jkingston
356
My Chance To Influence A Novel
Magnus;
An interesting post.
I had my fling at trying to influence a watch vignette in the novel of an extremely famous author who was a client. I had been asked to review the galleys concerning a legal issue that had arisen. Having nothing to do with the legal issue, as I read the text I can across an incident in the story where the heroine heads to a boutique and buys her beau a diving watch. The text did name a brand--but one that doesn't actually make a diving watch.
So putting on my WIS hat I happily pointed out that the author would need to change either the brand of the watch or the type of the watch. HA! What do I know about literature. The author was absolutely delighted to leave the text exactly as written.
Jeff
NO (long explanation inside)
By: MTF : October 13th, 2011-11:38
or maybe more strictly.......probably no; in the case of the Scarpetta series of novels, it seems unlikely that any 'cynical product placement' occured. Probably the mention of Breguet timepieces in books by various authors is not 'cynical product placeme...
It mightn't be...
By: BDLJ : October 13th, 2011-16:04
..purely cynical product placement, but it does smack of faux 'sophistication' and lazy writing - a way of conveying a certain degree of connoisseurship without having to establish any in the character itself. It also ages novels, or at minimum securely l...
Unless we've gone all...
By: BDLJ : October 13th, 2011-18:43
Derridian (is that a word?) and post-modernist, in which case we might consider Pulp Fiction just another text, I think MB's original post was talking books. As for the ass watch...from what I've read/seen from screen grabs it was a Lancet.
A Couple of Examples
By: gweilgi : October 14th, 2011-05:56
spring to mind. Jay Lake wrote an alternative-earth trilogy where horology is not only mentioned but a vital plot device: "Mainspring", "Esapement" and "Pinion". In "The Grand Complication" by Allen Kurzweil, Breguet's long-lost Marie Antoinette watch is ...