Art and Text (part 2)

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cynosure

A few weeks ago, I opened discussion on the relative advantages and disadvantages of publishing illustrated fiction in digital format. One response that struck me in particular was the observation that quite often, images don't match up with the story - a recurring problem that can effect any medium - this was particularly evident with old comic strips and pulp magazines, where covers shots frequently had nothing to do with the interiors. My solution was to draw the illustrations first then write the story around them, ensuring that there would always be at least some correlation between art and text.

Back in my self-publishing days, I drew a series of pictures simply titled Cynosure: Angel's story, a one-off project which evolved into a short piece called Fallen Angel. As a general rule, I only include one B&W image with each story, but in this case I put a lot more effort into the illustrations, aiming for a slick, clean look reminiscent of British TG journals of the 80s.

Which brings us back, of course, to the main question: in the present day and age, is there any need for illustrative material in a literary milieu? As a reader (and possibly author) of transgendered fiction, do you consider illustrations to be an unnecessary distraction from the textual content, or could a few well-placed images actually enhance the overall reading experience?

Comments

A picture tells... and all that

An appropriate image when included in the story can really enhance the mental picture you are building in your mind of the characters and their environment.
I'm working on a story that was inspired by nothing more than a pair of doors in a building. It may not come to anything but seeing the image of the doors as I drove past got the imagination flowing.

Samantha

As someone

who has written over 5000 captions and have a blog approaching 10 million in hits I can tell you that pictures say a lot if chosen well. Almost all my captions are written around a moment in time expressed by a picture. They are only a distraction if they are picked to titillate rather than enhance the story. You know you've failed as a captioner if the first or only comment out of a reader is nice picture.
However when reading a novel length story I think pictures tend to be a distraction because the reader creates their own 'movie in the mind' based on what they are reading and illustrations may not fit in with the picture they have. in their mind. You see this all the time when people who love a book see it turned into a movie and are disappointed because it doesn't fulfill their expectations.
Ann Michelle was talking about this very thing - offering illustrated versions of her books and wondering if readers would pay the extra price for them. I told her sell two versions one illustrated and one not and see which sells the best.

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Agreed

That's why I said 'appropriate'.

Samantha