Subject: Well...
Author:
Posted on: 2010-06-24 19:50:00 UTC
I used to write in-story author's notes... but after a while I moved on to annotations and end chapter notes instead.
Subject: Well...
Author:
Posted on: 2010-06-24 19:50:00 UTC
I used to write in-story author's notes... but after a while I moved on to annotations and end chapter notes instead.
His Breakfast of Champions completely screwed the fourth wall to some level far below the ninth of hell. Vonnegut was interacting with his character (Kilgore Trout) /as the author/, with a godlike control over Trout.
On another note (no pun intended), another key characteristic of good author's notes is that they don't start with A/N, AN, A-N, or any variation thereof. It makes them part of the writing rather than something that smacks you in the face.
...I'm going to have to use that once I get Permission.
Using a storyteller as the narrative voice isn't usually done anymore, unless it's a first-person narrative. It's too bad, really. There's something pleasantly familiar about it, and it makes for excellent reading-aloud.
Of course, most ficcers wouldn't know the difference between narrator and author anyway, so it doesn't do them any good at all.
~Neshomeh
Should read, "...they do so in a story that hasn't established that this is okay, either because the story is written as though it were being told by a storyteller, or because the tone of the story is humorous in a certain specific way."
No, I haven't. But these are good! Thanks for sharing!
That author gets away with it for two reasons: One, it's funny, and two, it occupies a clear space in the text that doesn't distract from the story.
The problem with most in-text author's notes is that they come out of nowhere and distract from the story, often without saying anything useful. The general rule is, if it's really important, it should be included in the narrative. If it isn't really important, it can wait until the end of the chapter.
~Neshomeh, who has never used author's notes except at the beginning of the story on ff.net or at the end in other places.
Were I she I would have put the note-song at the beginning or the end (probably the end), but as it's done I wouldn't have been much bothered.
I used to write in-story author's notes... but after a while I moved on to annotations and end chapter notes instead.
I actually used intext ANs on occasion. Then I came here and found out it was seen as bad form to do so.
So now I'm going to use endnotes instead.