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Archive => GNS Model Discussion => Topic started by: Tim Denee on February 19, 2002, 12:53:35 AM

Title: Criminal fiction GNS model
Post by: Tim Denee on February 19, 2002, 12:53:35 AM
I was reading a book about writing criminal fiction, (as in fiction detailing criminals, not rogue fictional characters...), and came across this in the foreword. If you can't see the G/N/S parallel, you're a lost cause.

"Should the writer present the whole affair as an intellectual exercise, a game of chess between the criminal and the law? Should he concentrate on the violent aspects of crime and pursuit, aiming to excite rather to puzzle his reader? Or should he look at the "why" of a crime rather than at the "who" or the "how", and seek, with careful scalpel, to dig down into the case-history of the criminal and his victim?"

The rest of the book is horribly out of date. For example, amongst the causes of crimes, it lists various drugs and their effects.
"(b) Marihuana
The use of this drug is not common in Great Britain, but it is known here. A marked feature of the addiction is a ferocious homocidal tendency, coming on very rapidly and unexpectedly"
Title: Criminal fiction GNS model
Post by: contracycle on February 19, 2002, 04:30:35 AM
Ha ha!