meoryn: (Default)
[personal profile] meoryn posting in [community profile] writers
I was watching an interview with Terry Goodkind the other night and he said something about villains that got me thinking.

What do you consider are the qualities of a "good" villain in a story?

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Date: 2009-08-11 10:34 am (UTC)
ilthit: (Default)
From: [personal profile] ilthit
I actually think that unless you're writing unashamedly genreish fiction (and I love genre fiction with a mad passion, so that's not a criticism as such) the antagonist should never be a villain; or shouldn't be conceived as a villain, anyway. If the antagonist is a person, you should still get where s/he is coming from, even idenitfy with him or her. Tinfoil villains made of nothing but evil are just boring, to me at least.

I guess I try to write my villains in a way that, if they were the heroes, the heroes would be the villains of the story, if you know what I mean. The antagonist has to be in opposition to the protagonist but that doesn't necessarily imply evil. Even if they are "evil", the evil doesn't come from nowhere. I want to know why they eat babies, and "they're tasty" is not quite enough of a reason. A little bit of this approach, I think, helps in genre fiction as well, unless you're writing comedy/parody.

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