Subject: Prepare for elf rant in three...two...
Author:
Posted on: 2011-12-19 21:47:00 UTC
...one
I've read most of the Inheritence books (haven't managed to get my hands on the fourth one yet, but I'm planing in it soon) and I'll admit, they are a guilty pleasure.
The Elves in Inheritance are kind of sueish, truth be told. They are portrayed as 100 times better than us mere mortals could ever hope to be. They're faster, stronger and more beautiful. They have better magic, better senses, and are immortal.
Now, this wouldn't be so bad, if say, there was a good reason for all of this. It's very much like this with the Elves in LotR after all, they don't get sick, have elven speed, strength, grace, beauty and senses as well. But Tolkien's elves have a reason for this: their bodies and souls are more closely connected then those of men because they are bound to Middle-earth, while the Race of Man isn't and goes on beyond the circles of the world when they die.
The closest thing the Elves in Inheritance have to a reason for their uber-awesomeness is their pact with the dragons, which is relatively weak in comparison, considering that later on Men were allowed into this pact, and still aren't as good as the Elves.
Tolkien's Elves also had a history and culture built up around them, a complex one (you could fill up a whole book with it infact!) and a tragic one. The bad things done by Tolkien's Elves were portrayed as being bad and they had consequences.
In Inheritence, the picture we have of the Elves's history and culture is shallow and flat at best. They are portrayed as the authors ideal society, but nothing more beyond that. Beyond that it is clear that they are a rip-off of Tolkien's elves and the uncreativeity and unoriginality there are signs of suedom.
When Paolini's Elves do bad things (like attacking nearby human settlements with no real excuse or reason besides "well, they are part of the Empire, so...why not?" like in Brisingr it is portrayed as perfectly alright. That kind of protaginist centered morality is probably one of the most telling signs of of Sues and Stues. Now I haven't read the fourth book, so it could be that Paolini knocked his elves down a peg or two and I just don't know about it, but as it stands now, his elves are a race of Sues