Back to Part 3 of my VirtualBalticon panel notes. In your original fantasy setting, everything the characters own or interact with has to come from somewhere, from food and drink to durable goods. Let’s talk about how to build a believable material culture for your world. These notes come from the titular panel from Virtual Balticon 54 with panelists: E.C. Ambrose (as moderator), Gail Martin, Roberta Rogow, James Stratton, and Beth Tanner. First up, let’s talk about how people get this wrong. Some of the biggest pet peeves that keep cropping up in fantasy novels. Pet peeves about fantasy logic 1. Horses are not cars Horses are not like cheap used cars. They are expensive to both buy and to maintain. And, in a world with horses? You’re traveling the paths that exist, not a highway. 2.Space and time have set values. Especially in alternate history, how long does it take to travel? How long does it take news to travel? It depends on who you are and where you live. Think of Napoleonic couriers, homing pigeons, ravens, and beacons. If you lived near their home base, you’d be far better informed, faster than many people betwixt and between the location where the news happened and where the news traveled. 3. Stew is not portable. Think about your food preservation and its transport. 4. Clothes are finite. Throughout history, many people only had only one change of clothing, and very little coin money. Most things were done by bartering. 5. Wild country is rare in settled countries. Those ‘wild’ prairies or moors? Likely had something grazing on them, and a herder watching over them. Carpenters and loggers in the woods. People gathering medicinal herbs in all sorts of places. Open land outside of cities and towns were mostly farmed. There isn’t much up for grabs that someone doesn’t try to make a living off of… unless there’s a reason. 6. Some fabrics are worth more than others. In The Hobbit, Bilbo’s robe is a patchwork robe, with a wide variety of expensive silks. (My Note: If he or his family were tailors and these were the offcuts? Maybe. But there needs to be a reason) How To Set Up An Economy That Works Here are some things to keep in mind. - What things are available in stores? What things must be given, inherited, or earned? - How good you looked often depended on family sewing skills — or the ability to pay someone with those. Plus, what cloth was from your region. - Coinage – do they have people, gods, or something else on them? Are they a consistent size, weight, or materials? Or mixed? - Show the different classes – there usually isn’t going to be a single economic class, even if they pretend it. - Someone’s usually in charge. -If someone is shocked at all the silverware, that tells us something about them. - If some people does something weird it can be: “oh, the coastal people usually do X”. - Are they nibbling on the ornamental fruit display? The very best of science-fiction and fantasy showcase different cultures and hint at where they came from. They display the different economic systems and how that affects what people within them prioritize. Examples of Good Fantasy Economics Lois McMaster Bujold’s science-fiction VorKosigan series. Katherine Kurtz’s Deryni series. Fran Wilde’s Bone Universe series. Juliette Wade’s Mazes of Power (she also has a world-building blog) Guy Gavriel Kay’s work Inconsistencies with your world’s economy, while sounding like the most boring lecture, can make or break the story for many of your readers. Be sure to think through the implications of where material items came from and how they got to be there, and you’ll be well on your way to creating a functioning fantasy world. Any tips or tricks I missed? Any world-building favorites you’d like to give a shout out to?