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#1 |
Are you gonna eat that?
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Children in books:A pet peeve
Maybe its just the books I read but why do children in fiction seemingly exist purely to do something stupid? I can't even count how many times I've seen a kid used as nothing more than a catalyst for action. Ooops, Billy did something stupid, he wanted to see the kitty and ended up letting the monsters in. D'oh! Nothing else going on and you've gotta move the story along? Have Billy exercise the brains God gave a turnip and endanger everyone. Which inevitably ends in a character dying trying to save the kid. Even in horror fiction, very few authors will have harm befall a child despite it happening in the real world a zillion times a day. It still seems like a "taboo". But I digress...
I don't hate kids, I don't mind kids in books. But inwardly I groan when a point is made to introduce one because I know at some point they'll do something dopey. Seen and not heard, thats my motto lol. Authors should actually have some insight into, say a 13 year olds, thought process and not have them make decisions that a paste eating 5 year old would question if they need to have a child character.The same goes for authors who try to write an ethnic or minority character but thats a whole 'nother discussion.... |
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#2 |
Information Acquirer
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Well,
Harry (Potter) does not seem to be utterly stupid. Neither Ilien (Shawn Cormiers "Nomadin" trilogy) nor Max (Nick Spalding "The Cornerstone") are stupid. I don't know about Random (D. Adams "Hitchikers Guide") though, alas I suspect her only to be strongheaded. |
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#3 |
Guru
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Is it always children? I've been reading some of the J.S. Fletcher mysteries from here and he seems to frequently make his main characters do remarkably stupid things so the villains can capture them and explain the whole mystery.
I mean, if you knew that two people were brutally murdered nearby possibly regarding buried treasure, would you romp about the countryside investigating ruins? Unarmed? And then the villains are even dumber, because they don't kill the idiots, but instead explain everything, only to be foiled at the end. I guess that's common in a lot of fiction, but it's aggravating. |
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#4 |
Great Old One
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I think this is just confirmation bias on your part. There're plenty of counterexamples.
You mention horror, but Stephen King's children are rarely stupid (It, Salem's Lot, The Shining). In George R.R. Martin's Song of Ice and Fire, children are no more likely to be stupid than adults. Someone else already mentioned Harry Potter, but I can add Percy Jackson and His Dark Materials to the list (in fact, juvenile fantasy seldom portrays children as stupid, given their target audience). So yeah, maybe its just the books you read ![]() |
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#5 |
Runs With Scissors
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Going to have to agree with this. I can't recall the last book I read in which a child served as a plot device alone, or did anything any more stupid than the adults. In fact, the last book I finished, Cleopatra's Daughter, had main characters who were all in the 11-15 range and were exceedingly mature and intelligent.
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#6 |
Serpent Rider
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Do you actually have kids? Or have relatives who have kids? [maybe you just have very smart, emotionally balanced, introverted ones?]
Because let me tell you, kids do some pretty dumb things. ALL THE TIME!!!!! My cousin has a brood of 4, and anytime my wife and I think "oh, maybe we should have children" we just go over to their place for the afternoon, and presto-chango, we're good with no kids ![]() I do agree that sometimes authors use children as plot devices, but that doesn't make it unbelievable that little Tommy would actually run into the road, or climb over that cliff or....etc, etc. Kids are what make us old ![]() |
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#7 |
Guru
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Have I mentioned the fact that my daughter, who was about 6 at the time, once scaled a sheer cliff by wedging herself into a crack and shimmying up? She wanted to see what was at the top!
Yeah, kids do dumb things. It has to do with a part of their brain that isn't developed until around the age of 18. There's a huge javelina outside? Let me go pet the thing with the HUGE tusks/teeth. LOL |
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#8 | |
Wizard
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#9 |
I write stories.
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When I first read Ender's Game, my immediate response was "Finally! A realistic rendition of a child who's smart and behaves rationally!"
Years later, I found out that many readers complained about Ender's personality because he seemed too grown up. It appears readers have vastly different expectations about how children think... |
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#10 |
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Sounds like a variation of "carrying the idiot ball".
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#11 | |
The Forgotten
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I get irritated by the portrayal of kids as people who are far more intelligent, wise, courageous and thoughtful than probably any kid is in the whole world. As much as I love the series, A Song of Ice and Fire is particularly guilty of this. Danaerys is, what, 14? And Jon Snow is 16 (same as Robb) and Bran is 8 or 9. Arya is only a little older. Personally, whenever I read about them I picture them as older. I've never thought of Dany as 14, for instance; in my head, she's more like 20. Sorry, but there is no way I can believe that a bunch of teenagers and pre-adolescents can be anywhere near as rational and put-together as portrayed by GRRM. |
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#12 | |
Publishers are evil!
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#13 |
Well trained by Cats
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Getting in (over your head) trouble is a side effect of children learning
![]() AKA 'The school of hard knocks' ![]() |
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#14 | |
Connoisseur
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I remember when the TV show, Dawson's Creek, came out. Tons of people were so into that show because it was the first drama where teens acted more like adults and had the vocabulary of college professors. But, everyone who saw the show always said the same thing: no kids really talk like that. It's all just entertainment. ![]() |
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#15 | |
Great Old One
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Nonetheless, Alexander the Great became king when he was 19. And 19 is not so far from 16 maturity-wise (if I can remember my misspent youth accurately). Life experiences matter more than raw age. And the g factor stabilizes between 16-19 years (and they all have high g). Given that all the aforementioned characters experienced several life-changing events before adulthood, in a relatively short time-frame, it is fair to expect a hastening of general development. And to be fair to GRRM, both Jon Snow and Daenerys have their teenage moments, when they make patently stupid/naive decisions that are emotion-driven. |
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