This post in
janni's LJ triggered something that has bothered me off and on for years. I wonder if I'm tone deaf to cliched writing, or would know a cliche if it reared up and picked my pocket.
Is cliched writing in the eye of the reader? If you read a lot, and in many genres, do you have a more difficult time finding prose that strikes you as evocative or that moves you in some way? Are there cliches that are genre-specific--the romance images of heaving bosom and throbbing manhood come to mind.
If you have a sentence handy that you find cliched, could you please post it in this thread, along with the reason you feel it's a cliche?
Update: The character describing themselves while looking in a mirror or any other type of reflection--I've seen enough complaints about that one, although I admit to having used it before I had heard it was a cliche. Now I make a conscious effort to avoid doing it.
Is cliched writing in the eye of the reader? If you read a lot, and in many genres, do you have a more difficult time finding prose that strikes you as evocative or that moves you in some way? Are there cliches that are genre-specific--the romance images of heaving bosom and throbbing manhood come to mind.
If you have a sentence handy that you find cliched, could you please post it in this thread, along with the reason you feel it's a cliche?
Update: The character describing themselves while looking in a mirror or any other type of reflection--I've seen enough complaints about that one, although I admit to having used it before I had heard it was a cliche. Now I make a conscious effort to avoid doing it.
no subject
Date: 2006-01-04 06:29 pm (UTC)This little posting is interesting because the most recent review of my book claimed that some of the plot was cliched . . . mentioning that it's obvious from the first page that there was something big in store for the main character and that that was the cliche.
When it comes to plot, I think one reader's cliche is another reader's comfort read is another reader's only-type-of-story-I-like. Some folks would call Quest Fantasy a cliche. The Strange Coming to Grips with Her Strangeness (a fave of mine). I mean, pick any story arc, and someone will say they've already seen it a thousand times and they never want to see it again.
Add to that the fact that we write in genres where people read a lot of books over the course of a year. The most debilitating feedback I received about my fantasy came from a first reader who had just finished serving on a novel jury, She had read it all one hundred times over the course, and she was pretty merciless.