In Long Ago Days of Yore. . .

Getting a piece of fiction written and published once took a bit of work. First, there was that literacy thing–you know, being literate enough to at least have a fair idea when you’d just put something down on paper that proved you didn’t have the first clue what you were taking about, for one thing. *sigh* Developing that kind of literacy takes a LOT of reading and perhaps quite a bit of RW experience as well, in many cases.

Then, if one were literate enough to at least have a clue about the deficiencies in one’s storehouse of knowledge and experience, the ability to correct, or at least seriously address, those deficiencies used to come in handy.

And that’s not the whole skill and knowledge set that was once very, very beneficial.

Just having a pedestrian imagination and a verbal vocabulary defined by the lowest common denominator of popular media is all it seems to take to get a novel published nowadays. And the stupider the plots and dumber the characters, the better. *sigh* Evidence: Dan Brown.

One of the worst things I see writers do mimics typical Hollyweird/BoobTube writing. When people who barely manage to inch into the first standard deviation above the norm try to write characters who are more than just average, they tend to write themselves and their acquaintances. Trying to write dialog for a very literate and “brilliant” scientist with a nominal IQ of something north of 150 using a semi-literate (or often even subliterate) mind capable of handling abstract thought at about IQ 115 results in characters that appear to be literate and brilliant only to persons to whom a Zabriskan Fontema appears to be a genius.1

To anyone with more than two active synapses between their ears, such characters seem to be dumber than a bag of hammers.

*meh* I do find such writing marginally interesting, though, as a window into the dull minds of the authors. Of course, when I ask myself, “What WAS this author THINKING?!?” the answer is usually, “Oh, right. Nothing at all. . . ”


1Visiting with a bright, thoughtful and literate person in the upper reaches of the first standard deviation above the norm (according to this person’s estimation; my experience of their abilities leads me to believe their one known experience with IQ measurement fell victim to test anxiety) has spurred me to expand this a bit.

Yes, “merely” bright people can write characters who are “brilliant” and do it competently, creating believable characters, BUT (and this is one HUGE badonka-donk “but”;-)) such persons MUST do their homework! Their research should include a LOT of reading of truly brilliant thinkers (and “conversation” with those thoughts read), face-to-face conversations with such persons–both casual and on-topic in those persons’ areas of expertise–and review of their characterizations and dialog by a literate person whose intellect is of a comparable level to that of the character written.

Better, of course, would be for an author to simply be of the class of persons he is characterizing, to have among his peer group more than a few persons of similar intellect, etc. But, alas! that is NOT the case with Hollyweird/BoobTube-influenced “bright enough for success in a dumbed-down high school setting” subliterates who seem to write most of the “genius” characters in contemporary fiction. *sigh*

BTW, while I enjoy the show in small doses, “The Big Bang Theory” is a very nearly perfect example of this problem in writing. Yes, it has at least one really bright consultant helping to get most of the science references at least within the ballpark of contemporary “consensus science,” but the characters are more laughable caricatures of nerds than perhaps the writers intend. . . or at least in ways the writers could hardly intend. It seems obvious from the writing (and directing and acting) that, aside from minimal input to keep “science-y” comments mostly on track, the folks involved in producing the show fit pretty well into the “semi-literate, nearly bright, clueless about genius” category of content creators I deplore here.

*shrugs* The show’s still entertaining in other ways, and if I view the “brilliant” characters as simply sophomoric poseurs with delusions of brilliance, it occasionally ends up being pretty enjoyable fluff.

But a steady diet would gag a maggot.

8 Replies to “In Long Ago Days of Yore. . .”

    1. I never owned copies of Doc Smith’s pulp in my youth. My first girlfriend (yeh, I was her “practice boyfriend” and she was my “practice girlfriend” *heh*) way back in high school had ’em all and I read those. I know they were seminal 20th Century sci-fi, but they all seemed rather wooden to me. I still enjoyed them, partly because Edward Elmer Smith really was about as smart as his characters. *heh*

      A bunch of Doc Smith’s books are available in ebook format now–quite a few of them for free, both from Amazon and from Gutenberg.org–and I’ve downloaded all that are available in various ebook formats. I’ve only re-read two so far, and I will probably re-read most or all of the others, but it’ll have to be in bits and pieces, because the writing, while literate and well-edited for orthography, is just a bit shallow, as really is fitting for the medium of pulp fiction (that’s not a criticism of the books as much as it is a matter of personal taste).

      [And can you believe I fitted that paragraph into just two sentences? ๐Ÿ˜‰ ]

  1. Hm… the Arisians and the Eddorians… ine of these reminds me of De…

    No, I don’t think I’ll go there…

  2. Hm… the Arisians and the Eddorians… ine of these reminds me of De…

    No, I don’t think I’ll go there…

    1. Na. The “De. . . s” aren’t, as a class, within several hundred orders of magnitude as intelligent as the Eddorians, although they’re doing their best to approach Eddorian-level evil. And Lensman model of the sort of gnostic dichotomy of good and evil (Arisian-Eddorian) breaks down even further if one were to posit a model of “De. . . s” and “The Stupid Party” in opposition. *feh* The Stupid Party’s idea of “opposing” the “De. . . s” is to bend over and pitifully plead, “Please, may I have another?”

      That’s hardly analogous to the galactic struggle between Good and Evil posed by the Arisian-Eddorian conflict, now is it? Hmm? ๐Ÿ˜‰

  3. That’s partly while I wasn’t going to go there. Although the word “evil” wasn’t quite what I had in mind… more amoral and ruthlessly power mad.

    But yes, the intelligence factor is surely lacking.

  4. I’ve been downloading them from Gutenberg today. I’ll hit Amazon next.

    I did pull down “Skylark of Space” from Gutenberg this morning – sadly the epub version looks corrupt. Time to dig out my kindle to e-pub conversion utility.

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