When her father is killed by a brutal warlord, a sheltered princess must take over as queen of her kingdom and lead her knights against an army of violent barbarians to defend her kingdom.
The_CNISamurai
When her father is killed by a brutal warlord, a sheltered princess must take over as queen of her kingdom and lead her knights against an army of violent barbarians to defend her kingdom.
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At first glance, the plot would seem to be:
When a brutal warlord kills her father, a sheltered princess must take over as queen and defend her kingdom against a barbarian invasion.
(23 words)
As if the death of her father and the invasion are 2 separate crises by 2 separate parties.
But if the same warlord is also the invader — his goal is to claim country and throne for himself — then perhaps:
When a brutal warlord kills her father and invades the kingdom, a sheltered princess must fight for her throne and the freedom of her people.
(25 words)
A virtue of the 2nd version is that she is fighting for something greater than just herself; she’s fighting for her people, for freedom– more important stakeholders and stakes than her claim to the throne.? [That’s not an insignificant nuance in the way historical (and fantasy) stories are framed these days, btw.]
Whatever, the ambiguity as to the role of warlord in the entirety of the plot needs to be clarified.
Also, I believe it always more effective to cast a character’s action — even the antagonist — in active, transitive words.? So “a brutal warlord kills the father” rather than “the father is killed by a brutal warlord”.? ?It also saves 2 words. achieving? economy as well as effectiveness.
fwiw