After going to see The Hobbit (the first time) I was
filled with the inspiration of Middle Earth, fantasy and new worlds. I came home, looked at my fantasy novel and
considered the world it was set in. I
started thinking about world building.
World building is basically the make up of a fantasy
world; the religions, languages, history, geography, topography, etc. Creating maps is a big part of writing
fantasy and something I used to do when the Lord of the Ring films introduced
me to the beautiful epic world of fantasy.
But I quickly got bored.
The novel I’m currently working on is set in a city and
the surrounding area. Other cities are
mentioned, politics is hinted at as is the history but I don’t go into great
depth. Why not? Honestly?
Because it bores me.
When reading a fantasy with a great deal of world building
(G.R.R. Martin and Tolkien for example) I tend to skip over the long
descriptions of landscape, family coats of arms and ancestry and things of
historic importance. World building, for
me, should come across through the story.
Take Terry Pratchett’s Discworld as an example. I have never looked at a Discworld map, nor
am I bothered learning about Discworld folklore but I love reading about the
different cultures and religions and cities through the characters and their
stories.
I’m just not interested in where
the mountains are in a world. I'm not too fussed about languages.
But I am interested in different cultures.
What I fell in love with when watching The Hobbit was the culture of the
dwarfs. Their songs, their beliefs,
their history and backgrounds and how that had shaped their characters.
I haven’t read The Hobbit yet. It’s next on my list. I have, however, read about it. The main
impression I’ve gotten from Tolkien fans online is that Peter Jackson has
developed and expanded The Hobbit characters more than Tolkien did through his
novel. In my review of The Hobbit: An unexpected Journey I mentioned that not all thirteen dwarfs were fully
developed. It sounds like none of them
were fully developed in the novel (I would hope with the exception of
Thorin). Now I’m a little worried. I love the thirteen dwarfs in the film, for
me it’s why the film was such a triumph.
I wonder if having the dwarf culture but a lack of character in the
novel will leave me with the same rush.
So after creating a template document with which to
create my fictional world complete with map, I got bored and decided I didn’t
need it. Not all fantasies require the
world to be complete. My hope is that
readers will be able to learn enough of my world through the story and the
characters without need for maps and long descriptive prose.
I have been thinking about a short appendix or using
short stories to build on the history and therefore add to the world building
but I still cannot help that I find serious world building incredibly boring.
At the moment I’m planning on making my current novel
into a trilogy. Maybe if it were to
continue into a series the world would be built as I write more but at the
moment I’m happy to leave blanks where it is unimportant to the plot. I hope that my future readers will be happy with this too.
Saying all that, I still can't help but worry that I'm missing a trick. Will my lack of interest in world building will be my downfall as a fantasy writer?
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