Post by account_disabled on Dec 3, 2023 23:48:56 GMT -5
Even though they are completely different novels and even characters, in my opinion they have something in common. Hogwarts School may have similarities to the Twelve Crows Mill. These protagonists have to do with magic, or rather with its dark side. The atmospheres created by JK Rowling and Otfried Preussler are very suggestive. Harry Potter and Krabat are two boys who were able to follow their curiosity and their hunger for truth and knowledge without being overwhelmed by Evil. Indeed, fighting it. The protagonists in Walter Moers They are adventurers of the best kind .
Starting from Captain Blue Bear, who in his thirteen and a half lives tells us all about it, passing through Rumo and his wonders in the darkness , up to the writer and poet Ildefonso de' Sventramitis who gets lost in the meanders of the city of books dreamy and the evil Eco who will not be intimidated by the witch catcher Malfrosto. Moers was able to create Phone Number Dataunique and particular protagonists, demonstrating extraordinary imagination and creativity. A fantasy writer has everything to learn from him. Who is the protagonist in George Martin? Good question. I don't think it exists. At the end of each novel there is a frightening list of characters. I don't think there is a well-defined protagonist.
As I have said several times, the chapters are set according to the point of view of the protagonist of that chapter. The result is a novel made up of many stories, connected more or less directly to each other. I like the system because it offers great advantages: you don't bore the reader with the same character's stories You don't get attached to a character, but you can make him die whenever you want, since you have so many others to spare you don't get bored when you write, because you space out more lives and more stories you create a corpus of stories, precisely, and not a single story you are more stimulated and your writing benefits It's difficult to write a novel with so many protagonists, I'm certainly not saying it's easy. But how much advantage do you think we would be?
Starting from Captain Blue Bear, who in his thirteen and a half lives tells us all about it, passing through Rumo and his wonders in the darkness , up to the writer and poet Ildefonso de' Sventramitis who gets lost in the meanders of the city of books dreamy and the evil Eco who will not be intimidated by the witch catcher Malfrosto. Moers was able to create Phone Number Dataunique and particular protagonists, demonstrating extraordinary imagination and creativity. A fantasy writer has everything to learn from him. Who is the protagonist in George Martin? Good question. I don't think it exists. At the end of each novel there is a frightening list of characters. I don't think there is a well-defined protagonist.
As I have said several times, the chapters are set according to the point of view of the protagonist of that chapter. The result is a novel made up of many stories, connected more or less directly to each other. I like the system because it offers great advantages: you don't bore the reader with the same character's stories You don't get attached to a character, but you can make him die whenever you want, since you have so many others to spare you don't get bored when you write, because you space out more lives and more stories you create a corpus of stories, precisely, and not a single story you are more stimulated and your writing benefits It's difficult to write a novel with so many protagonists, I'm certainly not saying it's easy. But how much advantage do you think we would be?