wendelah1: (Bone of Contention)
wendelah1 ([personal profile] wendelah1) wrote in [community profile] xf_book_club 2011-02-13 03:50 am (UTC)

Some writers are of the mind that the only way to capture the truth of certain realities is to write ugliness. I'm very rarely of that mind myself. I think there's almost always a way to convey horror beautifully if you want to find it, and that by conveying it beautifully it will ultimately have a more profound effect on the reader, because they'll welcome the emotion it invokes rather than blocking it out as being needlessly perverse. Bugs seems to have chosen to write a vile, nightmarish scenario as vile and nightmarishly as possible.

This story had a hallucinatory aura to it but I don't think vile and nightmarish really cut it for me.

This story took me to a familiar place, the stage of childbirth euphemistically known as "transition." Childbirth is unbelievably painful, and it can take you to a very dark place before you come out on the other side. This story seemed honest and factual about that. Adding to that horror show Scully's dual traumas, losing Mulder and medical rape, makes it hard for me to see how to prettify this for the reader, let alone why a writer would want to.

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