Have you been looking back through my off-topic posts or something ?
Nah, but on the other hand, I'd rather have something sincere and heartfelt that I could disagree with in almost every particular and enjoy anyway (see, most of Daniel Keys Moran's work, for example; I am entirely on the side of the antagonists in the Tale of the Continuing Time) rather than something that's trying to avoid controversy and ends up being insipid or worse, raising blatant questions about its set-up that it falls short of answering.
Ideally, one could hope to get around this by depicting characters with strongly-held beliefs but writing them in such a way as to show the negatives as well as the positives. This is however difficult and there are many readers who won't get it anyway because of, sfaict being absolutely convinced that if someone is presented as a hero/protagonist we are therefore meant to find them sympathetic. (As witness a goodly fraction of my on-topic posts; my personal read on the DF is that Jim is doing an amazing job of critiquing the values Harry espouses, without haryr himself being remotely aware of that.)
Meh. Good vs. Evil is easy and has been done thousands of times. Good vs. Other Incompatible Good, now that's interesting. (Also heartbreaking.)
OK, if you're defining hook that broadly, I can't disagree with you; it's the notion that every book needs to start with an action-scene-type hook specifically ("Ford Prefect hit the ground running") that doesn't work for me.
1
Haven't been going back through off topic posts. I just pulled what I thought were two random cultural/political positions that generally (but perhaps not always, cause hey its a big world) wouldn't go together and threw them out there.
2-3&4?
Its not so much that I would avoid heart felt positions or water things down until they aren't keenly felt but I don't think it has to be controversial. For instance my MC in my Spineward Sectors series starts out as an Anti-Monarchy, Prince, and with his culture's default Bias/raging-Hate-on for all things AI. Over the course of the series, due to the actions of the Parliament and Elected Sector Assembly he is forced to embrase the Feudal-Monarchist model to a certain extent while at the same time becoming disenchanted with the Democratic/Representative Elected model due to all the times they keep stabbing him in the back. But his unthinking knee jerk 'Rage against the Machine' anti-AI bias runs head long into Real Politic concerns when it comes time to deal with the Droids.
I think that by showing the flaws in both Monarchy and Democracy and then having our character pushed in the direction of the Monarchy side, I can get in the weeds a little bit as our guy agonizes over the 'ideal world' he'd like to live in and the actual world of corrupted elected leaders he has to deal with. This lets me have a political argument that bypasses most all of the hot button issues of the day by introduce a generally discarded paradim.
And at the same time I get to show what unthinking bias, even built on a well deserved and wholly earned basis can look like, when it comes to the Human Race's former and overthrown AI Overlords. Then after we get a few looks at some anti-machine bigots we will eventually get to deal with some very much non-AI but very intelligent Droids most of whom deserve our anger (for other reasons) and some of whom do not. And thus our biases and bigotries will be tested, exposed, counted and measured, yet at no time am I really running the risk of po-oing my fan base by hitting them where they live. Anyone with the intelligence to see what unthought out extreme positions can give you. Meaning at the very least big blind spots and anyone who wants to ignore the politics can have a good ride as we smash the bad guys and make a few smart decisions and maneuvers to help us out later on. Without having to feel preached at, or as if I am foisting some kind of political, social or whatever position on them as we go along.
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Its almost always about good versus evil, if only because there are very few individuals who don't think of themselves or what they're doing as good and their opponents as bad (if not actively evil). So I would say to have 'your characters' portray themselves to themselves and others as anything other than good and their opponents (at least initially) as anything other than wrong/bad/or-evil to be a flaw. That's not to say that the other side is evil or that our side is good. That's where you as a writer get to introduce nuance, context and in the process of giving the depth expose some of the flaws in our MC's thinking and positions. I will say a lot of people are looking for a good time when they read books and that to give them a morally conflicted hero who's not sure if he's doing the right thing or is on the right side and wonders if his opponents are just as good as he is, might not be as satisfying a read. I mean honestly its hard to have a good time, blowing up your enemies, saving the day in the nick of time by stopping your base from exploding or whatever else, if the reader is looking at it wondering if our guy/gal shouldn't have lost.
Now in writing this I have perhaps exposed a bias for a Star Wars, Star Trek, Dresden Files etc fun romp with action in it. But there you go.
5
On the Hook: I would say that if you can do 'better' or even 'almost as good' as an action lead in and if that's what you love to write you should by all means write it that way. On the other hand if your books are suffering because of your lead in hook is flat or off putting or just isn't selling your book to your audience and you've been avoiding putting an action hook in up to this point then....
The Deposed King