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What do people LIKE about Young Adult Fiction?

Started by KatieHal, April 22, 2013, 03:11:05 PM

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snabbott

See, that makes sense. Actually, there's something kind of like that in HP - the idea that the killing curse doesn't work unless you really mean it. I'm guessing that's true in general.

Steve Abbott | Beta Tester | The Silver Lining

Deloria

Quote from: KatieHal on May 03, 2013, 12:09:59 PMSo the protagonist, Harry Dresden, uses Latin (or Latin-like) words for his spells, whereas a Hispanic wizard we meet later on uses Spanish words.
Because Spanish isn't Latin-based? :P Does Harry Dresden speak English most of the time? If so, this is a deeply flawed explanation. :P
 
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KatieHal

:P Specifically Latin words, whereas the other wizard is using specifically Spanish words.

Though even Harry admits his system is far from 'perfect' and consistent.

Katie Hallahan
~Designer, PR Director~

"Change is the constant, the signal for rebirth, the egg of the phoenix." Christina Baldwin

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stika

Nah, it'd be much cooler if the spells were said in European Portuguese  8)

((what? I can dream, can't I?))

writerlove

Quote from: snabbott on May 03, 2013, 01:37:21 PM
See, that makes sense. Actually, there's something kind of like that in HP - the idea that the killing curse doesn't work unless you really mean it. I'm guessing that's true in general.

Harry tried to use the Cruciatus curse on Bellatrix in book 5 and it doesn't really work on her. She told him he had to mean it and in that moment, he was full of grief from the previous incident that had just happened.
"Love can't be banished, even from this place. ... still less can it be banished from my heart."
"ENOUGH! Burden me not with thy poetry."-KQ6

GrahamRocks!

I think that was one of the things that made me give up on my Fantasy novel: my Magic system didn't make much sense, or rather, it was too simple and there was hardly any "cost" to use it properly.

How did it work? Well, there is all sorts of Elemental Magic in the land of Corim, such as Fire, Ice, Lightning, Nature, Healing and so on; and a Mage can learn one type or multiple ones if they wish (although, I'd imagine that learning multiple ones would take longer) When a Mage is casting a spell, they simply have to focus on whatever task they have (Mages in training are taught to close their eyes to help them with this, while an advanced Mage doesn't have to), their eyes glow and they see their target in whatever color that Magic is associated with while everything else around them (from their POV, not literally) is in black and white. Once they are focused, they simply just thrust their hand/s forward and ALAKAZAM!

And seeing as you have to keep calm and focus to perform Magic, there really isn't such a thing as insane Mages in Corim as their spells with just backfire.

KatieHal

Ahh--yeah, see I'd say add something that lets bad guys use it. OR, that could be a whole plot in and of itself--somehow there ARE evil, insane mages suddenly and your protags are trying to find out why and how.

Alternately: evil doesn't necessarily mean insane. A person can do horrible things and be perfectly sane about it--what's he or she is doing can make perfect logical moral sense to them.

Any time you give a character powers or some kind, basically, you do need to find a drawback to it. Even if it's one that isn't going to be obvious--say, using magic makes them immortal. Sure, seems great, until you realize they suddenly don't age though their friends and family do. Or they DO still age, and have to deal with that while never actually dying. They can be long-term effects, but still something that's hard to wrap one's head around in the short-term. If they're immortal, are they still human? How else will this magic change them? And will they even notice, or is that the scary part, that they won't notice?

Katie Hallahan
~Designer, PR Director~

"Change is the constant, the signal for rebirth, the egg of the phoenix." Christina Baldwin

I have a blog!

GrahamRocks!

Well, people in Corim are a LOT longer lived than in our world- I mean, remember all those people in the Bible who lived to be over 100? The humans in my story can live to be over one hundred (provided of course, they don't die from injuries or disease, which is bound to happen anyway being mortal) and still be kickin'! They can't live to be, say, 1000 but they can live at least 150 or so.

Technically, there is a "cost" to using Magic in Corim, but it's not very interesting: whenever you work out or go for a run, you have a physical limit that lets you keep going until you can't take it anymore and collapse from exhaustion. Obviously, that's not a good thing to do. Same goes for Magic, except instead of physical tiredness, it's mental tiredness. If you overdo your Magic, you'd eventually become so mentally tired that you can hardly think.

As for that whole "Magic can be used for evil" thing? Well, my villain actually IS/WAS a powerful Mage anyway, so I knew that already.

Want me to recount what I'd thought of until my computer lost its data on it?

stika

Still no Portuguese magic incantations? *mutters to himself*

KatieHal

GR: Yeah, sure. In general, though, yeah--if you think your magic system is lacking something and not interesting, chances are no one else will either. So throw something new in there to mix it up. Magic wearing you out eventually is a common drawback I've seen in other fiction. It helps to make battles interesting--who's going to wear out first, etc.

Depending on what kind of world Corim is, the other drawbacks could just be the kind of trouble people who use magic get into. Especially if it's something they need to keep a secret, though I get the impression it's not.

Katie Hallahan
~Designer, PR Director~

"Change is the constant, the signal for rebirth, the egg of the phoenix." Christina Baldwin

I have a blog!

Deloria

#30
I don't like Young Adult Fiction. :P At all. :P It's insipid and doesn't often deal with issues I care about. :P I especially hate it when adults try to write young adult fiction that wasn't inspired by their own adolescence because those characters are never relatable and insanely unrealistic. :P John Greene can't write polymaths or cancer kids or libidinous teenagers. :P
 
Holy Roman Empress
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"In cases of doubt about language, it is ordinarily best to consult women."-Vaugelas
Space! :D Extraterrestrium! :D Espace! :D

stika


Deloria

I've never really read any Sci-fi, though I suspect that would be more up my alley. What bothers me in YAF is the lack of realism in the interpersonal relationships and the dialogue of the protagonist and the characters surrounding him/her. :P I'd be fine with an alternate universe. :P
 
Holy Roman Empress
Queen of *all* Albion
Précieuse and salonnière! :D
"In cases of doubt about language, it is ordinarily best to consult women."-Vaugelas
Space! :D Extraterrestrium! :D Espace! :D

stika

Ah that makes sense. Me I love Sci-fi in general, though I also like police novels, I've ready all of the Sherlock Holmes books ever published... not that it's a hard thing to do as they're not very big or that complex compared to what we have today :P

Deloria

 
Holy Roman Empress
Queen of *all* Albion
Précieuse and salonnière! :D
"In cases of doubt about language, it is ordinarily best to consult women."-Vaugelas
Space! :D Extraterrestrium! :D Espace! :D

stika

I've actually only seen an episode or two of the show it was pretty good

Delling

Quote from: Deloria on May 08, 2013, 11:04:00 AM
I don't like Young Adult Fiction. :P At all. :P It's insipid and doesn't often deal with issues I care about. :P

In fairness, I would say that some of it does indeed deal with issues you care about; it just doesn't do it well. ;P

Quote from: Deloria on May 08, 2013, 11:04:00 AM
I especially hate it when adults try to write young adult fiction that wasn't inspired by their own adolescence because those characters are never relatable and insanely unrealistic. :P John Greene can't write polymaths or cancer kids or libidinous teenagers. :P

XD So, what you're saying is... you only liked Looking for Alaska? (Because that's the one book based on his own adolescence... I mean, they all are of course in part based in his own experiences, but that one admits the heavy involvement of his adolescence in its setting and characters.)

Also, Alaska and Margo seem to be the same character when you strip away the packaging... that is, they seem to be the same underlying person simply responding to the family and background handed to them in their respective books. Colin is the rare super-boy who becomes interested in the otherwise "plain" girl (role reversal for Green). And in TFioS, if we were trying to follow the bouncing Sue/Stu trope through Green's work, we'd have to conclude that in the TFioS universe, cancer gives you enlightened entitlement to understanding the vastness of the universe, the meaninglessness of life, and the inevitability of oblivion, and then you die.
Noli me tangere! Nescio ubi fuisti!
Don't touch me! I don't know where you've been!

Marquess of Pembroke
Duke of Saxony in Her Majesty's Court
Knight of the Swan for Her Imperial Highness

...resistance was obviously useless against a family that could invent italics.

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stika

I saw we should turn this into an Edward vs. Jacob debate!

I vote team Jacob!

GrahamRocks!


KatieHal


Katie Hallahan
~Designer, PR Director~

"Change is the constant, the signal for rebirth, the egg of the phoenix." Christina Baldwin

I have a blog!