Abyss, on 15 April 2010 - 03:47 PM, said:
Tarcanus, on 15 April 2010 - 01:08 PM, said:
jitsukerr, on 15 April 2010 - 10:39 AM, said:
...Can you give us an example of what you would consider a DEM?
One of the most common is how Harry is always able to stretch himself
just far enough...when Michael is always right there....
jitsukerr, on 15 April 2010 - 03:06 PM, said:
I think that of those, only Michael could be considered a DEM. The other would be character development, aka plotting.
Isn't ANY accomplishment the rsult of strecthing oneself to do something you might not otherwise be able to. It's just a function of the story that Harry is put in situations where it's life or death. You don't know that you can lift a car until you're trying to save someone stuck under it.
As for Michael, well, he, and the rest of the Knights, are servants of 'GOD'. Of COURSE they are going to show up when needed. it's not deus ex machina when for the purposes of the story 'Deus' is the one calling the shots.
Of course accomplishments can be done by stretching your own abilities - and that's definitely a nice thing to see in a protagonist. The problem I have with it is that this stretching of abilities only occurs when Harry is about to be killed. If he stretched himself while performing a summoning or drawing a complicated circle, I'd really like that. It would balance out the way he's constantly stretching his abilities now through near-death experiences.
As for your second point about god, I don't buy it. All you're saying is that anything done through the Knights is, by default, going to be DEM because god makes things happen when they're needed - exactly when they're needed. Hell, the most common definitions of DEM talk about how in ancient times DEM was a god that would descend from above a play being acted out in order to randomly resolve the conflict in said play. That really seems like what god (in the Dresdenverse) is doing when he(she/it?) steps in at just the right moment to pull the characters' asses out of the fire.
@Obdi
I looked up better definitions of what DEM really is in order to fill in the holes in my memory and you're right to an extent. Most of the definitions reference random things coming out of no-where to resolve plot points, but there is also a more lenient definition that talks about a 'sudden or unexpected solution to a difficulty'. It seems I think of DEM as the latter definition, but both are correct. I see Harry being saved in the nick of time (all of the time) to be DEM situations because I didn't expect him to always be saved (though, in retrospect, I should, because he's obviously still alive after many many novels, haha).
And as always, none of this detracts from my enjoyment of the books

. I just read through the Vamp Party in Grave Peril and Harry just put all of the pieces together. The ending is nigh!