I've written about a dozen popslash stories.
But wait! you cry, that can't be right! You've written loads of stories! How true, how true, and thank you for paying attention. About 144, as it happens—it's a bit difficult to count, sometimes, because of epilogues, and some of them are poems, and… but, anyway. Let's call it 140 for the sake of having a nice, easy number. Closing fast on 400,000 words—which doesn't match up to some people's epic production levels, but is a heck of a lot of words for me.
And fewer than 20,000 words which I produced by myself. One twentieth. Five percent.
Let's break that down.
Fifty-two stories for some kind of challenge—SeSa and Remix, the Dragon Challenge, also wtf27, fanfic100 and sky_pie. Several one-offs. Fifty-two stories
Forty-six stories directly inspired by someone's prompt on fic_requests.
Others were written in response to fannish discussion of some kind—whether that was "I want more Chris/Kevin!" or, "let's discuss how consent issues are presented in fic". Others still were written specifically for one person. Sometimes there was a meme I decided to have a go at, or a bunch of other stories I'd been reading which made me think either, I'd like to try that, or, let's try a different approach to that. My very first popslash story was born out of the comments to one of Nopseud's Pornutopia chapters. And of course there can be overlap between inspirations. A scant dozen or so of my stories were written just because they occurred to me (and even that dozen may be an over-generous count, given the influence of other stories, and of Being In Fandom, on my output, but I couldn't pin anything down as the direct inspiration for those twelve).
So what's my point?
My point is, I need you. I need you to inspire me and poke me with ideas and persuade me that it's worth writing something down and sharing it. I need to feel that someone out there wants more of the stories I have to write, that someone out there appreciates the effort, that someone out there is still a part of this fandom that has got me so creative and productive and *happy*. Are you there? Are you still there?
The evidence is not good. I look at the feedback to the recent Dragon Challenge stories, and I think, great.
syncalot had all of two people give feedback to her charming Euro-era story;
chalcopyrite had three people comment to hers, as did I. I'm not for a second complaining about the *quality* of the feedback—those commenters took the time to say something specific about what they'd read, and gave the kind of feedback that gladdens a writer's heart.
But… three?
It's not as though popslash is actually swamped with fresh reading matter, these days.
I know there are good reasons why a lot of the people who used to comment aren't doing so any more. Maybe you don't read LJ as often as you used to, and you missed them completely. Maybe you just have too much going on in your life, and you simply don't have the time. Maybe you've moved on to another fandom and have no enthusiasm left for this one. Maybe it's something else. All perfectly valid reasons, I know that.
I just… I still love my pop boys, all ten of them now, not just Nsync. I still want to write about them—hey, I'm perhaps half a dozen stories away from completing the
fanfic100 prompts—and I still want to read about them. But fanfic is—for me, at least—so much more difficult in a vacuum. I want that interaction—it's not just that I want to know that people have read my words, I also need you to give me the impetus, the incentive, the atmosphere, the poke in the ribs, to make me write.
I need fandom.
But wait! you cry, that can't be right! You've written loads of stories! How true, how true, and thank you for paying attention. About 144, as it happens—it's a bit difficult to count, sometimes, because of epilogues, and some of them are poems, and… but, anyway. Let's call it 140 for the sake of having a nice, easy number. Closing fast on 400,000 words—which doesn't match up to some people's epic production levels, but is a heck of a lot of words for me.
And fewer than 20,000 words which I produced by myself. One twentieth. Five percent.
Let's break that down.
Fifty-two stories for some kind of challenge—SeSa and Remix, the Dragon Challenge, also wtf27, fanfic100 and sky_pie. Several one-offs. Fifty-two stories
Forty-six stories directly inspired by someone's prompt on fic_requests.
Others were written in response to fannish discussion of some kind—whether that was "I want more Chris/Kevin!" or, "let's discuss how consent issues are presented in fic". Others still were written specifically for one person. Sometimes there was a meme I decided to have a go at, or a bunch of other stories I'd been reading which made me think either, I'd like to try that, or, let's try a different approach to that. My very first popslash story was born out of the comments to one of Nopseud's Pornutopia chapters. And of course there can be overlap between inspirations. A scant dozen or so of my stories were written just because they occurred to me (and even that dozen may be an over-generous count, given the influence of other stories, and of Being In Fandom, on my output, but I couldn't pin anything down as the direct inspiration for those twelve).
So what's my point?
My point is, I need you. I need you to inspire me and poke me with ideas and persuade me that it's worth writing something down and sharing it. I need to feel that someone out there wants more of the stories I have to write, that someone out there appreciates the effort, that someone out there is still a part of this fandom that has got me so creative and productive and *happy*. Are you there? Are you still there?
The evidence is not good. I look at the feedback to the recent Dragon Challenge stories, and I think, great.
But… three?
It's not as though popslash is actually swamped with fresh reading matter, these days.
I know there are good reasons why a lot of the people who used to comment aren't doing so any more. Maybe you don't read LJ as often as you used to, and you missed them completely. Maybe you just have too much going on in your life, and you simply don't have the time. Maybe you've moved on to another fandom and have no enthusiasm left for this one. Maybe it's something else. All perfectly valid reasons, I know that.
I just… I still love my pop boys, all ten of them now, not just Nsync. I still want to write about them—hey, I'm perhaps half a dozen stories away from completing the
I need fandom.
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Date: 2010-06-24 07:03 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2010-06-29 02:59 am (UTC)I don't know if it's because I've tried to convince myself that I really can't write, that my role in fandom is not as a writer, or if it's influenced by the fact that writing for me is like taking all my wisdom teeth out all at the same time. Or even if it's to do with the decline in the amount I read (which has been in a general downward spiral once I started uni).
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Date: 2010-06-29 06:09 pm (UTC)I've always felt that my biggest contribution to a fandom is that I write stories—in fact, I don't consider myself *in* a fandom if I don't write stories in it. I don't really do anything *else*. (I'm only half-way into Adam Lambert fandom because what I've written featuring him is so far off the mainstream for that fandom. [And, of course, in consequence my stories aren't likely to get the kind of response that more mainstream ones do—well, that's fair enough, I guess.]) So I really need that incentive, and I mostly get the impulse to write from something external, ie another fan, a challenge, a prompt. I miss them!
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Date: 2010-06-29 09:12 pm (UTC)Now that I've dipped my toes into writing, though, I kind of understand the discouragement that comes from posting something you're really excited about and getting zero response. Odd feeling.
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Date: 2010-06-29 09:27 pm (UTC)And yes, it is discouraging to have made the effort of writing something and to have it go unnoticed. I mean, in *theory* we can just be proud of ourselves for having produced something that was worth producing... but in practice, it's really nice to have validation from someone else.
Sigh.
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Date: 2010-07-06 10:43 pm (UTC)Honestly, the popslash fandom feels like a ghost town to me. I'm still discovering old fandom posts in various abandoned corners of LJ, and it feels... a little odd, to be honest. And I feel like I'm just getting to the party when everyone else is hailing cabs and calling it a night. lol It is kind of disheartening. And I don't know that there's anything that can be done about it, other than accept the fact life is kind of sad, sometimes.
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Date: 2010-07-18 09:17 am (UTC)It's weird how quiet popslash is, because the people are still out there, still on LJ etc. I mean, there were twenty very enthusiastic Camp Sparklers, and we actually spent a good portion of our time there talking about pop subjects. I don't know why it doesn't seem to be translating into fic and feedback. Still. Awesome August, let's make some progress!