Misha Burnett asked me a question on my ‘Ask and Be Answered’ page. The question was:
“If you could make one trope of speculative fiction (fantasy, science fiction, horror) magically vanish, what would it be? For example, just wave your hand and *poof*, no more bio-engineered plague that turns people into zombies, or no more elvish archers or whatever. What do you think has been done to death and should be allowed to rest in peace?”
First, my experience with horror is extremely limited and I don’t understand the point of most of its trends. Sex gets you killed, the kid is always under attack by the monster, the villain can walk faster than an athlete can sprint, etc. So, I’m going to leave that genre alone.
For science-fiction it would be nice if we would leave Mars alone for a while. 9 times out of 10 it’s Mars that we go to or the enemies come from. I get that we’re obsessed with Mars, but there are other planets out there. Other galaxies too. Give the red planet a break before somebody is dumb enough to make ‘Mars Needs Moms 2′.
Here’s the big genre though. My genre. The one I’ve spent most of my life playing in and enjoying more than reality. What would I get rid of from Fantasy?
I thought about this all day, mostly to drown out the screaming toddler. I think almost everything can be kept solely because there could be a twist that I could see. Elven archers can be used, but they’re ghost-like because they’ve been alive for so long. Dragons are cowardly creatures that live on a single island or something. The fun about fantasy is that you can twist everything at some point. Yet, there is one thing that I find personally annoying with fantasy and it’s something that not a lot of people would notice.
STOP MAKING MAGIC A WONDER IN ITS OWN DAMN WORLD!
Let me explain. You live in a world where elves live forever, dragons roam the land, demons can be summoned, monsters are added into the ecosystem, and fairies exist. A magic item is uncommon, but you know they exist. All of this wonder and fascination around you would be the equivalent of airplanes, cars, and microwaves to us. Yes, a guy from the suburbs would be amazed by an elephant in the wild. That’s because it isn’t found everywhere. In many fantasy worlds, magic is everywhere, but the guy able to light a candle with a snap of his fingers STILL gets more awe than the pointed-eared immortal playing darts in the corner.
I’ve read so many books where a character is amazed by another character that can cast magic. Then, I remember that the amazed character is carrying a magic sword or a magic ring. Why be surprised about the fireball flinger when your sword can coat itself in lightning and move on its own? I know the reader is supposed to be in awe of the magic, but I’m tired of characters from a magical world being surprised by magic when there is no basis in the book that magic is rare. It would be like Luke Skywalker being fascinated and amazed by Droids.
Magic is a very delicate part of fantasy and it can be misused very easily. I know those of us in reality would be in awe of a real spellcaster, but that’s us. You can get away with common peasants being like that too. This doesn’t fly for the King of your kingdom acting like he hasn’t seen magic before even though he’s fought wars against undead, has a Magic School in his territory, rides a griffin, and owns a Crown of Telepathy.
So, I would get rid of the trend of spellcasters always being looked at in awe. Maybe it’s just a job that they have the natural talent for.