I’d like to begin by
talking about how writing fantasy is not
different from writing any other genre. Whether you are writing fantasy,
romance, mystery, or literary fiction you work with the same writing tools to
meet virtually identical goals. Foremost, you have to tell a story. Proust may
very well be one of the sole authors who got away without one, but most
everyone else has to have one. If you don’t have a story to tell, the reader is
going to close the book on you. Under the umbrella of “the story”, you also
need to develop your characters, maintain point of view (be it singular or
many), attend to the right balance of narration and dramatization, use
appropriate tense(s), consciously employ the best chronology for the story, and
so on. For the writers of most genres, this would be enough balls to have in
the air.
And then there is
fantasy. The very connotation of that word holds infinite worlds, limited only
by the imagination of the author. Think of the worlds wrought by J.R.R. Tolkien
or J. K. Rowling. Middlearth and Hogwarts are but singular side trips to the
vast realms. What this means for the fantasy writer is that work unique to this
genre is mastery of “world building.” The fantasy writer builds up the world
the story takes place in from the ground up. But it is much more than simply
imagining a different landscape.
A proper world built
from scratch needs a full history, spanning not only centuries but millennia.
Does your world have magic? If so, what are the rules? In most fantasies, there
are often consequences for using magic, and it is not always simply done. What
kind of technology does your world have? Has gun powder been invented? What
metals are used? What are the social customs, forms of greeting, clothing
fashions? What is taboo in your world, the rituals around death? What religion
or gods are believed? Do the gods themselves appear? What forms of government
are followed, the politics? What are the curses people use? (This can be a
surprisingly interesting question, as the answer can incorporate religious
beliefs and speaking what is forbidden.)
This is only the short list of questions that need to be answered as the
fantasy world gets built.
Is it surprising to
say that many a writer has gotten lost in world building and forgotten that
they started out telling a story? The
successful fantasy writer uses world building to advance the story and develop
character and not make it an end to itself.
I would argue that
the non-fantasy writer also must successful world build. A realistic story set
in the Minneapolis of right now has to consciously put that world on the page.
Many writers neglect this, and weak writing results. Perhaps what sets fantasy
writers apart from writers of other genres is that we take nothing for granted.
Another aspect
perhaps unique to fantasy writing is that most stories in one way or another
tell the Hero’s journey. In my classes on writing fantasy, I have described the
Hero’s journey like this:
The all purpose hero is someone set apart from ordinary humanity
through miraculous birth or other special qualities, and undergoes a test in
the form of a quest or journey. The quest takes the hero out of the ordinary
sphere of human life, often into a new land where different rules apply.
Passing through a series of challenges, the hero is helped in the quest by the
magic or wisdom of some, and hindered by others. Although the quest seems
difficult, when the end is achieved, the challenge is resolved with surprising
ease. The hero acquires a boon – something valued, such as new knowledge –
which he or she brings back to the human community for its benefit.
You can find
examples of this hero template in Mesopotamia’s Gilgamesh, the Finnish epic Kalevala, the Lord of the
Rings, and even Star Wars (the
original trilogy). Throughout the history of humanity we have always seemed to
have a need for a hero. It could even be said that each one of us is the hero
in our own personal story.
I am right now
finishing the first novel of a fantasy series. Because I am writing for a young
audience, I have been conscious of one other aspect that writers of children
literature attend to – as if there wasn’t enough to think about already. Much
of children’s literature investigate the idea of justice. As Dickens’ Pip put
it, “[i]n the little world in which children have their existence there is
nothing so finely perceived and so finely felt, as injustice.” Whether it is
rebellion against an injustice, or a goal to set things right, social justice
is the flame that ignites the story, and turns what began as mere characters
into heroes.
Michael
Kiesow Moore is an award-winning writer of fiction, poetry, and creative
nonfiction. His work has appeared in several books and journals, including Among
the Leaves: Queer Male Poets on the Midwestern Experience, Water~Stone Review,
Talking Stick, Evergreen Chronicles, The James White Review, and A
Loving Testimony: Losing Loved Ones Lost to AIDS. His awards have included
a Minnesota State Arts Board fellowship, a Loft Mentor Series Award, and poetry
nominated for a Pushcart Prize. He has taught
creative writing at the Loft Literary Center and
curates the Birchbark Books Reading Series at the Birchbark Bookstore.
For more information visit www.michaelkiesowmoore.com.
1 comment:
I shared this on Twitter and on G+ because I thought it a lucid exposition, not just about fantasy but creative balance. A work I would draw your attention to is a book called 'Another Space in Time' a fantasy rooted in familiar reality but which spreads above it like a tree.The Author is a most generous supporter of other people's work and deserves some reciprocity. He is Richard Bunning.
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