This is me. This is me rambling waiting for some reads to get back so I can polish my novella and fire that rascal off.
This is me with too damn much time on my hands, but not enough brain-mojo to do anything really creative. So I'm just thinking and rambling some on when and how to kill off main characters, and maybe some stuff about reader expectations.
So don't take this as advice from a "writer," because I'm by no stretch of the imagination an expert on that. This is more reactions from a reader.
I replaced my mobile phone and was re-downloading my ebooks when I stumbed across one I didn't quite remember. I started reading it, and was delighting in the gorgeous prose and utterly engaging protagonist. Then I got this nasty, unpleasant sensation, flipped ahead, and remembered I had read this one... and deleted it in a fit of rage.
Now, what follows will be SPOILERS for "The Reapers are also Angels."
THAT'S RIGHT, SPOILERS!
The author kills the amazing, engaging, delightfully emotionally rich protagonist, and then spends the last chapter or two focused on her murderer, as if to impart something Profound and Statementey, with no small bit of apologist poetical horseshit.
Now, why did this piss me off so bad I'll never crack another book by this guy? I'm not quite a Care Bear, after all... I wouldn't be devouring Zombie books if I wanted the Rainbow Unicorn to come and make every story happy with his Gumdrop Magic.
And I've never even briefly Ragequit Joss Whedon, Doctor Who, Torchwood, Spooks, or Supernatural over killing off a character I liked. Well, I did stop watching one episode of Supernatural when they killed a dog just to make sure everyone knew how much of a dick the villain was.
So why?
Why is this talented writer on my "Please die in a fire before writing anything else list"? He's a pretty damn skilled author, despite the Present Tense, No Quotation Marks, Just To Prove How Very Clever I Am And To Prove It's Serious Literature Even Though It Has Zombies. The guy wrote a pretty good book until he sneezed and let Uwe Boll steal his soul. Great worldbuilding, excellent characters...
Why couldn't I give this guy the pass I did John Carpenter? I'd love to have a beer with R.J. MacCready, but I didn't feel "cheated" with how that book ended.
So I puzzled on that this afternoon, trying to figure out the reason for the disparity in my reactions to Main Character Termination.
Part of it's a matter of pure taste. I grew up watching the ponderously nihilistic themes in 60's and 70's cinema, reading horror books which could be summed up "he dies, she dies, everybody dies." So it's not just a genre or theme I'm into. If I need to be reminded how shitty and unfair the world is, I'll watch the news.
But that doesn't account for the strength of my reaction.
Why does Joss Whedon get away with it? He kills fuckers off like there's no tomorrow.
Figured that part out: Because for every beloved and engaging character he kills, he usually has three or for more to carry the story forward. He kills people off to drive the story, to drive character development, and sometimes just to maintain a sense of peril, not so much in an effort to be "Profound."
But The Book Which Irritated Me Unreasonably, the protagonist's death didn't make the rest of the story Profound.
It made it pointless.
Why would I even want to stick around while the piece of trash waxed poetical? Keep reading a book now absent the only character I was interested in?
Now, remember, I'm talking about my personal tastes here, not making a professional, moral, or ethical judgement. People reading for some "Greater Statement" or "Profound Commentary" can still enjoy it just fine... but for me, that event was like watching someone create a beautiful painting, then, right at the end, set the canvas on the floor and squat their business all over it, just to mix things up some, just to say "Aha! See what I did there?"
Now, I've no idea if that was the writer's intention, rather that's the impression the book created in me, due to my own weird mix of tastes and experiences and all that stuff.
Mainly because when reading, I'm character driven.
So when none of the remaining characters are ones I care about, respect, or like, why bother reading more? It's the same reason I'm not into the whole Game Of Thrones thingee... I know that most anyone I like will die, or turn into an asshole because the author wants people to focus on story rather than characters.
So I've been able to gel one potential lesson from this: If you're writing a character driven story, don't kill the character unless your other characters are engaging enough to keep people around. I quit watching "Friends" when the monkey left the show.
If you only have one character people care about, think real hard before you gank them, make sure it's worth what you'll lose. "Well, Harry's dead, but Thomas Covenant's now telling the tale..." If your work relies on it's characters, be sure that you leave something your readers will still enjoy.
Now, if you're writing for readers who aren't driven by their emotional attachment to your characters or because they're intrigued by that character's development, have at, tally ho, and all that.
But keep in mind that unless you balance things, there's always a trade-off. In fact, balancing things is, itself a trade-off against really punching up this or that. If you sacrifice depth for cheese-whiz feel-good, or character engagement for Profoundity, or worldbuilding for any of the above, you're pruning off a portion of your readers.
I'm not saying "Don't choose this or choose that," just that you should keep that sort of thing in mind. Cost/benefit analysis, based on why you're writing, and who you think you're writing for.
Another bit I've taken from this, and it doesn't apply directly to Reapers/Angels, just something that came up during my musings: Know what your core audience likes about your work, don't make them feel cheated.
If your changing your game, hang a lantern on that. "This new series is going to darker places, about crimes against pandas. It's nothing like my smartass, wisecracking plumber's adventures amongst the gigglebunnies..." (I'm talking in terms of emotional, gut reactions.) Now, if you're an unpublished author, it's not like people have expectations. But if you've established a reader base, don't sucker them into buying your book about a girl who drank a glass of water and was sad, then got her life together to be hit by a train, if your earlier, popular work is about a boy who, I don't know, does nice things in a funny way or something.
If you've established a reader base, they expect some things from you. Magnum PI coming back as a ghost isn't what they're paying to see. There was a recent show that pretended to be Torchwood, but really wasn't except for some of the cast members... Don't be Not-Torchwood.
Don't be Spinal Tap Mark II.
Don't be Zardoz, or Highlander II.
Be aware of why people like your stuff. Don't be afraid to push your boundries, change your focus, but make sure your readers know what they're getting into.