poohcarrot said:
It's ironic that the plants on Mono Island know what the wizards want, evolve as quickly as possible in the hope they'll be taken off Mono Island, but once they get far away from Mono Island, they stop trying.
It's a bit like the evolution of writing. Things get better and better, then along comes Twilight.
Better and better, you say? Let's take a look at the "evolution" of English-writing non-fiction authors over the centuries.
1200s: Chaucher
1500s-1600s: Bacon, Marlowe, Shakespeare, Milton
1700s: Swift, Fielding
1800s: Austen, Twain, Eliot, Bronte, Henry James, Oscar Wilde, Poe
1900s-1930s: Faulkner, Wodehouse, Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Shaw, Joyce
1940s-1950s: Waugh, Amis, Salinger, Kerouac, Nabokov
1960s: Pynchon, Burroughs
1970s: Jacqueline Susanne, Harold Robbins
1980s: Stephen King, Brett Eaton Ellis, Jay McIninerney
1990s: James Patterson, Tom Clancy, Anne Rice
2000s: JK Rowling, Dan Brown, James Frey, Mitch Albom
With a few exceptions (such as Pterry), English-language writing has been in decline for decades, keeping pace with the declining literary IQ of readers in general.