Originally Posted by
JCamilo
I suppose he didnt explained well, but I do think ideas get more persuasive and will be better remembered if the writer is good. Most of good philosophers are good writers, trainned by rules from the time of Cicero or Plato. Even complexity like Schopenhauer's text is well written. And maybe he means, a book lasts due to it, while there could be many socialist poets, Shelley remained longer...
But Clarke was better than the majority of his fellow pulp sci-fic writter. He only looks as bad when we compare him with guys like Wells, Bradbury and perhaps Philip K.Dick. Anyways, this is a good example, Clarke most memorable book is a movie. Where someone with a foot on geniality gave to Clarke ideas an aesthetic power that keeps the movie much more alive than the book. It is so much that people do not notice two atheists skeptical dudes made a movie about creationism.
Yes, many texts do not need characterization, a novel trait, not a literature trait. Anyways, what means deep? I see this much used if the character goes in inner thinking, dostoieviskan style. And I bet many people can say Harry Potter is not as deep as Ulysses, even if Potter's inner feeling is probally presented more than Ulysses. I would say, a deep character should be a meaningful character, and Funes, Borges himself, Asterion... are deep.