Right, I had three
books tied for favorite read this past month (Anvil of Tears –
crazy intense characters, The All-Pro – football and
space battles, and The MVP – love on the
battle(football) field and stealing spaceships) so I couldn't pick one to
review this month.
Instead, I'm gonna
talk about the book I found the most useful – The Book of Three
by Lloyd Alexander.
I read this book
when I was a child, and while I usually remember what I read pretty well I was
surprised at how much of the story I didn't remember.
It's about Taran,
the Assistant Pig Keeper, whose job it is to take care of Hen Wen, the oracle
pig. The only problem is, Arawn is planning on taking over Prydain and when Hen
senses his soldiers she takes off into the woods. Taran scrambles to find her,
and meets Prince Gwydion in the woods who had been hoping to speak to Hen Wen.
Together they search for the pig, but when they learn that Arawn's strength is
greater than expected, and Gwydion is captured by a witch, Taran forces himself
to forget his quest for Hen Wig and take up Gwydion's –
save the Prydain.
Alexender's
writing is, while not something I want to emulate is a example of many good
things to me as a writer. Prydain is a land richly built around traditional
Welsh figures and legends, with original characters and folk names interacting
seamlessly together. The story could be
Welsh myth itself; it's not a story based on Welsh culture but one that takes
on the feel of it.
I love his
characters. Princess Eilonwy is a smart girl, talking circles around Taran, and
the dialog between them is so reminiscent of a young couple. He makes comments
that set her off and she disses him for being so ignorant. I could just see him
rolling his eyes and muttering 'girls'. The Bard/King Fflewddur Fflam has a
problem with lying, his hard strings snapping every time he does. Doli the
Dwarf complains about everything he's asked to do, he has the special talent of
making himself invisible, but you can tell he secretly likes it. And Gurgi's dialog is as distinctive as
Gollum's, though he's a lot more friendly. If you feed him.
The plot is full
of adventure and mishaps, the companions are always in some type of trouble.
Getting captured by a fairy king, chased by the undead Cauldron born. But what
got to me the most was that Taran, despite being the protagonist, isn't
actually responsible for getting them out of most of their troubles.
He's a perfect
flawed character, making mistakes due to pride and inflated self-knowledge, and
gets himself into lot of of trouble. It's his friends who have sword skills and
magic at their fingertips, Taran just knows how to ride a horse. His role is not to save the world, but rather
to act as a glue keeping people together. His decisions, while not always
correct and ear him a tongue lashing from Eilonwy, are usually followed.
The Book of Three
shows that not everyone is a hero, but that doesn't mean they aren't
significant.
It was a refreshing thing to see –
lots of plot points happen outside of Taran's awareness and his story is not
the most important in the history of the land. But it's important to him and to
read a story where the hero doesn't have to save the day, but just try, is
something so new to me. So many stories
involve the main characters being heroes – Harry Potter, The
Fellowship of the Ring, The Avengers.
When do you hear about someone's roll in saving the world when they
didn't really have one?
And that's what
Alexander taught me. All characters are
important. They all have a story worth telling not just in side stories and
back story, but in their own novels. And that there is more to being a hero
than taking down the bad guy.
This sounds like a great book, and the points you made are really something I've been thinking about lately. Main characters don't always have to simply defeat the bad guy, and they don't always have to be this amazing hero. So I'll be checking this one out. Thanks! :)
ReplyDeleteI always used to think they did, or at least defeat their own inner demons in a lot of contemporary lit, so it was good to see that's not the case. I'd certainly recommend this book if you want to go the other way. Or the 4 books that follow it.
DeleteSounds like a really great book. It's so important to remember that ALL of your characters should serve some purpose. I don't like "filler" characters :)
ReplyDelete