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Hi --
<p>Just as I was about to delete my OT-Chatter box wholesale, this topic
caught my eye ....
<blockquote TYPE=CITE><tt>I'm curious about why people choose to read or
not to read fanfic.</tt>
<br><tt>And how's the decision worked out? (e.g. did you start reading
fanfic</tt>
<br><tt>and wish you hadn't? did you have your mind made up one way
or the</tt>
<br><tt>other and then change it?)</tt></blockquote>
Back about this time last year, Lori plugged her first chapter of PoU over
on another HP group. I had to ask what she was talking about because
(a) I'd never heard the term fanfic, (b) I had no idea what ship meant
or what H/H stood for. <vbg> Now look at me!
<p>I had never read any fantasy lit before HP (and might never have picked
it up had I known it could be classed as fantasy ... although I've since
revised my preconceptions about that genre). I'd definitely not read
any sci-fi. These genres seems the most apt to spawn fanfic so I'd
never heard of the concept before. There's just *not* any Laura Ingalls
Wilder fanfic out there!
<p>Anyway, I was intrigued & got hooked pretty quickly. I didn't
hear about ff.net until sometime later -- probably at least a few mths.
I tried to look around over there, but I decided pretty quickly that it
wasn't worth my time. I'm very picky . . . and I rely on word-of-mouth
now to get the really good stuff. In truth though, pretty much the
only fanfic I read are the offerings on the PoU group and the HP_Paradise
group at this point. This is more than enough to keep me busy since
Lori, Cassie, Ebony & Heidi are all churning out novel-length fanfics.
<p>I don't have any problem with the notion that I'm "tainting" my views
of canon. I really haven't, as yet, ever *sworn* that some particular
tidbit was canon & have it turn out to be fanon instead. I can
keep track of it all fairly well in my head I think. Maybe I'm just
flattering myself, but I do think it's possible to keep the two universes
separate. It would be really interesting though if someone devised
a quiz that included questions with fine nuances & asked you to distinguish
canon from fanon. Alas -- something else *I* don't have time for!
<p>Anyway .... no, I don't think fanfic is absolutely definitively doomed
to ruin canon for everyone. I think it's quite possible to read &
enjoy both.
<p>It's also interesting that fanfic can make you think about canon in
a completely new way, and after all, what could be wrong with thinking
about a new analysis or take on a canon situation? Heidi's Surfeit
of Curses is a perfect example. Who's to say it won't be revealed
that Hermione has been in a study group with Draco for years now?
Writing & reading well-written fanfic can really make you get into
the characters' heads. It can also really make one think hard about
the different paths that JKR might choose to take.
<p>I love it, and judging from the results of the poll that Amanda set
up a few months ago, about 75% of our membership at least reads fanfic
on occasion (with the majority falling into devoted consumers and/or writers
of fanfic categories).
<p>Penny
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