30 November 2007 @ 07:22 am
The world rescue theory of mainstream literature  
In [info]tammypierce folks have been talking about why they read--or don't read--books along the lines of Gossip Girls or The A List.

I've been on a mainstream YA reading kick the past couple weeks, reading a mix of "trashy" and not-so-trashy non-fantasy YA books, and this discussion made me, in my free-associating way, think of something.

Sometimes, when I read a mainstream book, I find myself muttering things at the characters along the lines of, "Yes, your petty problems are all fine and well, but I'd really find you more interesting if you'd forget all that and just go save the world, or do something else useful with yourself."

For the trashier end of my current reading, I still found myself thinking that, even as I took a sort of mindless guilty pleasure in same.

But for the really good mainstream stuff? The thought never even crossed my mind.

So I propose a new standard by which to judge mainstream literature. The more often a fantasy reader thinks, "Oh, just forget all that and go save the world, will you?" the lower the quality of the book. :-) (Just add it to the Ninja Replacement Score on your list of critical tools.)

With that in mind, R.A. Nelson's Teach Me and especially Ellen Wittlinger's Hard Love are amazing reads. I was engrossed enough in the worlds of the protagonists that not once did I think any worlds needed saving but their own.
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( 13 comments — Post a new comment )
The Muse, Amused: editing like an editor[info]penmage on November 30th, 2007 03:02 pm (UTC)
Did you know that the sequel to HARD LOVE is coming out soon? In summer 08? It's called LOVE AND LIES: MARISOL'S STORY, and it's from Marisol's POV (duh.)
Janni Lee Simner: anime me[info]janni on November 30th, 2007 05:54 pm (UTC)
I didn't know that! It's not a book I thought of as needing a sequel, but now I'm very curious to read it.
The Muse, Amused: batgirl fights to make the world safe![info]penmage on November 30th, 2007 06:08 pm (UTC)
It's not so much a direct sequel as much as a different story through Marisol's eyes. It's also funny it's coming out so long after Hard Love--but coming out it is!
~twilight~[info]_twilight_ on December 2nd, 2007 01:52 am (UTC)
Ohhhh. Must read. Could really relate to Marisol.
al_zorra[info]al_zorra on November 30th, 2007 09:10 pm (UTC)
Isn't the preference for all action all the time by the Speshull 1 very limiting for readers -- especially readers that are demanding that ALL WRITERS commit to saving the world with dragons by Speshul 1 *+, perhaps, Speshul Dragon 2) all the time?

How very conformist.

And boring.

I like a Speshul 1 or 2 as much as anyone, when truly exceptionally well done and / or new. But, by now, with thousands of titles filled with dragons 2 + Speshul 1, those are few.

Ah well, I'm such a crank!

Love, C.
Janni Lee Simner: anime me[info]janni on November 30th, 2007 09:57 pm (UTC)
Well, I don't know that you need to be a special one to save the world, though.

Actually, it may be that if you're the sort of character who's book doesn't require worldsaving, you'll be well-rounded enough not to be Special, even if it turns out you save the world after all.
al_zorra[info]al_zorra on November 30th, 2007 09:59 pm (UTC)
I agree certainly, Janni.

Could you provide some titles in which the world is saved by someone who isn't the special one?

Love, C.
Janni Lee Simner: anime me[info]janni on November 30th, 2007 10:01 pm (UTC)
I'll have to think on that a bit ...

Actually, Frodo and Sam come to mind. :-) (And they're surrounded by Special Ones who can't do it precisely because of their specialness.)

Edited at 2007-11-30 10:02 pm (UTC)
some guy named Larry[info]lnhammer on November 30th, 2007 10:18 pm (UTC)
Happens a lot in Patricia McKillip's works. Winter Rose comes first to mind.

---L.
Janni Lee Simner: anime me[info]janni on December 1st, 2007 12:10 am (UTC)
Sarah Beth Durst's Into the Wild. The heroine is Rapunzel's daughter, but all that gives her is more knowledge than most of how fairy tales work, and no magic powers whatsoever.

The Homeward Bounders, by Diana Wynne Jones (the more I think about it, the more this one is a really good example)

Enchantress from the Stars, by Sylvia Engdahl
kelly_swails[info]kelly_swails on December 1st, 2007 03:21 am (UTC)
Sometimes I like trashy YA, as long as it's well-written (and no, I don't think that's an oxymoron. :)) I like the "Private" series by Kate Green. Okay, so I've only read the first two or three, but they have good cliff-hangers and the end and I *want* to keep reading, so that counts, right? They're set in a private school, so that may be why I find it intriguing.
Tez Miller[info]tezmilleroz on December 1st, 2007 08:20 am (UTC)
I'm considering reading the Gossip Girl books - are they worth checking out, may I ask?

Have a lovely day! :-)
Janni Lee Simner: anime me[info]janni on December 1st, 2007 03:10 pm (UTC)
I've not read Gossip Girls, but Sara Shephard's Pretty Little Liars was fun in the same quick-read, guilty pleasure sort of way. :-)