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#181 |
Connoisseur
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I liked Piers Anthony when I was very young, and now I can't imagine what the heck I was thinking. Same for David Eddings. I was a huge fan of his once, and now . . .
However, I do owe Eddings a big debt. On the first day of class when I was a college freshman, a woman sat down next to me because she noticed I was reading QUEEN OF SORCERY, which she had just finished. We struck up a conversation and started a friendship. I later met her roommate, who eventually became my wife. So David Eddings set me up. ![]() |
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#182 | ||
New York Editor
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I don't think you can draw a hard and fast line. There are too many edge cases that straddle boundaries. I see both as subsets of fantastic literature, which overlap and blend in various areas. I call the Urth of the New Sun SF, but I'm aware of the fantasy tropes. Quote:
Jordan has been pretty good about not going where you think he is with the series, and that's about as unexpected a conclusion as I can come up with. Getting a bit more serious, WoT presents teleological issues, and I don't know if Jordan really planned to address them. In that sense, WoT and Urth share some characteristics. Urth is about sin and redemption, and before the powers out there will consent to kindle a new sun, man must atone for prior bad behavior. WoT has Morgaine piously proclaiming the Creator is good, yet the Creator made the Wheel of Time, and started it spinning and weaving the Pattern over endless cycles in which Shaitan attempts tp break out of his prison and the Dragon must face him and stuff him back, while millions ultimately suffer and die. Christian theology calls this the problem of pain, and the answer to "How can a just and loving God permit this?" tends to be "We don't know, but we must believe in God and trust that He has a plan and all will be well in the end." WoT hasn't really addressed the question of what about all of this makes the Creator "good". We also get no real feel for Shaitan's motivations. If I were dropped into that world and could talk to one of the Forsaken, I'd ask two questions. First, "You know this has been happening for endless cycles. What makes you think that this time Shaitan will succeed in breaking free and remaking creation to his liking?" Second, "You expect to live forever and rule the world as the Great Lord's viceroys. What makes you think creation as he'll redo it if he can will even have a world you can live in, let alone rule?" If I really wanted to have fun, I'd suggest that Shaitan's motives are unhappiness over the way many millions have suffered and died, and a desire to end the cycles and break the Pattern, allowing humanity to forge its own destiny. Let's muddy the waters a bit and question just who the good guys are. ![]() But then, I'm increasingly displeased with most fantasy, precisely because of questions of motivation. When you toss deities in the mix, the bad guys all tend to be spoiled cosmic children, throwing magical tantrums because they can't have their own way. ______ Dennis Last edited by DMcCunney; 11-16-2009 at 10:05 AM. |
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#183 | |
New York Editor
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And I'll recommend The Belgariad, too. I just can't recommend anything else of Eddings', because he only has one story and cast of characters. ______ Dennis |
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#184 |
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#185 | |
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#186 |
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.....
Last edited by hokie; 11-15-2009 at 07:37 AM. Reason: wrong thread |
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#187 | |
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#188 |
Home Guard
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I liked the Covenant series but Donaldson's sci-fi series The Gap Cycle (loosely based on Wagner's Ring Cycle) were too much for me. The characters were even more unlikeable than Thomas Covenant. I gave up after 2 books.
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#189 | |
Connoisseur
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In one of the Xanth books he had an article after the end of the novel that talked about how he writes books, he writes the outline and fleshes it out a little then attempts to sell it to publishers. If they do not buy it he does not write the book. So now he does not spend time writing a book only to find he cannot sell it, part of the contract negotiation is a price and delivery time. I noticed the comment on the GOR series. A friend told me the first 6 or so were superb then it got on horseback and galloped away. I am in Australia so when I tried to buy the first book I was hit by the dreaded geographic restrictions. Edit I have just finished The Wizard of Karres and I enjoyed it. In reference to the earlier person calling it bad I have to say it is not as good as the original. I think the missing ingredient is humour. The humour is different to the original and is missing a certain something along with distrust and disrespect for authority. Eric Frank Russell could have written a sequel with the same humour and anti authority angle I think. I remember reading some Christopher Anvil in the 80s and I think he could do a similar thing, I have just purchased an Anvil book and am looking forward to reading it and will see if my memory is correct. Last edited by clockworkzombie; 02-28-2010 at 03:44 PM. |
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#190 |
tragic
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I've tried and tried but I just couldn't read Lord of the Rings.
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#191 | |
Wizard
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#192 | ||||
New York Editor
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The first six being readable is about right. The premise is that Gor is "counter-Earth", held on the othr side of the sun from us by the advanced science of the insectoid Priest-Kings who rule the planet. The Priest-Kings have been kidnapping people from Earth for centuries and dropping them on Gor, so the planet has pockets of human cultures from across Earth and throughout history. The Priest-Kings control technological development, so things like building technology and medicine are advanced (they have electric lights and "Stabilization serums" that stop aging), but combat is mano a mano with edged weapons. The protagonist, Tarl Cabot, is a John Carter type who is dropped on Gor and becomes a Tarnsman - a rider of giant hawk like birds - and a renowned warrior. A background cultural bit in the early novels is that most Gorean women are slaves. The hero's girlfriend is a "Free Companion" - a member of an order who rejects slavery as a woman's normal state. She is kidnapped early on and Cabot sets out to find and free her, but she is soon enough forgotten. Female slavery becomes a dominant foreground motif, based on the idea that a woman can only be truly happy, fulfilled (and multi-orgasmic) if she totally submits to a strong male master. Tarl Cabot increasingly becomes an arch-typical Gorean male, and becomes increasingly one dimensional and boring in the process. I didn't stop reading the books because I objected to the premise - I stopped because I lost interest in continual BDSM fantasy masquerading as SF. Quote:
I don't really see Christopher Anvil fitting either, though I think I see why you do. Sadly, Schmitz had completed a sequel to _The Witches of Karres_, but the manuscript was lost in a move. ______ Dennis |
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#193 | |
New York Editor
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Some books you can't actively read: you have to learn to relax and let the book read itself to you. Another like that for me was E. R. Eddison's _The Worm Ourobouous_. Eddison was a Victorian gentleman writing Elizabethan prose. The prose took considerable adjustment, but once I did it went down like fine cognac. ______ Dennis Last edited by DMcCunney; 03-05-2010 at 10:40 AM. |
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#194 |
Addict
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Don't feel bad, I've tried to read it three times in the last three decades and have never been able to finish the trilogy. I find it so tedious and boring that I put it down and never pick it up again.
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#195 | |
Wizard
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Though, if the story appears to somehow resist the reader, it's probably better put it off for later - or not read at all - better to concentrate on something else. I have been waiting for some years for Thomas Mann to get more approachable - I'm still not there, but I have the feeling it will be worth it in time. Edit: that idea of standing back and letting the work speak for itself is much the same way I try to approach art - especially modern art. Oftentimes I find it pays off not to rush. Last edited by Ea; 03-03-2010 at 06:08 PM. |
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