Entry tags:
new chapter; interesting review
Seventeen is up. I've been wanting to get to this one for awhile, ever since we started plotting bits of it behind the scenes. So I'm glad to have it out there.
Over dinner tonight, a friend who has never played the games and knows literally nothing about them told me that she'd read OMC and enjoyed it. She didn't understand much of what was going on, especially in terms of backstory, but she still liked it. I suppose that's a compliment! She also read bits of the other pieces of the Quartet, mostly for context; she said that helped a lot. I guess that partially answers the question of whether OMC stands alone, something I've often wondered. Obviously it's much richer if one reads the rest of the Quartet as well, but could someone just read it and still feel that they've seen a complete story? Hmm.
Over dinner tonight, a friend who has never played the games and knows literally nothing about them told me that she'd read OMC and enjoyed it. She didn't understand much of what was going on, especially in terms of backstory, but she still liked it. I suppose that's a compliment! She also read bits of the other pieces of the Quartet, mostly for context; she said that helped a lot. I guess that partially answers the question of whether OMC stands alone, something I've often wondered. Obviously it's much richer if one reads the rest of the Quartet as well, but could someone just read it and still feel that they've seen a complete story? Hmm.
Re: I
I think your part is the most likely to stand on its own because it was written first. But I expect reading it as a solo piece is a very different experience.
I imagine this style of storytelling has been done before (one event told from the point of view of different characters as written by different authors), but I don't think I've ever come across anything quite like it. More than anything, it seems the literary version of a role-playing game, with you as GM, running Nooj as an NPC, while the three of us play the other characters. Weird analogy?
I
I had intended to make another comment to you and it escaped before I could put it down. Your reference to Paine learning to compound the analgesic is particularly poignant in view of what I had written yesterday toward the end of Part Twenty. If you like, look over in my journal where I shall post them for your eyes only.
Incidentally, do you want me to post Nineteen privately for the Quartet as well as Twenty? I will abide by majority rule in this.
Re: I