Ender's Game Author chews out Rowling
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QuibblerofDoom — 17 years ago(May 14, 2008 07:21 AM)
I know Thumbelina112233 you would think he would have checked to see the outcome of the infamous Nancy Stouffer v JK Rowling case?
As for JKR "copying" JRR Tolkien and CS Lewis, I am a fan of both of them however their stuff wasn't all that original either, they "copied" people like William Morris and his work The Well at the World's End. Fantasy didn't start with these two you know. -
bivil — 17 years ago(June 26, 2008 04:17 PM)
Honestly, for a guy who claims to have all this "respect" he sure does a lot of bitching about something he clearly hasn't researched properly, may I remind people that the author with the "Larry Potter" character in her book only added "and the Muggles" to the title of her novel after JKR success so she could sue Jo for plaigarism(sp1c84?).
Speaking of proper research, Orson Scott Card isn't claiming "to have all this 'respect.'" And speaking of proper research again, Nancy K. Stouffer didn't write
Larry Potter and the Muggles
. The characters were in separate stories, which is a fact that you, Card, and most of the world seem unable to get straight. By the way, I realize that you're on a first-name basis with Rowling and must therefore be a close personal friend, but do your best to step back and get a clearer perspective. That's the advice Jackie Derrida used to give me. -
Grizzly_McThornbristle — 17 years ago(July 28, 2008 07:16 PM)
One cannot begin to discuss the literary meritis of Orson Scott Card; he has none. He is not a writer to be praised within literary circles, to put it nicelyhe is not a great writer (albeit better than Rowling). For him to write of "subliterature" is, to my mind, ironic. Card churns out those formulaic fantasy/sci-fi novels that you can find loaded on the shelves in any bookstore.
I can name various authors in just the sci-fi/fantasy field who make Card look like an amatuer (which, really, isn't too difficult). For example: Ray Bradbury, John Crowley, Susanna Clarke, Neil Gaiman, Gene Wolfe, Peter Beagle, and the list goes on.
He mentions the plot line that Rowling supposedly "stole" from him. That is probably the most common of plot lines to be found in genre fiction.
The Worst Witch
by Jill Murphy is much more similar to
Harry Potter
than is
Ender's Game
. And (I believe)
The Worst Witch
was published eleven years before
Ender's Game
. Can I therefore make the argument that Card "stole" from Murphy? Or from tons of other books published before
Ender's Game
in the fantasy/sci-fi genre?
Rowling is not that talented, although I found her books fun (which isn't saying much). Orson Scott Card isn't a huge talent either (although, as mentioned before, more talented than Rowling). If a similar argument is made by Cormac McCarthy or Neil Gaiman or John Crowley or Gene Wolfe, then I will listen. But Scott writes the same formulaic "subliterature" of which he speaks (or, as is true in this case, writes).
Life is a disease: sexually transmitted, and invariably fatal.- Neil Gaiman
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Grizzly_McThornbristle — 17 years ago(August 01, 2008 12:26 PM)
Charls Dickens was a hack who simply wanted to sell some books.
Your opinion. Although many scholars and critics will happily disagree with you. Dickens' language is beautiful. His characters are some of the best in the literature of any languagepurposefully exagerrated to illustrate human nature and emotion. His fictions are some of the deepest ever written. And he is one thousand times the writer Card will ever be.
I would not be as fast as you to criticize Orson Scott Card and race to the defence of Joanne Rowling.
You're right about one thing: I
am
criticizing Card; but I'm hardly defending Rowling. She has liberally borrowed from books before her:
The Sword in the Stone
,
The Worst Witch
,
Wizard's Hall
, and
The Secret of Platform 13
, to name a few.
Where Rowling claims to be the source and fountainhead of her works, without any reservation or respect for the influences from otther writers who might have impacted her development. She claims to write in a vaccuum. Card calls her out on such hackery.
That is a blatant lie. Rowling has frequently mentioned influences on her work: Rowling claimed that Merlin in T.H. White's
The Sword in the Stone
was where she got her idea for Dumbledore. In an interview with
The Scotsman
she mentions how Elizabeth Goudge's
Little White Horse
influenced her:
"[
The Little White Horse
] had perhaps more than any other book . . . a direct influence on the Harry Potter books. The author always included details of what her characters were eating and I remember liking that. You may have noticed that I always list the food being eaten at Hogwarts."
Rowling also described Wart (Arthur) from
The Sword in the Stone
as "Harry's spiritual ancestor." (There was also a pet da0owl in
The Sword in the Stone
, which may ring a bell.)
She said this about the wardrobe in the first
Narnia
book:
"I found myself thinking about the wardrobe route to Narnia when Harry is told he has to hurl himself at a barrier in Kings Cross Station - it dissolves and he's on platform Nine and Three-Quarters, and there's the train for Hogwarts."
She has recognized Dorothy L. Sayers as influencing her as well. She says it is because of Sayers that she wanted to make the
Harry Potter
books detective-type novelswith Red Herrings and such.
She recognized Shakespeare's
Macbeth
as influencing the prophecy in the HP books: In
Macbeth
the witches warn the title character of Duncan, and therefore Macbeth goes on to kill Duncan. In Rowling's books, Voldemort hear's a prophecy saying that a boy born on July 31 (Harry Potter) will more or less defeat him; so he sets out to kill Harry. This event is the catalyst for the entire series; as Macbeth hearing the witches' prophecy is the catalyst for the entire play. She
has
recognized this linkin an interview and on her own website.
These are a few examples. So to say that she doesn't recognize any of her influences (a la, the "vaccuum" comment) is just plain wrong.
On what do you base this opinion? Some of those very writers on that list will name Card among their influences.
I've read Card's work, and I've read their work. Their work is considerably better. That is what I base that opinion on. Also I know of none of those writers claiming card as an influence.
You don't see the Tolkien estate suing Gaiman because he puts orcs and trolls in his stories.
Which Gaiman story has orcs in it? And trolls were around long before Tolkien was conceived: Norse Mythology.
I also believe that you fail to recognize the quality of literature that Ender's Game represents.
Oh,
Ender's Game
is a good book. But it is not a classic piece of literature. It is a fun story that kept me turning pages, but there is nothing of importance being said in the narrativenot like Dickens and Joyce and Faulkner and Hemingway and sci-fi's very own Gene Wolfe (who isn't just one of the best sci-fi writers alive, but one of the best writers alive, in or out of genre). Card's book is one of the better sci-fi books, but nothing that will endure, nor to be mentioned when speaking of a "canon of Western literature."
I wouldn't plagiarize, but like any good lawyer will tell you, ideas can never be copyrighted.
Very true. I found this quote by Eva Ibbotson (author of
The Secret of Platfrom 13
) when asked whether Rowling plagiarized her work, and if a lawsuit would be necessary:
"I would like to shake her by the hand. I think we all borrow from each other as writers."
Ideas are thrown around literature all the time, be it from mythology (which everyone admits is free to be borrowed from), to writers of the antiquity (Homer being the most prominent example), to Victorian writers (it is here that I will mention that pesky Dickens again), to Modernists (Joyce, probably the greatest of English-language writers), to the Southern Gothic (the great Faulkner), to Hemingway (who did more to change the American prose-style2000 than any other author), to Post-Modernists (Pynchon and Vonnegut), and to the less critically-recogni -
aelmai — 17 years ago(August 01, 2008 02:26 PM)
I have to say that I completely agree with Orson Scott Card's comments about Dumbledore's sexuality. People call JK Rowling's decision to reveal Dumbledore's homosexuality 'brave', but I think it was pretty weak to only announce it after everyone had bought her books.
'Right, the shop is closed, everybody get out! Back on the streets, you time-wasting bastards!' -
Shearer_Goddard_Russell — 17 years ago(August 04, 2008 07:09 PM)
Do we really know what was to be printed in that Lexicon? I just don't think it's very fair of Card (and other critics) to pass judgment on Rowling so quickly about it. Also, don't take this the wrong way, but is Card one of those Mormons who's all anti-HP because it's about sorcery and witchcraft? (I say don't take that the wrong way because I'm a Mormon too, and I think it's kind of weird that people get so carried away with that. I mean, it's fiction, people.) Maybe that's a slightly more plausible reason for this outburst than "jealousy," which would be nice to believe but I doubt.
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Grizzly_McThornbristle — 17 years ago(August 08, 2008 10:07 AM)
I apologize for laying that trap for you, but you've been such a great sport in demonstrating just how two-faced and opportunist1908 Rowling can be.
Oh, it's a trap now, because I made a point which you can't argue. You claimed that Rowling refuses to recognize any influences. I showed that that statement was and is false. And now you go on about a "trap."
Wrong? Did you ever stop to think that it might have been bait?
Nope. It wasn't bait. You were wrong in saying that she didn't recognize influences.
Is your ego so diminished that you must force your personal opinion on us all and pretend it to be fact?
Again: nope. It is my opinion. My opinions are based on my experiences. Just because I didn't preface my sentence with "I believe" doesn't change the
fact
that that statement is my
opinion
. I am not trying to pretend that my opinion is a fact. Do you not remember asking, "On what do you base that opinion?"? So from the beginning it was recognized as my opinion, not a pretense of fact. This time, however, I will preface my sentence so you don't get confused:
I believe
that those writers are considerably better. Their prose-style is stronger, more developed; their characters are better; and their statements are more importanttheir books go beyond fun reads. That is my opinion. Card is a good writer, but,
to my mind
, he does not touch those writers.
Well, I don't see any authors other than Rowling suing other authors. So what do you think about that?
I think J.K. Rowling should take it easy on the lawsuits. Enough is enough. Like I said: I'm not here to defend Rowling; Card's "subliterature" statement just got me fired up. I think she should drop the lawsuit against the Lexicon. It is ridiculous. Books like that are published all the time. Oh, by the way, Nancy Stouffer did attempt to sue Rowling, but she lost. So Rowling is not the only author to sue another.
And you should know that schools of literature are defined by style and form, not "ideas."
I know. Thanks for pointing out the obvious. I was just explaining that ideas come from everywhere, and that is why I mentioned those various schools of writing. I was not saying that writings from the antiquity, victorian, and other times were defined by ideas; rather that ideas come from
everywhere
, and those ideas are tossed all around literature, throughout all "schools" of writing.
Ideas are tropes, and penetrate the scope and specturm of all schools of literature.
I know. Once again, thanks for pointing out the obvious. I did not claim that certain ideas were exclusive to certain schools of writing.
I'll leave you with this: You exhibit your simplicity when you claim that Homer is the most prominent example of a writer of "antiquity."
Nice little insult. Thanks for that. I was speaking on a public level. Which books from the antiquity are more familiar to the public than
The Iliad
and
The Odyssey
? None, that I can think of. This makes the name Homer the most prominent (or should I have said popular?) to the public. I know, and have read, other writers from the antiquity (ones with a stronger historical record): Aeschylus, Ovid, Virgil, Sophocles, Apollonius of Rhodes, Horace, Apollodorus, Euripides, and Aristophanes.
Just because they have you read Homerin school doesn't make him so prominent.
The most well-known writer of the antiquity to the common person. According to Dictionary.com, one of the definitions of
Prominent
is "well known"; so I do not retract anything I said.
P.S. Vonnegut is not a post-modernist.
His literature is often classified as post-modern: being from the post-World War II era, with certain tendencies of other post-modern writers, and a rebuttal of sorts to Enlightenment. I found this on the web:
Linda Hutcheon claimed postmodern fiction as a whole could be characterized by the ironic quote marks, that much of it can be taken as tongue-in-cheek. This irony, along with black humor and the general concept of "play" (related to Derrida's concept or the ideas advocated by Roland Barthes in The Pleasure of the Text) are among the most recognizable aspects of postmodernism. Though the idea of employing these in literature did not start with the postmodernists (the modernists were often playful and ironic), they became central features in many postmodern works. In fact, several novelists later to be labeled postmodern were first collectively labeled black humorists: John Barth, Joseph Heller, William Gaddis, Kurt Vonnegut, Bruce Jay Friedman, etc.
Pardon my conformity.
And if you can nail down just how Hemmingway changed the "Amerian prose-style" I'd like to know since his style is relatively common, not to mention trundicated, among Modern writers.
He wrote in short, declarative sentences, which was unique before his timemost English-written art being composed of long sentences (a la Poe). He didn't invent the style, but after he used it so prominently (there's that word again), it became a style used by American authors nationwide. The