So, I read Elizabeth Hayden's first fantasy novel, the first book in a big honkin' series. I was really impressed by a lot of the ideas, and I found some elements of it amazingly creative. However, I ended up feeling rather negatively about the book, and I've been trying to figure out why.
Here's what I think.
I have reached a point in my life where I am no longer interested in novels where every main character is "the best" at something. I'm great with "good at", I'm great with "great at" -- but I'm really tired of "is the best in the whole world at", particularly when it's more than one thing per character.
For example, in "Rhapsody" (Hayden's novel), the protagonists include the following:
Something like a D&D Bard (Rhapsody)
Something like a D&D Fighter/Rogue or Ranger (Achmed)
Something like a D&D Fighter/Barbarian (Um, Grunthor, maybe?)
The Bard is the most powerful magic-user in the world. She is ALSO the most beautiful woman in the world, although she doesn't realize it because when men start acting stupidly around her, she thinks it's because she's so ugly. For THE WHOLE BOOK, people are acting stupid around her, and she thinks it's because she's ugly, despite everybody offering to buy her things. (To be fair, she's now so beautiful as a result of a magical doodad, but still, after a couple of times, you'd think she'd click. But that wouldn't be fiction.)
(This is a side peeve of mine: the Cinderella syndrome writ large, where everyone is so mean to the scullery maid and thinks she's ugly until some guy from another culture says, "Hey, you're not ugly, you're Ephebian, and in fact, you're REALLY HOT for an Ephebian," and then he discovers that she sings to unicorns, and she's given a whole lot of new clothes and a love interest.)
The Ranger is the most sneakiest guy in the whole world. He is a moving shadow. He is poetry in motion. He invented a fantasy-world version of an assault rifle, which he uses most of the time -- because nothing makes my S&S fantasy work like a fantasy version of an assault rifle. He's the world's best shot. And when it comes to combat, he's the world's best warrior. Nobody can get anywhere near him. His standard routine is to let people try to stab him, and then he takes their sword away and stabs them instead. Because he's THE BEST FIGHTER IN THE WORLD, when he's not the best sneaky-guy in the world, the best shot in the world, and so on.
The Barbarian guy is ALSO the best fighter in the world, leading one to speculate as to what would happen were he and the Ranger to get into a fight. They're friends, so they never would, but still. The Barbarian guy is the STRONGEST fighter in the whole world, though, while the Ranger is the FASTEST guy in the whole world, so even though they're both utterly unbeatable, they're at least not stepping on each other's toes.
This is DEFINITELY something that bothers me now. I'm not sure if it always bothered me or not. I'm trying to think of other stories where the hero was THE BEST -- Belgarion was the most powerful sorcerer AND the most powerful warrior, but he never seemed smug about it -- plus, I was twelve when I read The Belgariad. Arutha was a GOOD swordsman, but I never thought that he was the best -- it was never such a hands-down idiotically obvious bestness that I got annoyed about it. In some series, there are heroes who are the best at something, but they have obviously sacrificed everything to get there -- so the world's best swordsman is a grim silent man who's no good at cards, dice, or poetry.
Thoughts? Am I all alone in this? Is this a stage that people go through, where for awhile you want to read about heroes who are THE BEST at everything, and then you want heroes who are more human and balanced?
Here's what I think.
I have reached a point in my life where I am no longer interested in novels where every main character is "the best" at something. I'm great with "good at", I'm great with "great at" -- but I'm really tired of "is the best in the whole world at", particularly when it's more than one thing per character.
For example, in "Rhapsody" (Hayden's novel), the protagonists include the following:
Something like a D&D Bard (Rhapsody)
Something like a D&D Fighter/Rogue or Ranger (Achmed)
Something like a D&D Fighter/Barbarian (Um, Grunthor, maybe?)
The Bard is the most powerful magic-user in the world. She is ALSO the most beautiful woman in the world, although she doesn't realize it because when men start acting stupidly around her, she thinks it's because she's so ugly. For THE WHOLE BOOK, people are acting stupid around her, and she thinks it's because she's ugly, despite everybody offering to buy her things. (To be fair, she's now so beautiful as a result of a magical doodad, but still, after a couple of times, you'd think she'd click. But that wouldn't be fiction.)
(This is a side peeve of mine: the Cinderella syndrome writ large, where everyone is so mean to the scullery maid and thinks she's ugly until some guy from another culture says, "Hey, you're not ugly, you're Ephebian, and in fact, you're REALLY HOT for an Ephebian," and then he discovers that she sings to unicorns, and she's given a whole lot of new clothes and a love interest.)
The Ranger is the most sneakiest guy in the whole world. He is a moving shadow. He is poetry in motion. He invented a fantasy-world version of an assault rifle, which he uses most of the time -- because nothing makes my S&S fantasy work like a fantasy version of an assault rifle. He's the world's best shot. And when it comes to combat, he's the world's best warrior. Nobody can get anywhere near him. His standard routine is to let people try to stab him, and then he takes their sword away and stabs them instead. Because he's THE BEST FIGHTER IN THE WORLD, when he's not the best sneaky-guy in the world, the best shot in the world, and so on.
The Barbarian guy is ALSO the best fighter in the world, leading one to speculate as to what would happen were he and the Ranger to get into a fight. They're friends, so they never would, but still. The Barbarian guy is the STRONGEST fighter in the whole world, though, while the Ranger is the FASTEST guy in the whole world, so even though they're both utterly unbeatable, they're at least not stepping on each other's toes.
This is DEFINITELY something that bothers me now. I'm not sure if it always bothered me or not. I'm trying to think of other stories where the hero was THE BEST -- Belgarion was the most powerful sorcerer AND the most powerful warrior, but he never seemed smug about it -- plus, I was twelve when I read The Belgariad. Arutha was a GOOD swordsman, but I never thought that he was the best -- it was never such a hands-down idiotically obvious bestness that I got annoyed about it. In some series, there are heroes who are the best at something, but they have obviously sacrificed everything to get there -- so the world's best swordsman is a grim silent man who's no good at cards, dice, or poetry.
Thoughts? Am I all alone in this? Is this a stage that people go through, where for awhile you want to read about heroes who are THE BEST at everything, and then you want heroes who are more human and balanced?