Realistic Fiction
Feb. 7th, 2014 08:44 amWhen reviewers complain that a story element is "unrealistic," their real complaint is usually something else. When they say a handsome billionaire falling for a mousy secretary is "unrealistic," they're really saying that the characters were underdeveloped and their romance was flat and contrived. When they say the pat deus ex machina at the end was "unrealistic," they're really saying that it felt cheap. (In general, when people complain about the ending, the problem isn't the ending. The problem is the middle leading up to it.)
— "Ideal vs. Reality," T. K. Marnell
Originally published at Liana Mir. You can comment here or there.
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Date: 2014-02-07 03:58 pm (UTC)Otherwise, yes. ;)
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Date: 2014-02-07 04:13 pm (UTC)To elaborate slightly, I just finished a duology where the first book has an obvious deus ex machina (apparently, this author does that infrequently), but the set up that made it satisfying didn't come in the beginning of the book at all. It was developed through the second half of the book. By the time the ending came along, I believed and expected the deity to take direct action.
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Date: 2014-02-07 04:21 pm (UTC)There are exceptions to everything, obviously. It's hard to tell if I don't know the book, but I would suspect that either the possibility of a deus ex machine was in actuality set up much earlier than that even though the actual deus ex machina was established only later, or I would have hated the book. ;) I mean, this isn't about right or wrong anyway, just about what's most likely to work for most readers.
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Date: 2014-02-07 04:32 pm (UTC)The flaw can be in either, and I think T. K. probably meant "before" more than a specific part of the book, but I find that I modify my expectations throughout the middle of the book to reflect how hard of a line the author is going to take. I do take serious issue with a book whose ending disconnects from the beginning, but I downright hate the book that led me merrily along through the middle, then fizzles with an about-face.
In this particular case, the first third of the book established the religious issues involved certainly and it was a fantasy book, but no hint that the goddess was a hands-on 'real' deity that interacted directly with the characters came through until the second half. It is nevertheless an acceptable possibility in the genre, so I couldn't care less because the goddess DID interact before the climax (and I'd read the prequel where it was more obvious), so I was good with it. The rules showed that if the deity was real, she was allowed to have a hand and rescue the characters.
Queen's Thief by Megan Whalen Turner on the other hand takes the same established setup of the gods are real and plays out that they are NOT allowed to intervene directly, which is a rule only learned through the middle of the book, and a deus ex machina would have killed the books dead. The characters had to win on their own. They could only count on the gods to keep them alive. Maybe.
All three parts have to work together and I think we're in agreement there, but I've always been a patient reader, probably because I came up on classics. I don't require the beginning third of a book to be awesome. I require the middle to be awesome and the ending to deliver on both.
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Date: 2014-02-07 04:52 pm (UTC)(I have another Helo for you. ;))
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Date: 2014-02-07 05:04 pm (UTC)( :warm fuzzies: )