Another writing question. Well, more of a insecure writer question.
How important is an original plot/premise/concept to the novel?
Or is it more about the characters and the wording and so on?
Let's say I had an idea for a female wizard living in, um, New York. And the wizard was totally different from that other Barry/Larry guy
. You know, the sarcastic dude with the skull in his basement.
Let's say my wizard was sweet, kind, caring, timid, never sarcastic. She has no pets, lives in a huge penthouse with a pool in the backyard.She calls her mom twice a week, hates fast food and soda. Whatever. Like anti-Barry.
And then I give this wizard a bunch of pals like supersexy cop dude who loves her, dates her, and wants to marry her; couple of sisters; vampire buddies. Again, anti-Barry.
So then I write this whole book about this wizard and how she solves a mass vampire killing.
(Don't worry, I didn't
actually have the idea to write this, it's just an example. In case Jim's lawyer and agent happen to be around...I am not stealing his wizard. Relax.
)
If I were to write said story, what would your opinion be of that story? Would it be, um, marketable? Is it a bad thing to lack originality in a plot?
I know the above was kind of an extreme example, but how about if one was writing a vampire novel or something of the sort? It's hard to step outside a genre entirely and be completely original.