Around page 75 of The Body in the Library, a young boy tells the chief inspector that he enjoys reading murder mysteries. The boy collects autographs of famous authors and starts listing them. One is Agatha Christie. While it made me smile, it broke the illusion and threw me out of the story for a second. I know other authors have done the same thing--Dante comes to mind, but that was part of the structure of The Divine Comedy.
How does an author do it successfully? Is the cleverness of an author referencing themselves worth the chance that the reader will be thrown out of the book and not pick it up again? Would it be easier if you were less well known?
Thursday, September 13, 2007
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2 comments:
Unfortunately I don't know how to make a specific self-reference without it making the 'fourth wall' break. (It's what bugged me so much about Ocean's Twelve--Julia Roberts pretending to be someone else while pretending to be herself...) The one time I did a story like that I put the POV in first person and people didn't know I was referencing myself. In all fairness, that's one of my favorite self-written stories but I don't point to a book with my name on it. Tricky. Very tricky.
Tacky. Very tacky.
Unless, perhaps you're Stephen King referencing you're self under your secret pseudonym. Then it's just super geeky.
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