Tagged: tv tropes
My Least Favourite Book Tropes: Part Three
In parts one and two of this series I described some of the tropes that most annoy me and I’m going to continue in that griping tradition for part three. It’s been a while since I’ve done one of these so I’m ready to start ranting! The usual caveat applies: tropes are not necessarily clichés. They’re just devices used by authors to tell a story but that doesn’t mean they don’t occasionally stray into the world of cliché. Some of them annoy me but you, as a reader, may very well love these ones. It all depends on the person.
This is very prominent in YA and in Children’s Fiction because the protagonists in these books are not adults. So of course they see adults as hindering their progress on whatever mission they’re on rather than what the adults are actually doing: worrying about them. Sometimes adults deliberately obstruct children’s or teen’s activities and it’s usually in the name of safety. Other times they’re just being jerks, as every child or teen has found out at some point.
In some ways the trope makes sense—children and teens are more impressionable and more likely to adapt to events going on around them. For example, if a child is telling an adult that there’s magic and lots of horrible things are happening because of it, then the adult is probably going to be useless and deny the whole thing. It’s annoying but it’s at least believable. When this trope is annoying is when all adults are useless, not just some. That’s just unrealistic and a total caricature. That’s somewhat expected in children’s fiction but when you’re reading YA it’s just patronizing, even if you are a teenager. Continue reading
My Least Favourite Book Tropes: Part Two
In Part One I discussed just some of my least favourite tropes. Now I’m ready to go on another time-wasting researching TV Tropes spree. At least it didn’t take me five hours to research this article. Let’s get into some bad tropes and why they’re so bad now, shall we? As with my first article, let me give you the caveat that tropes are not necessarily clichés. They’re just devices used by authors to tell a story but that doesn’t mean they don’t occasionally stray into the world of cliché as you’ll see with the following examples:
Generally speaking, it’s not easy to take over a territory and hold it for an extended period of time. Especially if you do everything possible to alienate the local population, which will inevitably cause an uprising in 9 out of 10 situations. So why is it that in books, especially YA, worlds are conquered quite easily? If the heroine (and it’s almost always a girl) throws out the old, oppressive government in a dystopia there’s rarely a counter-revolution or any resistance to the new rule. In truth when oppressive governments are overthrown as happened during the French Revolution, a counter revolution is pretty much inevitable from those who profited under the reign of said oppressive government.
Conquering isn’t as easy as a lot of books make it out to be and ruling a conquered land is even harder. Yet we see bad guys take over countries/worlds like it was nothing. Things are rarely so simple in real life. Continue reading
My Least Favourite Book Tropes
Just to give you a quick overview, tropes are not necessarily clichés. Rather, they’re devices authors use in the course of writing their novels and every single writer out there uses tropes. But there are some that I absolutely can’t stand so I’m going to list them for you, using the names from TvTropes, one of the most informative and scarily addictive sites out there. Follow the links provided at your own risk; I am not responsible for any browser crashes from opening multiple tabs or the hours you may waste on the site.
This trope annoys me like no other simply because it’s so prevalent in YA. It seems like every female protagonist out there wants the distant jerk, especially when it comes to love triangles. You know what? Not every girl out there wants a bad boy, but YA writers happily ignore this fact and keep writing about girls falling in love with manipulative, controlling jerks. Of course there are exceptions to my hatred of this trope, the most notable being Strafford in Diantha Jones’ Oracle of Delphi series. He definitely has a reason for being distant in the beginning, but the fact that he changes as the series goes on makes the trope short-lived.
2. What Happened to the Mouse?
This trope name is actually quite fitting because the trope itself is about minor details or even characters just disappearing from the narrative for no good reason. Usually it means that the author simply forgot about said detail or character and the editor didn’t catch the mistake.
This trope is especially annoying when you realize that something has never been fully explained in the novel once you’re done. Take, for example, the girl zombie in the red vest that follows Mary around in The Forest of Hands and Teeth. She’s stronger, faster and more intelligent than a normal zombie and Mary speculates that something was done to her to make her that way, but there’s no explanation as to what happens to her or even what the heck was done to her to make her this special zombie. It’s like Carrie Ryan just completely forgot about it or really didn’t care. It’s carelessness like that that annoys me to no end, making What Happened to the Mouse? one of my least favourite tropes.
This one happens so much in YA that it’s almost become as annoying as the love triangle. A Faux Action Girl is a heroine that can supposedly kick butt at will but never actually does any butt-kicking. Usually she turns into a Damsel in Distress as soon as a man shows up. This is annoying because all of the other characters make her out to be this awesome warrior and strong woman but her actions never actually demonstrate this.
Faux Action Girls appear a lot in YA and usually they’re just standing around waiting to be rescued. Or, they’re the prophesized saviour of the people and learn to fight and are proclaimed ‘natural fighters’ but never actually do much fighting. When they do fight, they usually end up needing to be saved by their love interest who is invariably male. Yawn.
4. No, Mr. Bond, I Expect You to Dine
This seems to happen a lot in fiction, not just in YA. But it’s basically when the villain has the hero or heroine in their clutches and instead of torturing or killing them, invites them to a dinner and then a tour of their evil lair. Unsurprisingly, this happens a lot in science fiction and fantasy because there’s usually an unstoppable doomsday weapon involved.
I get it, villains love to gloat. Heroes are supposed to say “You’re crazy!” when they hear said villain’s gloating plan to rule the world. But why for the love of all that is bad, do villains not just shoot the hero? By letting them dine and tour the facilities where they’re carrying out their top secret evil plan, they’re giving them a chance to escape. Sometimes writers try to put a spin on this trope and instead get the villain to dine with the hero/heroine so they can have a big reveal like Luke, I Am Your Father.
This list doesn’t even begin to cover all the tropes and/or clichés I’m sick of, but these are definitely some of the main ones (aside from love triangles). So now it’s your turn: what tropes annoy you the most? Is it because said tropes are overused or are just based on a dumb premise?