tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9919027.post115679078843023080..comments2024-03-04T14:52:40.445+02:00Comments on pulpetti: On fan fictionUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9919027.post-1156864113975253602006-08-29T18:08:00.000+03:002006-08-29T18:08:00.000+03:00Yeah, you can of course point out that LITTLE WOME...Yeah, you can of course point out that LITTLE WOMEN is no longer in copyright, so it's free for each and everyone. Same goes for WIDE SARGASSO SEA and all of the Sherlock Holmes retellings and all the new Cthulhu stuff (which Lovecraft gave freely to his friends to use, to be sure).<BR/><BR/>But as I said, there's no way to be satisfactorily pro or against fanfiction. I fear, though, that most of it just bad writing.Jurihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03021010310386744591noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9919027.post-1156858105359384942006-08-29T16:28:00.000+03:002006-08-29T16:28:00.000+03:00There was a conversation on the interwebs not too ...There was a conversation on the interwebs not too long ago about whether the latest Pulitzer fiction prize winner, Geraldine Brooks’s <EM>March</EM> would qualify as fanfic.<BR/><BR/>It’s a tale set in the world of Little Women, with the girls’ father as the main character.<BR/><BR/>I have no great interest in fan fiction as such, but I found the arguments in that conversation interesting.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11744494570814728578noreply@blogger.com