Subject: Look, I do sympathize, dude.
Author:
Posted on: 2011-12-22 14:28:00 UTC
My first introduction to modern fantasy was R. A. Salvatore's Drizzt Do'Urden. Chaotic Good dark elf who flees his Chaotic Evil home in the Underdark and makes his way above the surface... and he was my absolute favorite thing to read for a very long time, and he is such a Stu. He's got lavender eyes (in both infrared and visible light), he angsts about his past in a journal* at the start of every chapter (and frequently throughout), he has two über-cool scimitars, which he wields frequently, he manages to befriend a Lawful Good dwarf and his human daughter...
I haven't read the series in years, but if you put it in front of me right now, I would probably drop everything and be late to work because I'd start reading immediately. He's a total Stu, and I love the series anyway, and shrug when people tell me it sucks. Likewise with the new TV show, Terra Nova. I know it has issues, I know it has flaws, I know quite a few of the plot twists were predictable, and I just don't care. I like it. Why do I care whether it's clinically GoodTM or not? Or, as my friend said about Flashpoint, "It's not that the show has no flaws. It's just that I don't care."
Eragon being a totally overpowered Stu doesn't invalidate your enjoyment of him. It doesn't even have to be a 'guilty pleasure'! You know he's not the most developed character in the world, but who cares? You like it; that's what matters.
*I will admit that two of those journal entries were excellent, and stuck with me-- the one on dragons, and the one on shadows. "There are no shadows in the Underdark." And he goes into a whole explanation of how shadows can be seen as a metaphor for imagination, dreams, for the twilit world of 'maybe-there,' but in the Underdark, none of those things matter, there is no time for maybes, for dreams. Then the one on dragons, where he muses that perhaps dragons represent everything unconquerable about the world, that we, as humans sapients, need something out there so mysterious, timeless, wise-- that it will be a tragedy when the last dragon is gone. Very poignant, those.