I have very limited ability to visualize images or to imagine/remember sounds.
The weird thing is that sometimes with fiction, I’ll feel as though I know what a character looks like, even though I can’t visualize it. This is strong with Tolkien (the movie hobbits were wrong, wrong, wrong), while with Bujold, I simply have no idea what the characters look like. Having a sensory experience with fiction is so rare it seems like a miracle.
At the same time, if fiction has too few sensory cues, I’m apt to feel disconnected and uninterested. This is especially notable with military science fiction—and it may be related to my having more problems with telling people apart if they’re wearing uniforms.
I’ve wondered if what fiction people like has something to do with brainwave similarities between the author and the readers.
The weird thing is that sometimes with fiction, I’ll feel as though I know what a character looks like, even though I can’t visualize it. This is strong with Tolkien (the movie hobbits were wrong, wrong, wrong
I have very limited ability to visualize images or to imagine/remember sounds.
The weird thing is that sometimes with fiction, I’ll feel as though I know what a character looks like, even though I can’t visualize it. This is strong with Tolkien (the movie hobbits were wrong, wrong, wrong), while with Bujold, I simply have no idea what the characters look like. Having a sensory experience with fiction is so rare it seems like a miracle.
At the same time, if fiction has too few sensory cues, I’m apt to feel disconnected and uninterested. This is especially notable with military science fiction—and it may be related to my having more problems with telling people apart if they’re wearing uniforms.
I’ve wondered if what fiction people like has something to do with brainwave similarities between the author and the readers.
So they were, and Galadriel was even more wrong.