Having read the first Baccano! light novel, I can confirm that it continues to not have a main character, though since the first is much more stand alone than the rest I'm pretty sure Firo was intended to be more of a main character than he is.Atria35 (post: 1473940) wrote:I can definitely see so. Baccano! and Durarara!! don't have a single main character- they all pretty much are. Of course, the light novels haven't really been translated (officially) yet, so... But I have read other books like that, where there were a few mains instead of a single one (and one of the mains seemed like they'd been kicked off the wagon for a while, there, too!)
LadyRushia (post: 1473992) wrote:It would take a tremendous amount of skill and fine tuning to pull this off in a way that wouldn't come off as hyperactive head hopping. My instinct tells me that this sort of technique would work better with fewer characters to deal with. Structurally, you would probably switch between characters each chapter.
Syreth (post: 1474489) wrote:Difficult, but possible. Epic fantasy, like many other genres, heavily draws upon the archetype of having a central hero. There's an old adage that essentially says, "don't break down a fence until you know why it's there." It might be good advice to follow in this instance. Perhaps write a short story, or plot out an epic, with a central character, then when you've mastered that, try multiple characters. Just food for thought.
LadyRushia (post: 1474007) wrote:Other than that, this specific idea about multiple main characters suggests a vantage point type of story to me. By that I mean a story about a single event or place seen through the eyes of multiple characters who may or may not know each other. They have something in common that somehow connects them.
Are we talking about vantage point main characters? Because when I thought about main characters it kinda was just like what you were saying about well connected characters. Or, as I would say, fully designed characters.
PatrickEklektos (post: 1474512) wrote:And I have a scientific thought from this food for thought, we must test and discover! So we test taring down the fence to see what happens when we do! Then we make a calculated discovery and then we draw a calculated conclusion... unless we are eaten by bears... which could happen. Which would be a calculated discovery leading to the calculated conclusion to not tare down that fence! ^_^
Esoteric (post: 1473941) wrote:Perhaps if you wrote something thickly in omniscient viewpoint, using the narrator as the consistent personality who followed, for example, the struggles of a primitive tribe. The primitive tribe itself could be construed as the main character which is explored chapter by chapter through the individual members of the tribe. I could see this working well. It's a tough problem though.
LadyRushia (post: 1474007) wrote:Another thing to keep in mind is this: minor characters should not be equated with underdeveloped characters. A good story will have developed minor characters that seem to close the gap between themselves and the major characters. The Harry Potter series pops into my head immediately. There are a slew of minor characters in those books (Luna Lovegood, Neville Longbottom, Cho Chang, etc.) and they're all well-developed. Even though they don't get a lot of focus, they are still integral parts of the story at one point or another and they feel like main characters even though they technically aren't.
rocklobster (post: 1474543) wrote:You could do like Robert Jordan and George R.R. Martin do in their respective long-running fantasy sagas, Wheel of Time, and A Song of Ice and Fire. Neither of these have a "main character", per se, but they do have chapters that focus on each character's POV for a while.
I disagree with that. Luna, Neville, and the others don't feel like main characters. They feel like well-developed minor characters. What I'm trying to figure out if I can do is go through all of Luna's and Neville's stories as well as Harry's, rather than just having them pop in where appropriate to advance the story. You can see what I mean in Deathly Hallows. Since almost everything is from Harry's perspective, we only find out what's happening at Hogwarts in little bits and pieces, and then at the climax we find out what Neville's been up to. If Neville was a main character, or at least felt like one, the book would go through all of his struggles even though he's not around Harry, because it would contribute to...the theme or something, I guess. I want my characters to feel like they're all equally important to the plot/quest/whatever, not like there's the leader and then a bunch of interesting but subordinate characters.
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