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- #21
Incanus
Auror
Since I didn't (and wouldn't) coin the phrase 'ideas are cheap', it doesn't really matter what I mean by it, but what is meant by the people who employ this phrase. I agree that they seem to be pointing to the initial idea for a story.I think this depends on what you mean by idea. In writing it's often taken to mean the concept for a story. That concept could be something like a PI investigating crimes, or some unknown person being dragged into a journey to save the world. In that sense ideas are common to many writers, and so you could say that ideas are cheap in the same way that talk is said to be cheap. For me it isn't so much the idea or concept as it is how you develop it in your writing, in the same way that most people can talk but only a very few have something really profound to say.
But I think the comparison between 'ideas are cheap' and 'talk is cheap' doesn't really work for me. For a quick change of perspective, are musical notes 'cheap'? To me, the idea is absurd--a concept in search of a real world application, and not finding it. Is a C major chord 'cheaper' than a Bb minor-seven-flat-five? The very question doesn't make sense. In music, context is everything, and I think it is in writing as well. Musical notes are common to all musicians in all genres, but it doesn't make them cheap.
I think that any good book worth its weight should rise above common or daily language use, and strong, resonant ideas go a long way toward achieving that.
Myth Weaver
Troubadour