GRRM is notorious as being absolutely, ridiculously, COMPLETELY against fan fiction in general and absolutely fan fiction using his creations in specific. It isn't anything specific he said in that quote, it's a reinforcement of what he has said elsewhere. S good number of authors started at a very young age with fan fiction and while they may have learned more when they moved on to original creations, it wasn't useless and it sure wasn't "lazy". It's almost always an easy introduction into writing fiction in general and eventually leads to you moving on to your own worlds.
This is the quote, pulled from the article:
And write. Write every day, even if it is only a page or two. The more you write, the better you'll get. But don't write in my universe, or Tolkien's, or the Marvel universe, or the Star Trek universe, or any other borrowed background. Every writer needs to learn to create his own characters, worlds, and settings. Using someone else's world is the lazy way out. If you don't exercise those "literary muscles," you'll never develop them.
I'm not saying you're responding to anything specific in that comment, and I understand your assertion that he is against fan fiction. However, and this is speculation, couldn't he be against fan fiction for the reasons stated above ( or at least partially due to those reasons)?
I think he makes a valid point. To exercise the creative muscles necessary to produce great fantasy, an author needs to create. This makes so much sense to me. If I'm borrowing characters, their relationships with others, settings, etc. how much creative work am I really doing? How much growth as a writer will I truly gain?
In my view, one of the hardest parts of being a writer is sitting down to the blank page and hammering out a story that has never been written before with characters of my own creation, in events and settings of my making. I don't have any problem with fan-fiction if that's what someone wants to do. However, it seems a far easier road considering the writing will begin with an established framework. As such, I don't see how the fanfic author will progress as quickly as the one who creates everything from nothing.
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