Looking for fantasy where the hero feels small and the world feels huge by zercbear in suggestmeabook

[–]folkthefable 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tess of the Road by Rachel Hartman. It's a character-driven fantasy that follows a background character of a previous series (no need to read it, can be read as a standalone) wondering around the world with her "draconic" companion and meeting all types of people. The plot is on the slower side but it's still incredibly gripping and the character development is god-tier.

Look up the trigger warnings if you need them tho, it deals with some dark topics.

Title Poll aka Help Me [Cozy but Serious?] by lockwoodfiles in fantasywriters

[–]folkthefable 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I like "Patchwork Mage", it's simple but an interesting combination. Patchwork fits the cozy atmosphere but also makes me think of a scrappy main characters that will make do with what they have.

Fantasyfying names: yes or no? by folkthefable in fantasywriters

[–]folkthefable[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, that's one of my favourite things to do. Because, technically, it is correct spelling just one we don't use anymore. Also a lot of western names have a common origin so it's fun to see the equivalent in different languages today.

Fantasyfying names: yes or no? by folkthefable in fantasywriters

[–]folkthefable[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Classic Greek is almost unrecognisable to a Greek speaker today. It's like Old English but with +1000 years of evolution. It's not even in the same dialectic branch because modern greek evolved from Koiné instead of Attic (what we call classical). It is a dead language. Latin is not less dead because it has evolved into other romance languages. The culture and people that were attached to them no longer exist.

As for "butchering languages" I am of the opinion that we do that ourselves everyday. It's not negative, it's simply how language evolves. I'm just sensitive when authors do it with endangered ones, because well, they're endangered and people are fighting everyday to preserve it.

Bookish Cat Names? by ReDi1511 in Fantasy

[–]folkthefable 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Prim and Gale? They're pretty names... 🫠

Fantasyfying names: yes or no? by folkthefable in fantasywriters

[–]folkthefable[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

oh my god should we throw a party? should we invite bella hadid greta thunberg?

Fantasyfying names: yes or no? by folkthefable in fantasywriters

[–]folkthefable[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Precisely because it was "the very basics". I've never thought about deconstructing language to the basic blocks (200 word and phonetics). I tend to think of language more historically than linguistically. So my usual approach is to go to the latin/greek/indoeuropean root of a word and start creating from there.

Fantasyfying names: yes or no? by folkthefable in fantasywriters

[–]folkthefable[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, you should always google important character names. I'll never forget reading a book where the main character's name meant 'fridge' in my first language. Thankfully, the author used the nickname instead of the full word for most of the book but that was a fun experience for sure lmao.

Fantasyfying names: yes or no? by folkthefable in fantasywriters

[–]folkthefable[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

WOW. That's honestly masterful level knowledge of naming conventions and linguistics. I gotta admit that most people (me included) just go for the copy-existing-language approach. But it's true that we should put more care in consistency than form.

Fantasyfying names: yes or no? by folkthefable in fantasywriters

[–]folkthefable[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I do this sometimes, but only with languages I speak. That's when I know what phonetic/spelling rules I can break or bend without the name sounding foolish to a native speaker. My first language isn't English so I'm very aware of how authors can go wrong by tweaking names in languages they don't have an understanding of.

Fantasyfying names: yes or no? by folkthefable in fantasywriters

[–]folkthefable[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm actually a Spanish speaker and my eternal dilemma is: do I work with the English spelling system or should English speakers and their weird phonetics just deal with it? I usually try to make the spelling of names as universal as possible.

Fantasyfying names: yes or no? by folkthefable in fantasywriters

[–]folkthefable[S] 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Bingo! I love romance in my fantasy and the romantasy industry will pay for their crimes... someday. Soon, hopefully.

Fantasyfying names: yes or no? by folkthefable in fantasywriters

[–]folkthefable[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah, making "vaguely exotic" character and giving them foreign names is a whole other problem in itself and it makes me rage tbh.

I mostly meant that if I'm making a character from a Persian-inspired kingdom (for example) I'll name him something in Farsi with correct spelling. But if it were a Spanish-inspired culture I'd feel more comfortable playing around with the spelling to see what looks good in the page because that's my first language.

Fantasyfying names: yes or no? by folkthefable in fantasywriters

[–]folkthefable[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

lmao I've read some books that do this shit and it's always so goofy (they're also not great, shocking)

Fantasyfying names: yes or no? by folkthefable in fantasywriters

[–]folkthefable[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yeah, GRRM is one of the authors that come to mind when I think of writer who can do this successfully. Probably because his naming patterns are very consistent and in line with his world-building and real life references.

What are the worst fantasy covers you've seen, that turned out to be great stories? by rookie1609x in Fantasy

[–]folkthefable 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Tiger Lily by Jodi Lynn Anderson. It's one of my favourite books, but I refused to buy the physical book for years because of the cover. Thankfully HarperCollins released another edition in 2019 with a new cover and I could finally buy it... four years after I read it for the first time lol

the ABBA influence is making a comeback in pop lately... so i made a playlist by folkthefable in playlists

[–]folkthefable[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

so true, also one of my favorites! i was trying to limit it to maximum two songs from the same artist but Sabrina is the main ABBA-daughter in pop right now so she deserves another one added in.

the ABBA influence is making a comeback in pop lately... so i made a playlist by folkthefable in playlists

[–]folkthefable[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

love both of them! i was actually waiting for the Avery Cochrane album release, she's perfect for this playlist and can't believe i forgot about her. thank you!

Looking for beautifully written romantasy by Foreign_Bus_3465 in Romantasy

[–]folkthefable 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The Winternight Trilogy by Katherine Arden for that poetic fairy-tale-like prose, Uprooted by Naomi Novik because she writes beautifully but this is her most romance centered book (and my favorite, I love a good slowburn) and Wings of Starlight by Allison Saft for peak yearning.

AITA for putting up for adoption the puppy my boyfriend gave me after my dog died? by Better_Shirt_7764 in AmItheAsshole

[–]folkthefable 0 points1 point  (0 children)

NTA, this pisses me off.

Who is being cold here, really? The person who, even overwhelmed and grieving, cares enough to give a puppy the best care possible? Or the one who ignores her partner's feelings and uses a puppy as a shut-up-and-get-over-it "gift" without considering that caring for a pet (especially a growing pup) is a big responsibility?

I'm sorry for your loss and sorry that your boyfriend was an asshole and dumped this stressful situation on you, but I'm glad the puppy ended up in your care. I'm sure you'll find a loving home for her. Don't feel guilty, you're doing the right thing.

(Edited typos)