So that is epistolary fiction for the New Centory?
Very well done; it's a touch melodramatic, and I was going to ask you if this was "for real" ...but I had a chance to think about it while I was downstairs. I'm probably only about 25% of the way through the thing, but I fully expect Cthulhu to appear in the basement of that old house by the end.
It's a nice example of it, even if I did have to look up what "epistolary" meant.
It's an interesting technique - even back in "Dracula", the dates and the headers told you as much as the letter itself, sometimes, providing you with a lot of context. In modern times, you've got a whole lot of extra methods *and* a lot of extra information available in the extra bits themselves - as well, you can run a much closer-to-realtime update. "Dracula"'s journal entries all required the writer to survive, calm down, site, and write - an answering machine message from a cell user does not.
"The Blair Witch Project" is another example of the way to let the conveniences of modern technology update this kind of storytelling, and I like it.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-15 10:00 am (UTC)Very well done; it's a touch melodramatic, and I was going to ask you if this was "for real" ...but I had a chance to think about it while I was downstairs. I'm probably only about 25% of the way through the thing, but I fully expect Cthulhu to appear in the basement of that old house by the end.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-15 10:09 am (UTC)It's an interesting technique - even back in "Dracula", the dates and the headers told you as much as the letter itself, sometimes, providing you with a lot of context. In modern times, you've got a whole lot of extra methods *and* a lot of extra information available in the extra bits themselves - as well, you can run a much closer-to-realtime update. "Dracula"'s journal entries all required the writer to survive, calm down, site, and write - an answering machine message from a cell user does not.
"The Blair Witch Project" is another example of the way to let the conveniences of modern technology update this kind of storytelling, and I like it.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-15 10:56 am (UTC)And don't feel bad that you didn't know what it meant. Leah (Anlon) had to clue me in on it.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-15 10:57 am (UTC)It's one of those "There's a word for that?" moments.