lizvogel: Banana: Good.  Crossed streams: Bad. (Good Bad)
lizvogel ([personal profile] lizvogel) wrote2014-07-15 11:44 am
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Yet another beta-reading tid-bit

One of the things I'm very leery of when looking for critique is what I call rules-parrots: those people who chant whatever writing "rules" they've adopted, and try to force every story to conform to them by rote at the expense of judging the story on its own merits.

As usual, Patricia Wrede says it better than I do:

"There are always folks around who have memorized a list of no-nos without understanding the reasons behind them, and they will complain bitterly if they notice you using anything on their list, regardless of what you’ve done with it or why."

I don't know whether the drive to parrot rules comes from insecurity about one's own judgment or a desire to boss others around (though I suppose they're not mutually incompatible). I do know it's profoundly unhelpful. Perhaps rules-parroting is a cop-out for a beta-reader in much the same way as using an unexamined cliche is a cop-out for a writer?
legionseagle: Lai Choi San (Default)

[personal profile] legionseagle 2014-07-15 04:10 pm (UTC)(link)
I couldn't agree more; it was one of the most frustrating thing in one critique group I was in. Especially where people had absorbed no-nos ("passive writing" and, inexplicably "gerunds" were favourites) which they seemed to be both violently against and quite incapable of identifying.
Edited 2014-07-15 16:11 (UTC)
legionseagle: Lai Choi San (Default)

[personal profile] legionseagle 2014-07-15 08:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Her blog is very good, isn't it? Thanks for putting me on to it.

I had one person tell me someone couldn't help my heroine down from her horse, because he wasn't the person she had identified as the romantic hero (it was, as a matter of fact, a historical detective story, not a romance).