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[personal profile] kitewithfish
I think that I've come to an odd realization about my reading habits.

There are a number of sci fi/ fantasy novels that suffer from old problems- their characters are formulaic, the plot is predictable, etc, etc. And people don't want to read them for those reasons- the particulars of the story in question are dull.

However, sometimes these novels are absolute gems of World-Building. The characters are less interesting to me than the world in which they are shown, and I find my literary sight drawn from the foreground to the landscape. The most recent examples of these, that I've found, have been quite nice AU fantasy novels, with good to decent characterization and plot, but create really, really compelling and interesting worlds for their characters to move through.

I'm in the middle of rereading Robin McKinley's Sunshine, which features some nice twisting of fantasy tropes (the Chosen One/ Descendant Girl with Magical Powers, Vampire Who Talks Old, etc), but the really interesting thing for me is the background world McKinley created. It seems fairly well like ours, with the main difference being that Others (vampires, werewolves, and demons, oh my) are real and publicly acknowledged as threats- superficially, it seems like an Alternate Universe with a mystical background that exploded into outright dangerous war several years before the story takes place, and has since reached some kind of peace accords.

But McKinley keeps sticking little things in there that seem to hint at a much more convoluted history- Instead of "cool" and "damned", the slang is "spartan" and "carthaginian", one swears to gods and kali (lower-case) when one's pissed. These things are not one-offs, but consistent, and the particular opposition of spartan (good to the Roman mode of thought) vs. carthaginian (very, very bad to the Romans), seems to suggest a period of longer influence for the Roman Empire. Gods doesn't stand against that idea, but then where does Kali come into the mix?

The other books that I'm thinking of in the realm of the intriguing world building is "The Dresden Files", a series by Jim Butcher on the adventures of the Chicago's only advertising wizard (he's in the phone book), who features primarily as a detective in supernatural cases. (Clearly, this series violates the Knox's Ten Commandments and Van Dine's 20 Rules right off the bat. If you can't hack it, just give up.) Having read 2.5 of the ten books in the series, I can warn you that they tend towards a formula and the writing is rather workmanlike at times, nor are they truly "detective stories" in the that it's generally impossible for you make an educated guess along with the main character.

But the world(s) that Jim Butcher put together for this series are just delightful. They are lovely and complex, and honestly, that's partly the reason that I keep reading these things, not generally being a fan of the detective mindset in general. But right off the bat you get a delightfully evil mob boss with the cold "soul of a tiger", and a large and varied backstory on the main character that only gets hinted at within the first book. I want to know more, not so much about whodunit this week, but more about how everything all fits together- the greatest mysteries of this series are clearly not the ones that Dresden is called upon to solve, but the much wider ones of politics and who's pulling the strings, which are clearly only going to come out gradually over the course of the maaaaany books.

Date: 2008-02-17 03:12 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
David Edding's world in the Belgariad and the Mallorean is pretty awesome. One country in particular I think you would really like...but I forget what it's called. It's snake-y. Tamora Pierce is also good at this. I think my favorite little detail is 'earbobs' instead of earrings. It's such a cute word! -E

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