How confident are you when writing? Confidence about the subject, the technology, the characterisations, the plot, the world? Etc.
Storytelling is a one way medium, in that we the authors, if we ever reach the grand masses, will seldom be able to take every individual's feedback to heart. We tell it how we believe it is, not the other way around. We decide who lives and dies in our stories.
When reading, especially fiction, we take for granted that the author knows, that the author is correct in their word usage. We read on because the words that came before interested us and we want to see where the next words take us. But we can not question these words as we read them, we can not ask the author questions, we can not interrogate the book nor the author. We must accept every word for what it is. And that may be good, for otherwise, we could spoil surprises.
So, we need to be confident in our writing. Confident that we have managed to bring along all the necessary words for the telling of the story we want to tell. We need to make sure it all makes sense.
How do you stay credible in your story? How do you maintain your story's cohesion? We may forget that a lamp was blue in one scene and write it as red in another, which diminishes our authority.
How important is if for an author to maintain their authority? (To make sure that all these components of cohesion, correctness, credibility, etc, are all kept throughout a story.)
For me, I am getting more and more confident about the world I'm building, how it works, and why. But someone familiar with my universe could probably poke a thousand holes in it. My authority can be questioned. Is it perhaps a sign of a weak story? I don't know.
What I'm not at all confident about, and where my authority will certainly be challenged, is reality, more specifically our physical reality. I know why an apple falls from a tree, in the simplest terms, but I don't know why the apple disappears in a black hole. (I may have a solution for this and that is to set my stories in another universe.) But with these issues I have, I may paint one planet a certain way and another another way, none of which may make sense physically. (But I don't worry too much about it, since it is fiction.)
How about you? How's your authority?
Storytelling is a one way medium, in that we the authors, if we ever reach the grand masses, will seldom be able to take every individual's feedback to heart. We tell it how we believe it is, not the other way around. We decide who lives and dies in our stories.
When reading, especially fiction, we take for granted that the author knows, that the author is correct in their word usage. We read on because the words that came before interested us and we want to see where the next words take us. But we can not question these words as we read them, we can not ask the author questions, we can not interrogate the book nor the author. We must accept every word for what it is. And that may be good, for otherwise, we could spoil surprises.
So, we need to be confident in our writing. Confident that we have managed to bring along all the necessary words for the telling of the story we want to tell. We need to make sure it all makes sense.
How do you stay credible in your story? How do you maintain your story's cohesion? We may forget that a lamp was blue in one scene and write it as red in another, which diminishes our authority.
How important is if for an author to maintain their authority? (To make sure that all these components of cohesion, correctness, credibility, etc, are all kept throughout a story.)
For me, I am getting more and more confident about the world I'm building, how it works, and why. But someone familiar with my universe could probably poke a thousand holes in it. My authority can be questioned. Is it perhaps a sign of a weak story? I don't know.
What I'm not at all confident about, and where my authority will certainly be challenged, is reality, more specifically our physical reality. I know why an apple falls from a tree, in the simplest terms, but I don't know why the apple disappears in a black hole. (I may have a solution for this and that is to set my stories in another universe.) But with these issues I have, I may paint one planet a certain way and another another way, none of which may make sense physically. (But I don't worry too much about it, since it is fiction.)
How about you? How's your authority?