Aspie authors writing social interaction
I think when an Author writes - he creates, but then, when a Reader reads he creates too.
Very insightful, and I think correct.
When I read a scene and later see it enacted. It is almost always more dramatic than I imagined it with characters yelling and hitting each other.
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I did a show in college where the author (a fellow student) came to the first few rehearsals. I very quickly really wanted him to leave. His ideas and my ideas and the director's ideas really didn't jive.
In the Audio Book version of "As You Wish: Inconceivable Tales from the Making of The Princess Bride" which is written and read by by Cary Elwes (ok someone else helped him with the writing) they have voice clips from the other cast members and the author and director and so on. Apparently they shot the Fire Swamp first and the author freaked out at the idea of the actress being set on fire. He eventually stopped coming to the shootings. I think it was mutual between him and the director.
When I read a book and then I see the movie - it never quite matches - usually the movie is terrible by comparison.
Case in point - the "Tunnel of Love" scene in the Percy Jackson movie - a scene i REALLY wanted to see done right by hollywood was just "not a bang but a whimper".
Sometimes the director's take is simply different and fresh. But that is rare.
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ADHD-I(diagnosed) ASD-HF(diagnosed)
RDOS scores - Aspie score 131/200 - neurotypical score 69/200 - very likely Aspie
Kraichgauer
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Of course you're welcome!
Would you be willing to share your works?
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Kraichgauer
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Of course you're welcome!
Would you be willing to share your works?
Let me think on it. I could possibly post passages.
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Another question: Does anyone know of any successful writers who have or have been suspected to have Asperger's Syndrome?
EDIT: clarity
I am extraordinarily late to this party but I just found this thread and wanted to weigh in. I'm a published author, through a traditional publishing house (as opposed to self-publishing). I don't have Asperger's, but I am level two.
Hi!
I'm new to this forum, and new to the whole Austism/Asperger's topic, as I only was diagnosed 5 days ago (Asperger's).
Since I was 10 or so, I've been writing stories, not so much because I enjoy writing or using language (I do not), but because it helped me process things and find solutions for "personal emotional problems". Using invented characters as dummies who can act and react in a way I can not kind of does a good job for me.
I never shared my writings. Though fictional in many aspects, I always felt that in a way, I was still revealing too much about me.
Just recently I joined a very small online group of amateur writers and it's working really good, I started to write more organized stories (like consecutive chapters of a novel rather than just independent scenes) and it's a lot of fun reading what the others write, commenting on it, helping each other.
Since I got my diagnose, though, I have the feeling that perhaps my writing is not so good, because of "writing social interaction".
I can do dialogues, but only in a very script-like form (like screenwriting).
My 3 readers (we are 4 people in this group) like very much my action scenes, but they miss a little the emotional component.
This whole writing thing is not a big deal for me, it's more for fun than anything else, but I read the title of this topic, and it made me think if perhaps I could actually use writing fro getting a better understanding or sense of emotions, not only my character's, but mine, too?
Have a nice day!
I'm new to this forum, and new to the whole Austism/Asperger's topic, as I only was diagnosed 5 days ago (Asperger's).
Since I was 10 or so, I've been writing stories, not so much because I enjoy writing or using language (I do not), but because it helped me process things and find solutions for "personal emotional problems". Using invented characters as dummies who can act and react in a way I can not kind of does a good job for me.
I never shared my writings. Though fictional in many aspects, I always felt that in a way, I was still revealing too much about me.
Just recently I joined a very small online group of amateur writers and it's working really good, I started to write more organized stories (like consecutive chapters of a novel rather than just independent scenes) and it's a lot of fun reading what the others write, commenting on it, helping each other.
Since I got my diagnose, though, I have the feeling that perhaps my writing is not so good, because of "writing social interaction".
I can do dialogues, but only in a very script-like form (like screenwriting).
My 3 readers (we are 4 people in this group) like very much my action scenes, but they miss a little the emotional component.
This whole writing thing is not a big deal for me, it's more for fun than anything else, but I read the title of this topic, and it made me think if perhaps I could actually use writing fro getting a better understanding or sense of emotions, not only my character's, but mine, too?
Have a nice day!
Welcome DunaDuna,
I hope you find Wrong Planet to be a resource as you move forward. I understand the position you are in regarding your diagnosis; I was diagnosed with autism level two, sixty-eight days ago. I enjoy writing for processing and journal daily along with other assorted writings. I have joined a number of writing groups over the years but have only returned to one of them. I found that one about five months ago and attend regularly (every two weeks).
One of the things that I like very much about the writing group that I attend is that we do not offer critiques. We offer what the person who started this group calls resonance. If a particular bit of writing touched a person in a particular way, we will speak to that - specifically, I suppose, we share how a piece made us feel rather than what we thought about it. Resonance is offered on a volunteer basis only, so no one is required to speak on someone else's work. I have participated in groups in which, I've watched a person critique something that was just read but it was clear from their critique that they completely missed the point - or worse, they make something up because they were so busy texting in their lap during the reading that they never heard it.
Anyway, just wanted to say that although I had a pretty good handle on emotions before I began writing, it certainly helped. These days, when someone does offer a critique, I'm often receiving compliments on my dialogue specifically. Anyway, best of luck to you in your continuing journey!
I'm good at social interaction in stories. The Asperger's doesn't make me socially clueless, I still most of the social instincts NTs have but it just sometimes takes a little longer for me to process things or to respond correctly, even if I don't have to think.
So writing stories about social interaction isn't hard for me.
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AnonymousAnonymous
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Kraichgauer
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AnonymousAnonymous
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AnonymousAnonymous
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Kraichgauer
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Location: Spokane area, Washington state.
which is set in the Pacific Northwest several years after the end of World War I.
Sounds really cool! I had written a horror novella taking place in eastern Washington in the early 1900's, called At Night Outside The Window. Is the genre straight western?
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AnonymousAnonymous
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which is set in the Pacific Northwest several years after the end of World War I.
Sounds really cool! I had written a horror novella taking place in eastern Washington in the early 1900's, called At Night Outside The Window. Is the genre straight western?
No, it can also be considered a "Revisionist Western", which questions the
ideals of the "traditional Western" by using character development and realism.
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Silly NTs, I have Aspergers, and having Aspergers is gr-r-reat!
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