Active Users:539 Time:25/11/2024 10:51:35 PM
True. Rebekah Send a noteboard - 12/07/2010 06:03:40 PM
These character archetypes were all great - until they were used one too many times. Doesn't mean they can't still be used, but a good storyteller should give them a fresh retelling; take the trope and play with it, subvert it, get it drunk and stick it in a hot tub with its roomie's hot younger sister.

It's definitely a main reason I like authors like Erikson and Sanderson, among several others. I do what I can to avoid books with characters as blatant as those listed here. (Although sometimes they still find a way onto my bookshelf, the sneaky bastards.)

I like them sometimes. No need to think. Just comfortable reading.
*MySmiley*

Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read. - Groucho Marx
Reply to message
Interesting post from author Sam Sykes: The 5 Worst Motivations for Fantasy Characters - 12/07/2010 12:07:59 AM 988 Views
Interesting. - 12/07/2010 12:34:02 AM 482 Views
Except he's not - 12/07/2010 04:23:12 AM 497 Views
I don't think the satire works though. - 12/07/2010 05:14:44 AM 476 Views
I thought that, too... but Kvothe screws up, a LOT. - 12/07/2010 06:28:54 AM 499 Views
Re: Interesting. - 12/07/2010 09:07:00 AM 572 Views
Indeed. - 12/07/2010 06:03:09 PM 482 Views
This should just be common sense by now. - 12/07/2010 08:22:16 AM 540 Views
True. - 12/07/2010 06:03:40 PM 457 Views
Greed, lust and fear make the best motivators IMHO *NM* - 12/07/2010 06:36:18 PM 225 Views
Re: Greed, lust and fear make the best motivators IMHO - 13/07/2010 08:40:29 AM 498 Views
To be fair, number 4 is a good motive in itself; it's just been overused. - 13/07/2010 09:08:49 AM 479 Views
Tigana attests to that. *NM* - 13/07/2010 07:49:44 PM 193 Views

Reply to Message