marycatelli: (East of the Sun)
marycatelli ([personal profile] marycatelli) wrote2020-12-02 10:44 pm

where do they come from?

There's an old woman in the woods. She gives good advice to the heroine, and possibly something of gold that she can use to bribe the villainess.

Or an old man who can speak to all the beasts, and has two brothers who can speak to all the birds and all the fish respectively.

The evil sorceresses and witches and wizards can be stepmothers and stepsisters and brothers who fled once their plots were uncovered. But what, then, are the beneficent ones? Perhaps princes who never found the princess again, or the ogre's beautiful daughter who gets away on her own but has nowhere to go except a hut in the woods.

The thing is, if the heroine speculates that she might end up one of them, I have to explain where they come from. And if I can't explain, the heroine has to have a different speculation about a future fate that doesn't involve becoming queen.

[personal profile] jbellinger 2020-12-04 03:50 pm (UTC)(link)
Is there some kind of price to pay to be queen or king? Something that makes some people say "It's just not worth it" and give up on the office and its demands?

I assume that hermits (holy and un-) would complicate the story framework too much.

[personal profile] jbellinger 2020-12-04 04:04 pm (UTC)(link)
or maybe travelers from out of the area on their way to some magical site... If they're transients then there won't be a line of people around waiting to ask where their lost cow got to.

[personal profile] jbellinger 2020-12-04 11:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, and kinging it isn't always as easy as it's cracked up to be.