Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
ita, it's still on going, Robert Jordan has some potentially fatal disorder, but doesn't expect he'll be done until he's 90, an age he may not see.
Do NOT get sucked back in.
Don't do it!
But if you do, can I just ship Paul's copies of the damn books your way to get them out of my house? He's agreed that they're not good for him, only make him mad, and he's just reading them to see how it ends, if it does.
Wow, I reached the conclusion that the Wheel of Tedium would never end, and even if it did I would be well past caring by that point. I mean, 15 years of books? With no plot developments to speak of?
Wikipedia is the best:
Reviewers and fans of the earlier books have noted a slowing of the pace of events in the last few installments. This slowing culminated in the tenth book Crossroads of Twilight which covered only one day in the lives of the characters.
Ha! And aren't these books like six hundred pages long? (Holy shit, apparently 864.)
However, he maintains that A Memory of Light will remain one volume "whether it is 1500 pages long, Tor has to invent a new binding system, and it comes with its own library cart".
Well then. There's only one more book left, see! And apparently, what, he projects it will take him thirty years to write it??
I was confused at first:
The Wheel of Time
is bad to get into, but apparently the...thing with the..
Songs of Ice and Fire,
I think it's called? Those books are good, though?
I'm liking them. Ummm, there was a five year gap between books at one point but he seems more on schedule. (Next book is next year and I think that there will be 7
in toto
.)
Ooh, the Wikipedia entry for the Wheel of Time might be a good way to get caught up -- just so you can read the most recent book.
ETA: here is the wikipedia entry for
A Song of Fire and Ice.
The books are known for complex characters, sudden and often violent plot twists, and intricate political intrigue. In a genre where magic usually takes center stage, this series has a reputation for its limited and subtle use of magic, employing it as an ambiguous and often sinister background force.
The novels are narrated from a very strict third person limited omniscient perspective, the chapters alternating between different point of view characters. Martin has a reputation of not being afraid to kill any character, no matter how major.
Hrm. Definitely sounds more interesting than
Wheel of Time,
which looked like your standard epic fantasy hoo-hah. I don't know where I'd find the time to read these longass fuckers, though.
Ooh, the Wikipedia entry for the Wheel of Time might be a good way to get caught up -- just so you can read the most recent book.
Heh, I skimmed the summary of the first book, and, yeah, it looks like more
Lord of the Rings
stuff...and I didn't really like READING
Lord of the Rings
so much.
I think that Wheel of Time is more like what would happen if
The Lord of the Rings
were set in Sweet Valley High.
Which is occasionally funny! But not on purpose.
t holds her matched LOTR set close
They don't understand, my precious, no, they don't, you're nothing like those other books, no, not at all. They're all cribbing off of you, sssss.
The Wheel of Time: making the Lord of the Rings look short for the past two decades.