G-non-I-P

Jul. 27th, 2007 11:31 am
skygiants: Princess Tutu, facing darkness with a green light in the distance (elizabeth book)
[personal profile] skygiants
I'm feeling oddly twitchy and want to post something here. I don't know why; I just feel like it. (Actually I do know why. It's because I'm supposed to be cleaning my room. Shhhh.) And there are some small things in my life I could post on, I guess, good and bad, but I'm too lazy to find the words to make them interesting/relevant, not to mention putting them into a format that I feel okay releasing to THE WORLD.*

*sidenote: I think I may start keeping a journal. Not because of any desire to keep things from THE WORLD, just because I think it would be nice to have some kind of written record of the way I feel when I feel it, for later, and also a place to put thoughts without having to make them interesting. Note that I have made this decision many times before, when I was small, and it came to nothing, but I'm older now! Surely this will be a relevant factor!

Anyways, as is always the case when I want to post and don't know what, I will revert to my default - writing about books and stories and things, and demanding that you all entertain me by writing back. One book that I wanted to review in my Massive YA Book Post of a few weeks ago and forgot is The Perilous Gard, by Elizabeth Marie Pope. The book is yet another iteration of the Tam Lin story, and any book that's based off of that is about 90% certain to catch my interest anyways, just because of the main story element: there's a young man in trouble, and there's an ordinary girl who puts on her ass-kicking boots and goes to face down the Queen of the Fairies to save him. It's predictable that this is one of my favorite base stories. There are other ancient story plots, though, that I love and have no idea why. Rapunzel, for example. Princess in a tower raised by a witch gets compromised by a prince and then has to go wander the desert; why do I latch onto this story? Is it because of the pretty hair? (This is sadly plausible, though I've always kind of thought my eternal desire for long hair came from the story, and not the other way around.) There are trope-plots I'm even embarrassed to like. Confession: I almost always fall for the girl-and-her-mentor romance, like Daine/Numair, even though intellectually the age difference and the power differential disturb me when I think about it.

So tell me, what does it for you? What storylines are almost guaranteed to reel you in, and why? Bonus points if it's against your intellectual judgment. I may have asked this question before, I can't remember, but whatever; I want to hear your thoughts now.

(And relying entirely on character tropes is cheating.)

Date: 2007-07-27 07:17 pm (UTC)
agonistes: a house in the shadow of two silos shaped like gramophone bells (a man and his cow)
From: [personal profile] agonistes
I like hero's journey stories that start off with the character in the underworld (rather than have the hero upstairs at the beginning and then descending), and then HILARITY ENSUES.

Firefly counts. (And Serenity ESPECIALLY counts.) The Dark Tower counts. Pretty much any movie by David Lynch ever counts. Hell, even The Emperor's New Groove counts.

What gets interesting about it is how you define the underworld, and then how the hero manages to get himself (or herself) out of it. And what that says about cultural perception. And stuff. I'm supposed to be working. D: D: D: *flees!!*

Date: 2007-07-27 07:45 pm (UTC)
agonistes: a house in the shadow of two silos shaped like gramophone bells (he'll school you)
From: [personal profile] agonistes
*nods* No, it makes sense -- there's going to be back story that's got to be filled in, whether it's biographical information, or literal flashbacks (i.e. The Emperor's New Groove).

And...I'd argue that he does. Or that we get glimpses of it, maybe -- the first real, overt hints we get come in DT5, but I've always thought the process starts in DT4 when he finally tells the damned story. But I'm thinking of when he dances the commala, and the part at the very end when Eddie asks him to go after Susannah. And then there are parts in DT7. I mean, we don't even get his name until he speaks the High Speech, way back in DT1 -- that's a hint right off that he's fallen from a state of grace, and when he acts in accordance with proper behavior for somebody born to the High Speech ("Speak the act of contrition in the speech for which better men than you will ever be have died, maggot") is when we get those glimpses. The desert is unquestionably the lowest point, or, er, the underworld. So to speak.

Also, Mal isn't so much the one in the underworld in the series (though he certainly is in the movie). In the series it's Simon. (Which is a huge part of the reason why Simon is my favorite.) And that's where at least some of the cultural perception comes in -- because isn't where Simon has found himself the underworld, according to his own standards? And yet.

*flees back to work*

Date: 2007-07-27 07:49 pm (UTC)
newredshoes: possum, "How embarrassing!" (first love; eternal dwb)
From: [personal profile] newredshoes
Quest stories, unbreakable friendships, and children standing up to grown-ups and winning!

Also, talking animals. Animals and creatures and beasts win every time.

Date: 2007-07-27 07:49 pm (UTC)
minkhollow: (all right. tahiti!)
From: [personal profile] minkhollow
Fractured Fairy Tales are a big one for me, be they in the original Rocky and Bullwinkle incarnation or otherwise. This would be why I latched onto the Enchanted Forest Chronicles (one of the reasons, anyway), and why Witches Abroad is one of my favorite Disc books.
Speaking of the Disc, satire's also a good one for me. XD

I also like smart characters, particularly smart female characters. And redeemable-if-you-squint bad guys (see also Sneakers).

Date: 2007-07-27 08:04 pm (UTC)
campkilkare: (Default)
From: [personal profile] campkilkare
*agreed* When Roland says yes, and turns out of his road for the sake of love, that's a light year away from the man who let Jake drop. And King identifies that "yes" with all the power and promise of the White.

Date: 2007-07-27 08:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] furikku.livejournal.com
Character tropes are more likely to snag me than anything else, really. I really love redemption stories and the shonen animu "I WILL BE THE BEST EVAR WHATEVER-THE-HECK-I-LIKE-TO-DO PERSON!!!" thing, though. (Although that second one usually comes down to the protag as well, since I love the goofy idealist.)

Hero's Journey, duh.

Um... pretty much anything involving tragic ghosts, especially ghost children.

Oh, and Bad Guys made God by the Power of Love. I DON'T CARE IF IT'S CHEESY I WILL EAT THAT SHIT UP. Hell, almost ANY Power of Love story.

Date: 2007-07-27 08:42 pm (UTC)
misslucyjane: poetry by hafiz (Default)
From: [personal profile] misslucyjane
Hero's journey. Ahh, I'm such a sucker for Campbell.

Any "reader, I married him" kind of thing. ANY. Jane Eyre is my heroine forever and forever . . . which also means I love Madwoman in the Attic.

And anything playing with the Holy Grail, where the story is ostensibly about the object but is really about the journey.

Also, as an aside, someday when my brain is working again I'm going to write about how Harry Potter is an unreliable narrator.

I'd have a hard time choosing a favorite fairy tale, though I have a huge soft spot for Tam Lin too (I have a great unfinished XF fic using Tam Lin as a model) but I'm very partial to the Bluebeard story, which is kind of a fairy tale, sort of.

Date: 2007-07-27 08:54 pm (UTC)
ext_12491: ([M: PW] Glitter)
From: [identity profile] schiarire.livejournal.com
I like pairs (or groups) of people who are all on equal or semi-equal footing, and who are friends or relatives or lovers (or any mix of the above!), but who are SECRETLY TRYING TO DESTROY EACH OTHER.

. . .

Also revolutions.

Sometimes I like "The Geek Shall Inherit" (TM Wir Sind Helden) stories, but only if they are done well enough to make me forget they are "The Geek Shall Inherit" stories. See also: shameful 'oh, he/she IS me' feel-good-ers.

Date: 2007-07-27 09:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] areyoumymemmy.livejournal.com
Boarding school stories. I am fascinated by boarding school stories, from the old Katy books to And Both Were Young to Rebelde, my mexican soap opera of choice. (And yet I am not a huge Potter fan. Strange.)

Something about them, and I'm not really sure what it is. Maybe I always wished I went to one? They just suck me in, whatever it is.

Date: 2007-07-27 09:36 pm (UTC)
ext_12491: ([C&G] Cancer of the feelings)
From: [identity profile] schiarire.livejournal.com
I know. I am unpredictable in the extreme. *cough*

Oh, I mean that I was a really uncool (although not socially outcast), geeky kid who read on the playground all the time, and so whenever I came across a book whose hero was such a kid (Young Wizardry, for example), I fell hook-line-and-sinker for the "wizards LOVE reading! Just like you!" thing and felt as if the book were about me. It's a little harder to do that to me now, but it still works sometimes.

Date: 2007-07-27 09:45 pm (UTC)
misslucyjane: poetry by hafiz (timey-wimey detector)
From: [personal profile] misslucyjane
DON'T SNEAK A PEEK, PSYCHE. NO SERIOUSLY, DON'T cycle.

*snort* Just like saying "don't stick beans up your nose!" You'd think he wanted to murder his wives.

My post-grad area of study was the Romantics, the era of the gothic novel (and so much else wonderful stuff--I love those nutcases) and so I have a HUGE soft spot for them, no matter how ridiculous they are. And it's so funny to think about how influential that model turned out to be--romance novels still thrive on Byronic heroes and windswept moors.

(I have no book icons on this account! Something is wrong here!)

Date: 2007-07-27 09:56 pm (UTC)
ext_12491: ([M: OP] Patrick)
From: [identity profile] schiarire.livejournal.com
I know, right? I also miss, like, books where (invariably) a boy would go off on RIP-ROARIN' ADVENTURES, like to the California Gold Rush, or he would live in the forest eating treesap and Holding Down the Fort, or he would fly to the moon on the wings of a giant moth... I was also really into the girl versions of these (as you probably also know), but they tended to be more, "girls can't have adventures... EXCEPT ME! I defy societal pressures. ADVENTUROUSLY!" and then there would be an adventure. Unless they were the Oz books, which ruled, because they were unquestioningly just really weird.

Date: 2007-07-27 10:13 pm (UTC)
ext_12491: ([J&W] Wide awake)
From: [identity profile] schiarire.livejournal.com
AND SHE TOTALLY WENT FOR IT, she was so blasé! She was just like, cool, so I'm a pretty pretty princess.

HOWEVER, do you remember - I have no idea which book it was. But Ozma and some girl were in a TRAP, and then Ozma took the girl's hand, and stuck her other hand DOWN HER OWN SHIRT (this took me a while to interpret, not being familiar at the time with the word 'bosom'), and the villain supposedly DIDN'T PAY ANY ATTENTION because both these things were SO NORMAL FOR GIRLS TO DO? Like, what on earth? The older I get, the weirder that is to me. I mean, I've been a girl for a while now, but I don't usually grab my friend's hand and my breast at the same time. And if I did, I don't think it would go unnoticed.

People do write wacky sibling stories! Dexter counts... maybe... I was going to say SPN, but maybe we shouldn't talk about SPN.

Date: 2007-07-27 11:41 pm (UTC)
ashen_key: (one two three all in a line)
From: [personal profile] ashen_key
Outcasts, normally cynical, who find a place to belong and try and save the day because of it. My darling Obernewtyn Chronicles, which I really think are THE books of my childhood (even though it's seven years between books four and five in terms of publishing) are about that, even though Elspeth still has her quest. A lot of David Gemmell has that.

But, other then that...I really, really don't know. Really honestly. Sometimes I like quests, but that really has to be how it's written. Girls kicking ass tend to bore me. Boys discovering that they are king bore me, too. Normally. I like them knowing and just ignoring until they can't.

Maybe I'll think of something else. It's really too early to think.

Date: 2007-07-28 05:19 am (UTC)
ashen_key: (bedhair)
From: [personal profile] ashen_key
Um! It's been years since I've read them, so I'm actually more hazy then I would care to admit on something that had me literally lying on the bed staring the ceiling going 'oh. my' - I'm sorta boycotting the author because she took seven years to write the fifth book.

Wait.

Nine, I think, actually. And it wouldn't be so bad if she didn't write all these other things in the meantime. And then not finish them, either.

BUT! It's set in a post-everything-goes-nucleur-boom world, with the typical very controlling government. Sorta medieval, the main character, Elspeth, is an orphan as her parents were burned for sedition. She's trying to act normal so she can get her certificate for normalcy, but as she IS a mutant, she is delcared a Misfit and sent to Obernetwyn and things get really interesting. Misfits are both those who stand out, and those who have various form of mindpowers, and the powers of be at Obernetwyn do experiments on some of them - one girl used to be like River Tam, but they broke her to stupidity. That's the first book, and after that it's more of a hideout for misfits against the government, and there is a phrophecy and gypsies and relics of their past and our future and MATTHEW.

Oh MATTHEW.

He breaks my heart, that boy.

And then there is betrayal and foreign lands and really, really interesting secondary characters.

Date: 2007-07-28 05:53 am (UTC)
ext_12491: ([DW] Ten)
From: [identity profile] schiarire.livejournal.com
Ozma was actually going for her -- key? So that she could get them out of the trap? But the narrative's explanation of the villain's non-protesting confused me.

Tams are weird, weird siblings, except when River throws up on Simon's clothes.

Date: 2007-07-28 06:22 am (UTC)
ashen_key: (delightfully weird)
From: [personal profile] ashen_key
Matthew. And Damain (I think you spell it) and others and oh, the guy. Name I can't remember (this is TERRIBLE, Becca. I can't remember my childhood!) And DRAGON. Oh, Dragon. Poor Dragon.

And, I don't know. I read the back of the fifth book and I'm not sure if it is the last or not. But the fourth book is MASSIVE, so you mgiht as well start reading them. Plus, I love her style.

Green Monkey Dreams has to be one of my favourite books, ever.

Date: 2007-07-28 06:26 am (UTC)
ashen_key: ([KoH] black and white smile)
From: [personal profile] ashen_key
*grins* hey, maybe by the time you've finished, she would have finished the series.

I can but hope, anyway.

Date: 2007-08-05 07:57 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] villainny.livejournal.com
Have you read Archer's Goon? Not friends/lovers but siblings, admittedly, but still...

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skygiants: Princess Tutu, facing darkness with a green light in the distance (Default)
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