I went back to the OP on this. As posted, it casts the net rather widely, with "originality" being applicable to plot, setting, character, and so on. Later in the thread, the focus seems to narrow down to invented objects, which gets covered by setting, of course.
The question posed was, is originality (regardless of how defined) a laudable goal? Is it overrated? Is there such a thing as too much for a single novel or series?
The answer to all those is sometimes yes and sometimes no, which doesn't feel especially helpful. Other answers tend to reduce to "yes if done well and no if not", which likewise is not helpful.
Is there any other sort of answer? Only, I suggest, in the particular. That is, only when the question is, here is something I have written, do you find the "original" parts of it help or hinder the story? By "original" here I leave room for all the perspectives and definitions that have been tossed about on this thread.
I'm not convinced asking leading questions like that is necessarily a good thing when talking with beta readers or editors (not convinced it's necessarily bad, either), but it's the best I can do. To put it another way, speaking in generalities will almost always focus more on definitions than on practical writing advice, while talking about specifics is only randomly helpful to anyone but the author. At the same time, it's the peculiar magic of human beings in forums that all kinds of discussion can spark all sorts of insights in the most unexpected places, even years after the thread has gone quiet.
The question posed was, is originality (regardless of how defined) a laudable goal? Is it overrated? Is there such a thing as too much for a single novel or series?
The answer to all those is sometimes yes and sometimes no, which doesn't feel especially helpful. Other answers tend to reduce to "yes if done well and no if not", which likewise is not helpful.
Is there any other sort of answer? Only, I suggest, in the particular. That is, only when the question is, here is something I have written, do you find the "original" parts of it help or hinder the story? By "original" here I leave room for all the perspectives and definitions that have been tossed about on this thread.
I'm not convinced asking leading questions like that is necessarily a good thing when talking with beta readers or editors (not convinced it's necessarily bad, either), but it's the best I can do. To put it another way, speaking in generalities will almost always focus more on definitions than on practical writing advice, while talking about specifics is only randomly helpful to anyone but the author. At the same time, it's the peculiar magic of human beings in forums that all kinds of discussion can spark all sorts of insights in the most unexpected places, even years after the thread has gone quiet.
Auror
Myth Weaver