fybonacci said:
I think Morgon fails the typical farm-boy-ness. He had an education.
There's also farm-girls by the way: Paksenarrion, whatshername from Canavan's Black Magician trilogy.
!!!RANT WARNING!!!
God I hate these perpetual farm boys! As if one who knows how to milk a cow and nothing else can do all the things these ppl do! Rand? A general??? Hah. He could marshall some cows I'm sure! Man! At least Morgon had an education and was a ruler - my deepest respects to McKillip. It's just so sickeningly standard - why oh why can't they come up with something new? Why does every fantasy book haaave to start on a farmlike place of somesort! I found Guy Gavriel Kay a couple months ago. I compulsively read everything he wrote. Can't remember any farms there. Am going through withdrawal symptoms. Have been going through Martin withdrawal symptoms for years. And Jaqueline Carrey, too. Farmboys just don't fill the void... want intelligent people... with education... or somethn... no cowmilking.... plzzzz
END RANT
Well, one problem you can run into is that if you have an educated, intelligent person who knows the world and figures out everything, is that your reader isn't in on all of that knowledge. If you have an uneducated, ignorant character that's never traveled to another city before, you have a chance for that character to travel the world. And as the character learns about the history, the geography, the cultures, etc, in that world, so does the reader.
The same goes with magic. You hardly ever see the most poweful wizard in the world as the main character in a story from the beginning. The reader of the story has a much better understanding of magic once the ignorant character learns how to do magic himself.
I think it's basically an exposition tool, a way for the author to explain things without making it feel like the reader is sitting in a history class.
So, in a typical fantasy setting, a farm boy from a small town makes a prime example because he's never been educated, he's never traveled outside his secluded town, and he doesn't know anything about the world.
And I agree, I think Morgon falls outside of the typical definition. But I think he was still enough of a farm boy for the whole process to work for him
