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Thoughts on dragons?
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Stan
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May 04, 2014 09:01PM

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Like Trike says - doing a 'plug and play' of established story elements in an attempt to boost your narrative's appeal is the wrong way to go about telling your story. In my view, the story tells you whether a dragon needs to show up or not.


If you are going to use them, have them make sense, in the context of your world and your story. Anne McCaffrey wrote her dragons as bigger, telepathic, emotionally intelligent horses, but created a world where they had something to do, and where their development made sense. If you're going to have an evil man-eating dragon, don't put it in a remote area with one small village to dine on, because given carnivorous appetites, it will probably de-populate that village in a hurry.
I do love dragons when they are done well- I've been in love with them since I was very young. They're such an elemental force, and there is so much mythology that goes along with them that seeing someone do something new with them is exciting.


If you are going to use them, I'd also suggest doing some reading on their history.



I fully intend things stay like that :-)


@Silvana
Yeah I have seen that done well, more in eastern stuff. That kind of stuff is just plain fun.

In other words, if there don't HAVE to be dragons, there should not be any.

Does that include using the word 'Dragon' in the title of a book, Brenda? :-)
"The Dragon of Mishbil"

However, fantasy is a platform for your imagination. Once upon a time maps were marked 'there be dragons'. All manner of animals have been called dragons when their true nature was unknown or misunderstood. Why not feature a 'dragon' of that type, a creature of your own invention? Then you can decide on their nature. Are they truly destructive? If so, why? Your 'dragon' could even be one of the protagonists of your story.

Echoing an earlier poster - dragons are like vampires: do it right and you could have a hit. Do it wrong...well, there's a pile for that.
My suggestion: Look at your work and decide do YOU like dragons. Do YOU see a dragon in your WIP? What kind of dragon would work in YOUR created world while not sounding like a copy?
If you shove it in just for shits and giggles, it will look like that.

Zayne wrote: And Joseph, I think that so long as the dragon is dragon-like and not some fruity, human-loving beast, then putting a dragon in the story would be awesome.
Absolutely. The most important thing about a dragon is that it should be dragonish. Everything else is optional. And sorry guys, but dragons do not have to justify their inclusion in a book. That's like saying that humans have to justify their inclusion. Dragons are no more a cliché than humans are. Every character in a fantasy novel has to have a species, and there's absolutely no reason why that species can't be draco sapiens rather than homo sapiens.
To misquote Dr Johnson, the man who is tired of dragons is tired of life.
Dragons do not suck. They rule.
Absolutely. The most important thing about a dragon is that it should be dragonish. Everything else is optional. And sorry guys, but dragons do not have to justify their inclusion in a book. That's like saying that humans have to justify their inclusion. Dragons are no more a cliché than humans are. Every character in a fantasy novel has to have a species, and there's absolutely no reason why that species can't be draco sapiens rather than homo sapiens.
To misquote Dr Johnson, the man who is tired of dragons is tired of life.
Dragons do not suck. They rule.

EVERYTHING in a book must have justification. Nothing should just be window dressing.
I too am working on my first fantasy-fiction novel. Is there a dragon in my novel? Well...yes! ;) But he is different (he is still a true dragon, but his manner is unique) and he serves a special purpose. He also happens to have a fantastic name (in my opinion--although I jokingly refer to him as, "Fluffy" beyond the books' scope). He is one of my story's most thrilling characters. While he is not a 'main' character per se, his presence is a crucial part of the storyline.
Are there other dragons in my book as well? You bet there are! They too are unique and they too serve a special purpose as to story's plot and my fantasy world's background.
Chris is right upon right in that dragons do, indeed, RULE! Amen to that! I too fail to see them as redundant in the world of fantasy.
Channel your work as all good writers and/or artists do...Flow the writing of your tale and you will know whether or not the inclusion of a dragon (or dragons) suits the weaved-together threads of your story, its world and its characters.
Good luck with your book in all ways!
Are there other dragons in my book as well? You bet there are! They too are unique and they too serve a special purpose as to story's plot and my fantasy world's background.
Chris is right upon right in that dragons do, indeed, RULE! Amen to that! I too fail to see them as redundant in the world of fantasy.
Channel your work as all good writers and/or artists do...Flow the writing of your tale and you will know whether or not the inclusion of a dragon (or dragons) suits the weaved-together threads of your story, its world and its characters.
Good luck with your book in all ways!

The more diverse your world is the better. Look at our own. All the cultures and species of animals and insects. Nearly every week I come across an article on an animal that I've never seen or heard of before. In other words, populate your world and make sure you consider how one culture would react to another or habits of predators and so forth.

Mrs Joseph wrote: Throwing in a dragon "just because" makes just as much sense as throwing in a romance "just because."
EVERYTHING in a book must have justification. Nothing should just be window dressing.
OP did seem to be implying that the dragons were not essential to his book. While I would defend to the death an author's right to include dragons (preferably your death, not mine), I entirely agree that they should be in the book because you need them there, not as some sort of visiting celebs.
I think what worried me most was the suggestion that dragons are a cliché and should therefore be dispensed with. If you start thinking like that, you could end up throwing out almost the whole of fantasy - elves, dwarves, wizards, even magic. Hardly anything distinctive of the genre would be left. Much of fantasy is rooted in traditional folk-tales and legends, and I think that is a strength, not a weakness.
EVERYTHING in a book must have justification. Nothing should just be window dressing.
OP did seem to be implying that the dragons were not essential to his book. While I would defend to the death an author's right to include dragons (preferably your death, not mine), I entirely agree that they should be in the book because you need them there, not as some sort of visiting celebs.
I think what worried me most was the suggestion that dragons are a cliché and should therefore be dispensed with. If you start thinking like that, you could end up throwing out almost the whole of fantasy - elves, dwarves, wizards, even magic. Hardly anything distinctive of the genre would be left. Much of fantasy is rooted in traditional folk-tales and legends, and I think that is a strength, not a weakness.

But you probably shouldn't listen to me. I'm sick of dragons and zombies and vampires and werewolves and ghosts and elves and dwarves and "ser" or "sirrah" instead of "sir", and teenage wizards in the modern world...yeah, sick of fantasy in general.
**grumpypants**

The Books of Malazan seem from the outside like another big Tolkienesque adventure, and Brandon Sanderson is essentially writing D&D modules. As entertaining as the Iron Druid novels are, I've still only read the first couple because that type of character is over-used currently.
That's why I'm currently looking for some Science Adventures like Jonny Quest and Tom Swift: I haven't read anything like that in ages.

This is a pretty good review and overview: http://www.strangehorizons.com/review...

Oh, I like dragons, too. I recently read Seraphina, Joust, Alta and Dealing with Dragons back to back.
I've even been thinking of starting Wings of Fire: Dragon Stories. But I want them to be more than window dressing (cause window dressing sucks).
But those books were about dragons and gave their dragons character and attitude and pazazz. If someone is just throwing in a dragon hoping for sales...well, count me out. I respect dragons more than that.

DRAGONS!!!!!
*cough*
I'm a fairly jaded reader, I don't tend to respond well to old tropes of fantasy (which isn't the same as saying I wouldn't love to see them done well and imaginatively), but there's still a sort of trigger somewhere in the hindbrain that goes off when there's a dragon. And judging by the reactions I've seen from some non-fantasy-readers watching Game of Thrones, it's quite a widespread trigger.
More seriously, what's the point of dragons? Well, I think the key is that humans are always in control - even when there are other sentient species around, it's hard to imagine humans not being on top, or at least having some hope of getting to the top in an equal fight. Those conflicts play out as, essentially, colonial conflicts, freedom-fighting. And even when it's bloody, there's a degree of safety there.
What dragons do is introduce the idea that humans aren't on the top of the food chain. Dragons are powerful and frightening, and specifically they're powerful and frightening in a very primitive, direct way: at heart, they're very large, very hungry, predatory animals, and when they're around humanity becomes a prey species. But because humans are sophisticated people who aren't easily scared of mere predators, dragons get everything else they need to prey on mankind. Forget vampires, zombies, werewolves, dragons are the ultimate nightmare - they're basically written to trigger every fear and feeling of insecurity and helplessness that people have.
So they're physically powerful - they can crush and destroy. But humans can kill powerful things. So dragons are basically invulnerable - a tank and a predator in one. But humans can always hide away and keep their distance from a predator. So dragons can fly - they can cross great distances in no time at all, and can completely bypass all the walls and armies set to stop them. But humans can build defences - we can wear armour and live in castles! So dragons can breath fire (or sometimes acid), and burn people alive and roast them inside their armour, and sometimes even melt the very stones. Fire AND big predators - the two great primal fears?
This makes them more or less unstoppable killing machines. But humans are smart and can think their way around any problem! So dragons are smarter. And they're older, and more knowledgeable. Suddenly a fundamentally alien predator has been given the ability to take man on at his own game. So humans have no chance at all - but humans can at least get their affairs in order - humans can actually cope quite well with a predictable form of doom. So dragons are unpredictable - smart, but patient, inscrutable. So humans just have to go about their lives doing the best they can and being honourable in the face of being eaten/roasted at any moment? But then the worst of the dragons go further - they can warp mind and morals with their will, force loyalty and love, or spread despair and paranoia. They are literally the worst of nightmares.
And if that's not enough, some of them can even pretend to be humans.
Of course, in pure form dragons are SO much the pure nemesis of humanity that it's difficult to have an engaging story when they're around - it's all unavoidable and relentless reptillian mayhem. So most authors take away an advantage here or there, or else make them cuddlier by making them 'nice'. But underlyingly, they're death incarnate.
Which I think is why even non-fantasy-fans get excited about Dany having dragons. They don't know what the dragons will be able to do, exactly, but a dragon is like a promise. It's a much more primally understandable equivalent of giving a character a nuclear missile: even if you can't see how one is actually going to be useful in this story, even if the missile just sits in its silo the entire time, the fact that it's there transforms the story in an exciting way.

Two examples. The Shadowrun setting takes its cue from Glaurung, and from Smaug atop his hoard: it puts dragons into a 21st century setting by making them the ultimate corporate predators. They play up the reptilian coldness, the inscrutability and ancient patience, the deviousness, the telepathy and ability to influence minds, they let them walk around in people-suits, and they back it up with physical (nigh-on, much like a tank iirc) invulnerability.
Robin Hobb, on the other hand, emphasises the physicality, the fact that these are large, hungry cow-gobbling carnivores. They're not all that smart, they're impulsive and instinctual, and it's almost as though their ability to communicate with humans is some evolutionary coincidence. Put Tintaglia next to Lofwyr, and you'd barely recognise them as the same trope - much more so than any two elves or two dwarves or two wizards from different settings. But they both feel like natural uses of the concept of dragons.
[Surprisingly, it's the Shadowrun suit-wearing business executives who feel like the more direct descendants of Tolkien. Hobb's dragons, on the other hand, feel like a more realistic version of McCaffrey's (or rather: it feels like Pern's dragons are to Hobb's dragons what horses in teenage girl stories about horses are to actual horses...), and hence at several removes from Ancalagon.
EDIT: final edit and then I'm done. Another pop culture thing: watch how people react to the Hobbit films. Elves appear on screen, people shrug, maybe, perhaps, say they're beautiful. Orcs and Nazgul and whatever, people understand that they're monsters. But there's a reason Jackson finished the first film with gold trickling as a dragon's eye opened: because even people not versed in fantasy can be expected to get a thrill out of a dragon, even if he's barely been mentioned in the film and it's not really clear how dangerous he is. Again, it's like the scene in a Bond film where the villain shows you that they have a nuke. And there's something really visceral about, say, the scene where Bilbo is hiding from the big stalking dragon - something that attacks some primal instincts in the mammalian brain.
(I'm not saying they're great films - they're not, but that's partly the point. That the dragon works even in a not-that-great film directed at a general, non-genre audience. Because it's a dragon.

I enjoy stories that involve Dragons. I recently read
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/7... and I liked the domesticated/wild and mythical dragon thing that went on in the story.
But most of the stories I read for pleasure don't regularly involve dragons..

But you probably shouldn't listen to me. I'm sick of dragons and zombies and vampires and werewolves and ghosts and elves and dwarves and "ser" or "sirrah" instead of "sir", and teenage wizards in the modern world...yeah, sick of fantasy in general."
Oh, there's plenty of fantasy that doesn't have any of that stuff. I don't like dragons or werewolves or vampires or elves, etc etc but I still find plenty to read. Malazan, Sanderson, Carol Berg (especially the Collegia Magic, Bridge of D'Arnath, and Rai-Kirah series), to name a few.

Dragons are cool.

D.W. wrote: do not pander to your audience....ever. it will end badly. write what your comfortable with...
That is the best piece of advice so far in this thread.
That is the best piece of advice so far in this thread.
Wastrel wrote: I'm not saying they're great films - they're not...
So far I have seen the first Hobbit film 7 times, and the second 3 times. I fully intend to watch them over and over again. Are they highbrow? No. Are they intelligent? No. Are they faithful to the book? No. Are they exciting and fun? YES!!
Sorry. Personal view. Just a big kid, really.
So far I have seen the first Hobbit film 7 times, and the second 3 times. I fully intend to watch them over and over again. Are they highbrow? No. Are they intelligent? No. Are they faithful to the book? No. Are they exciting and fun? YES!!
Sorry. Personal view. Just a big kid, really.

The more popular a trope is, the better your writing of it has to be, and the more you have to follow certain traditions.
You can mess around with an Avenc, or a girtablilu, or something equally obscure, and no one cares because they have not seen it before. Make a vampire who has no aversion to one of daylight, garlic, crosses, etc., and you are playing with your readers' preconceptions. It can certainly be done, but it has to be done WELL.
Good luck :)


Sorry. I thought you were talking about elves for a minute...

if you are going to be a writer - write. don't write things that you think other people want to read. That will make you a journalist.
:)

whether a scene in which a dragon is introduced is affecting, amusing, or agonizingly dull depends primarily on the choices made by the scene's author. I say "primarily" because dragons have appeared in thousands of stories over the centuries, and almost any reader may be presumed to have been exposed to at least one such. The reader's reaction will naturally be influenced by how they feel this new dragon compares to the dragons which they have been introduced to in the past. (Favorably, one would hope. A dragon must learn to make a good first impression if it is to do well in this life.)
(Grabbed it from here:
http://www.strangehorizons.com/2002/2...
)

(Yes, including humans. Then, most of your readers are humans, so they will identify more readily with human characters; furthermore, default human traits more easily map to human stories, which is why we get so many complaints about elves that are pointy ears stuck on humans.)
Wastrel wrote: Of course, in pure form dragons are SO much the pure nemesis of humanity that it's difficult to have an engaging story when they're around - it's all unavoidable and relentless reptillian mayhem. So most authors take away an advantage here or there, or else make them cuddlier by making them 'nice'.
Nice dragons tend to be small and cute, like puppies. There's a cute dragon in one of Tove Jansson's Moomintroll books, I forget which one. And of course there's Norbert the Norwegian Ridgeback, Hagrid's pet in the Harry Potter books.
Better than making them nice, I think, is to make them flawed, especially in personality. My favourite dragon is Chrysophylax Dives, in Farmer Giles of Ham, who over-reaches himself and is outwitted by the canny farmer. I suppose Tolkien modelled this story on the folk tales in which a peasant or farmer outwits the Devil.
There's plenty of life left in the old worms yet. You just have to find an entertaining way of writing about them.
Nice dragons tend to be small and cute, like puppies. There's a cute dragon in one of Tove Jansson's Moomintroll books, I forget which one. And of course there's Norbert the Norwegian Ridgeback, Hagrid's pet in the Harry Potter books.
Better than making them nice, I think, is to make them flawed, especially in personality. My favourite dragon is Chrysophylax Dives, in Farmer Giles of Ham, who over-reaches himself and is outwitted by the canny farmer. I suppose Tolkien modelled this story on the folk tales in which a peasant or farmer outwits the Devil.
There's plenty of life left in the old worms yet. You just have to find an entertaining way of writing about them.

Sorry. Personal view. Just a big kid, really. "
I agree with this.
I thought the first dragged too much, especially in the goblin cave... but I thought the second was much better paced, and the whole barrel scene with the elves and orcs was just ridiculously awesome.

I will observe that small does not have to be a property of nice. Many Eastern European fairy tales are small. Small enough to ride horses, marry princesses, and get tricked into a trap by being told it's for the hero of the tale, and would it help test it by getting inside to check its size, since it and the hero are the same size. There is therefore a long folkloric tradition of small dragons.
Convincing your audience of that is another matter.

Nice dragons tend to be small and cute, like puppies. There's a cute dragon in one of Tove Jansson's Moomintroll books, I forget which one. And of course there's Norbert the Norwegian Ridgeback, Hagrid's pet in the Harry Potter books. "
Not sure you can really count Norbert as cute, being as he was only cute to Hagrid, and Hagrid's kinda nuts... and he was only little for a few months. ;)
And there are bigger dragons that are nice. Like Elliot, from Pete and the Dragon, and Toothless, from How to Drain Your Dragon - though, of course, that's over time.
Oh, and Draco from Dragonheart.
c.o.lleen wrote: the whole barrel scene with the elves and orcs was just ridiculously awesome.
Or awesomely ridiculous.
I like the first film more than most people do. I think it builds splendidly from the cosy and amusing opening to the frenetic ending. And the music is, at times, just exhilarating.
Or awesomely ridiculous.
I like the first film more than most people do. I think it builds splendidly from the cosy and amusing opening to the frenetic ending. And the music is, at times, just exhilarating.

I will say I liked the first movie better the second time I saw it. It didn't seem as draggy. Maybe that's partially the difference from being on a comfy sofa as opposed to being stuck in the theater.
Anyway, I always hafta laugh at the end of those movies where everyone in the theater is like "really, that's where it gonna end?"
And I'm like "What did you expect? It is part 2 of a three part movie! Of course it's gonna be a cliffhanger. Duh!"

Stan wrote:
"Sorry. I thought you were talking about elves for a minute... "
Ha exactly the way I feel. Elves done best are arrogent jerks that lie by ommision all the time. But 9/10 they are boring SO UNBELIVABLE BORING, at least even the poorly done vampires do something awesome every so often.
Speaking of Elves in a Dragon thread I have seen more in Chinese books and the like where Dragons more or less replace Elves as the super high up elder race that knows all sorts of things and tend to not tell other people things. I tend to like this better because Dragons are normally not considered to be "good" like Elves are and while they act refined normally are prone to losing their temper. Plus they tend to have really awesome moments because dragons.

Oh dear God, forget I said anything. Write the story you want and good luck getting published.

But then, if you don't like "Romance" then I suppose I should crawl back into my 'treasure' hole and disappear :)
Books mentioned in this topic
Tremendous Trifles (other topics)Tremendous Trifles (other topics)
Farmer Giles of Ham (other topics)
Wings of Fire (other topics)
Alta (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Neil Gaiman (other topics)G.K. Chesterton (other topics)
Neil Gaiman (other topics)
Steven Brust (other topics)
Anne McCaffrey (other topics)
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