Straight talk from the sisters about blood, sweat and ink
Welcome back to Masterplots Theater! Today we’re going to talk vengeance, for all those writers who are just dying to exorcise a past wrong through fiction…
I have combed my Goodreads list, but alas, I haven’t read any revenge novels! So I am going to use a movie I have seen as an example: GANGS OF NEW YORK.
In Nobody’s Darling by Teresa Medeiros, the story starts when the heroine seeks justice on behalf of her brother. She believes the hero (a western time bounty hunter) killed her brother, and she tries to kill him because the authorities won’t help her. Later, she realizes he didn’t kill her brother and they set out together to find her brother. So, I’m not sure the entire novel fit the plot type, but at least the beginning does.
An interesting twist! Sounds like vengeance plot turned quest.
well my story is V for Vendetta, have a look if you have a few minutes to spare
http://www.obliqview.blogspot.in
Vendetta, a mixture of the Kinsmen and Vengeance masterplots. 😉
I suspect revenge is a popular plot because all of us have felt ourselves trampled by villains and served with injustice. Who has not wanted to hang a jury for letting the bad guy off? Who has not wanted to raise a sword against the evil mastermind? Who would not give our lives to protect the ones we love, and to act on their behalf when all is lost?
Some of my favorite books are: The Princess Bride (personal most favorite,) Gone Girl (twisted but compelling,) The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (her mission worn literally on her skin,) and The Scarlet Letter (breathtaking for its view into a rigid society I considered savage with its public morality.)
As for movies, Secret in Their Eyes – the ultimate revenge, perhaps, because punishment is so brutal.
Great post, Heather. I enjoyed your description of this masterplot, especially the idea of moral justification.
You mention some excellent examples. I haven’t seen SECRET IN THEIR EYES, but will check it out. And I have to admit that when served injustice myself, or when witnessing it happen to others, my mind instinctively plots revenge. Perhaps I should put those feelings into words… Glad you enjoyed the post, and thanks so much for the comment!
Well, I’m a fantasy fan, I’ve read my share of vengean stories, and I have to admit this is a kind of masterplot I really like. Not because of blood-shading, mind you, but because it has the potentiality to bring up a lot of intersting reflections.
One of the most intersting I read was David Gemmell’s “Ironhead’s Daughter”. Gemmell wrote the vegeance masterplot quite often and he was particularly interested in normal people doing the wrong thing.
In “Ironhead’s Daugther” the protagonist, Sigarni, is raped by a group of men when she gets arrested and put in jail. She manages to evade thanks to her witts and afterward she seeks and kills all the men in the group. This group is very diverse. You don’t have the normal hateful bunch of men, but every one of these men is different and has his own personality. One of them is actually a good men who got caught up in the ‘pack psichology’ and did something he would have normally never done. Sigarni kills him as she kills all her rapers, but Gemmell had the possibility to rise a few questions: what is a just punishment? When someone is punished for a crime, does it matter their personality and previous behaviour or is the crime they committed more important? Does it matter if they repent? Does the victime have the possibility to chose the punishement, whatever it turns out to be, because they’re the ones who were wronged? Where exactly do you place the line of justice?
It is an adventure-packed story (all of Gemmell’s stories are), but there is a lot of food for thoughts in there.
@JazzFeathers
The Old Shelter – Jazz Age Jazz
Fantastic points, Sarah. I will have to check out that book. Thanks for the comment!