Difference between revisions of "Comment Hooks"

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(Created page with "'''Comment hooks''' are essential features of good fanwriting. To inspire the best locs or mailing comments, faneds must spike their zines liberally with c...")
 
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  The trouble with a [[fanzine]] like [yours] (which is why neither [of us] got around to responding to the first issue) is that it doesn’t exactly sparkle with tempting comment hooks – not, I hasten to add, that this is the fault of your writing, but I think it has more than a little to do with your contents. What, after all, can one say in response to an account of some unpleasantness at a summer barbecue, unless one has a similar anecdote of one’s own to offer? Which I don’t... which perhaps means that I lead a rather boring life, but then I guess that’s just tough on me.
 
  The trouble with a [[fanzine]] like [yours] (which is why neither [of us] got around to responding to the first issue) is that it doesn’t exactly sparkle with tempting comment hooks – not, I hasten to add, that this is the fault of your writing, but I think it has more than a little to do with your contents. What, after all, can one say in response to an account of some unpleasantness at a summer barbecue, unless one has a similar anecdote of one’s own to offer? Which I don’t... which perhaps means that I lead a rather boring life, but then I guess that’s just tough on me.
  
An easy trick is to make a controversial statement or pose a question, but better is writing that resonates with the reader. In what may be the term’s first use, [[Ted White]] described the first type of comment hook in ''[[Energumen]]'' 7 ([https://www.fanac.org/fanzines/Energumen/Energumen07.pdf April 1971]):
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An easy trick is to make a controversial statement or pose a question, but better is writing that resonates with the reader. [[Ted White]] described the first type of comment hook in ''[[Energumen]]'' 7 ([https://www.fanac.org/fanzines/Energumen/Energumen07.pdf April 1971]):
 
  I have been intending to write you a loc for the past several issues of your fanzine, because I have enjoyed it thoroughly. However, thorough enjoyment doesn't spark a letter -- letters are sparked by "comment hooks" which look like checkmarks (exactly like check­marks, in fact!) in the margins. These hooks are usually found grazing in the margins near [[fuggheaded]] remarks.  
 
  I have been intending to write you a loc for the past several issues of your fanzine, because I have enjoyed it thoroughly. However, thorough enjoyment doesn't spark a letter -- letters are sparked by "comment hooks" which look like checkmarks (exactly like check­marks, in fact!) in the margins. These hooks are usually found grazing in the margins near [[fuggheaded]] remarks.  
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The term seems to date to the late 1960s or early 1970s.
  
 
See also: [[RAEBNC]].  
 
See also: [[RAEBNC]].  

Revision as of 02:10, 21 May 2023

Comment hooks are essential features of good fanwriting. To inspire the best locs or mailing comments, faneds must spike their zines liberally with comment hooks.

Only rare letterhacks or apans have the knack of responding relevantly without something to fasten their comments onto. As a 1980s loccer kvetched:

The trouble with a fanzine like [yours] (which is why neither [of us] got around to responding to the first issue) is that it doesn’t exactly sparkle with tempting comment hooks – not, I hasten to add, that this is the fault of your writing, but I think it has more than a little to do with your contents. What, after all, can one say in response to an account of some unpleasantness at a summer barbecue, unless one has a similar anecdote of one’s own to offer? Which I don’t... which perhaps means that I lead a rather boring life, but then I guess that’s just tough on me.

An easy trick is to make a controversial statement or pose a question, but better is writing that resonates with the reader. Ted White described the first type of comment hook in Energumen 7 (April 1971):

I have been intending to write you a loc for the past several issues of your fanzine, because I have enjoyed it thoroughly. However, thorough enjoyment doesn't spark a letter -- letters are sparked by "comment hooks" which look like checkmarks (exactly like check­marks, in fact!) in the margins. These hooks are usually found grazing in the margins near fuggheaded remarks. 

The term seems to date to the late 1960s or early 1970s.

See also: RAEBNC.



Fanspeak
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