Fanfiction and Me
Jul. 2nd, 2009 12:54 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
The topic of fan fiction came up this afternoon with a writer friend and how it can benefit the sales of a writer.
She asked me hypothetically if I would ever approve of Dylan and the Dream Pirates fan fiction provided it was picked up by a publisher.
Cut provided so that my wife doesn’t kill me.
I answered my usual answer that I’d give the same generic implied consent that J.K. Rowlings gave Harry Potter fan fiction. I very much believe that Rowling’s acceptance of fan fiction helped drive her sales to amazing levels. I am not saying this was the only thing that made Harry Potter a success, but I think it really helped early on. Truthfully, that is how I first heard of Harry Potter and I own all of the books. More than one copy for some of them.
And if people were writing fan fiction about my stories, they were reading my novel and a consumer of my fiction.
And then I added that there were less opportunities for fan fiction since Dylan and the Dream Pirates had mostly male characters, but that if it happened, I’d be thrilled and dancing all the way to the bank.
Note: Yes, I know that half of fan fiction is M/M romance, but the other half does include M/F.
And then my friend pointed out that Dylan and the Dream Pirates had talking cats and living ships and that where there is a fandom, there is a way.
People are strange.
And that's not always a bad thing.
She asked me hypothetically if I would ever approve of Dylan and the Dream Pirates fan fiction provided it was picked up by a publisher.
Cut provided so that my wife doesn’t kill me.
I answered my usual answer that I’d give the same generic implied consent that J.K. Rowlings gave Harry Potter fan fiction. I very much believe that Rowling’s acceptance of fan fiction helped drive her sales to amazing levels. I am not saying this was the only thing that made Harry Potter a success, but I think it really helped early on. Truthfully, that is how I first heard of Harry Potter and I own all of the books. More than one copy for some of them.
And if people were writing fan fiction about my stories, they were reading my novel and a consumer of my fiction.
And then I added that there were less opportunities for fan fiction since Dylan and the Dream Pirates had mostly male characters, but that if it happened, I’d be thrilled and dancing all the way to the bank.
Note: Yes, I know that half of fan fiction is M/M romance, but the other half does include M/F.
And then my friend pointed out that Dylan and the Dream Pirates had talking cats and living ships and that where there is a fandom, there is a way.
People are strange.
And that's not always a bad thing.
no subject
Date: 2009-07-02 08:53 pm (UTC)I agree. Things that have a thriving fandom tend to be interesting, at the very least.
no subject
Date: 2009-07-02 08:58 pm (UTC)I met a lady during a convention that listened to me talk about short stories that was very into The Greatest American Hero.
Made me remember that series with fondness.
no subject
Date: 2009-07-03 06:58 pm (UTC)