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Indeed. Rebekah Send a noteboard - 12/07/2010 06:03:09 PM
But I think all of these things can work if they are used intelligently in a non-cliched way. Naturally, lazy writing is always going to give a boring product.

Very sensible reply.

To agree with him though, Number Two (the Perfect Hero) bugged the crap out of me in The Name of the Wind. Kvothe was so perfect it was ridiculous and boring.

Well. I disagree on this one. I didn't really like that book, but I thought Kvothe was fine. He made enough mistakes to be realistic, but was "perfect" enough to fit the classification of genius. Just a very capable person, even as a young boy.

And a lot of the things he did well were through sheer luck, not his own skill.
*MySmiley*

Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read. - Groucho Marx
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Interesting post from author Sam Sykes: The 5 Worst Motivations for Fantasy Characters - 12/07/2010 12:07:59 AM 1193 Views
Interesting. - 12/07/2010 12:34:02 AM 648 Views
Except he's not - 12/07/2010 04:23:12 AM 658 Views
I don't think the satire works though. - 12/07/2010 05:14:44 AM 636 Views
I thought that, too... but Kvothe screws up, a LOT. - 12/07/2010 06:28:54 AM 674 Views
Re: Interesting. - 12/07/2010 09:07:00 AM 735 Views
Indeed. - 12/07/2010 06:03:09 PM 643 Views
This should just be common sense by now. - 12/07/2010 08:22:16 AM 707 Views
True. - 12/07/2010 06:03:40 PM 620 Views
Greed, lust and fear make the best motivators IMHO *NM* - 12/07/2010 06:36:18 PM 294 Views
Re: Greed, lust and fear make the best motivators IMHO - 13/07/2010 08:40:29 AM 636 Views
To be fair, number 4 is a good motive in itself; it's just been overused. - 13/07/2010 09:08:49 AM 620 Views
Tigana attests to that. *NM* - 13/07/2010 07:49:44 PM 257 Views

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