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If you're playing with beginner electronics, making something with a say a 10" x 10" footprint will be much easier than making something with a 1" x 1" footprint. You have to understand a lot less. Fiction writing is like that I think.
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Vonnegut is kinda different. I binged everything he wrote in college. I'll have to think about how his models relate to Campbell's.
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Replying to @DanielleFong
Yeah Vonnegut is a bit different. He has that great essay where he argues that real life story structure is basically a straight line.
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I do have idle plans of eventually working more on my fiction, but tbf, this stuff is interesting enough, I'll be fine if I end up just doing a gigantic yakshave exploring all this stuff and abandoning my fiction ideas. It's interesting in its own right.
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There's a sort of lean-startup model for nonfiction and I understand it well enough to even teach now. I think I could get any reasonably competent English speaker writing decent blog post level essays within a couple of months. There's a reliably executable learning curve.
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Fiction though, lacks both the agile startup learning curve AND any pedagogical model anyone can guarantee. There's a vast industry of people offering education, but none strikes me as reliably capable of getting you to a first good story even assuming you have decent ideas.
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I have a sneaking suspicion that the main value of all those expensive, intensive creative writing workshops and programs is that you block out enough immersive time and pay enough that you're kinda forced to figure it out or risk having wasted your money.
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Just like you learn foreign languages best by actually paying the big bucks to travel and live there for a few weeks. The situation forces you to pick up the language at least a little, and the cost provides an incentive. The immersion prevents all escape.
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When the famous programs bring on famous fiction writers etc. that's mostly just evening entertainment. The main value is being shut up in Oberlin or wherever and wondering if you've wasted your money.
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I've been sort of idly tweeting about this reading bunnytrail/yak shave for a while now. I oughta do an overview blog post of all the stuff I've looked at and what I've learned/failed to learn from them.
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The thing about fiction is that there’s no point writing a *bad* story. By contrast, there is often a point to writing bad non-fiction. If you have interesting enough things to say, it doesn’t matter if you say them badly. This is not true of fiction.
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If I knew I was writing a Catch-22 it’d be worth a decade of effort. Writing 10 dreck novels would likely be less fulfilling for me than flipping burgers for 10 years. Some authors manage to be both good and prolific, but unlike nonfiction there’s no strong correlation.
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I suspect fiction writing is naturally a guild economy, while non-fiction writing is naturally a free market. So when the internet killed distribution scarcity and tastemaker gatekeeping, nonfiction exploded but fiction remained basically the same.
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Fan fiction communities in relation to “published” fiction markets (text, screen) are a joke, compared to nonfiction social media vs old media. Non-fiction new media (blogs, newsletters) have pretty much brought all but the costliest investigative non-fiction to its knees.
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The only reason to publish non-fiction in old media now is street-cred in circles that don’t actually read much. But there’s reasons besides market access and cred to participate in the fiction guilds. They actually possess IP that’s still mostly shared via apprenticeship.
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In fields with a good “beginner game” how seriously you can take someone is a function of raw number of pots they’ve made. If they’ve made more pots the chances are good that they’ve made more *good* pots. A 200-pot person should be taken twice as seriously as a 100 pot person.
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Nonfiction, math, programming are like that. More words written = likely better writer More problems/proofs done = better mathematician More lines of code = better programmer More pots = better potter
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Fields that are NOT like that More startups != better entrepreneur More novels != better fiction writer More acting credits != better actor More movies != better director More bills passed != better politician More arrests != better detective
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Good question. I don’t think so. The learning curve seems intrinsically longer. It’s not a tech or tools problem. Kinda like better shoes won’t turn more people into Olympic-grade athletes. Slight chance AI could help, a la TextSpark.ai
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Replying to @vgr
Do you see any way the ecosystem of fiction could change in a meaningful way in the near future? Is there a product or cultural event that could upend it, or are we so far into the Internet age that the system has proven cemented?
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Neato! Russian Campbell. How come there’s a Russian version of everything?
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Replying to @vgr
I heard about Vladimir Propp in @lexfridman's interview of Vladimir Vapnik (can't remember if it was 1st or 2nd interview--both intense listens but worth attention for interesting ideas even if you don't care about ML/AI). Seems like Russian Campbell. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vladimir_
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