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How do you like your magic?
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Terry
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Oct 21, 2011 07:27AM

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The biggest thing for me to swallow with the Harry Potter stories is that the magic is convenient rather than consistent. I enjoyed the story telling but hated the magical additions. If you've got an amulet that allows time travel in one book, there's got to be good reason it can't be used in another. I tend to dislike it when magic can suddenly solve all problems and heal all things and hate when the magic is too "easy" to be believed.

I also expect magic to have a cost behind it, energywise. I don't think it works as well if the magic ability is endless and doesn't have some sort of check or flaw. It's probably the scientist in me that thinks magic should follow some sort of rules and make sense according to physics.
I liked that in Skinwalker, the author actually discusses the energy costs to shifting into another animal. Jane Yellowrock has to take mass from objects around her to shift into an animal larger than herself, and she has to release mass to shift into a small animal.

I've read the first Malazan. I know they say you should read at least the first three to really get into it, but I haven't been able to. I intend to get into them though at some point.

All magic should have rules and limitations. If I read a book and I see none, I stop reading.

Do you like it more when the magic-user is born magical or is trained to used magic?


Depends on what rules have been set. I do prefer humans being born with the ability to use magic but then trained how to implement its use. Magical creatures, I do at times like when the author explains how they use magic as long as it pertains to the story, but like you I take it mostly on faith that such creatures are able to use magic and it's just one of those inherent things we don't quite get. i also like when an author takes such typical creatures and give a different twist to what's written, adding their own little attributes or history etc, making those creatures 'their' own within their story.



I'm also okay with magical creatures and other semi (or Demi) humans (elves, dwarves, orcs etc.)

I do like the Harry potter style too, where there are magic words and wands. Don't see a lot of wands in hard core fantasy, sadly.
The best has to be the unexplained power. Like in the classic epic-journey-story (LOTR, Shannara series etc) where there is a mysterious 'powerful' wizard who leads the country hick on some adventure. The wizard's power is never really revealed, they just have it and can summon bolts of lighting whenever they want!

Lately I've been drawn to very architecturally detailed, inventive magic that draws on an unusual resource. An example would be Brandon Sanderson's Mistborn series, in which "allomancy" has characters consume various metals to use their powers.
I agree that magic should have limitation but I don’t like it when they have a “cost” to pay. I don’t mean some kind of energy or thing like that. What I want to say is I really hate it when, let’s say, someone possess ability or spell to read mind but they can’t turn it off and freak out or when there is a silly rule such as you have to be virgin to use this and that spell…why? Is the god of magic Artemis or something?

I also don't like the miraculous magical fix. I mean, what good was the quest for that holy grail thing when all you had to do was switch off the magical lightbulb for a second?
Other than that, I like to learn the systems, the theories and what not, and, since I'm pretty open minded, I can go with anything, the more intricate the better (with some limits).
Just not Xanth magic, that's all I ask. (Somethings are a bit too pharsical.

I like it when the magic is complex- Black Prism, Mistborn, etc- I think it is so amazing how after decades authors can still be so inventive.
Beyond that I really like dirty, gritty magic. Magic you have to work for becuase it won't just come readily. I do like low-fantasy, because of this, but it also just means I like to see characters *earn* their magic. Years spent learning, etc. I think this is why I like the Warded Man by Brett, or even Harry Potter, lol.


I like David Eddings magic system in The Belgariad but it's rather simplistic when you look at it by itself.

And the only way to achieve that plausibility with magic is to be steadfastly consistent in the application of your own rules. You can set up the rules however you want--your magic can be rare or pervasive, weak or powerful, etc.--but if it can do one thing in Chapter 1, it should function the same way in Chapter 10, unless it's clear that some new element has been added.
I've seen a lot of fantasy manuscripts--and published books, and way too many movies--that break their own rules, and nothing will toss me out of a story faster than that.

"People are more likely to believe an impossible probable than an improbable possible."
Which was his way of saying "It doesn't have to BE realistic (possible), it just needs to SOUND or FEEL realistic (possible).

"People are more likely to believe an impossible probable than an improbable possible."
Which was his way of saying "..."
So, your saying magic in a story is like a breast augmentation?

"Wow!...those.. I mean.. you... YOU look great!" get it wrong, and... too much makes you a freak of nature, too little and everyone will go "what's the point?" Nevermind where we can go with the quality of workmanship and skill involved with this. In the end, it's still not the natural or realistic image, just one that people will "Feel" okay with.
(and I'll be good now. I'm sorry about the boob thing Mrs. Joe. I am a retired sailor. I think it's a flash back from that trip to Istanbul. I won't do it again.)

Same for magic. There should be reason there's magic in the world, or at least a reason people can use it. I also like to see people earn their magical abilities. Just like any skill, practice makes perfect, and I don't think there are enough instances of a spell going wrong (at least that I can think of) besides Bayaz in the First Law series.






What about magic where there seems to be good and evil but basically it ends up being what a person uses it for that may or may not be construed as evil or good?

"Good vs. evil," "badassery, a pinch of mystery and just a dash of consequence,"the witch/wizard is vulnerable"--these conflicts connect directly to our own challenges in life, those of morality, individual conflict, and inner conflicts. Of course, in the magical world, the conflicts of nature, such as lightning, are also sometimes individually directed!


LOVE DRESDEN. Sorry for shouting but I had to make my adoration known. I'm three or four books behind, but I'll be catching up when I'm done with this bout of writing in another month.


I like consistency of some sort. Even when it's fantastical, I don't like it when things change from point to point. It removes a lot of the dramatic potential of magic. I mean magic can be ridiculous and overly powered and still consistent. I'm not saying it has to be all clearly defined and laid out with rules, but just that if I'm going to be totally taken off guard by something magical happening, it should at least retroactively make sense and not just be, "And now time to totally throw out the rules." Well, I suppose there are situations where you can throw out the rules (you establish worlds are blurring together or something) . . .
I do like the interface between the magical and the mundane a lot too, and like many of the above posters, it's pulled me toward a lot of urban fantasy in recent years.


I also liked the "Sun Runner" matic ideas from Melanie Rawn's books (The Star Scroll) and, yet a very different, and interesting system in her second as yet unfinished (darn it) Exiles Trilogy. (The Ruins of Ambrai...I also liked the blond on the cover, but that has more to do with being a DOS than anything else.)



David Eddings did have a pretty funny way of explaining his magic system. :-)
As far as magic systems go...I felt that Eddings system left a lot open for deus ex machina. Everything is up in the air re: abilities. The differences between strength and abilities is centered on thinking patterns??! and the difference between men & women also makes a difference in abilities.
The only thing he was consistent about was that having magic lengthened one's lifetime exponentially ((view spoiler) ) and the energy requirements to use magic...except that the energy requirements were not that drastic, either.

I thought the second series was better than the "Sun Runner" series. And I liked the Sun Runner Series. (It wasn't perfect, but, in the end, I found a lot of it very enjoyable and looked foreward to the next one. )

I'm pretty much with you on your evaluation of the Sun Runner series.

Don't get me wrong, I enjoy Sanderson's books but the infodumps and repetitive language tends to jar me from a story. (Granted, magic tends to be the main focus of his stories)
In general, just give me a few bits here and there, enough to let me know you thought about things. Like others mentioned, don't let it turn into a Harry Potter cop-out.

What about magic where there seems to be good and evil but basically it ends up being what a person uses ..."
I agree that Magic in itself is neither good or evil. But, It's powerful and power seduces most humans. So to see character struggle between being good or evil is always interesting.
And esp when Magic can be dark and characters succumb to it, then they go back to struggle and being good after a while.. It just draws me in.

Magic tied to the elements also makes me happy :)

Like Soan, I like it to have that seductive allure, though I tend to shy away from it when it starts to divide into clear black/white lines of good magic versus evil magic. There should always be shades of both - muddled together in a nice big grey. The classic...I suppose you would call, game-style mindset of "all Necromancers are evil, but the goodly priests will save us!" hurts, just a twinge.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Redemption of Althalus (other topics)Black Sun Rising (other topics)
The Star Scroll (other topics)
The Ruins of Ambrai (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
John Varley (other topics)Robert Lynn Asprin (other topics)