The Gods of Fantasy
By Guest Author Brynneth N Colvin
Many
fantasy novels feature gods. Books may start off by
sending your hero on a quest. They might intercede at the
critical moment, or create useful challenges. Gods can
play an integral part in your
plot or you might write them in as background details
adding colour to your setting. Gods can really add to your
fantasy novel if you get them right, but it is important
not to let them take over.
What Sort Of Gods Should I Have?
In ancient human cultures, gods always relate to the
lives of people. Whatever is most important to a culture
will be represented by gods-be that war, poetry, farming,
sea travel, dragon taming or magic. The gods in your novel
should reflect things important to your characters. You
may want to include temples, priests and priestesses,
festivals, rituals and sacrifices to your gods to make
them more real within your story. The more gods that
exist, the less powerful they tend to be, and the more
specifically focused they are. You might choose one all
powerful deity. If you have two deities, they could be
good and evil, or order and chaos. They could be gods of
night and day, or war and peace-be creative. If you want
more than two gods, think of the things that your culture
values. Horse
cultures will have horse gods. Fishermen will have sea
gods.
How Powerful Should They Be?
Unless you are writing a book about gods, then very
powerful beings interfering in the lives of your mortals
can spoil your story. After all, your heroes are the ones
who need to win the day, and all powerful beings won't be
so attractive to your readers because you know they're
going to triumph. The more present a god is going to be in
your story, the less powerful you should make them. All
powerful, all knowing gods work better as distant objects
of veneration than characters in the plot. You can limit
your god's power by only giving them magic in their sphere
of influence, not letting them be all knowing or placing
other physical limitations on them.
How Can Gods Enrich My Story?
Heros sent on quests or being given challenges by the
gods fill ancient myths and legends, so they make a useful
plot device. Gods playing with the fates of nations can
also be interesting to explore, as is the possibility of
mortals caught up in the intrigues and jealousies of the
gods. Religions evolve all sorts of complex rituals and
traditions which can be used to fuel the plot. Religion
can be good, or evil, or both within your story. It can
provide you with wise old priests and gentle healers, or
with mad despots determined to convert the world by force.
Humans inspired by gods, or using gods to justify their
actions can make very good protagonists. Where you have
priests, you might also have priestly magic which can add
another dimension to your tale. Religion may create social
castes, hierarchies, strange laws, or other social
possibilities. Participants may have to wear particular
costumes, or respect peculiar laws and taboos-all of which
can add to your story and to the originality of your
setting. Where there are multiple gods and religions, you
might have religious wars as well which make good plot
devices.
Making Gods Work For You
Your novel will have one or more heroes, and these are
the people readers will really care about and invest in.
Very powerful gods who either solve everything, or throw
up impossible challenges that must be solved by other
gods, detracts from your heroes and it is important not to
let this happen. Plan your story so that the heroes take
centre stage most of the time, and your gods do not take
over. Also, do not fall back on using gods to get your
heroes out of otherwise impossible situations as this is
an obvious ruse and may well leave your readers feeling
cheated.