Clement Rage
Pro Adventurer
So, in another thread, we were talking about coding societies and stock medieval fantasy settings before we got sidetracked. I picked out some relevant posts, if I missed any, feel free to slot them in.
@Obsidian Fire
@Cat on Mars
@anyone else that cares
I know I have problems with story blurbs that are 'like this, but with a twist'. I like seeing stories sold on what they are, rather than what they aren't, but when you're selling work, you have to make your work stand out from the crowd.
I've read occasional articles lamenting how samey this becomes, but no one forces anyone to write within a genre. It's harder not to, but genres become genres because somebody writes something new and sells it.
Thoughts, anyone?
@Obsidian Fire
@Cat on Mars
@anyone else that cares
Well, "fantasy is always some kind of fauxEuropean medieval land" is a trope for a reason, right?
Tangent: Y'know, this also bothers me a bit. Because people complain about it a lot, but, like, there's no god of writing forcing you to write that if you don't want to. Publishing houses gatekeep, yes, but hey, I've been self publishing fanfic on the internet for fifteen years.
A lot of works are so proud of subverting the formula by actively defying the tropes as though they're somehow bad in themselves. For me that's like following someone else's blueprints to a tee and then complaining about how bad the plans are.
Why didn't you just do something else, then?
Oh, right. Actually building something new from the ground up is hard.
One of the best examples I can think of for subverting the "fauxEuropean medieval land" setting is the Codex Alera series by Jim Butcher. The culture, politics and military are all heavily Roman in nature, but they've got nature spirits everywhere that everyone interacts with that feels like it's something a medival fantasy novel would have.
The entire series was written by Butcher to prove it was possible to write a good (or at least decent) book based on two not-so-great ideas. The ideas in question being the "Lost Roman Legion" trope and pokemon.
Is that subversion, or just doing something else?
I know I have problems with story blurbs that are 'like this, but with a twist'. I like seeing stories sold on what they are, rather than what they aren't, but when you're selling work, you have to make your work stand out from the crowd.
I've read occasional articles lamenting how samey this becomes, but no one forces anyone to write within a genre. It's harder not to, but genres become genres because somebody writes something new and sells it.
Thoughts, anyone?
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