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[personal profile] rolanni
This subject has come up in three different conversations, under three different guises in the past 24 hours, so I thought I'd bring it here and see what y'all think.

What, exactly, is with the need to have stories be "realistic"?  I mean -- a news story, that has to be "realistic," because you're reporting facts; events that actually happened, words that were actually spoken, actions that were actually taken or not taken. 

A fictional story, though -- note the use of the word fictional, as in science fiction -- that can be any dern thing the author wants it to be, provided she can bring it off.  Back when I was learning how to write, there was this thing that readers brought to a story called, "The willing suspension of disbelief," which is that piece of human consciousness that says, "Tell me a story."

It's not my job as a science fiction writer to teach piloting, or math, or genetics, or, heck, the fine art of gambling.  It's my job to tell the best dern story I can, right now, and if I do it right, and don't jostle the elbow of that  willing suspension of disbelief, then the story will deliver an emotional punch far different, and (IMNSHO) far deeper than that delivered by a "factual" story.

To recap -- I don't care if the premise of "The Cold Equations" is "realistically" flawed, or if the "realistic" math "proves" that that 98 pounds of extra cargo wouldn't make a bit of difference in the med ship reaching its port.  What I care about is the melant'i play -- the working out of the relationships; the exploration of human error, and necessity.

What about you?  Does a story have to be "realistic" in terms of what we know now in order to engage your interest and your heart?  Why or why not?

Date: 2006-09-04 08:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] janni.livejournal.com
I think characters need to not be so blatantly stupid that I'm thrown out of the story, but otherwise, almost anything is game. My problem with "The Cold Equations" isn't the science -- I'm willing to buy that that's how that universe works -- but that given the science, it would be that easy to sneak onto a spaceship. There'd be guards and a lock on the door at the least, surely -- and people would have some knowledge of the consequences, too, because they would be a big deal. (Also, in a story that's specifically exploring the fact that numbers don't have any give, I'm more likely to care that the numbers used in fact do have give, than if those numbers that are used in a story about space pirates, say.)

Otherwise, yeah, I don't care about complete realism and get impatient with folks that do. I want just enough to give me the illusion it's real -- how much is enough varies by story, but no story is going to be completely realistic.

Then, too, it's not like I really understand how a car or airplane works. My characters can use things that work in ways they and I don't fully understand, too.

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