: Re: What liberties can I take with the monarchies in my own world? Could a writer make up his own rules, for a monarchy he created, in a world of his own making? My question is whether I
Of course, and it's arguably more interesting to do so. Obviously it will need to be logically coherent, and I'd suggest you write some history which uses or illustrates these differences. This has two purposes:
a) It will allow you to ensure your "rules" actually work (if the history is believable and logically consistent)
b) It will give you some points for characters to refer to, and generally give you more of a 'world'. You don't need to explain these references in the narrative, but you might want to have a glossary for the interested reader.
The (potentially) tricky bit will be explaining the important differences while walking a line between long, obvious exposition and small titbits of info which the reader fails to pick up. There are plenty of well-tried methods to do exposition without the reader noticing (too much).
Incluing is a word for scattering expository information seamlessly through a story, to avoid having to break the narrative for a chunk of exposition.
More posts by @Phylliss352
: I think that "belief" and "morality" should the core of a complete monster. Not to say that s/he follows the same beliefs and ideas that we do, no no no! A complete monster has their own
: Alternative publishers like Dover I have a manuscript that is a derivative of a mathematical work in the public domain. It is a diamond in the rough which was unpalatable due to its prose.
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