The question I have is, what does it mean when people critique romance novels as "written like fanfiction"? I haven't read much fanfiction since I was younger, but it is referring to something being too fluffy or outlandish? I remember some fanfiction reading better than certain books I've read!

I guess I'm just opening the floor to other's thoughts on the relationship between romance novels + fanfiction, if the two are mutually exclusive, and/or why some people may feel one is better than the other.


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Of course, all three of these are things that I would like to see. My goal is to become a published author and see my novel in book shops across the country. And if my book is a best seller, that means more people are reading and enjoying the project I dedicated so much time to. Plus getting a movie deal would be pretty amazing, as unlikely as it is.

Both of them wrote fanfiction about my novel several weeks ago. My friend presented a fanfiction to me along with their critique of the novel-in-progress. My wife wrote her own fanfiction at our writing retreat in Lake Geneva. Both of the fanfictions were a lot of fun, and both made me incredibly flattered.

My college friend wrote the first fanfiction for FanFact (which upset my wife a lot) as part of a critique for my manuscript. The logic was by reading this fanfiction I could get a better idea of how my readers were characterizing my...well, characters!

But I thought since these fuckers took up a majority of my reading life this year, I should review a couple of them, just for shits and giggles. (And because it feels weird reading and not reviewing stuff for you fine people.) Here are six of my favorites. These are all novel-length except for the Honorable Mention, which I just wanted to include because it emotionally destroyed me.

This fan-made graphic novel shouldn't be confused with the Friday Fanfilm of a similar name: Jason Rising from what I know they aren't connected and this is its own story set between Part 2 and Part 3 if I remember correctly.

There was a recent Kickstarter for a Friday the 13th graphic novel that got shut down due to a copyright claim and people have asked me whether that means that fans can't make F13-related content anymore. The simple answer is "no." The studios allow fan fiction and allow Kickstarters for fan films as long as certain guidelines are meant (e.g., no porn) and the budget is limited (about $50k). The studios are not going to allow a Kickstarter where someone is basically preselling a graphic novel. That's not "fan fiction," that's a business in competition with the studios. You can write stories or draw pictures & put them up on the internet for free with no problem. But if you plan on charging fans for your product, you have gone away from "fan fiction" and the studios will shut you down.

After is a 2014 young adult romance novel written by American author Anna Todd under her Wattpad name Imaginator1D and published by Gallery Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster. After is the first installment of the After novel series.

After was originally released as a fanfiction on Wattpad.[1] Anna Todd's writing of the novel was inspired by the music and fandom of One Direction. She took inspiration from singer Harry Styles and based the fanfiction on him.[2]

From November 2012 to August 2013, I wrote 10 fics, most of them novel length, all of them occurring in the same AU (alternate universe). My first fic, The Rose and the Thorn was my first attempt at writing fiction in about twenty-five years, and my first endeavor remotely as involved. It is entirely accurate to say that I learned to write fiction writing fanfic.

My project for National Novel Writing Month is finally complete! Capping out at over 57,000 words, Hogwarts Department of Human Resources is a Harry Potter fanfiction novel that images what would happen if, after the conclusion of the Harry Potter novels, Hogwarts finally established an HR department. Read all 30 chapters for free on Archive of our Own using the following link. Enjoy!

Royal Road is the home of web novels and fan fictions! In our amazing community, you can find various talented individuals who write as a hobby or even professionally, artists who create art for them, and many, many readers who provide valuable feedback and encouragement.

To the writers out there who are doubting writing fanfiction, I say go for it. Fanfic is just as valid as its counterpart, and it has its perks. Perhaps one day, someone will stumble upon your work late at night, craving a new adventure with their favorite characters. And that joy is what makes fanfic all worth it.

Fanfiction is very similar to original fiction, except that the characters and settings are often based on an existing universe. Most fanfiction is based on TV shows, movies, or books. However, it can also be based on video games, anime, or even songs. To see some examples of fanfiction, you can look at:

Even if you never publish the novel you spent years writing, writing fanfiction can help you develop the skills you need to become a novelist. Among those invaluable skills are storytelling, descriptive writing, and proofreading your writing. It can also help you develop relationships with people to whom you can showcase in your own original work. For example, if you write a fanfiction featuring Princess Peach and Mario, you can also introduce a few of your own characters, which allow you to practice character development and character building as well as potentially create characters you can use in your original works.

Great post, Hayley. Very informative.

I will add some authors detest fanfiction. However, they should feel privileged fans relate to the material and want to make it their own. As you said, fanfiction is a participatory culture.

I would love if one day fans make fanfiction of my stories because it will mean the stories I created will live on. How many authors wish for passionate fans? (as long as they are not stalkers, of course).

As a kid who grew up creating my own comic book and Doctor Who adventures, I approve of fanfic.

Anyone who scribbled Harry Potter fanfiction or dissected the latest teen drama with their friends knows. And the line between actor and character is often completely muddled for viewers that live far beyond the realities of Hollywood.

Colfer is best known in the literary world for his popular middle grade series The Land of Stories. In his latest novel, Colfer explores the world of television fandom and the trials and tribulations of teenagers on the brink of major life changes.

Here are the twelve most popular tropes used in romance novels. Bear in mind some tropes are loved by some and loathed by others. Tropes also come in and out of fashion. Virgin falling for alpha male Arab Sheikh who forces himself on her, used to be very popular. Not so much now.

Fanfiction is the largest literary genre about which there is virtually no scholarship. In an attempt to remedy this lack, my thesis project theorizes Sherlock Holmes fanfiction as an expression of readerly desire. Desire, in this case, connotes the sexual and the intellectual, the imaginative and the appropriative: ultimately, it is the urge, on the part of the reader, to get closer to the world and ideas of the source text. I argue that, in fanfiction, this project of proximity is executed through an examination of characters and their relationships using popular psychological and literary beliefs about selfhood and interiority as rooted in childhood and conceptualized as topographical space.

After a brief overview of the history of the Sherlock Holmes stories, their fans, and fan writing, I discuss adaptations, focusing on the popular BBC television show Sherlock, which caused a burst of creativity in the genre of Sherlock Holmes fanfiction by drawing attention to a romantic subtext between the two main characters.

In my concluding chapter, I look at parallels between the concepts put forward in the novel and the lives of the authors themselves. My final point contemplates the role of authors in envisioning society, and the potential held by cultural works in changing the antiquated labor and social relations of postcolonial Malaysia that trace back to the colonial era. 006ab0faaa

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