SeverinR
Vala
"Oh, ho ho! You sly dog! You got me monologuing! I can't believe it..." Syndrome, The Incredibles.
I believe the best fantasy books have a good mix of original ideas which make the book unique and cliches which help the reader to "feel at home".
I'm going to be the voice of dissent here and say that I love series. I often specifically look for books that start a series because I want to get immersed in the world and I I want to really get to know the characters.
My favorite in-plot cliche (by no means limited to fantasy) is the villain who is about to kill/incapacitate our hero(es) but first must give a monologue about his/her diabolical plot to take over the world. When the hero escapes, he will now know every detail of the villain's plan and so will be able to counter it (bah, foiled again).
Terry Pratchett absolutely skewered this cliche in Night Watch.
Haven't read that one, but I would hope he did the obvious thing: have the villain feed the hero a load of complete crap. Then the hero spends the next hundred pages chasing red herrings.
Oh, wait: villains would never lie about something, would they?
Naah, that's just a perception–no doubt largely a consequence of the ones involving groups of Carmelite nuns going on a quest to chastise minions of the Dark Lord for their bad language tending to be brief and not particularly memorable.
[That was in response to Neurosis's post, btw.]
Naah, that's just a perception—no doubt largely a consequence of the ones involving groups of Carmelite nuns going on a quest to chastise minions of the Dark Lord for their bad language tending to be brief and not particularly memorable.
[That was in response to Neurosis's post, btw.]
Anyone noticed how when the cliche dark lords are finally killed, it tends to lead to the cliche result of the sudden disappearence of all of his vast, loyal armies?