Devor submitted a new blog post:
The Mentor: Trope Reboot
by Brian DeLeonard
Fantasy novels are complex tomes filled with beguiling magics, curious creatures, unspeakable names, countless political fiefdoms, more breeds of elf, and thousands of years of adventure. Your readers have to learn all those new particulars without wanting to burn your book in rage.
Thankfully there’s a trope for teaching those details. Let’s reboot the Mentor.
Explaining the Worldsplainer
Few people or characters learn everything on their own. Most of us have guides, teachers, parents, and role models to help us on our way forward. These are the people who have walked the path ahead of us, who have earned their knowledge through labor and first-hand experience, who pass their hard-won wisdom onto us.
That’s not what makes a mentor.
As a trope, the mentor doesn’t exist to share his or her experience with the hero. A hobbit cannot become a wizard. The slayer will never be a watcher. Harry never wanted to become headmaster of Hogwarts. The mentor’s abilities are usually very different than the hero’s. Otherwise the mentor would be able to handle the conflict alone.
The mentor’s experiences are beyond the hero, mysterious and unattainable, and yet almost useless for ultimately solving the problem at hand.
Instead, mentors explain the world. The mentor is mysterious because the author’s world is mysterious. Little by little the words of the...
Continue reading the Original Blog Post.
The Mentor: Trope Reboot
by Brian DeLeonard

Fantasy novels are complex tomes filled with beguiling magics, curious creatures, unspeakable names, countless political fiefdoms, more breeds of elf, and thousands of years of adventure. Your readers have to learn all those new particulars without wanting to burn your book in rage.
Thankfully there’s a trope for teaching those details. Let’s reboot the Mentor.
Explaining the Worldsplainer
Few people or characters learn everything on their own. Most of us have guides, teachers, parents, and role models to help us on our way forward. These are the people who have walked the path ahead of us, who have earned their knowledge through labor and first-hand experience, who pass their hard-won wisdom onto us.
That’s not what makes a mentor.
As a trope, the mentor doesn’t exist to share his or her experience with the hero. A hobbit cannot become a wizard. The slayer will never be a watcher. Harry never wanted to become headmaster of Hogwarts. The mentor’s abilities are usually very different than the hero’s. Otherwise the mentor would be able to handle the conflict alone.
The mentor’s experiences are beyond the hero, mysterious and unattainable, and yet almost useless for ultimately solving the problem at hand.
Instead, mentors explain the world. The mentor is mysterious because the author’s world is mysterious. Little by little the words of the...
Continue reading the Original Blog Post.