I'm working on my own writing, so I don't think I'll be able to analyze the other Iwanako pieces at length--and
I've already said my piece on Something Different. I'd like to keep the discussion going, though, so I'd like to briefly touch on the remaining three shorts.
Challenge Accepted has always been close to my heart, because it was written as a response to my fic--and honestly did Iwanako/Kenji more thoughtfully and concisely than I ever could have. I don't have any qualms with writing het romance (well, all my relationships with men have fizzled out early, but I see more than enough of them in the media to understand how to do one), and it's not that I ever thought a Kenji ship fic was a bad idea, per se--I
definitely dislike Kenji/Yuuko, because I think it's lazy and trite, but I'm totally behind Kenji getting shipped with other people.
Sidenote on Kenji--it's kind of irksome to see in far-future fics that he's exactly the same as he was at the age of eighteen. I get that his gimmick is his paranoia and conspiracy theories and whatever, but imagine if
Katawa Shoujo were a ten-season HBO drama instead of a visual novel--does anybody honestly think he wouldn't either grow past that or get written off the show entirely? That shtick would get
really tired--even Steve Urkel eventually developed the
Stefan Urquelle persona. (Did I just alienate you, Mirage?) It's just frustrating to me, when authors think that of all the characters in the VN, Kenji is the only one who doesn't get to grow as a person.
Anyway, I guess that's one reason why I like
Challenge Accepted (along with the fact that the author used Daidouji as Iwanako's family name... that's my catnip). It's not far-future, but you can see the
inklings of change, even in so few words. I wouldn't exactly say Kenji's a character I'm especially passionate about, but I
am sad you don't see more content like this.
So moving on, as far as
Finality and
The Past Catches Up are concerned...I think these stories are totally across the ocean from each other in terms of raw ability--I've read
Finality dozens of times and could barely get through
The Past twice--but they both do one thing that I'm totally in harmony with: they give Iwanako some kind of darkness. In nimblesquirrel's piece it's bigotry and snobbery, and in Brythain's it's a biting coldness and cynicism, but both of these stories reinforce the idea that Iwanako is...well, if she's not outright a
bad person, she's certainly not a nice one.
I mentioned moral inferiority in an earlier post--it's a subtle trait, so rarely consciously acknowledged, but Iwanako differs from the main five girls (and Miki*, but in the opposite direction) in that she's the
one love interest whose moral standing relative to Hisao is completely ambiguous. Even though it's the scene of the VN readers are perhaps the most intimately familiar with, we know
practically nothing about what actually went down during that six-week period where Iwanako continued to visit Hisao. It's Iwanako's inscrutability that makes her a compelling character--that Hisao's feelings about her vary widely across five different timelines is extremely meaningful (though from a Doylist perspective I suspect it's mostly because the same scene was written by many different writers with different styles, worldviews, and narrative objectives, rather than anything intentional.)
One of the reasons I get irrationally nervous (feel free to make fun of me for it) about the prospect of stories about Iwanako by other authors is that I
really don't want to see her depicted as a pure-hearted, sinless person--to me, that would be completely throwing out one of the most interesting aspects about her threadbare portrayal in the VN, and, really, just kind of missing the point entirely. Like, yes, she's indeed enough of an enigma that it's
totally possible she could be that kind of person, but why would her goodness be so
unknowable to Hisao? An enigma is an
obfuscation, and there's no need to obfuscate
virtue. To my eyes, it seems overwhelmingly more likely that the enigma of Iwanako shrouds a deep reserve of inner darkness. She's not evil, but she's sure as hell fucking
conflicted.
In using Iwanako as the POV protagonist of my story, I've had to partially spoil her mysteriousness--the reader is shown her feelings and her thoughts, so it's impossible to maintain the ambiguity, and I doubt I'd want to--but I've made it a trait she
instinctively enforces. To the other characters in the story, she's still pretty damn mysterious--and when some of that mystery is stripped away after Scene Ten, she never feels quite as "clothed" as she does in the earlier chapters. That exposure, that violation, is extremely disturbing to her.
Since I'm drifting now, I want to make some final comments on
Finality--I love the dead world it takes place in. That empty desolation reflects the mindset of Brythain's Iwanako so
strongly--it's fantastic work. I love how dystopic this future Iwanako is--she's let her guilt, pain and acedia overwhelm her such that she's become completely closed off emotionally from the world, perhaps irrevocably. The world has passed her by, and the people who mattered to her are long gone, and she's hardened herself in response--she has no illusions that she can
thrive. It's all she can do anymore just to
survive. That's a fantastic snapshot.
...I'm going to be a weirdo here though and confess I
hate Iwanako/Takumi and Mai/Shin, though. I mean, it doesn't matter for this story anyway but
god do I hate those ships.
* If you haven't noticed yet, I treat Summer's Clover as canon. That's why you've never seen me post on any of the active Miki Pseudo-Routes--I'm not interested in any depiction of her other than Suriko's. Same goes for Suzu--I'm know I'm in the minority but I don't really like Scissorlips' piece at all, anyway.