DoctorGamgee wrote:Perhaps it is the often used form of Deus Ex Machina that you dislike.
Well formed stories use the tools well. I have seen a set of books where only middling writing is there, but the use, the ideas/process, and creative process of solving the riddles and finding a reality are so well plotted that the discovery, usage and rules of what it can/can't do has left me enraptured in two trios set in the same world. A third trilogy on the mother of a character left me cold and didn't care for it.
For me, it is the execution of the plot (and the tool: magical talents) that allow me to love the books, even though the author has trouble writing for male characters (the trio following the women is brilliantly done!).
Thanks, Doc, that sums up a part of my thinking very well, a well-executed plot using magic as a significant part of that execution. BTW, what are the books you're talking about, you're doing a good job at selling them!
Vraith wrote:The hardest part of dealing with Magic is [and maybe this is part of what u.'s problem is? Maybe someones already said this?] is that it can't be simple "magical." It has to be integral.
This probably catches much of my interest in the issue. This premise captures the assumption that plot is primary:
Magic has to be integral to the plot.
It's here that my sociological training (via feminist studies) kicks in; is my assumption that plot must be primary valid, or is it something that I should question? (Again it arises because some of these books are phenomenally popular.)*
My experience with the fantasy that I dislike is that the plot is rendered secondary to the magic, and the primacy of the magic means that it is unnecessary for it to integrate with the plot. An analagous genre to this is vampire fiction (did I say that I dislike those intensely too!

).**
I find fantasy where Magic is primary suffers from much the same monotony and weakness of the vampire thing.
u.
* As I was writing this post I realised that some of my problem may be mostly with fiction aimed at teen and young adults: Sabriel, Harry Potter and Vampire fiction are all fall intot his category.
** I cannot abide vampire novels because the fact of a person being a vampire trumps all else. In the case of vampire novels plot doesn't matter to me because they are not about human beings. And if vampirism represents repressed sexuality, repressed animality, repressed what*#@*ingever I am unutterably bored the microsecond I work that out. A few are okay e.g Bram Stoker, Stephen King and early Anne Rice. But a genre?! (I'm beginning to feel like a grumpy old man, maybe it is a gender thing after all
)