Author Topic: How dark are you?  (Read 8418 times)

Offline Dom

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How dark are you?
« on: October 07, 2006, 12:12:54 AM »
Just curious...how dark of a writer do you consider yourself to be?

I just re-read a draft of something of mine, and it just hit me how...subversive it is.  It surprised me, and I generally consider myself a fairly dark writer.

So naturally I'm wondering how others rate themselves on the spectrum.  :)
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Offline terioncalling

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Re: How dark are you?
« Reply #1 on: October 07, 2006, 02:30:37 AM »
It varies.  There is a poem I wrote recently for my poetry class that's sort of dark and monochromatic and switches from mental to physical according to the people in my class.  That's the only recent dark thing I can think of besides a fanfic I'm writing on and off on.


Enshadowed thoughts, enshadowed minds,
enshadowed chains, holds, and bindings.

A shadowy room with a darkened lamp,
filled with figures with shadowy hands.
Shadowed blade cuts deep, so deep;
blood - black blood - pools at the shadows feet.

Enshadowed hands clench and shake,
trying vainly to find a shadowed escape.
"Why? WHY?" cries the enshadowed soul,
quaking in confusion and pain in the dark;
but the shadows don't answer, they just close in,
a suffocating presence, oh death-dealing fiends.

Cries in the shadows fail and fade,
only echoes remain and disappear in shame.

Shadowy figures slip away,
leaving behind only a shadowy space.
Black blood dries and cracks at the base
of a shadowy table with an enshadowed frame.

Enshadowed hands hang, limp and useless;
a shadowed form lies still, broken and forgotten.
"If I lose the light of the sun, I will write by candlelight, moonlight, no light. If I lose paper and ink, I will write in blood on forgotten walls. I will write always. I will capture nights all over the world and bring them to you." - Henry Rollins

Offline Belial

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Re: How dark are you?
« Reply #2 on: October 07, 2006, 04:10:07 AM »
It all depends on what I'm writing.

A lot of the time, i write comedic fantasy, why? Because I like to laugh.

But when I'm not doing that, it's not unknown for me to write dark fantasy (by "not unknown" I mean, if it's not comedic, it's usually dark), where I get to feel nice and sick as I write things.

It's always an interesting experience making yourself feel sick from what you're writing. I do it more than not actually, I suppose it doesn't say much for the state of my being, but it's good stuff, even if it is a little bit scary that I come up with it :P

Offline Tersa

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Re: How dark are you?
« Reply #3 on: October 07, 2006, 05:10:04 AM »
I don't think I'm really that dark aside from my sense of humor. I just have a taste for angsty, broody men.  :P

I always end up writing for the darkest male character I can find.  I don't try to, it's just who ends up fitting the best.  For example, the character I've been writing for the past few days is one of those people that a lot of days gets up and wonders why he heck he doesn't just climb to the top of a tall building and jump.  There's plenty of other characters I could be writing for but he's just the most interesting. *shrug*   

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Offline Lord Arioch

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Re: How dark are you?
« Reply #4 on: October 07, 2006, 06:05:13 AM »
I'm told that my stuff tends to be VERY dark.

I even had someone put it down after the first page and tell me they were to scared to go on. ;D

Offline Cathy Clamp

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Re: How dark are you?
« Reply #5 on: October 07, 2006, 08:05:46 PM »
My characters tend to ENJOY the deaths of others. In our first book, I wrote a torture scene that was done by the "hero" that my co-author insisted I remove before we submitted it.  It gave her nightmares. But she's written (and published) some stuff that gave me the serious creeps, too. So, I guess we're both pretty dark.

Just wait until I finally get a chance to work on the story I REALLY want to write---a dark little Cthulu story that will seriously bother people.  I'm aiming for Weird Tales, if it's not too dark for them...  ::)
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Offline terroja

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Re: How dark are you?
« Reply #6 on: October 08, 2006, 08:34:10 AM »
I think that most writers that think they're dark are just not very versatile. If I ever wrote a book that couldn't be "bright" on minute and "dark" the next, I think I'd throw away my pen forever.

Usually books that are just nonstop pessimism or sadism are just incredibly boring. How many consecutive tortures and deaths can you read before they lose any and all impact? The only time purely dark writing is ever actually disturbing is if there is something twisted about it. Someone getting decapitated with a rusty table saw is not nearly as interesting (or funny) as someone getting decapitated with a rusty tablesaw by Santa Clause while their children watch.

« Last Edit: October 12, 2006, 06:59:19 PM by terroja »
A man feared that he might find an assassin;
Another that he might find a victim.
One was more wise than the other.

Offline Belial

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Re: How dark are you?
« Reply #7 on: October 08, 2006, 08:02:53 PM »
Terroja, I'm afraid that I must disagree with your comment.

While it's true that nonstop pessimism and sadism do get boring, I wouldn't consider a book full of them to necessarily be "Dark". Not dark, just sick.

Most of the really good dark writing I've read is full of other things as well, love, hate, mercy, slaughter, redemption, downfalls. It's full of things... if you can't feel for the protagonist the story isn't going to be good.

"Dark" writing is a lot more than just sadism. It's a way of telling the story, it's dark and gritty, with horrific elements. That doesn't equate to sadism or angsty-ness though. Sadism is just one of the tools of dark writing. Like any tool it has it's uses and it's tasks, but it cannot do everything, it cannot be everything, there needs to be more.

Now that I've rambled, trying to get my ideas across (although not to my satisfaction) I think I'll stop before I confuse even myself. Hopefully it made some sense, but if not I'm sure i can rant some more quite happily.  :P

Offline Dom

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Re: How dark are you?
« Reply #8 on: October 08, 2006, 08:51:33 PM »
I agree with Belial.

Anita Blake is kinda, sorta dark.  (I'd call it gritty more then dark; I've never felt Horror of any sort while reading her stuff).  The Black Jewels Trilogy is dark.  The Kushiel series can be dark, particularly in Kushiel's Avatar, but overall is not.  Harry Dresden, to me, has a hint of darkness, but overall is not.

Regardless, I've noticed authors tend to write a...specific "shade" of darkness if you look at their careers overall.  Anne McCaffrey, Mercedes Lackey...both are NOT dark authors.  For me they're totally on the other side of the spectrum.  I get the impression that neither wants to delve into darkness well enough to write any situation or scene or character that is truly dark.  Piers Anthony falls here too.

C. S. Friedman, Joan D. Vinge, Robin Hobb are darker authors.  They tend to write greyscale, with any particular book being slightly lighter or darker then the others.

Firethorn by Sarah Micklem is dark.  Totally.  Then again Sarah Micklem has only put out one book.

Robert A. Heinlein is not dark, but he is rather subversive.

It's more the feel of the book, overall, like Belial said.
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Offline Saker Pup

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Re: How dark are you?
« Reply #9 on: October 08, 2006, 08:59:35 PM »
"Dark" writing is a lot more than just sadism. It's a way of telling the story, it's dark and gritty, with horrific elements. That doesn't equate to sadism or angsty-ness though.

Unless I misread completely, I believe that was Terroja's point.

Offline terroja

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Re: How dark are you?
« Reply #10 on: October 09, 2006, 12:20:50 AM »
"Dark" writing is a lot more than just sadism. It's a way of telling the story, it's dark and gritty, with horrific elements. That doesn't equate to sadism or angsty-ness though.

Unless I misread completely, I believe that was Terroja's point.

I think he misread.

That's okay. Some people are so interested in listening to themselves talk that they don't bother to pay more than cursory attention to anyone else's words.

 

A man feared that he might find an assassin;
Another that he might find a victim.
One was more wise than the other.

Offline Belial

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Re: How dark are you?
« Reply #11 on: October 09, 2006, 06:27:03 AM »

Usually books that are just nonstop pessimism or sadism are just incredibly boring. How many consecutive tortures and deaths can you read before they lose any and all impact? The only time purely dark writing is ever actually disturbing is if there is something twisted about it. Someone getting decapitated with a rusty table saw is not nearly as interesting (or funny) as someone getting decapitated with a rusty tablesaw by Santa Clause while their children watch.




"Dark" writing is a lot more than just sadism. It's a way of telling the story, it's dark and gritty, with horrific elements. That doesn't equate to sadism or angsty-ness though.

Unless I misread completely, I believe that was Terroja's point.


Again, i must respectfully disagree. Terroja equates sadism and pessimism as being "dark". However I have read dark stories that are neither sadistic, nor pessimistic. They are intinsically different things. As I said, sadism and pessimism can be tools towards dark writing, but they are by no means the be all and end all of dark writing.

The difference between what I said and what Terroja said is simply this: Terroja says that completely dark (i.e. all sadism and pessimism) is only interesting with a twist (i.e. his Santa Claus idea). However, I say that sadism and pessimism are one small part of dark writing. He says it's the be all and end all, I say it's a small tool, that writing can be dark without them. 

Offline Roxinos

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Re: How dark are you?
« Reply #12 on: October 12, 2006, 12:17:49 AM »
He's not saying it's the be all end all. He's saying that it is a part of it, but not an entirely necessary part of purely dark writing. There has to be something more. That twist. Which is similar to what you said.

But I could be wrong.

Offline Mickey Finn

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Re: How dark are you?
« Reply #13 on: October 12, 2006, 02:28:36 AM »
"If I ever wrote a book that could be "bright" on minute and "dark" the next, I think I'd throw away my pen forever."


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Offline terroja

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Re: How dark are you?
« Reply #14 on: October 12, 2006, 06:58:39 PM »
Terroja equates sadism and pessimism as being "dark".

I did no such thing. I, in fact, said the exact opposite of that. Keep trying though, you might just get something right one of these days.

Mickey: I meant to say couldn't, not could.
A man feared that he might find an assassin;
Another that he might find a victim.
One was more wise than the other.