I can recall conversations from the past decade when my fantasy-reading friends would hear a certain speculative novel was bland, and they'd immediately ask: "Did it have a map?" A derisive snort followed. Of course, in the decade preceding that, I would buy only books that had maps between their end papers and opening chapters. No map, no deal. How quickly our tastes change.
More than anything, the search for a map was a search for comfort. A means of spotting familiar territory on packed bookshelves. The map was a promise of what sort of story was within: swords, quests, most likely magic. It was the marker for a place I called home. Where my reading-self kicked off her boots and put up her feet.
I've since come to a place where I see no such absolutes, no need for either map inclusion or exclusion. I've lately started to feel that among new novels, the urban fantasies have more maps than the second world fantasies.
But the existence of the map -- so long as it's accurate to the novel's description -- remains, in many but not all cases, a marker of thorough world building. How are we to believe you've done your homework for a realistic set of trials, or a logic-based magic system we can buy into, or indeed, for what "the orcs' loincloths are made out of," if you haven't first planned out the lay of the physical land to house the assorted narrative tchotchkes?
Yet we must wonder where the line between thorough world building and too much world building exists -- if it does at all.
Ahmed points to the fact that Wheel of Time, with its fourteen door-stopper installments (long even by fantasy standards), is "a sort of perennial target of parody, even among die-hard fans, padded as it can be with relentless descriptions of clothing, hairstyles, furniture and food." Wheel of Time is, in fact, the series that accustomed me to a multi-page glossary/appendix at the back of the book.
Even with that glossary, I reached a point with the Wheel of Time series when I picked up the new book after a year of waiting for it to come out, and I could no longer recall all the characters, whether it was by name or deed or motivation or location. A crisis of memory further compound by there being a certain number of characters who are acting as spies and double agents under assumed identities. The down time between one release and the next was more than enough to rob me of the myriad of minor details (some of which were important) that the reader was expected to recall if she wanted it all to make sense. So I gave up. Not on the series, but on the game of remembrance.
Twelve years ago, I decided to wait for the end of the series to arrive and then to ... start over. With book one.
In January 2013, A Memory of Light, book fourteen in the Wheel of Time series started by Robert Jordan in 1990, hit the shelves. The final book. In the truest meaning of a never-ending wheel, the end is the impetus: It's time to start again. And, as Ahmed points out, I'm certain that sooner or later, keeping track of everything will feel like homework. But homework for a favorite class.
**This piece was originally posted on the World Weaver Press blog.