This is an expanded version of an essay from Superversive SF, which no longer exists.
Please note: For the purpose of this essay, the term Fanfic or Fan Fiction is defined as applying solely to wish fulfillment literature.
It is defined this way because:
This way it is used by everyone in our modern culture who does not themselves write fan fiction—including by reporters and podcasters.
Wish fulfillment literature is awkward to write over and over.
If you write stories that are in the background of other people’s stories, but your stories are good, and you don’t make the mistakes referred to below—for the purpose of this essay—and this essay only—you are writing sequels, not fan fiction.
I realize that fanfic writers really love the term, to them, I apologize.
The speech:
Here at the Wright Household, this article is legendary.
This is in part because I’ve been talking about writing it for at least a year and a half before I did so. It is more, however, because of my now-famous speech—in which I laid out for two of our sons the main points I wished to cover in such an essay.
It was December of 2015, and we stood on the ramparts at Bear’s Den in the Blue Ridge Mountains, looking out upon miles of countryside. As we halted atop the rocks, where the Appalachian Trail passes, I spread my arm, gesturing toward the open valley stretching beneath us and exclaimed:
“Imagine an immense black fortress, stretching as far as the eyes can see. The vast bulk rises up over the Blue Ridges, dominating the landscape. It is made of solid basalt, and it stretches for miles and miles. It has smooth sides with no handholds, crisply-cut crenulations along the top, and looming towers, from which a lookout could spot anyone approaching from any direction.
“Now, imagine this fortress represents the personality and qualities of impressive characters, such as Dr. Doom, Spock, Snape, or Batman. Pick your favorite.
“Each ‘stone’ of the fortress wall represents a quality about that character. Each was carefully hand-placed by the creators—writers, artists, actors, etc.—who helped shape the character. Together, these blocks of character developing, backstory, speech patterns, appearance, and actions form, in the mind of the audience, the titanic, solid edifice that make up our favorite characters.
“Now imagine that in all that vast, impenetrable, solidness, there exists only one window. It is a round window, the size of a porthole.
“On one occasion, once, a candle passed by this window.
“This flicker of light, seen through the tiny window, represents the emotions displayed by our character, a brief glimpse of suffering or hope or love in an otherwise impassive character.
“Fan fiction narrows the focus of the camera to that window. Sometimes, maybe, it shows a little bit of the basalt surrounding it. Instead of one flicker of candlelight, it fills the window with flames and fireworks.
“It then relies on the fan to imagine that the fortress is still present, even though the enormous mile-long basalt bulk of the rest of it is never so much as glimpsed.”
And, this, folks, is—in a nutshell—the difference between wish-fulfillment fan fiction and the other stuff.
Terms:
Before we continue, let us pause for some definitions:
Professional – a writer who gets paid.
Amateur – a writer who does not get paid.
Well-Crafted Writing – solid writing and storytelling.
Fan Fiction or Fanfic – wish-fulfillment stories, most often written by people who love a work or genre but who are not serious writers.
For the purpose of this article, the term fan fiction has nothing to do with getting paid. Both professional writers and amateur writers can write solidly-crafted fiction or wish-fulfillment fiction. (If you write good stories in someone else’s background, for the purpose of this essay, you are writing well-crafted amateur fiction…or, if you publish it, a well-crafted sequel.)
Note: Just because fan fiction, as defined, is not well-crafted does not mean that it is wicked or stupid. It can be great fun to write, and millions of fans love reading it. Some fiction written by fans for fans is well-crafted and does not fit the definition of fanfic used in this article. However, even the badly written stuff can be great fun.
If you love writing or reading fan fiction, don’t let me or anyone else interfere with your joy!
However…fanfic is as a general rule not well-crafted, and, sadly—and this is more common now than when I first wrote this article—not always amateur.
Badly written stories with the earmarks of fanfic have spilled over into comics, Star Wars, Jane Austin’s sequels, and many other areas. Thus, there is a need to distinguish between well-crafted fiction and this kind of fiction.
That being said, let us look at our fundamental question: How do you tell well-crafted fiction from poorly crafted “fan fiction?”
Missapplying the Term:
Some people today try to sardonically apply the term fan fiction to anything that takes place in another writer’s background.
Using characters and locations from earlier works in one’s fiction, however, is an age-old tradition. Writers in ages past were expected to build on what had come before them. If it were the case that anything written using someone else’s characters or setting was automatically fan fiction, we would have to refer to Mid-Summer’s Night Dream by Shakespeare as “Huor of Bordeaux fan fiction.”
Or label every episode of Batman or Superman that was not written by the original creator of the character as fanfic.
Both of these things would just be silly.
I first started wondering about this subject when I saw someone refer to my husband's (author John C. Wright)’s novel Awake in the Nightland as “Nightland fanfic.” I remember frowning and thinking, “Something’s not right about that.”
Why is there a difference between what John was doing and fanfic? To explore that, let’s take a look at editor Andy Robertson’s story of discovering John’s Nightland tales/
Mr. Robertson was running the Nightland website, for which he was soliciting stories based on The Night Land by William Hope Hodgson. He described how he and a few other writers were playing at writing Nightland stories, basically writing Nightland fan fiction…and then, John, this writer he had never heard of, submitted the real thing.
Andy Robertson recognized there was a difference between fan fiction and what John had submitted. One felt like a game. The other felt real.
It made him feel the way the original stories made him feel.
Brief aside: The Night Land is a story about a man looking for his wife in a dark and destroyed end-of-time world. Mr. Robinson’s beautiful wife had died young, and sometimes he would wake up in the morning and talk to her…and then wake up again and that had been a dream. The Night Land resonated with him in a way that most of us cannot even image.
So when he spoke of the spirit of the original, he knew of what he spoke.
Can Official Works Be Fanfic?:
This subject reared its head again with the publication of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child. The script was approved by the author. Thousands have seen the play, and, yet, the debate rages on: Is Harry Potter and the Cursed Child fan fiction?
The fact that a serious debate can take place on this subject regardless of the original author’s support shows that there is more to the issue than just ownership of the character.
What finally pushed me over the edge, however, was a brief, unpleasant foray into modern Marvel comics.
Marvel has replaced all the original heroes we love with new heroes of the same name who are different. This might not be too bad, if the characters were noble and heroic, but they are not. The old set of characters were brave and bold. The new set of characters…emote.
They stand around while others admire or adore them, and they do easily tasks that the real heroes found difficult.
I kept thinking that there was something familiar about this kind of writing. I had seen it before. But it took thinking about it for a bit before I sat up and exclaimed, “Oh, I get it! They’re writing Marvel fanfic!”
For all I know, they actually hired fan fiction writers to be their current writers. If so, that would explain a lot!
What Is Fanfic?:
So what is fanfic?
The key to understanding the difference between well-crafted writing and wish-fulfillment writing is to remember the fortress and the window.
You can write about the fortress without mentioning the window. But, you can’t write about the window without depending on the reader to be picturing the fortress. Because the whole point of showing flames and fireworks in the porthole is to give the impression that these are the true passions secretly raging in the heart of the otherwise impassive character.
If the audience is not picturing an impassive character, the fanfic doesn’t work.
Fan fiction, by nature, is parasitical. Like mistletoe growing on oak, it cannot succeed without a host story, the work of the original creator, to prop them up. In this case, the oak is the “fortress”—i.e., the work done by the original creator/series/etc. to establish the character.
No one is amazed when Spock falls for Mary Sue—unless they believe the person doing the falling is the one true Spock, the emotionless Vulcan.
Because winning the heart of a Vulcan is exciting.
Winning the heart of Joe, an overly emotional guy?
Not so much.
No one is amazed Dr. Doom is beaten by Gary Stu, unless they are picturing the character being beaten as the most impressive villain of them all, the tyrant ruler of Latvaria with his vast armies of robot Dooms. Actually being able to finally defeat Dr. Doom, at least without the use of squirrels, would be truly exciting.
But if Gary Stu merely beats Steve the Thug?
Not so much.
Committing Violence Against Fictional Characters:
Basically, well-crafted fiction tells a story that is true to the characters and setting. A wish-fulfillment story puts the personal desires of the writer and the fans above the needs of the character and plot.
Jason Rennie, former publisher of Superversive Press, described it:
“The bad stuff feels wrong because it is forcing characters and a universe into a direction it won’t naturally go. You need to do violence to the universe like some incompetent interventionist god to make it bend the way you want.
But the good stuff, like the [Monster Hunter International] add-on stories work because they fit in the universe and don't do violence to it. They feel like they belong.
Lady Thor and Black Chick Ironman do violence to the universe to fit, as does Mary Sue etc.
But good "fan fic" like Star Trek Continues doesn't do that.”
Mr. Rennie defines wish fulfillment fan fiction as “doing violence to the [fictional] universe.” What does he mean by that? What is the kind of violence that is usually done?
The first kind of violence is emotional.
More about the Fortress:
I mentioned the tiny porthole through which a single candle passes as an analogy for the emotions shown by some stalwart characters. They act out of duty or purpose and do not let their emotions come between them and their goal. Only rarely, at moments of high tension, do they occasionally reveal the single crack in their fortress/armor.
Fan fiction rips open that crack and makes the whole story about emotions—emotions that the character would never ordinarily express.
Why does this happen?
Precisely because the character is so impassive—or whatever the quality that the wish-fulfillment version is jettisoning.
Let’s use an example:
Mary Sue Riley is a fan of Star Trek. She loves Star Trek. She loves Spock. She dreams of being the one human who would win the heart of the nigh-heartless logical Vulcan.
She loves this idea so much that she decides to write a story where this happens. She, Mary Sue, wins the heart of Spock! Ah! What wonder! What joy!
Spock…the unemotional, the unattainable, the great black fortress large enough to span the Blue Ridges, loves her!
But she doesn’t know how to do this. She does not understand Spock. She doesn’t know how to sculpt a story so amazing, so difficult as to actually portray a character who could reasonable win the heart of the logical, unemotional Spock.
So, to quote Mr. Rennie, she applies violence.
She just declares that Spock is in love with her self-insert character and expects the reader to act as if this is, in fact, the real Spock, and he actually fell in love with her for real.
She puts her camera on the porthole of Spock’s heart and never bothers to pull the camera back to show the fortress or how the fireworks got inside. She just expects the reader to do the work
Sadly, we see this over and over today in books, on streaming shows, and on the Big Screen—writers who expect the reader to picture the fortress while they apply violence to the character until they are so warped that they don’t even begin to resemble the original.
Abusing Your Characters:
After prohibition ended in America, it became popular to have movies that glorified drinking, such as Philadelphia Story, where partway through the story, the dignified main characters would drink too much and suddenly blurt out what they were really thinking.
Or they would kiss someone that they would never otherwise have kissed.
Emotional fanfic treats the characters as if they are perpetually drunk…or worse…so that they act without inhibitions, saying or doing things that the real character—the one that has to live with the consequences of their actions and who, usually, has some modicum of dignity—would never do.
Fanfic characters blurt out their loves, hates, romantic longings, and fears…personal things most characters would never reveal come pouring out of their mouths. Even worse than never reveal, things they would never even feel come gushing out.
Other types of violence include:
Talking about nothing real—conversation limited to things like relationships, how awesome they are, and other simplistic conversations
Overly simplistic relationships: everyone is so buddy-buddy, without the real differences of personality that every human relationship faces.
Super-cool wow wonder—a lot of time is spent on how much other people admire the character.
The ability to easily beat anything…quickly.
The Worf Shaped Balloon!
Years ago, John and I used to watch Star Trek: Next Gen, which we, for the most part, enjoyed very much. But they had one tendency that used to drive me crazy. In order to show how tough an enemy was, they would have the enemy beat Worf the Klingon.
Only, they never spent any time building the fortress that is Worf—ie, showing him using his great fighting prowess to win the day. They merely traded on the viewers’ knowledge that Klingons were tough in order to demonstrate how much tougher others were.
This went on for a while, with Worf being tossed around in a number of shows in a row. Then one day, emotional counselor Deanna Troy was possessed by an evil power, and—to show how EVIL the power was—she picked up and tossed…Worf.
And I jumped up from where I sat on the couch and shouted at the TV: “That’s not Worf! That’s a Worf-shaped balloon!”
And that is what happens in fanfic. It’s not Snape who falls in love with Hermione, it’s a Snape-shaped balloon. It’s not Sabertooth—the baddy who used to beat Wolverine to a pulp—that Wolverine’s adopted daughter beats up with one punch, it’s a Sabertooth-shaped balloon. (Wish that was fanfic. That one was Marvel.)
And that, in a nutshell, is the problem with most wish-fulfillment pieces. Sooner or later, the reader looks up from the porthole where all these wild emotions are happening and exclaims, “This isn’t a fortress! It’s just a vaguely fortress-shaped balloon!”
Engraftments and The Brilliance that is Tom Simon:
Essayist extraordinaire Tom Simon offers both a historical perspective and additional terms that could be useful to future discussions on this topic:
“Puts me in mind of the flap between Samuel Richardson and Henry Fielding. Richardson more or less invented the epistolary novel with Pamela, which was a shamelessly sentimental and long-winded tear-jerker that even most aficionados of eighteenth-century novels now find unreadable. Henry Fielding wrote Joseph Andrews, a novel ostensibly about Pamela’s brother, but in a completely different tone – lighthearted, humorous, and salted with picaresque adventure. Richardson was furious and called Joseph Andrews a ‘lewd and ungenerous engraftment’ on his own novel.
“In the same way, we could fairly call 50 Shades a lewd and ungenerous engraftment on Twilight; lewd, especially. Wicked is an engraftment on The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Fan fiction of the Mary Sue or slash types could be generally described as engraftments; whereas a genuine contribution to a canon grows organically from the characters and situations already developed.
“Perhaps we could reverse-engineer a terminology for this. The original source material would be root stories; sequels and prequels and shared-world stuff, if done competently and with respect for the root, would be branches; stuff that really does not belong, but is forced on out of fan-service, moneygrubbing, or sheer self-indulgence, we can call by Richardson’s term – engraftments.
“This not only takes the pro-vs.-amateur question out of the equation, it is also independent of the authorized-vs.-unauthorized issue. For instance, The Phantom Menace may have been an authorized part of the Star Wars canon, but it is so different in tone and intention, and does such shameless violence to the previous canon, that we may fairly call it an engraftment on Star Wars – even though it was done by the same writer and director.”*
*—This was written before the horror, the horror that is the Star Wars sequels.
Servants of the Muse:
An author of well-crafted fiction is the servant of his muse. He listens to the words and wisdom the Divine Muse sends. He writes a story that honors the characters, plots, and themes he has been given.
A wish-fulfillment writer expects the plot and characters to perform for him. He, as we heard above, does violence to the source material. Or, at the very least, he leans on the source material for the force of his story, without himself adding to the “fortress.”
You have heard of people who are tone-deaf.
Wish-fulfillment fiction is muse-deaf.
There are many "official" works that set out to sabotage long-standing IPs, wearing the skinsuit while demanding the same respect it had earned from fans in the past.
I call this anti-fanfiction.
They want the existing fanbase to accept their anti-fanfiction as canon. They will gladly buy the IP rights to further validate it.
Many years ago I wrote a fan fic in the Buffy Universe when my writing career was in it's infancy. It wasn't altogether bad and I moved on to other things. Time passed and I grew as a writer, got some books on Amazon that were modestly received. I mentioned in passing on my web site that i had been working on a story in H. Beam. Piper's Kalvan universe. A lot of people said they wanted to read it. I posted it and then more books as I finished them. One day I got an email from John Carr, the right's holder for Piper's original book, and he asked if I'd agree to publishing them under his imprint. All I had to do was make some changes. Carr was publishing his own follow-on stories to Piper''s work and I was excited, Then the last of his books in the series came out, and while he didn't kill off the main character, he did trash him (at least in my opinion).
This is the big danger to writing in someone else's universe -- although of late entirely too little attention is being paid to "canon.' And the collapse in audiences for a lot of series is proof positive that things have gone too far. Star Wars, Star Trek, Marvel,DC, and many Disney works and many, many more.
All we can do to fight this is voice our opinions and withhold our gelt. Slowly, slowly things are changing.
Some of the stories they've reworked only need a slightly different premise and the writer can reimagine it as much as desired. Who doesn't imagine what movie character you'd want to play one of your characters? God knows writers have been changing themes and doing it for hundreds of years! Of course the kicker, as you say, is the writing needs to be good, and the writer has to exercise some imagination. Did I mention the need for good writing?