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#46 | |
Are you gonna eat that?
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maybe i'm just noticing it more because its been brought up. but thinking back there really aren't many books i've read that have true heroes. very few are hopeful or have a positive outlook. sf/fantasy i've read that does have a positive outlook/characters (imo)- the Star Force series by BV Larson (indie). it concerns a computer professor who uses nanomachines to build weapons and ships to combat alien invaders. he lost his children to the invaders but he isn't driven by revenge. he learns from his mistakes. he doesn't dwell on failures. he thinks his way around problems instead of immediately resorting to violence. he's just a relatively upbeat character who shows the power of hope, logic and critical thinking over brute force. Jerico the paladin (from various fantasy novels by David Dalglish. indie)- his faith drives him, not revenge. he uses violence as a last resort and feels bad when he is forced to use it. even in the face of horror he remains a pillar of strength. he's diplomatic, believes in justice and salvation for everyone and willing to accept punishment for his mistakes. hes a true hero yet nowhere near a 'pollyanna'. those are the two that really stand out for me. as much as i do enjoy the Song of Ice and Fire series, even the kids in those books have a body count under their belt for god's sake. and imo there's far too many people trying to ape the GRRM style. when even kids become anti-heroes i've just gotta shake my head. i really don't care that gritty is popular. i just wish there was more of the opposing view in genres i enjoy to balance it out a bit. i don't want flowers and puppy dogs, just a little less moral turmoil and more than a handful of characters i can cheer for would be nice. |
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#47 |
Wizard
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For my part, I love the grit, the murkiness and the moral turmoil. I've had thirty years or so of almost nothing but clean-cut, heroic, upstanding, nausea-inducing protagonists and I'll happily do without them for the next three decades. Not that I begrudge "the other side" their fluffy bunny rabbits stuffed with fragrant rose petals, but I certainly hope the pendulum doesn't begin to swing the other way any time soon.
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#48 | |
Wizzard
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His latest published work, the WWW trilogy, is fairly upbeat and about joyous discovery of consciousness and awakening of a kind of AI in conjunction with specialized near-future-tech allowing the blind to see and the broader cultural impact of it all (disclaimer: I have not read the last book so maybe it all goes to hell in a handbasket). The 1st novel, Wake, was nominated for a Hugo Award, and here's a page on the author's site with the other award noms and some info and chapter excerpts, if you're interested. He's also got some free short stories to try out (not all optimistic and some quite dark). |
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#49 | |||
Evangelist
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Oh. And no ennui allowed either. ![]() Since we're talking (mostly) fantasy here, I'll take GRRM over RA Salvatore and his ilk any day. Quote:
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Spoiler:
(Edit-Apologies for the silliness, morning caffeine rush and all) Thanks for the tip, I will check this out. Edit - I did check this out, looks really interesting and affordable. Thanks again. Last edited by VaporPunk; 03-23-2012 at 04:41 AM. |
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#50 | |
Are you gonna eat that?
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i've said in another thread i simply can't stomach the 'innocent farm boy hero with magic trinket' so prevalent in epic fantasy. i just don't believe it on the basis of sheer logic. i also don't believe said character would remain 'good' after their journey, they'd have some serious issues. since GRRM is often mentioned, i would consider somebody like jon snow a complex, yet fundamentally good, character. same for the starks. rough around their edges, willing to get dirty when need be, but fundamentally good. i suppose i was too hasty in my previous post. i guess i generally just don't like my heroes to go below chaotic neutral/neutral good. like batman ![]() Last edited by xg4bx; 03-23-2012 at 04:44 AM. |
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#51 |
Wizard
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Can the people who want (at least sometimes) stories without gritty realism give an example? Because I was thinking about books that I liked, that give a warm and fuzzy feeling as a whole because there is a happy end, but all the example that I could think of had torture, betrayal, loved ones that died tragically or just some kind of deep rooted desperation that the main character overcomes at the end.
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#52 |
Wizard
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I think the gritty fantasy trend is partly because of the success of GRRM. Every successful thing is copied, either as a cynical cash-in, or just through inspiring the people who loved it.
Personally, I got quite fed up with the sanitised theme-park fantasyland that a lot of epic fantasy used to take place in, so I'm happy to see some realistic grime. I haven't noticed SF being particularly pessimistic, but I think it reflects popular attitudes to science. If you believe in climate change (or global warming, as we used to call it before dumbing down) then your future earth might not be a utopia, and if you don't then scientists are engaged in an evil conspiracy, which isn't exactly optimistic either. Also, it's not easy to get a good story out of a happy and peaceful utopia. |
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#53 | |
Loves Ellipsis...
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Well, I did say my list is shorter than most. I've made a habit of not taking the rec's from a lot of people. That list is what happens when I do take recs. ANd speaking of GRRM...I tried twice to read that series...and twice I ended up giving the book(s) away. It was so...gory and gross and depressing and freaking SAD that I was just... ![]() So, for all yall who would prefer GRRM (and I cannot understand why...although I have tried) yall missed out on a fire sale. I was giving those books away like hotcakes (HB, too). Couldn't even stand to have them in my house. *shudder* I don't mind the sad stuff being out there...I just want to be able to avoid it better. I end up giving away a pretty big pile of books (which is rather painful for a book hoarder like myself) - or wasting money. Yall can have all the dark, gritty, sad, bloody books yall want. I just want people to stop pushing the "greatest new sff book out! You gotta read it!" bloody, gory, eat your face off stuff on me. I've managed to keep myself out of the dystopian cesspool that has emerged by being thorough enough in review reading to dig out the spoilers. I'm pretty out there with my dislike of anything nightmare inducing. I tell my friends and anyone who's trying to rec a book to me that I'm a wuss. I don't want my hero dying, raping or anything like that. I can take a dark-tinted story...but gosh darned it! there better be a light at the end of that tunnel! So, for me...I'll take an elf riding a white winged unicorn over a rainbow while wielding a magic sword handed down from his super-hero unknown father saving the day over anything GRRM can ever conceive. ![]() |
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#54 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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![]() I find the trend of milking genre series' into far more books than they have story for (even by the most lenient of standards) to be vastly more damaging than a little grit and moral ambiguity could ever dream of being. Someone point me to the new scifi project/consortium that has the one rule of; "No sequels, no prequels, no reusing of worlds/characters." Intended to inspire genre authors to create stories instead of franchises. That, I could throw my support behind. ![]() |
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#55 | |
Loves Ellipsis...
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![]() I so agree! It's getting to be just a little tiring. Plus the fact that a lot of these serial writers should never try their hand at anything longer than a standalone. And I know someone will get all butt hurt over this but...The Kingkiller Series??!?! Why? Why are they door-stoppers? Where is the freaking story?? I gave up on The Name of the Wind about 2/3 of the way through as Kovth when I realized that nothing was ever going to happen and Kovth was going to continue to be a silly@ss while proclaiming his greatness. ![]() I'm going back to my habit of not reading a series until the entire thing is done. If it gets cancelled mid-series due to lack of sales...well, I didn't miss out on anything. |
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#56 |
Wizard
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For optimistic, science-positive SF, I cannot recommend Lois Bujold too highly - her science-of-choice is biology, and I've been told by People Who Know that it's very good. I love her fantasy books too, which certainly are not unicorns and rainbows, but tend toward optimistic. The Sharing Knife books are wonderful, and Curse of Chalion and Paladin of Souls are two of my all-time favorite books.
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#57 | |
Guru
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#58 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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![]() But I digress... |
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#59 | |
Aging Positronic Brain
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The other author is Nathan Lowell. His Solar Clipper Trader Tales are reminiscent (not identical or derivative) of early Robert A. Heinlein. Again, life's joys, challenges and tragedies play out. In both cases, the dystopia where there is no good, the best is a murky grey, is not the overarching theme. I like hope, not despair, from the books I read. YMMV Dean |
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#60 | |
Wizard
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But maybe people would consider it gritty. |
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