CHANGING BLOG ADDRESS
IMPORTANT NOTE TO ALL READERS:
I HAVE MOVED!
I have moved the whole blog to a new address. Please join me over there as no new posts are being added here and I have removed key info from this old version ...
PLEASE GO TO THE NEW ADDRESS: www.helpineedapublisher.blogspot.com
When you get there, PLEASE rejoin as a "follower" - changing addresses means I lose my 230 lovely friends!
NB also - all comments are intact on the new version.
I HAVE MOVED!
I have moved the whole blog to a new address. Please join me over there as no new posts are being added here and I have removed key info from this old version ...
PLEASE GO TO THE NEW ADDRESS: www.helpineedapublisher.blogspot.com
When you get there, PLEASE rejoin as a "follower" - changing addresses means I lose my 230 lovely friends!
NB also - all comments are intact on the new version.
Wednesday, 24 June 2009
NARRATIVE TRANSPORTATION
Why do we write fiction? Why should we? What does it do to the reader? Why? Why is it damned important? What will happen to the human race if we don't do it and if readers don't read it?
These questions and more are the ones I will attempt to answer in a speech next week. You can't come, sorry; but it hardly matters because in the course of my research I came across a wonderful blog, written by scientists/psychologists with an academic and passionate interest in the power of fiction. And their research articles are available on it. Free. Which is incredibly generous.
It's called Onfiction and I've put a link in my blog list, as well as here.
It is fascinating, inspiring and very important. And it even gives us novelists a load of useful pointers about engaging our readers and why some types of story engage more than others. Scientists call it "narrative transportation". I love it the whole concept of narrative transportation. I read an article about it in Scientific American Mind last year and it's stayed with me ever since. What more could a writer want than that the reader be transported into the world we create? (Sarah - many thanks for the link to that! Last time I looked it wasn't on-line and I'm delighted that it now is. Thanks to SciamMind too.)
Go carry your readers away!