Showing posts with label The Hobbit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Hobbit. Show all posts
Saturday, 3 January 2015
The Hobbit. Battle of the Five Armies
Yesterday I went with son No.2 to see The Hobbit, the battle of the five armies. I'm full of admiration for the film. I read the book some years ago and was swept away by the story. The film carried me along from beginning to end. I admired the venues, the costumes, the characters, the special effects etc.
Thursday, 10 July 2014
Q is for Quests
Quests are a crucial part of fable, fantasy, legend and myth. To name only a few, there are a wealth of fascinating quests in The Odyssey, the search for the Holy Grail by Arthur's knights of the Round Table, which so many novelists have written about, Tolkien's novels beginning with The Hobbit, J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter series, Percy Jackson's The Olympians and Philip Pullman's The Golden Compass (His Dark Materials series).
Perhaps it is significant that the child in all of us enjoys children's novels with riveting quests.
Quests in fiction are important. What does the hero or heroine want? At the beginning of Margaret Mitchell's Gone With the Wind, her self-absorbed heroine, Scarlet O'Hara's quest is to attract every man at a barbecue, whether she wants them or not, and, above all, to marry Ashley Wilkes, who she pursues until the final chapter.
I have yet to read a novel in which there is not a quest - for love, to find out who done it, to take revenge, to be a successful businessman or woman, actor, actress, artist, poet or author etc.
So, before I write the first line of a new novel or short story I ask myself what the main characters' quests are
Perhaps it is significant that the child in all of us enjoys children's novels with riveting quests.
Quests in fiction are important. What does the hero or heroine want? At the beginning of Margaret Mitchell's Gone With the Wind, her self-absorbed heroine, Scarlet O'Hara's quest is to attract every man at a barbecue, whether she wants them or not, and, above all, to marry Ashley Wilkes, who she pursues until the final chapter.
I have yet to read a novel in which there is not a quest - for love, to find out who done it, to take revenge, to be a successful businessman or woman, actor, actress, artist, poet or author etc.
So, before I write the first line of a new novel or short story I ask myself what the main characters' quests are
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