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4.0 out of 5 stars a very telling book
Ever pick up a fantasy book and feel that you've read it before? This very telling book is a good satire as to how formulaic the genre has become! A fun read!
Published 14 months ago by Marc Petrick

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Funny, and possibly useful
Read the latest Robert Jordan, David Eddings or Terry Brooks door-stop and decide that you could write a fantasy soap opera just as well? Or maybe those authors drive you insane and you want to turn the fantasy genre on its head? The solution to both of these tasks can be found in this strange book from Diana Wynne Jones, better known for writing original children's...
Published on Feb 22 2003 by Glen Engel Cox


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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Funny, and possibly useful, Feb 22 2003
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Glen Engel Cox (Columbus, Ohio) - See all my reviews
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Read the latest Robert Jordan, David Eddings or Terry Brooks door-stop and decide that you could write a fantasy soap opera just as well? Or maybe those authors drive you insane and you want to turn the fantasy genre on its head? The solution to both of these tasks can be found in this strange book from Diana Wynne Jones, better known for writing original children's fantasies of her own. Her secret, contained herein, seems to have been a long study of fantasy literature, and noted what has become cliched. In this book, all the tropes are dissected and cross-referenced. A better title would have been "A Writer's Guide to Fantasy Schlock, with annotations."

As a book to read straight through, it is not as rewarding. The entries are listed alphabetically, with small caps indicating a term with its own entry. Little icons appear in the margins--these don't mean anything per se, but are usually little graphic jokes on the text. The text itself is quite amusing, especially if one is familiar with the subject being pilloried.

I wouldn't recommend this book to all, but fans of fantasy should find enough here for their monies worth of chuckles. Would-be writers will find this an indispensable reference work.

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4.0 out of 5 stars a very telling book, Mar 28 2011
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Marc Petrick (Sudbury, Ontario) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Tough Guide to Fantasyland (Paperback)
Ever pick up a fantasy book and feel that you've read it before? This very telling book is a good satire as to how formulaic the genre has become! A fun read!
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