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Live Blogs A Perfect Cliche Storm: Let's Read Adventurers Wanted
FreezairForALimitedTime2011-10-01 00:58:21

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Fantasizing: An Introduction

Hello. My name is Freezair, and I am addicted to YA fantasy literature.

Ever since I was little, it's been clear that the universe I reside in isn't always this one. I'll be the first admit I'm somewhat escapist, or at the very least, I wouldn't mind a universe with a few more dragons in it. When I zoom past the literary fiction for the section draped in Franklin, Arthur, and Eloise, though, I at least have a passing excuse: I plan to make a career out of writing the stuff, so I have to do research! Research that you willingly and happily devote your time to is still research, after all.

This being the case, I consider myself a bit of a conessfrenchword of children's and young adults' fantasy. When you like fantasy of any kind, you have to be willing to accept certain things. Every genre has its own weak supports in the suspension bridge of disbelief, and fantasy is no exception. Chosen Ones? Kid Heroes? Elves and dwarves, sentient treasure, and that strange desperation which drives hero-collect-callers to look to other worlds besides their own for suitable champions are all common contrivances.

My disbelief floats around on a futuristic hoverboard, and very little can bring it down. I can ride out a Cliché Storm like a madman sitting on his porch with a camcorder in a tornado. No coincidence, no convenience, and contorted plot point will faze me. I happily indulge rip-offs, of everything from Tolkein to Rowling, in my hunger for more.

Or at least, I used to. Recently, I hit a bit of a... stumbling block.

As all regular readers know, some books are sentient, evil, and actively trying to break you. No—don't bother denying it; you know it in your heart of hearts yourself. The funny thing is, this is not always the same book to the same people. This particular book, for example, was obviously not as such to the people who published it, although it is for me.

This book is called Adventurers Wanted: Slathbog's Gold, with the subtitle implying that this is merely the first in a series. Oh my. The plot concerns a teenaged boy who is hired by an "adventuring company" to go to a mystic land and help a merry band of adventurers slay a dragon. While it sounds cliche, it does not immediately sound terrible. After all, a Cliché Storm can still be fun, provided it is not as deficient of style as it is of creativity. It's Not Supposed to Win Oscars—or Hugos, I suppose, as the case may be—it's supposed to be a fantasy romp. Nothin' inherently wrong with books-by-the-book.

But to pull of cliche well, you need other things besides the cliches to fall back upon. Stylish, syrupy prose that vanishes beneath you eyes like potato chips do in your mouth. Characters who stand out against a sea of cardboard cut-outs. A unique world. A fun concept. Just one of these can elevate your book above the level of yet another Extruded Book Product to a genuinely fun read.Tangent

This book, however, not only stuffs as many fantasy tropes as it can into its pages—the very first chapter reads like our own section on Fantasy imploded and was reassembled by a rudimentary AI—it couples them with some astoundingly doughy prose and dialogue. Add in a main character so milquetoast, you want to stuff him in a toaster over to crisp him up a little, and you have yourself what is commonly described in vernacular as a "hot mess."

Luckily, there is one surefire way to stave off the pain brought by these evil books: Sharing it. And that's precisely what I plan on doing.

Aren't you all lucky?

Comments

BonsaiForest Since: Dec, 1969
Feb 23rd 2011 at 7:53:06 PM
Awesome. I see you took some inspiration from my liveblog! :P

So Adventurers Wanted doesn't even qualify for a "Why It's Still Awesome". From the sound of it, it just seems very boring. I'm not into fantasy all that much, so I don't have as much experience as you do in that field and therefore wouldn't recognize the sheer Cliche Storm. But the whole thing just sounded totally boring to me! A book I wouldn't even have fun laughing at!

The lack of personality really sounds like it kills Alex. I can handle characters with limited personality if their interactions are still believable and/or the plot is interesting. But neither is the case here! And I can handle an uninteresting or unlikeable main character if the supporting cast is good. But not even that is the case! I tend to agree with you - if at least one of these things was good - plot OR character, there could have been an enjoyable story, considering I was able to enjoy stories that did well in one but failed in the other. Hell, I also was able to enjoy stories that had both unrealistic characters and a flawed plot, that managed to be fun because they were at least interesting!

Glad you, the fantasy expert, read this and not me. It sounds so painfully bland!

Looking forward to seeing what you come up with to improve it in the next part.
FreezairForALimitedTime Since: Dec, 1969
Feb 23rd 2011 at 8:39:10 PM
I did warn you I would. :P But thanks for the ideas! I also wanted to include the book Otto And The Flying Twins, but didn't because at the time I was for some reason incapable of recalling the name of the author (though I remember now it's Charlotte Haptie). Think it's too late to edit it back in?

Honestly, I think Alex is the thing that really killed this story for me. A lot of my ideas for fixing it (which will come up sometime tomorrow, I think) revolve around giving him a personality infusion one way another. I also slice down the main cast and—but ah, I don't want to give it all away.

And sometimes, we fantasy lovers have to take one for the team. But hey, I'm glad to have done so. If I ever liveblog another book, maybe I should try branching out to another genre. The problem is, since my reference pool is mostly fantasy, I only know bad books in that genre! I don't know any horrible, say, adventure stories, or mysteries, or horror novels! Also, being that I'm most familiar with this genre, I know the whiffs of badness better than I do for other ones.

Ah well.
lee4hmz Since: Dec, 1969
Feb 23rd 2011 at 8:56:36 PM
I'm not sure what else I can add to this except to say that you pretty much nailed it this time, too. The bits of dialogue you posted were so dry and lifeless that it wasn't a stretch to read them in Ben Stein's voice ("Bueller? Bueller?").

And to add to the whole cooking metaphor, it's not just that the cook didn't know how the ingredients went together, he didn't even know how to prep them properly, so they went into the mixing bowl shell and all (like that scene from Short Circuit where Number 5 is trying to make pancakes). So you get something that isn't just strange-tasting and oooey-gooey, it's also oddly crunchy and hurts going down.

Finally, I was totally thinking of Suudsu and Chocozuma's Revenge when I first read that part of the analysis. Tasty things that don't really go together, see. :D
BonsaiForest Since: Dec, 1969
Feb 23rd 2011 at 8:59:42 PM
I edited my liveblog entries days after I originally put them up, to fix up mistakes (I showed it to people and realized some things could be written better), so there is no "too late" to edit it!

If Alex had a personality, he certainly would at least have reservations about going on the adventure, or maybe be naively gungho about it - either would resonate with some of the audience and make him human, and color his interactions with other people and perception of what happens, even if the plot elements themselves are cliche. You're very right that his lack of personality is what brings it down.
FreezairForALimitedTime Since: Dec, 1969
Feb 23rd 2011 at 10:12:26 PM
I totally made a cake kind of like that when I was a kid, Lee. Me and my friend Ashley. We put things like sprinkles and peach yogurt in it. Me? I don't know exactly what it was, but that cake grew two huge bubbly mounds right in the center. Being immature little kids, we said the cake had boobs.
lee4hmz Since: Dec, 1969
Feb 23rd 2011 at 11:05:42 PM
Heh! It makes me wonder what this book ended up growing...nested Bags of Holding that You Cannot Grasp The True Form of? The mind boggles.

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