blog fiction.’ At the bottom of the Wikipedia page I once again began to click my way through the Reference and External links, looking for fresh sign. (No, not like that, like this.)

Unfortunately, the first link — enticingly titled, “Blog Fiction…Where the Story Begins,” and pointing to an equally-enticing URL: blog-fiction.com — proved to be a wild text chase, ending as it did at the battered remains of the aforementioned site, which was apparently being consumed by a ravenous MediaWiki landing page.

Undeterred, I poised my field mouse to click on the next link, at which point the two energy drinks I’d consumed reached critical mass and my heart rate shot to 180 beats per minute for over an hour and a half. Fortunately, sleep was deep on the backside of this ballistic chemical experience, and I am now ready to take up the chase again — as soon as my laptop fully recharges from the feeble outlet here at the infirmary. More soon.

— Mark Barrett

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: blog fiction

Is Blog Fiction Dead?

September 3, 2009 By Mark Leave a Comment

Following up on the previous post, I followed one of the ‘best blogfic’ search hits back to a 2008 post on BlogFiction.org, titled: Did Blog Fiction Peak In 2005?

An interesting question. If true, however, I would think it had less to do with the potential of the medium than it did with the various attempts during that time. So maybe it’s time to try something new.

— Mark Barrett

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: blog fiction

Lost in the Desert

September 3, 2009 By Mark 2 Comments

Can you point me to the best blog fiction on the internet? Not just the best web fiction — although I guess I wouldn’t mind a few pointers there as well — but specifically blog fiction, however you define it?

The reason I ask is that I’ve been rooting around for a few weeks now, clicking links and following threads, and I’m seeing a lot of fiction on the internet. And I’m really glad that so many people are publishing to the web. It can only make them better writers, and it can only speed the process of networking which is so important to any writer’s ability to develop. (All writers need to find good readers. It’s a nightmare for all involved.)

On some level, however, I’m still not connecting with a lot of what I’m reading, and I keep feeling like I’m wandering in circles. So…if I said to you, “Who’s writing the best blog fiction on the internet?”, what would you say?

(I tried searching for ‘best blog fiction’ but I was not encouraged by the number of hits I got in return. And ‘best blogfic’ turned out even worse.)

— Mark Barrett

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: blog fiction

Site Seeing: BlogFiction.org

September 2, 2009 By Mark Leave a Comment

When you get around to the type of internet fiction called blog fiction, or blogfic — and it won’t take you long — you should stop in at BlogFiction.org. On that site you’ll find posts that will help you put things in context, as well as get you up to speed on the current state of the genre (if that’s the right word for it).

First up, and a must-read, is a post titled Blog Fiction Defined. It’s exactly the kind of deep analysis I like, but it’s also very accessible, and includes a clickable flow chart to help you grasp the information presented. Even better, there’s an explicit acknowledgment that it’s too soon to nail some of the details down, and from an editorial point of view that’s a very good sign.

After that, poke around on the blog and in the forum. There are some good nuggets of information to be found not just on the subject of blog fiction, but on the much more important question of what blog fiction is and may become. As someone who’s interested not just in reading blogfic, but in writing it, I need to know how blog fiction is put together as a matter of craft, and BlogFiction.org seems interested in that question as well.

— Mark Barrett

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: blog fiction

Flash Fiction Defined

August 31, 2009 By Mark Leave a Comment

I spent some time today trying to bring my growing awareness of internet fiction into some kind of focus, and while doing so the phrase ‘flash fiction’ kept nagging at me like a forgotten errand. Later, in a moment of clarity I realized that I didn’t really have the slightest idea what flash fiction was, beyond being very short.

So I saddled up ol’ Metaphor (that’s the imaginary horse I just invented for this post) and rode over to the Wikipedia Saloon, (apparently this post is going to have a Western theme), and asked around. And here’s what I found:

Flash fiction is fiction of extreme brevity. There is no widely accepted definition of the length of the category.

So there you go: nobody knows what flash fiction is.

Yee hah!

— Mark Barrett

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: mystery

Why Communities Matter: Filtering

August 28, 2009 By Mark Leave a Comment

In the great rollicking free-for-all known as the internet, there’s clearly no shortage of content. Everybody’s got a blog or a web site, or a Twitter account piped through a Facebook app which spits out 140-character poems that are converted into a real-time mash-up with whatever’s playing on your local radio station, all courtesy some kid’s home-grown basement server, which is running off juice he’s stealing from the neighbors.

If we had enough hours in the day we could look at it all and laugh. But we don’t have enough hours in the day. In fact, we don’t have enough time to read this blog post, let alone try to figure out what it means. So we rely on others to do the sifting and filtering for us. What’s the best movie this week? What’s the hot new band? Which video clip will make us laugh? Cry? Hurl?  [ Read more ]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: credibility

Why Communities Matter: Support

August 27, 2009 By Mark Leave a Comment

There are a lot of people writing online fiction these days. And why not? Until recently anyone with the desire to write fiction had to suffer with a drawer full of unread manuscripts or a social network dotted with unreliable (if not patronizing) readers. Today you can easily find a writing community that shares your specific interests, and if you’re not a total jerk you can usually find someone who will give you honest and useful feedback.

But online communities — at least some of them — also provide another important resource for fiction writers, and that’s emotional support. Whatever you want to say about any given writer’s skill level, or the average skill level of all fiction writing on the web, the fact is that putting your work out there for others to see is a risk — and it should be a risk.

Unless you’re a pure artist — meaning someone who is creating without concern for audience reaction (which is doubly hard to do when you’re using the written word, which was literally invented for communication) — you intend the people who read your fiction to have a particular experience. And at some point you want to know if you created that experience or not. So you need other people to validate your work when it’s finished, and that certainly involves risk.  [ Read more ]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: community, Fiction

Why Communities Matter: Education

August 27, 2009 By Mark Leave a Comment

I almost pity people who are growing up now with no knowledge of what life was like before the internet came along. What still seems a miracle to me — on days when I’m not getting bombarded with spam, or some punk isn’t trying to destroy my computer with malware — is a boring norm to more people every year.

True story: a couple of decades ago I asked my grandmother, who was born in 1910, to pick the most amazing technological advance of her life. I figured maybe it was the airplane, or even the computer, although computers were just getting out of the gate at that time. She thought about it a while, then said, “Electricity.”

What she meant was that until sometime in the 1930’s, electricity was not a given in daily life for a lot of people (and for some it would take much longer). When electricity finally got wired up to your house, and you weren’t using lanterns to see after dark, it changed everything.  [ Read more ]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: community

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