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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Question of the Month, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. QOTM: All about Villains!

Hey guys, it’s Kat! I hope you all had a great week :) For those of you who have been reading Pub Crawl/Let the Words Flow (as we used to be known way back when), you might remember we used to do Questions of the Week, where a number of us here at the blog would all answer one reader-submitted question, offering a variety of insight.

Well, it’s been a while since we did a QOTW, but we decided to bring the feature back. However, QOTW is a bit of a misnomer, since we’ll probably be doing them more like once a month…so now they’re called Questions of the Month!

The question we’ll be discussing this Friday is: “In your opinion, what makes a great villain? And how do you go about crafting your own villains?”

Erin BowmanIt’s really important to me that a villain’s motives make sense. This doesn’t mean that I ever agree with his/her actions, just that however evil or wrong or misguided the villain is, I can at least get inside his/her head and see where they’re coming from. Example: Voldemort was so terrifying because his obsession with pure-bloods and the cleansing of the Wizarding race felt real. His racism ran deep, and I could see what he was trying to attempt and why. Every villain is the hero of his/her own story, and the protagonist is the antagonist in our villain’s eyes. I always try to keep this in mind when writing.

Stephanie Garber

Don’t leave your villains lurking in the shadows; I think it’s important to give villain’s plenty of page time. I used to be a huge fan of the television show The Vampire Diaries. One thing I loved about that show was that their villains were never part time. They were active characters, always causing problems, killing people, directly tormenting the MCs. It was awesome! I think this also made the villains on The Vampire Diaries feel more powerful because they weren’t afraid to show their faces, and during many of these confrontations they would win.

I think that ideally your villain and your MC should have a relationship arc—just like the other arcs in your story. And if you take the time to map out something like this, it’s going to ensure your villain does more than just randomly pop up everyone once in a while.

JJI think what makes a great villain is some sort of quality that makes him or her seductive and/or attractive. I don’t mean that the villain needs to be incredibly good-looking; I mean that the villain needs charisma. Something about the villain needs to draw followers, not just his/her minions, but the reader as well. Intelligence, persuasive speech, cunning, intimidating presence, etc. all make for a compelling antagonist. If you can understand why the villain’s underlings are devoted to him or her, then you’ve got the makings of a great villain.
Personally, my favourite sort of villain is the tricksy kind, the slippery, morally ambiguous character whose motives are completely opaque, and is just as likely to help the protagonist as much as hinder him or her. (David Xanatos from Gargoyles—for whom the Xanatos Gambit from TV Tropes is named, Ben Linus from Lost, Melisande Shahrizai from the Kushiel series by Jacqueline Carey, Mrs. Coulter from His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman.)
When crafting villains, as Stephanie said, I think it’s important that the villain and protagonist should have some sort of relationship. Too often we think of villains as providing useful plot obstacles, but it’s one thing to set back a character on a quest; it’s another thing to have that setback mean something emotionally. Villains are always more interesting when things are personal between them and the protagonist.

Stacey Lee

 

In creating villains, examine their black souls and find the colors inside. A multi-dimensional villain can break your heart, too.

 

biljana new pic

I agree totally with Stephanie on relationships between the villain and other characters. I also think it’s important to somehow make the villain relatable; give them common human traits or trivial weaknesses so that even if people can’t relate to the murderer, they can relate to them disliking the cold not because the cold is their nemesis, but because the cold sucks.

In terms of how I write my own, I wrote a post here a while back that covers that :)

Hannah

I love JJ’s mention of the slippery, morally ambiguous villain. Those are definitely some of my favorites as well – I find myself hating them and rooting for them all at once, which can be deliciously frustrating. And villains whose motives make complete sense to me as a reader are even better. We’ve all heard the phrase “a villain is the hero of his own story”. But I think it’s important to remember that this means our hero is his/her villain. And how does this play out if the hero and the villain have a personal relationship already? What does this mean for the reader, who is now being given another layer to the conflict? There are so many ways to create depth in villains, but I think at the very start of the list, a villain must have more than “rule the world at any cost” on their to-do list.

Julie Eshbaugh SquareI agree with so much that’s already been said here! If I could add anything, it would be that it helps me to remember that most people believe they are acting morally, so in the villain’s (however twisted) understanding, his actions are morally justified. I also enjoy a story that has so much moral ambiguity–depending on whose POV you consider–that it can be unclear who the villain actually is.

Annd, that’s our round-up! What are you guys’ thoughts on villains? :)

If you have a question you want us to consider for a future QOTM, feel free to post it in the comments or tweet it at us! Even if we don’t choose it for our next QOTM, we might pick it for a future one after that :)

 

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2. Back-to-School Reading Recs

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by

Erin Bowman

It’s September and the school buses are again making the rounds. In honor of back-to-school, us Pub Crawlers have been chatting about some of our favorite required reading from high school. (And also some of our least favorites). I’ll kick things off…

Erin Bowman
Favorite: A Separate Peace by John Knowles and The Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger, both read in 10th grade when I had an amazing teacher. I remember connecting with these characters because they felt so distinctly teen, and I loved that.
Least Favorite: The Red Pony. I could not stand this novel. I don’t even remember why. I had a grudge against Steinbeck until Grapes of Wrath won me over in 11th grade.
– Erin Bowman

adamfaceauthor
Favorite: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon. Seriously the only book all the Juniors read beyond where we were asked to. 
Least Favorite: Ulysses by James Joyce because, come on, who had time to read that when I was busy writing Harry Potter fan-fiction when I was home?
– Adam Silvera

Kat Zhang
Favorite: The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy. The language in this book is gorgeous!
Least Favorite: Hmmm, probably A Light in August? I just wasn’t a fan of Faulkner…
– Kat Zhang

SusanDennard
Favorite: Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s Chronicle of a Death Foretold. I have no idea why, but I was obsessed with that book.
Least Favorite: My Antonia by Willa Cather. I didn’t even finish this, I’m ashamed to admit. I got, like, three chapters in, decided it was too dreadful to continue, and SparkNoted the rest.
– Susan Dennard

JJ
Favorite: Probably Jane Eyre or Pride & Prejudice. Because I am predictable like that. Jane Eyre pretty much cemented my love of the gothic novel, but I really appreciated the way my teacher taught us the book, which was pretty much about sex. Passionate sex, romantic sex. In other words, FEELINGS. I loved Pride & Prejudice because I thought it was funny. Austen is extremely wry and she writes about ridiculous people that just SKEWERS their ridiculousness. (Although unlike Bronte, she doesn’t do earnest feelings nearly as well.) Other books I loved were Beloved (Morrison) and The Great Gatsby (Fitzgerald).
Least Favorite: Tess of the D’Urbervilles. I tried, Thomas Hardy, but I just can’t get into you.
– S. Jae-Jones (JJ)

amie165c-twitter
Favorite: The Endless Steppe by Esther Hautzig. This was a memoir about a Polish girl exiled to Siberia during WWII, and at thirteen, it was a revelation to me.
Least Favorite: Far From The Madding Crowd. Like JJ, I just couldn’t get into Thomas Hardy. I faked my book report on this one. Still not sure if my teacher knew or not…
– Amie Kaufman

EC Myers
Favorite: Lord of the Flies by William Golding
Least Favorite: Lord Jim by Joseph Conrad
– E.C. Myers

Joanna Volpe
Favorite: Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens
Least Favorite: My Antonia by Willa Cather
– Jo Volpe

Julie
Favorite: A Separate Peace by John Knowles
Least Favorite: The Red Pony by John Steinbeck
– Julie Eshbaugh
(note from Erin: Julie and I are book twins, yay!)

Rachel Paint
Favorite: Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club, which is still one of the best novels about the cultural divide between immigrant mothers & their daughters that I’ve ever encountered.
Least Favorite: The Color Purple by Alice Walker. I didn’t find anything likeable or interesting about the characters or the story, and I was assigned the book 4 times between grade 9 and second year university!
– Rachel Seigel

Jodi Meadows
Favorite: I also liked A Separate Peace.
Least Favorite: I’m pretty sure I didn’t care for the rest of the books assigned in school, but that’s all overshadowed by the amazing books I picked out for myself from the library.
– Jodi Meadows

What’s your favorite novel read during high school? What about least favorite? Tell us in the comments!

Erin Bowman is a YA writer, letterpress lover, and Harry Potter enthusiast living in New Hampshire. Her TAKEN trilogy is available from HarperTeen (FORGED out 4/14/15), and VENGEANCE ROAD publishes with HMH in fall 2015. You can visit Erin’s blog (updated occasionally) or find her on twitter (updated obsessively).

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