I would feel that I wasn't doing a very good job to hold up the point I was trying to make xDsstimson wrote: Okay I understand where you might be going, but if you were a mystery writer, how would you feel if at the end of book one of a ten book set, everything you were going to do had been written down and published as a guide to your series, even before you finished writing it?
I guess this is where a big question comes upsstimson wrote: Twist are okay as long as they are very very well hidden.
What part about Okiya being Akai is not well hidden? I've seen many people who haven't read Chek's theories saying "Okiya is Bourbon for sure" or such like that. Again: she's searched, examined edited, and cited all of these theories after what must have been HOURS of work. To me, that suggests that the twist she has found is in fact well hidden, she's just taken the lengths to go and find it. Also note your own words: you say well hidden, you don't say completely hidden. However, what you seem to be getting at is that authors should completely hide away what they plan to twist in the story...which doesn't make sense to me. That actually irritates a lot of people when that happens.
Again, going back to Romeo and Juliet or Hamlet, or really any of Shakespeare's works (not to compare Gosho to Shakespeare, but there needs to be an example from a good writer to have merit) in every single one of his works there has been foreshadowing, there has been obvious things. Does that make it a bad work? Not when you do it correctly.
There's also something that Abs. said "You seem to think that Gosho reads fan theories like Chek reads DC" With how busy his schedule is, and disregarding the joke that Chek has Gosho locked away, that seems almost 100% impossible. You don't want Gosho to be influenced by fans theories and I somewhat agree that an author shouldn't try to bend things for the readers but...what if he just didn't read the theories? It's like not their existence changes his mind, it's their content and if he reads them









