Xar wrote:SRD has said that the Land is a "larger" world than the "real world", so characters from the "real world" can expand in the Land, whereas characters from the Land can't shrink into the "real world". Does that mean that upon death, characters from the "real world" are gradually given a different depth of perception of the Land, or rather, that they expand in the Land to the point of becoming part of it?
You are definitely correct.
My answer is actually simplistic. Our reality keeps people small; when they are disconnected, they are free to become larger in the Land.
Of course, that's not a complete answer. It doesn't explain why they become larger than everything else in the Land, why they seem to become resident superheroes.
Do we need to have more of an explanation than a literary one? That authors choose to make protagonists heroes?
Covenant is an exception, no matter how you look at it. He
is the white gold, all else follows from that. Somehow, in the Creator's choice, the Land and Covenant became related before Covenant ever arrived.
If you consider Covenant's case as an exception, and Hile Troy's case as simply a protagonist ending his life on a heroic note, then there may not be as much of a trend as we might imagine.
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