Subject: Hmmm, Sue-ish powers done well?
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Posted on: 2013-05-08 07:13:00 UTC
Well, there's the Dark is Rising Sequence by Susan Cooper, which has as a main character (well, sort of-- he's only introduced in the second book) a boy called Will who finds out on his eleventh birthday that he's the last of the Old Ones, immortal, time-travelling beings with various other powers, and that he must complete the Circle to help the Light drive back the Dark at its final Rising. (Oh, and it was written at least a decade before Harry Potter was conceived.) But anyways, obviously he has very much Stuish potential, but Susan Cooper handles it all so very marvelously... Her writing's as rich and delicious as high-quality dark chocolate, and it has a sort of etheral, otherworldly quality while still being completely believable. No one can write time-travel like her, and she's my second-favorite author ever after JRR Tolkien. But, well, I could go on forever about her and her books, so I shall shut up now.
Next, I wish to recommend The Books of Pellinor by Alison Croggon. They are rather heavily influenced by Ardaverse, perhaps more so than necessary, especially in the first book, but I still enjoyed them a lot. The main character, Maerad (Although... Well, no. Spoilers.) has a very large potential for Canon Sueness, but I think her ridiculous amount of power and Chosen One-ness was handled very well, down to most people being very afraid of her. And she makes mistakes. A lot of them. To the point of killing someone when they were just trying to stun her and she knew it, though she denied that afterwards. Another thing she does is lose three fingers to frostbite. How often do you see that happen to the hero?
Thirdly, The Enchanted Foest Chronicles by Patricia C Wrede. Like Chrestomanci mentioned below (and I'll vouch for that series, too), it's written for younger readers, but it's definiely worth the short amount of time it'll take to read. Just-- Morwen is awesome. Cimorene is awesome. Kazul is awesome. For that matter, every single female character is awesome. A lot of the male ones too, for that matter. Especially Telemain, Mendanbar and that snarky gargoyle. And wizards steal magic, but can be defeated by a hilarious, unconventional means that makes perfect sense in a completely backwards way. Not to mention the constant poking-of-fun-at-fairy-tales.
And finally, one of my friends recently got me into Neil Gaiman's The Sandman comics, which I finished the last of on Saturday. They're pretty much a new obsession for me, and I never read graphic novels. Period. And then I opened Preludes and Nocturnes... It focuses on Dream, one of the seven Endless, who, from eldest to youngest, are as follows: Destiny, Death, Dream, Destruction-who-quit, Desire, Despair, and Delirium-who-was-once-Delight. And Death is amazing.
...But now I'm going to sleep, so look it up yourself. 'Night!
-Aila