I think a bunch of people are reading it. I keep recommending it and seeing other people recommending it too.
Hmm ... this would not work for most webfics, but yours is unusual. What about hosting separate topical discussions? You are dealing with heavy, controversial topics that most writers never touch; and your characters have dense representation of groups that rarely get shown. So people who read that stuff are probably used to getting squelched when they try to talk about those issues, and may be less likely to pipe up. But if you picked up a thread from the story and linked in a couple of supporting articles, then pitched out a question or two, that might spark a discussion.
Frex, the last several episodes involve a comatose character waking up and obsessing over his wife, who doesn't want him anymore, then he grabs her and beats her up and trashes the city. So you might talk about caregiver issues or domestic violence. What do people think about the portrayals in fiction? Does that help get people thinking about the real issues? What parts of "Wonder City Stories" do the readers resonate with?
There are lots of webfics that have gay characters, or trans characters, or people of color, or strong women, or handicapped people, etc. etc. but not many that mix those -- and WCS is the only one I can think of that is just a kitchen-sink combination of all kinds of under-represented groups. It's wacky but it works. It's like a real city that way. So there has to be some way of getting the readers to talk about it beyond: "Why isn't anybody writing about X?" "Oh, you should read Wonder City Stories."
Yes...
Date: 2010-07-27 08:34 pm (UTC)Hmm ... this would not work for most webfics, but yours is unusual. What about hosting separate topical discussions? You are dealing with heavy, controversial topics that most writers never touch; and your characters have dense representation of groups that rarely get shown. So people who read that stuff are probably used to getting squelched when they try to talk about those issues, and may be less likely to pipe up. But if you picked up a thread from the story and linked in a couple of supporting articles, then pitched out a question or two, that might spark a discussion.
Frex, the last several episodes involve a comatose character waking up and obsessing over his wife, who doesn't want him anymore, then he grabs her and beats her up and trashes the city. So you might talk about caregiver issues or domestic violence. What do people think about the portrayals in fiction? Does that help get people thinking about the real issues? What parts of "Wonder City Stories" do the readers resonate with?
There are lots of webfics that have gay characters, or trans characters, or people of color, or strong women, or handicapped people, etc. etc. but not many that mix those -- and WCS is the only one I can think of that is just a kitchen-sink combination of all kinds of under-represented groups. It's wacky but it works. It's like a real city that way. So there has to be some way of getting the readers to talk about it beyond: "Why isn't anybody writing about X?" "Oh, you should read Wonder City Stories."