Consider, It Might Be Better Not To Know
I just
skimmed a review of a book where someone noted in the comments that overall
they loved the series, even though they felt a little lost at times. The comment struck me because the reviewer
noted that there were something they loved in this latest addition to the
series, something they though were meh
and others they didn’t get, yet the rating they gave was still pretty high (4
out 5).
I contrasted
this with other reviews (or feedback/critiques) I’ve seen for other works
online. There’s a lot of ‘why this, why
that, make this clear’ and it's posited as if any questions raised that don't make sense to the reader right away, are a very negative thing, when
technically, the opposite may not be.
As a reader,
you don’t really need to know everything on the first read through. I’d even go as far to say as you really don’t
want to. You should know/understand
enough that the flow of the story and suspension of disbelief is interrupted.
You should be able to fill in some gaps with a few theories and guesses that
make sense to the characters, world-building and plot. But you really don’t have to know everything,
right now.
Why would
you want that? Where’s the fun and the intrigue? Often books resonate with you
well after the story on the page is done because there are a few little niggles
in your mind. Sometimes those niggles
are enough for you to write the author; sometimes they are the very thing that
pulls you into the next book.
You know
what one of my greatest joys is as a reader? : re-reading a story later and
discovering something new—some nuance I missed the first time, or having a new
interpretation of something because I might be reading it in a different
mindset now, or with new knowledge gleaned from elsewhere—that delight in
discovery would have been lost if the author had pedantically laid every
mystery in the text wide open. Not only
that, but when the author fills in every nook and cranny of explanation it robs
you the reader the experience of making that book uniquely yours based on your
life experiences or what you may need from that story emotionally at that time.
Granted, it what’s missing from the text is
causing frustration and confusion, then, yes, perhaps the author should have
provided more clarity. The take away is,
enjoy not knowing for awhile and accept maybe never knowing except for what
your own imagination might supply.
On another note, yup, been absent again. So the progress report is: the job hunt continues, it's no fun and prettymuch is a drain on any creative energy.
Published on October 13, 2013 05:16
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