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Saturday, September 28, 2013

The Royal Ingredient


It’s quite difficult to find a fantasy novel that does not have some sort of character or plot dealing with royalty. Even if the central focus of the story and its characters have nothing to do with sovereigns, thrones or kingdoms, there still tends to be someone or something in the plot that relates to things of royalty. I believe this is mostly due to the setting of most fantasy worlds taking place in a medieval-type era. The Middle Ages was a period of emperors, kings and lords.

Another look at this is that the utter most of us do not stem from royalty; therefore, experiencing the royal lifestyle is the dream (or fantasy) of many people. I think that’s why a lot of the western world is so fascinated with the royal family of England—it’s like a fairytale—something so far from us, and unattainable, that it’s like a fantasy.

So it has been since the dawn of fantasy fiction that kings, queens, princes and princesses have been the orbital point of stories. There are tales of dynasties holding their thrones (or trying to take back their thrones); tales of regicide and machinations; tales of usurpers. There are so many methods in the use of the royal ingredient in fantasy; and it has almost…almost become as common as magic (excluding urban fantasy).

Are there any fantasy books where there is no ruler somewhere in the story? Is it possible to have an epic fantasy without some element of the royal or imperial? I’m sure such books exist, but they are few (and I’m sorry to say that I cannot think of any at the moment).

I think the royal element tends to bring the grandeur scope of things into fantasy worlds. Palaces, castles, crowns, scepters, thrones, riches and servants, these are cool things (apart from magic). I just feel like a good fantasy would be amiss without some of these things in the mix.

The British folklore of King Arthur may have had influence on the genre—a legendary king mentored by a wizard (Merlin). Princesses and princes have been quite common in the fairytales of old; as well as kings and queens. Early fantasy novels like The Well at the World’s End by William Morris, published in 1896, and an influence to J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis, contains characters of royalty; including Lord Dunsany’s novel, The King of Elfland’s Daughter.

I’ll leave this thought with you… Imagine A Song of Ice and Fire without the royalty ingredient. It would be more like the Hatfields and McCoys; which may be quite good, but it would lack the grandeur scope—lacking that epic scale.


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