Subject: Catharsis.
Author:
Posted on: 2010-07-22 04:31:00 UTC
I see people mutilating the books I love, and it's just so wonderful to read fics that show people setting it right. Simple as that. Plus, there's the opportunity to write what I guess is metafiction--something I've always liked, ever since I realized the concept existed--basically, stories about stories.
Killing Sues isn't particularly important to me; it's more of a means to an end. This would be why I've put my agents in Floaters. I want to try them all--exorcisms, geographical aberrations, messed-up crossovers, kidnapped canons, and yes, Mary Sues.
I learned some writing tips from the missions I read. I can only hope that other writers will eventually learn from the ones I write. If I can get past the writer's block on Page Five of mine, that is. :P
Something else I like about the PPC is the concept of the PPC itself. The idea of an organization that polices fan fiction just tickles my fancy. I keep on working out the details of the "rules" of the PPC continuum--which are internally consistent, despite the fact that they're nothing like the way our world works. (My standard approach when I fall in love with a new continuum is to find out everything about it.)
In the PPC, everything depends on irony and humor and Murphy's Law; and they're real "laws of physics", enforced by a Legal Department, no less. Even the inconsistent things have an explanation--HQ is just that weird, and what else would you expect from a place that runs on plot holes and has access to dozens of continua with time machines?
Also: The relief from angst, from "badass" characters, and from general taking-itself-way-too-seriously fiction. It's nice to see characters who face death and insanity every day without wangsting or turning into musclebound Schwarzenegger clones. I love watching underdogs succeed; and that's what PPC agents basically are. Very, very snarky underdogs, in most cases, which makes it even better. Even the "serious" PPC stories avoid the overly-dramatic issue. (Does anybody read the webcomic "Order of the Stick"? It's done a very similar thing, creating serious plotlines while keeping a great level of humor, much like the PPC.)
And of course there's the benefit of talking to other people who also love books. That's always a bonus for me; in real life, I mostly meet people who are into video games or TV shows, and I don't get the opportunity to talk about books all that much.