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wendelah1) wrote in
xf_book_club2010-02-08 04:32 pm
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Story 104: "Genius" by Kipler
Back when I was still having a normal life, I took on a number of Geocities-related projects. One is to recreate The Spooky Awards Archive, complete with working links, but minus the hideous graphics. Even before the demise of Geocities, the links had all gone dead on the old site. I did finish 1995 and put it up at Dreamwidth. Now that I am back working on that project, I thought it might be fun to read some of the stories that won awards back in the day. Believe it or not, some of them still hold up very well.
"Genius" is vintage Kipler, well-written, with believable season two-three Mulder/Scully interaction. It's genfic, which was more common then than now, or so I've heard, but in any case seems perfectly appropriate to me for the time period. The story is a case file/x-file, told from Scully's POV, involving a child abduction. Since it's not been that long since her own abduction, I think it's fair to say that Scully is a little creeped-out by this investigation. We all know how Mulder is with child abduction cases.
"Genius" won the 1995 Second Place award for "Most Carteresque," which I suppose is short-hand for the story that most resembles the show itself. Since I liked the show best back in the first few seasons, I was eager to see what a fine fanfiction writer could come up with that could fit seamlessly into the series canon. Kipler does not disappoint.
Kipler's old site went down when AOL Hometown closed, so the link is to her site, way-backed.
Genius
Kipler-waybacked
If anyone is still in touch with her, please let her know we are discussing her story. Please leave suggestions for next time at the nomination post.
"Genius" is vintage Kipler, well-written, with believable season two-three Mulder/Scully interaction. It's genfic, which was more common then than now, or so I've heard, but in any case seems perfectly appropriate to me for the time period. The story is a case file/x-file, told from Scully's POV, involving a child abduction. Since it's not been that long since her own abduction, I think it's fair to say that Scully is a little creeped-out by this investigation. We all know how Mulder is with child abduction cases.
"Genius" won the 1995 Second Place award for "Most Carteresque," which I suppose is short-hand for the story that most resembles the show itself. Since I liked the show best back in the first few seasons, I was eager to see what a fine fanfiction writer could come up with that could fit seamlessly into the series canon. Kipler does not disappoint.
Kipler's old site went down when AOL Hometown closed, so the link is to her site, way-backed.
Genius
Kipler-waybacked
If anyone is still in touch with her, please let her know we are discussing her story. Please leave suggestions for next time at the nomination post.
No one is ever too late to comment
Kipler's clear-sighted empathy for her characters informs and shapes every scene. Scully can't stop trying to apply reason and logic to every situation, because it's integral to her character. Rather than make her look like an idiot for having the bad luck to be living in a universe that keeps making her wrong for standing up for science, Kipler makes her position sympathetic, even understandable. No one comes off as the bad guy in this, there is no villain; in the end, there is just something new to understand, something miraculous, a mystery for science to try to unravel. What elevates the story out of the MOTW category into something rarer is that scene at the end, with Mulder playing the piano and Scully looking on, as she comprehends at last what drew Mulder to the case, and to Sarah.
Re: No one is ever too late to comment
yes, i agree. it was definitely a fic that started off good but mild, and built on itself right up until the end. i really love it when a writer manages to do that. it's subtle and feels very natural and poignant, without really seeming to try.